Difference between revisions of "Cornell University"
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− | [[Image:Cornell.jpg|thumb|Cornell students visit Ithaca's beautiful gorges to engage in their school's most popular pastime: drowning<ref> | + | [[Image:Cornell.jpg|thumb|Cornell students visit Ithaca's beautiful gorges to engage in their school's most popular pastime: drowning<ref>[serious note] It should be noted that the Cornell suicide rate for undergrads is dead average. Cornell unfairly earns a reputation for high suicide rates because the gorges are simply a popular place to commit suicide for Cornell and non-Cornell people alike. See question 9. http://ezra.cornell.edu/posting.php?timestamp=1045112400 [/end serious note]</ref> ]] |
− | '''Cornell University''' (as it is called by students and alumni), or '''SUNY Ithaca''' (as it is called by everybody else) is a quasi-private quasi-[[Ivy League]] university in the part of New York no one really knows or talks much about. | + | '''Cornell University''' (as it is called by students and alumni), or '''SUNY Ithaca''' (as it is called by everybody else) is a quasi-private quasi-[[Ivy League]] university mostly located in some far-off piece of flyover country located [[Upstate New York|the part of New York no one really knows or talks much about]]. |
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+ | That said, parts of it are located in [[NYC]], begging the question of why it hasn't been able to get its act together and locate all of its facilities here, though Cornell's victory in the [[2011 Applied Sciences NYC competition]] and commitment to build a new campus on [[Roosevelt Island]] shows that they might finally be coming to their senses. | ||
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+ | Cornell is widely known for being filled with Columbia rejects, for having a [[SUNY]] agriculture school, and for - even more incredibly - supporting a hotel management school. It was recently discovered that they even have an "Interior Design" major. And that's not even in the Hotel School. Granted, their "marketing and tourism" faculty do some [http://cornellsun.com/section/news/content/2010/05/07/larger-breasts-pay-waitresses-study-hotel-professor-finds groundbreaking research]. | ||
==Inferiority complex== | ==Inferiority complex== | ||
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== References == | == References == | ||
<references /> | <references /> | ||
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+ | == External links == | ||
+ | *[http://www.cuwiki.org/ CUWiki] | ||
[[Category:Universities]] | [[Category:Universities]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Ivy League]] | ||
+ | [[Category:New York State]] |
Latest revision as of 17:48, 9 May 2024
Cornell University (as it is called by students and alumni), or SUNY Ithaca (as it is called by everybody else) is a quasi-private quasi-Ivy League university mostly located in some far-off piece of flyover country located the part of New York no one really knows or talks much about.
That said, parts of it are located in NYC, begging the question of why it hasn't been able to get its act together and locate all of its facilities here, though Cornell's victory in the 2011 Applied Sciences NYC competition and commitment to build a new campus on Roosevelt Island shows that they might finally be coming to their senses.
Cornell is widely known for being filled with Columbia rejects, for having a SUNY agriculture school, and for - even more incredibly - supporting a hotel management school. It was recently discovered that they even have an "Interior Design" major. And that's not even in the Hotel School. Granted, their "marketing and tourism" faculty do some groundbreaking research.
Inferiority complex
Cornell students are often noted for their insistence on reminding everyone that they went to an Ivy League school. For example, when alumni from each of the eight Ivy League schools were asked where they attended college, they responded:
- Harvard Grad: I attended Harvard University.
- Yale Grad: I went to Yale.
- Princeton Grad: I went to Princeton.
- Columbia Grad: I went to Columbia.
- Dartmouth Grad: I went to Dartmouth.
- Brown Grad: I went to Brown.
- Penn Grad: I went to Penn...the Ivy League, not the state school.
- Cornell Grad: I have an Ivy League education.
Needless to say, Cornell students and alumni are extremely self-conscious of their position at the bottom rung of the Ivy League ladder, and thus carry an enormous inferiority complex around with them. Indeed, Cornell's official motto[2], coined by one of its most esteemed alumni, Andy Bernard, reads: "I went to Cornell. Heard of it?"
Observing Cornell fans at Columbia sporting events (disgusting gloating when they win, vociferous bitching when they lose) will reveal that they possess the greatest inferiority complex to Columbia out of all the Ivies. The little-guy mentality also manifests itself in their decidedly fascist marching band, which can only be understood as another failed attempt by Cornell to rise above her smaller, brighter cousins.
Cornell students and alumni are legendary for fighting prolonged and unwinnable editing wars over this very page here on WikiCU. They've never won any victories here, and in response they've produced their own wiki, which, needless to say, is pretty pathetic.
Suicides
As a mark of their rage over Cornell's status, the university's students also tend to don "Ithaca Is Gorges" shirts. These reflect pride in the university's dramatic rate of picturesque suicides, in which it once rivaled NYU. Recently, the suicide rate has come down a bit. However, this only occurred after the Cornell administration established a totalitarian state in which all student movements are watched and dissenters are sent to labor camps in Alaska.[3] You can't drown yourself in ice (but you can try, as many Cornell students doubtless do during Upstate NY's unbearable winters). Even the most draconian attempts to dissuade Cornellians from ending their existence have sometimes failed, however, such that the university was forced to install barriers to prevent its students from hurling themselves into the abyss.[4]
References
- ↑ [serious note] It should be noted that the Cornell suicide rate for undergrads is dead average. Cornell unfairly earns a reputation for high suicide rates because the gorges are simply a popular place to commit suicide for Cornell and non-Cornell people alike. See question 9. http://ezra.cornell.edu/posting.php?timestamp=1045112400 [/end serious note]
- ↑ http://abovethelaw.com/2010/03/adventures-in-law-school-advertising-cornell-ever-heard-of-it/
- ↑ http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB119881134406054777.html?mod=blog
- ↑ http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/03/24/cornell-suicide-barrier_n_511991.html