83 Wows
to Celebrate
83 Years of Building Futures
1. |
Queens College is in
the top 1% of colleges in helping students rise from poverty to prosperity. |
2. |
Coincidental with the
college’s 83rd anniversary, QC students speak 83 different languages. |
3. |
Close to 90% of our
faculty have a doctorate or the terminal degree in their field. |
4. |
The
Chaney-Goodman-Schwerner Clock Tower is named for the three young men who
were murdered in Mississippi during the summer of 1964, including QC student
Andrew Goodman. Paul Simon ’63 would later write a song about him, “He Was My
Brother.” |
5. |
Queens
College is the first public college in New York State to participate in the
Kessler Scholars Program, which provides scholarship aid and uses research and real-time student
feedback to transform the experience of first-generation college students. |
6. |
Queens College ranks fourth among all colleges
for offering the best ROI by Business Insider. |
7. |
The Summit Apartments,
certified LEED Gold in 2011, is the first LEED-Certified student residence in the City
University of New York system. |
8. |
Frank
H. Wu
is the first Asian American to serve as Queens College president as well as
the first Asian American to lead a CUNY college in Queens County. |
9. |
Townsend Harris High
School, a prestigious city institution forced to close in 1942 due to budget
restraints, reopened on the QC campus in 1984. Townsend is consistently
ranked among the nation’s 100 best high schools, with a 99% graduation rate. |
10. |
The college hosts the
only tech incubator in the borough of Queens with funding from the New York
City Council. |
11. |
Victory Media
designated QC a 2021 Military-Friendly® School and a Military Friendly Spouse
School. |
12. |
Kiplinger
Personal Finance
lists QC as a “best value college” and Money
magazine similarly ranks us as a top college nationwide for value. |
13 |
Queens College has been named a Princeton Review Best College for 29 consecutive years,
ever since the guide was first published in 1992. In addition to its best
college status, QC continues to appear on the lists for “Got Milk?” (campuses
where beer is scarce) and “Scotch and Soda, Hold the Scotch” (no hard liquor).
The school was also recognized in the categories of Best Value College and
Green College. |
14. |
Queens College offers
incoming first-year students QC in 4—the only program of its kind in New York
City—which guarantees participants that they will graduate in four years. |
15. |
A cargo ship was named
Queens Victory
in honor of the college, which hosted the Army Specialized Training Program
during World War II. |
16. |
The World War II
Veterans Memorial Plaza on the quad—a gift from Arnold Franco ’43, who served
in the war as a code breaker—is dedicated to the over 1,100 faculty,
students, and staff who served in World War II. |
17. |
The Reverend Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr. was the first speaker in the college’s John F.
Kennedy Memorial Lecture Series. |
18. |
A Civil Rights Archive
established at the Rosenthal Library documents the significant record of
activism by Queens College students and teachers and includes the library
collection of famed activist James R. Forman. |
19. |
In 1979 President
Jimmy Carter became the first president to visit Queens College, holding a
Town Hall Meeting at Colden Center. |
20. |
Supreme
Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor spoke at Queens College in October 2017; she
followed her talk with a spirited discussion with students. |
21. |
The Godwin-Ternbach Museum has the borough’s most comprehensive
collection of art and artifacts, housing nearly 6,000 works that date from
ancient to modern times. |
22. |
Queens College
administers the Louis Armstrong House Museum and Archives, a National
Historic Landmark and New York City Landmark. Originally housed in the
college’s Rosenthal Library, the archival collection — now completely
digitized — includes Satchmo’s papers, private tape recordings, musical
manuscripts, scrapbooks, photographs, gold records, trumpets, and more. It comprises the world’s largest archives for a single
jazz musician. Former First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton visited the
campus in 1998 to support the preservation and philanthropist Robert Smith is
among the museum’s trustees. |
23. |
The Kupferberg Center for the Arts, the largest
multidisciplinary arts complex in Queens, has presented Yo-Yo Ma, the New
York Philharmonic, the New York City Ballet, Jerry Seinfeld, Aziz Ansari,
Trevor Noah, Tony Bennett, Ray Charles, Billy Joel, David Bowie, and Carol
Burnett. |
24. |
U.S. News and World Report names QC as one of the top five among Regional Universities -
North whose students graduate with the least debt. We're also a top ten
Public School (North), a Best Value college (North), a Best College for
Veterans (North), and among the top fifteen for Social Mobility (North). |
25. |
The Queens College
Speech-Language-Hearing Center has served children and adults in the Queens
community since 1942; the QC Psychological Center offers free/low-cost
services to the community. |
26. |
QC’s Costume
Collection contains over 2,000 items, shoes, and accessories that date as far
back as the 18th century. |
27. |
Ken ’41 and Max Kupferberg
’42 worked on the Manhattan Project during World War II. |
28. |
Marie Maynard Daly ’42 was the first African American woman in
the nation to earn a PhD in chemistry. |
29. |
Doris L. Wethers ’48, an authority on sickle cell disease, was the first black attending
physician at Saint Luke’s Hospital in 1958. |
30. |
Albert Kapikian ’52 is known as the father of human gastroenteritis virus
research for his work developing the first licensed vaccine against
rotavirus, a breakthrough for which he received the Sabin Gold Medal. |
31. |
Stanley Milgram ’55, a social psychologist, was best known for
his controversial experiments on obedience and his concept of Six Degrees of
Separation. |
32. |
For nearly 40 years, Queens
College has been the home of environmentalist Barry Commoner’s Center for the
Biology of Natural Systems. Now known as the Barry Commoner Center for Health
and the Environment, it screens the health of nuclear weapons workers through
a $40.5 million grant from the Department of Energy and researches medical
issues affecting 9/11 first responders and residents of the World Trade
Center neighborhood. |
33. |
QC alum and faculty
member Stephen Pekar ’86 was part of the
first major expedition to explore the lost continent of Zealandia (near
Australia). |
34. |
Dennis Liotta ’70 is the co-discoverer of Emtricitabine, a
breakthrough HIV drug that is now used by 94% of HIV-positive patients in the
United States. |
35. |
|
36. |
Charles Wang ’67 and Russell Artzt ’68 cofounded
Computer Associates (now known as CA), one of the world’s largest independent
software corporations. |
37. |
Forbes named Olivier Noel ’11 to its annual
“30 Under 30” list of outstanding young entrepreneurs in the sciences. Olivier
founded the company DNAsimple, which banks DNA
samples from people all over the world for use by researchers. |
38. |
Geneticist Elizabeth
Neufeld ’48 received the National Medal of Science for her research on
the genetic basis of metabolic disease in humans. |
39. |
Queens College was the first school
in New York state to offer a Master’s in Science in Education (grades 7-12),
a unique graduate degree program that fosters the teaching of computational
thinking and computer skills in middle school and high school. Students
graduate with the specialized knowledge and skills in computer science (CS)
that are needed to teach the subject, including AP courses in CS, in
secondary schools. |
40. |
Jane Breskin Zalben ’71 is the author of over 50 children’s books; Else Holemund Minarik ’42 wrote
the popular children’s book series Little
Bear, which was illustrated by Maurice Sendak; David A. Adler ’68
has written close to 200 books for children and young adults, including the
popular Cam Jensen
series. |
41. |
Carol Fredericks
Jantzen ’67, ’70 has won
national recognition in the fields of glass chemistry and the safe disposal
of high-level nuclear waste. |
42. |
Researchers in the
School of Earth and Environmental Sciences have conducted projects on all
seven continents and all five oceans; no wonder QC has more earth and
environmental science majors than any other CUNY college. |
43. |
Gail Marquis ’73 won a silver medal as part of the U.S.
women’s 1976 basketball team; Marjorie Larney ’64
competed in the javelin at the 1952 and 1956 Olympics. |
44. |
Queens College was the
first public college in New York State to receive a gift of $1 million from Give
Something Back, a foundation established by philanthropist Robert Carr. The gift covers tuition, fees, and room and board
for 50 young women and men. |
45. |
In 1975, QC’s women’s
basketball team played in the first women’s basketball game held in Madison
Square Garden. The college’s basketball court has been named the Lucille Kyvallos Court in honor of the legendary QC coach and
pioneer in women’s basketball. |
46. |
Former QC President Félix V. Matos Rodríguez is the first educator of color and the first Latino to serve as chancellor of CUNY, the largest urban university in the United States. |
47. |
Jill Barad ’73 was one of the first women to head a Fortune
500 company (Mattel). |
48. |
Donna Orender ’78 was commissioner of the Women’s National Basketball
Association. |
49. |
Juliet Papa ’78 (1010 WINS Radio) received the national
Gracie Award as Outstanding Reporter/Correspondent; Mary Murphy ’81
has won Emmys for her reporting on WCBS Channel 2 News and WPIX News. |
50. |
QC has had more
graduates serve in the U.S. House of Representatives than any other CUNY
college: Joseph Crowley ’85 (14th District, retired), Adriano
Espaillat ’79 (13th District), and Gary Ackerman ’65 (5th
District, retired). |
51. |
Helen Marshall ’70, ’73 was borough
president of Queens from 2002 to 2013 after serving in the New York State
Assembly and Queens Borough Council. |
52. |
Joel Benenson ’79 was the lead pollster and senior strategist for Barack
Obama’s historic race for president in 2008, and a senior strategist for
Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign. |
53. |
Raymond Paretzky ’83 is the first CUNY student who received a Rhodes Scholarship.
He is currently a partner in the law firm of McDermott, Will & Emery. |
54. |
While studying at QC
to be a teacher, Carole King met her future husband and songwriting
partner Gerry Goffin on campus. (John Lennon
said in 1963 that he wanted Paul McCartney and himself to become “the Goffin-King of England.”) King received the Library of
Congress’ Gershwin Award for Popular Music in 2012. |
55. |
Actor Danny
Burstein ’86—whose father Harvey is a longtime member of the college’s
Philosophy Department—has won two Drama Desk Awards and three Outer Critics
Circle Awards, and has been nominated for six Tony Awards. In 2020 he won the
Drama League’s Distinguished Performance Award, the oldest theatrical honor
in North America. |
56. |
Distinguished
Professor of English Kimiko Hahn is the author of ten collections of
poetry; The Unbearable
Heart received an American Book Award. Hahn recently completed a
term as president of the Poetry Society of America. |
57. |
In the last 40 years,
Queens College faculty and alumni have been nominated for or won over 100
Grammy Awards. |
58. |
Music Professor Joseph
Machlis’s
textbook, The Enjoyment of
Music, is one of the most popular music appreciation books
published in English, having sold over two million copies. |
59. |
Jon Favreau, who attended QC, is an actor, the director of
the popular Iron Man
movies, the executive producer of “The Mandalorian” series streaming on
Disney, and a recipient of the Harold Lloyd Award for Filmmaking. Lidia
Bastianich, who also attended QC, is an award-winning Italian cookbook
author and TV host. |
60. |
Three QC graduates
have won Pulitzer Prizes: Dorothy Rabinowitz ’56 (2001, for
Commentary), Lloyd Schwartz ’62 (1994, for Criticism), and Marvin
Hamlisch ’68 (for A
Chorus Line). A fourth graduate, Richard Ofshe
’63, contributed articles to a series exposing the Synanon movement, for
which the newspaper the Point
Reyes Light received a Pulitzer Prize for Public Service in 1979. |
61. |
Paul Simon ’63, a member of the Grammy Hall of Fame,
received Album of the Year honors for Graceland
and Still
Crazy After All These Years (among 12 Grammys he has won). He is
also the first recipient of the Library of Congress’ Gershwin Award for
Popular Music. |
62. |
Novels by Susan
Isaacs ’65 have been translated into 30 different languages. |
63. |
Alums Fran
Drescher, Ray Romano, and Jerry Seinfeld ’76 all starred in hit
comedy series that ran for years. Carol Leifer ’78 won four Emmy
Awards for her scripts for Seinfeld. |
64. |
Luciano Pavarotti sang
at a special concert celebrating Colden Center’s twentieth anniversary
season. QC of course has produced its own opera stars, including Reri Grist ’54, Frank Lopardo, and Erika Sunnegardh
’99. |
65. |
The late Jimmy
Heath, a legendary saxophonist and composer, was the first head of QC’s
jazz program. |
66. |
The late Gregory Rabassa, Distinguished Professor of Hispanic
Languages and translator of Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s One Hundred Years of Solitude,
was awarded the National Medal of Arts, the nation’s highest honor for
artistic excellence. |
67. |
Brothers Vincent ’72
and Chris Misiano ’76 have directed hundreds
of TV shows, including ER,
West Wing, Law & Order, Ally McBeal, The Blacklist, and Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. |
68. |
The Moog synthesizer,
one of the first widely used electronic instruments, was created by two-time
Grammy Award winner Robert Moog ’57. |
69. |
Joy Behar ’64 is the Emmy Award-winning cohost of The View. |
70. |
Michael Weisman ’71, who helped to reshape how sports are
presented on TV, has won 24 Emmys for his work at NBC and FOX; popular
sportscaster |
71. |
Howie Rose ’77, the radio voice of the New York Mets, has
won two Emmy Awards for excellence in broadcasting. |
72. |
Marvin Hamlisch ’68 was only the second person to win an Emmy,
Grammy, Oscar, Tony, and Pulitzer Prize (Richard Rodgers was the first). |
73. |
Jerry Seinfeld ’76 claims that the only time he found a
parking spot in Queens was when he returned to QC to receive an honorary
degree. |
74. |
Maaza Mengiste, a professor in the English
Department, has two acclaimed novels to her credit. Her second book, The
Shadow King, has been shortlisted for the Booker Prize. |
75. |
Eminent Lincoln
scholar Harold Holzer ’69
served for nine years as co-chairman of the United States Abraham Lincoln
Bicentennial Commission, and in 2008 received
the National
Humanities Medal from President George
W. Bush. |
76. |
Cristina
Jimenez Moreta ’07, an immigrant rights activist; Bright Sheng ’84, a
composer; Elliot
Sperling ’73, who researched the political, religious,
cultural, and economic relations between Tibet and China from the 14th
through 17th centuries; and David
Rudovsky ’64, an attorney whose
work concerns the protection of the constitutional rights of individuals and groups; and Eric Wolf '46, distinguished anthropologist and author of
Europe and the People Without History, have received MacArthur “Genius” Awards. So did late Music Professor George Perle,
a composer and music theorist.
|
77. |
When Deborah J. Glick ’78
was sworn into the New York State Assembly in January 1991, she became
New York’s first
openly gay state legislator.
Glick and fellow QC alumna Toby Stavisky, the first woman from Queens County
elected to the New York State Senate, chair the higher education committees
in their respective legislative bodies. |
78. |
Nellie
Y. McKay
’69 was the co-editor (with Henry Louis Gates, Jr.) of the Norton Anthology of African-American
Literature, which has become the worldwide standard in the field. |
79. |
Richard Richter ’51 was the founding president of Radio Free
Asia and the founding senior producer of ABC’s Good Morning America. |
80. |
Jules Piccus ’42 made international headlines in 1967 when he discovered in
the National Library in Madrid two codices by Leonardo da Vinci that had been
missing for 135 years. |
81. |
Economist Vera Shlakman
(1952) and English professors Oscar
Shaftel (1953) and Dudley Straus (1955)
were dismissed from the college for refusing to speak about their possible
connections with the Communist Party. In 1982 they were vindicated and
received financial compensation from New York City. |
82. |
Alumna
Carolyn Leigh wrote the lyrics to such standards as “Witchcraft,” “The Best Is Yet to Come,” and “Young at Heart” as well as the
Broadway musical Peter Pan,
which starred Mary Martin. She was working with Marvin Hamlisch ’67 on
the musical Smile in 1983, when she
died. Two years later, she was inducted into the Songwriters Hall
of Fame. |
83. |
Michael Berenbaum ’67, a scholar who specializes in the study of the Holocaust, was
the co-producer of One Survivor Remembers: The Gerda Weissmann
Klein Story, which won a 1995
Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject and an Emmy Award for Outstanding
Information Special. |