Institution
Eastern Illinois University has 12,179 students, and 2,000 faculty and staff. Admission is
selective. Tuition is approximately $7,000 per year for Illinois resident and $17,500 for non-residents, making it one of the most affordable universities in Illinois.
[1] There are prominent
Communication Disorders and Sciences and
Biological Sciences programs, though the College of Education remains the largest department. The university has an endowment of approximately $35 million.
The university includes Colleges of
Science, Arts and Humanities, Education and Professional Studies,Engineering and Technology Program [Masters], and the Lumpkin College of Business and Applied Sciences. Other academic divisions include the Graduate School, Honors College, and School of Continuing Education. Eighty-eight percent of graduates find work in a field related to their major within six months after graduation.
[2]
In the
US News & World Report
college rankings, EIU is classified as a Masters university, meaning one that grants no doctoral degrees and draws students primarily from the surrounding area, rather than nationally. EIU ranks in the top half of US News' rankings of Masters universities within the Midwest region.
[3]
History
Eastern Illinois University was established in 1895 as the
Eastern Illinois State Normal School
. Originally a teacher's college offering a two-year degree, it gradually expanded its curriculum to include
Baccalaureate and
Master's degrees in most of the arts, sciences, and humanities.
The first building was finished in 1899 and is called Old Main, though it is formally named the
Livingston C. Lord Administration Building in honor of EIU's first president, who served from 1899 to 1933. Built of Indiana limestone in a heavy
Gothic revival style with turrets, towers, and battlements, its distinctive outline is the official symbol of the school. Old Main is one of the five "castles" built in the 1890s at the major Illinois state colleges. Governor
John Peter Altgeld was instrumental in funding the Illinois university system, and he was especially fond of the Gothic style. Eastern's "Old Main" and
Illinois State University's Cook Hall are the only schools where the "castle" is not named after Altgeld. Other original
Gothic Revival buildings include
Booth Library and Blair Hall. Blair Hall was restored after a disastrous fire in 2004. In the fall of 2008, the university opened the newly constructed Doudna Fine Arts Center, designed by international architect
Antoine Predock. The 138,000 square foot complex will house the music, theatre, and visual arts departments.
Sports
Eastern Illinois University's colors are
blue and
gray; the sports teams' nickname is the
Panthers. Except for men's
soccer and swimming teams, the teams participate in NCAA Division I (I-AA for
football) in the
Ohio Valley Conference. The men's soccer program competes in the
Missouri Valley Conference and the swim team competes in
The Summit League. Eastern Football is coached by Bob Spoo.
Eastern Illinois University is the only NCAA
Division I institution that offer women's
rugby as a varsity sport.
Three current National Football League head coaches -
Mike Shanahan of the
Denver Broncos,
Sean Payton of the
New Orleans Saints and
Brad Childress of the
Minnesota Vikings - are alumni of Eastern Illinois. Additionally,
Tony Romo, the starting quarterback of the
Dallas Cowboys, is an alumnus of the University, having actually been signed by Dallas on the advice of Payton, then an assistant coach for the team.
Eastern Illinois University was a member of the
Illinois Intercollegiate Athletic Conference from 1912-1970.
Fight Song
Eastern Loyalty
or
EIU Fight Song
is the fight song for the university. The lyrics are:
We are loyal EIU, we're loyal and true -
'though the odds be great or small
we'll still be cheering you (rah! rah!)
so fight you Panthers for the glory of our dear name
fight on for Eastern, come on Panthers lets win this game!
Notable alumni
- Joan Allen, actress
- Brad Childress, head coach of the NFL's Minnesota Vikings
- Jim Edgar, Governor of Illinois from 1991 to 1999
- Joan Embery, environmental activist
- Paul N. Hopkins, CEO (Chief Executive Officer) of Farmers Insurance Group
- Burl Ives, actor and folk singer. Did not graduate.
- Joe Knollenberg, representative of the Ninth District of Michigan, United States House of Representatives since 1992*
- Christine Korsgaard, philosopher. Transferred before graduation.
- Charlotte Martin, singer-songwriter
- Mike Shanahan, head coach of the NFL's Denver Broncos
- Sean Payton, head coach of the NFL's New Orleans Saints
- Matthew Polenzani, opera singer
- Ron Westray, jazz trombonist, member of the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra and the Mingus Big Band
- John Malkovich, actor. Did not graduate.
- Larry Smith, CNN Headline News sports anchor [4]
- Newton Tarble, one of the founders of Snap-on Tools.
- Jerry Van Dyke, actor. Did not graduate.
Notable athletes
- Tim Bogar - retired Major League Baseball infielder
- Brad Childress - head coach of the Minnesota Vikings of the National Football League
- Kevin Duckworth, former National Basketball Association all-star center
- Jeff Gossett, NFL Pro Bowl punter
- Kyle Hill, professional basketball player
- Matt Hughes, professional MMA fighter
- Schellas Hyndman, head coach of FC Dallas
- John Jurkovic, former NFL defensive lineman
- Marty Pattin, MLB All-Star pitcher
- Tony Romo, starting quarterback for the Dallas Cowboys of the National Football League
- Kevin Seitzer - retired all-star Major League Baseball player
- Chris Szarka, fullback for the Saskatchewan Roughriders of the Canadian Football League
- Ray Fisher, former lineman - Dallas Texans of the National Football League
- Dan Steele, track All-American, 400-meter National Champion, and Bronze Medalist at the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympics