St. Cloud State University
Encyclopedia
St. Cloud State University is a four-year public university founded in 1869 on the banks of the Mississippi River
Mississippi River
The Mississippi River is the largest river system in North America. Flowing entirely in the United States, this river rises in western Minnesota and meanders slowly southwards for to the Mississippi River Delta at the Gulf of Mexico. With its many tributaries, the Mississippi's watershed drains...

 in St. Cloud, Minnesota
St. Cloud, Minnesota
St. Cloud is a city in the U.S. state of Minnesota and the largest population center in the state's central region. The population was 65,842 at the 2010 census. It is the county seat of Stearns County...

, United States
United States
The United States of America is a federal constitutional republic comprising fifty states and a federal district...

. The university is the largest member of the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities (MnSCU) system which is the largest single provider of higher education in the state of Minnesota. With more than 18,000 students, St. Cloud State has Minnesota's second-highest university enrollment. St. Cloud State has more than 100,000 alumni worldwide; Notable alumni include John Stumpf
John Stumpf
John Stumpf became Chairman for Wells Fargo & Company in January 2010. He was named Chief Executive Officer in June 2007, elected to Wells Fargo’s Board of Directors in June 2006, and has been President since August 2005....

, president
President
A president is a leader of an organization, company, trade union, university, or country.Etymologically, a president is one who presides, who sits in leadership...

 and CEO of Wells Fargo & Company, and James B. Bullard
James B. Bullard
James B. Bullard is the 12th president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. He is currently serving a term that began on March 1, 2011. Dr. Bullard succeeded William Poole as president of the St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank on April 1, 2008....

, president
President
A president is a leader of an organization, company, trade union, university, or country.Etymologically, a president is one who presides, who sits in leadership...

 and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.

History

St. Cloud State University opened its doors to students in 1869, under the name Third State Normal School. The school consisted of one building, the Stearns House, a renovated hotel purchased by the state Legislature for $46,000. Classrooms were on the first floor, the "model school" was on second floor and a women's dormitory was housed on the third floor. The five-member faculty was headed by Principal Ira Moore. Of the 53 original students, 43 were women. In 1898, the school began offering a junior college curriculum.

In 1914, the school dropped its secondary education program entirely. The legislature authorized a name change in 1921, allowing the school to adopt the name St. Cloud State Teachers College (the word "teachers" was deleted in 1957). The first bachelor's degrees were awarded in 1925, with master's degree programs offered beginning in 1953.

In 1975, St. Cloud State became a university, comprising five colleges and a graduate school. The G.R. Herberger Business School is recognized as one of the top business colleges in the country and is one of only four in the state that is nationally accredited. Within the past decade, the College of Science and Engineering established and gained full accreditation for its Computer Engineering program. It is the only university in Minnesota that offers an ABET accredited Manufacturing Engineering Program. It also offers ABET accredited Electrical and Mechanical Engineering programs, along with Computer Science. St. Cloud State University's Master of Engineering Management is the only program in Minnesota that is certified by the American Society of Engineering Management (ASEM).

In 1987, men's hockey became an NCAA Division I program. Two years later the team moved into a new two-rink arena called the National Hockey Center. In 1998, the university added a women's hockey team at the Division I level.

In 2010, the university teamed with the private sector to build a welcome center and student housing complex adjacent to campus. The university leases the Welcome Center and Coborn Plaza Apartments.

Previous school names

  • St. Cloud Normal School 1869–1921
  • St. Cloud State Teachers College 1921–1957
  • St. Cloud State College 1957–1975
  • St. Cloud State University 1975–present

Academics

The university was created as a Normal school
Normal school
A normal school is a school created to train high school graduates to be teachers. Its purpose is to establish teaching standards or norms, hence its name...

, then developed college-level programs for teachers. Today it offers more than 200 majors, minors and pre-professional programs in five academic colleges. The School of Graduate Studies offers more than 60 graduate programs and certificates leading to specialist, Master of Arts, Master of Business Administration, Master of Engineering Management, Master of Music, Master of Science degrees and an Ed.D. in Higher Education Administration. A new graduate program of note is the master's in regulatory affairs & services, one of five programs offering classes at the university's Twin Cities Graduate Center in Maple Grove, Minn.

St. Cloud State has about 20 education-abroad programs, including a year-around program at Alnwick Castle
Alnwick Castle
Alnwick Castle is a castle and stately home in the town of the same name in the English county of Northumberland. It is the residence of the Duke of Northumberland, built following the Norman conquest, and renovated and remodelled a number of times. It is a Grade I listed building.-History:Alnwick...

 in northern England
England
England is a country that is part of the United Kingdom. It shares land borders with Scotland to the north and Wales to the west; the Irish Sea is to the north west, the Celtic Sea to the south west, with the North Sea to the east and the English Channel to the south separating it from continental...

.

Colleges and schools

St. Cloud State offers more than 200 undergraduate and more than 60 graduate programs of study through two colleges and six schools. The academic structure described below takes effect July 1, 2011.



Student life

At the beginning of each academic year students are invited to "Mainstreet," an event held on campus, to peruse student organizations and groups as well as those offered by the community.

Residence Halls

Nearly 20 percent of St. Cloud State students live in one of the eight traditional residence halls or in an apartment-style hall on campus. In August 2010, as a part of Fifth Avenue Live, St. Cloud State opened the Coborn Plaza Apartments, a new residence hall that is capable of housing 455 students in high-amenity apartments with underground parking.

Traditional residence halls:

Apartment-style residence halls:
  • Stateview
  • Coborn Plaza Apartments

Student organizations

St. Cloud State allows students to join an array of 250 student organizations. Click on the following link to access a list of the organizations at St. Cloud State.

Greek life

Students can also join one of the nine houses that represent the Greek population
Fraternities and sororities
Fraternities and sororities are fraternal social organizations for undergraduate students. In Latin, the term refers mainly to such organizations at colleges and universities in the United States, although it is also applied to analogous European groups also known as corporations...

 at St. Cloud State.
Sororities Fraternities
  • Delta Phi Epsilon
    Delta Phi Epsilon (social)
    Delta Phi Epsilon is an international sorority founded on March 17, 1917 at New York University Law School in New York City...

  • Delta Zeta
    Delta Zeta
    Delta Zeta is an international college sorority founded on October 24, 1902, at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. Today, Delta Zeta has 158 collegiate chapters in the United States and over 200 alumnae chapters in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Canada...

  • Kappa Phi Omega
  • Acacia
    Acacia
    Acacia is a genus of shrubs and trees belonging to the subfamily Mimosoideae of the family Fabaceae, first described in Africa by the Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus in 1773. Many non-Australian species tend to be thorny, whereas the majority of Australian acacias are not...

  • Delta Sigma Phi
    Delta Sigma Phi
    Delta Sigma Phi is a fraternity established at the City College of New York in 1899 and is a charter member of the North-American Interfraternity Conference. The headquarters of the fraternity is the Taggart Mansion located in Indianapolis, Indiana...

  • Phi Kappa Tau
    Phi Kappa Tau
    Phi Kappa Tau is a U.S. national collegiate fraternity.-History:Phi Kappa Tau Fraternity was founded in the Union Literary Society Hall of Miami University's Old Main Building in Oxford, Ohio on March 17, 1906...

  • Tau Kappa Epsilon
    Tau Kappa Epsilon
    Tau Kappa Epsilon is a college fraternity founded on January 10, 1899 at Illinois Wesleyan University with chapters in the United States, and Canada, and affiliation with a German fraternity system known as the Corps of the Weinheimer Senioren Convent...

  • Theta Chi
    Theta Chi
    Theta Chi Fraternity is an international college fraternity. It was founded on April 10, 1856 as the Theta Chi Society, at Norwich University, Norwich, Vermont, U.S., and was the 21st of the 71 North-American Interfraternity Conference men's fraternities.-Founding and early years at Norwich:Theta...


  • Student Media

    KVSC-FM is a public radio station licensed to St. Cloud State University. The station first started on May 10, 1967 and expanded broadcasting times in September 1994.

    The University Chronicle is the student newspaper and is published twice a week. It has been published since 1921.

    University Television Station (UTVS) is a student-run television station, which airs live newscasts and other programming. The station is broadcast on Charter Communications
    Charter Communications
    Charter Communications is an American company providing cable television, high-speed Internet, and telephone services to more than 4.7 million customers in 25 states. By revenues, it is the fourth-largest cable operator in the United States, behind Comcast, Time Warner Cable, and Cox Communications...

    ' cable channel 21 in the greater St. Cloud area. Broadcasts of sporting events, including men's hockey, are also aired on other Charter franchises.

    Student Media Awards

    In the spring of 2009, student-run media outlets received awards from five different competitions that garner national, regional, and state recognition. Husky Productions received the Global Media Award for College Sports "Best Live Game or Live Event" for its telecast of a November hockey game between Wisconsin and St. Cloud State. At the Broadcast Educators Association Awards in Las Vegas, UTVS, Husky Mag, and Husky Productions received three out of the 17 awards recognized. Husky Mag took first place in the studio competition, two students received first place in the music video category, and Husky Productions took second place in the studio production category. In March 2009, KVSC-FM received four awards from the Minnesota Associated Press Broadcasters for work done in 2008. The honorees were: Aaron Bjokrstrand's "Rage Against Abuse", received Best in show; "Husky Hockey Review", first in Sports Reporting; Jenna Wundrow's "SCSU Recycling Program: Green or Guilt?"; first in documentary/investigative; and Peter Tomala and Patrick Sullivan's "Husky Sports Friday"; honorable mention in sports reporting. Students with the University Chronicle received 11 Better Newspaper Contest awards for their work in 2008 from the Minnesota Newspaper Association; the University Chronicle received second place for its typography and design.

    Minnesota State University Student Association

    Each student attending St. Cloud State University pays a .43 cent per credit fee to fund the Minnesota State University Student Association
    Minnesota State University Student Association
    The Minnesota State University Student Association is an independent, non-profit organization funded and operated by students. MSUSA serves nearly 70,000 students attending Minnesota's seven state universities: Bemidji State University, Minnesota State University Mankato, Metropolitan State...

    , a student-led non-profit that advocates on behalf of all Minnesota state university students.

    Athletics and Activities

    The university currently sponsors 21 Division II teams and is a member of the Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference
    Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference
    The Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference is a college athletic conference which operates in the Midwestern United States. Nine of its members are in Minnesota, with two members in South Dakota and one member each in the states of Iowa, Nebraska and North Dakota. It participates in the NCAA's...

    . The St. Cloud State's men's and women's ice hockey teams also compete in Division I as a member of the WCHA
    Western Collegiate Hockey Association
    The Western Collegiate Hockey Association is a college athletic conference which operates over a wide area of the Midwestern and Western United States. It participates in the NCAA's Division I as an ice hockey-only conference....

     division. The mascot is the Husky
    Husky
    Husky is a general name for a type of dog originally used to pull sleds in northern regions, differentiated from other sled dog types by their fast hard pulling style...

    .

    St. Cloud State University provides free admission to all sports for students (including football and hockey). This is possible through an athletic fee

    The school operates a radio station, KVSC
    KVSC
    KVSC 88.1 FM in Saint Cloud, Minnesota is part of Minnesota's Independent Public Radio network. It is operated by St. Cloud State University and broadcasts a freeform radio format...

     88.1 FM. Students publish a newspaper
    Newspaper
    A newspaper is a scheduled publication containing news of current events, informative articles, diverse features and advertising. It usually is printed on relatively inexpensive, low-grade paper such as newsprint. By 2007, there were 6580 daily newspapers in the world selling 395 million copies a...

    , the University Chronicle. Students also run a television station known as UTVS, which recently won first place for best student news and productions from the Society of Professional Journalists
    Society of Professional Journalists
    The Society of Professional Journalists , formerly known as Sigma Delta Chi, is one of the oldest organizations representing journalists in the United States. It was established in April 1909 at DePauw University, and its charter was designed by William Meharry Glenn. The ten founding members of...

    , as well as honorable mention at a New York competition in 2004.

    The school operates a theatre called Theatre L'homme Dieu. The theatre produces a ten-week season of plays and musicals each summer. The theatre employs professional actors, directors, and designers usually from the Twin Cities
    Twin cities
    Twin cities are a special case of two cities or urban centres which are founded in close geographic proximity and then grow into each other over time...

     theatre community. The theatre also employs a resident intern company of twenty student apprentices. Most of the student apprentices are theatre majors from SCSU and other Midwestern universities.

    Coborn Plaza opens in 2010

    Construction of a St. Cloud State welcome center and 455-student housing complex at Coborn Plaza was completed in August 2010. The welcome center and apartment-style housing are part of the first phase of Fifth Avenue Live, a private development adjacent to campus. Student apartments will be on the upper floors of the north and south buildings. Retail will be on the ground floor of the north building. The welcome center is slated for the ground floor of the south building. The university is leasing the apartments and welcome center from the J.A. Wedum Foundation.The two buildings combined are called Coborn Plaza in honor of the community contributions of the Coborn family, whose grocery chain formerly had a store on that site.

    Twin Cities Graduate Center opens

    In July 2009, St. Cloud State added a presence in the Minneapolis/St. Paul metropolitan area
    Metropolitan area
    The term metropolitan area refers to a region consisting of a densely populated urban core and its less-populated surrounding territories, sharing industry, infrastructure, and housing. A metropolitan area usually encompasses multiple jurisdictions and municipalities: neighborhoods, townships,...

     with a graduate center in Maple Grove, MN. The Twin Cities Graduate Center uses the cohort instructional model of learning, in which small groups of student proceed through the program together. Classes from programs such as business administration, higher education administration, counseling and regulatory affairs and services are offered.

    Riverview Renovated

    Lawrence Hall renovated

    After an extensive restoration project in 2002 and 2003, St. Cloud State reopened the doors to historic Lawrence Hall to host a cultural melting pot of international and American Students studying foreign languages. The hall was first built in 1895 housing women students and later housing men for a few years. After originally being touted as fireproof, the building burned beyond repair and a new Lawrence Hall was built in 1905. It once again served as housing until it was retired in 1974 with exception to the basement floor which was used to facilitate a Math Skills Center. The Math Skills Center was forced out of the hall in 1999 after the structure was deemed unfit. After being distinguished as a campus eyesore efforts began to start a restoration campaign of the hall with funding for the project coming from the state's Legislation's bonding bill in 2000.

    Hockey program to Division I

    In the 1986-1987 season, Herb Brooks
    Herb Brooks
    Herbert Paul Brooks, Jr. was an American ice hockey player and coach. He notably coached the United States' men's hockey team to a 4-3 upset of the heavily favored Soviet Union in the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, New York on February 22, 1980...

    , the 1980 USA men's Olympic
    Olympic Games
    The Olympic Games is a major international event featuring summer and winter sports, in which thousands of athletes participate in a variety of competitions. The Olympic Games have come to be regarded as the world’s foremost sports competition where more than 200 nations participate...

     hockey coach, became the coach of the Huskies and helped St. Cloud State hockey team achieve Division I status. He also helped lead efforts to build the National Hockey Center
    National Hockey Center
    The National Hockey Center is a 5,763-seat hockey arena in St. Cloud, Minnesota. It is home to the St. Cloud State University Huskies men's & women's ice hockey teams, and the Saint John's University Johnnies ice hockey team. The main rink is now named for former SCSU President Brendan J....

    . A small street near the National Hockey Center was named for Brooks shortly after his death.

    Notable alumni

    • Van Nelson - 1968 Olympic Track and Field Athlete. 5k and 10k winner at the 1967 Pan American Games.
    • Tyler Arnason
      Tyler Arnason
      Tyler Arnason is an American professional ice hockey center who is currently a Free Agent. He most recently played with the Texas Stars of the American Hockey League. He has previously played in the National Hockey League for the Chicago Blackhawks, Ottawa Senators and the Colorado...

       - Professional hockey player
    • Todd Bouman
      Todd Bouman
      Todd Bouman is an American football quarterback who is currently a free agent. He was signed by the Minnesota Vikings as an undrafted free agent in 1997. He played college football at St. Cloud State....

       - National Football League quarterback, Jacksonville Jaguars
      Jacksonville Jaguars
      The Jacksonville Jaguars are a professional American football team based in Jacksonville, Florida, U.S. They are currently members of the South Division of the American Football Conference in the National Football League...

    • Dick Bremer
      Dick Bremer
      Richard J. Bremer is a sports broadcaster for Fox Sports North. He does the play-by-play announcing for the Minnesota Twins and Minnesota Gophers men's basketball and other Minnesota sports...

       - Minnesota Twins
      Minnesota Twins
      The Minnesota Twins are a professional baseball team based in Minneapolis, Minnesota. They play in the Central Division of Major League Baseball's American League. The team is named after the Twin Cities area of Minneapolis and St. Paul. They played in Metropolitan Stadium from 1961 to 1981 and the...

       television play-by-play
    • James B. Bullard
      James B. Bullard
      James B. Bullard is the 12th president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. He is currently serving a term that began on March 1, 2011. Dr. Bullard succeeded William Poole as president of the St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank on April 1, 2008....

       - President and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis
      Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis
      The Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis is one of 12 regional Reserve Banks that, along with the Board of Governors in Washington, D.C., make up the nation's central bank. Missouri is the only state to have two Federal Reserve Banks . The St...

    • Matt Cullen
      Matt Cullen
      Matthew David Cullen is a professional ice hockey center, who currently is an alternate captain of the Minnesota Wild of the NHL.-Playing career:...

       - Professional hockey player, Stanley Cup winner, Minnesota Wild
      Minnesota Wild
      The Minnesota Wild are a professional ice hockey team based in St. Paul, Minnesota, United States. They are members of the Northwest Division of the Western Conference of the National Hockey League ....

    • Jim Eisenreich
      Jim Eisenreich
      James Michael Eisenreich is an American former Major League Baseball player with a 15-year career from 1982–1984 and 1987–1998. He played for the Minnesota Twins and Kansas City Royals of the American League, and the Philadelphia Phillies, Florida Marlins and Los Angeles Dodgers of the National...

       - Former MLB outfielder/first baseman with Tourette syndrome
      Tourette syndrome
      Tourette syndrome is an inherited neuropsychiatric disorder with onset in childhood, characterized by multiple physical tics and at least one vocal tic; these tics characteristically wax and wane...

    • Jeff Finger
      Jeff Finger
      Jeff Finger is an American professional ice hockey defenseman currently playing for the Toronto Marlies of the American Hockey League.-Playing career:...

       - Professional hockey player, AHL
      American Hockey League
      The American Hockey League is a 30-team professional ice hockey league based in the United States and Canada that serves as the primary developmental circuit for the National Hockey League...

       Toronto Marlies
      Toronto Marlies
      The Toronto Marlies is a Canadian professional ice hockey team currently playing in the American Hockey League . The top affiliate of the National Hockey League 's Toronto Maple Leafs, the Marlies play at the Ricoh Coliseum in Toronto, Ontario...

    • Andrew Gordon
      Andrew Gordon (ice hockey)
      Andrew Gordon is a Canadian professional ice hockey right winger in the Anaheim Ducks system.-Playing career:Gordon began his career with the Notre Dame Hounds of the Saskatchewan Junior Hockey League. In 2004, he was drafted by the Washington Capitals...

       - Professional hockey player with the Hershey Bears/Washington Capitals
    • Mark Hartigan
      Mark Hartigan
      Mark Hartigan is a professional ice hockey centre, currently playing for the Dinamo Riga. He now lives in Plymouth, Minnesota.-Playing career:...

       - Professional hockey player, HC CSKA Moscow
      HC CSKA Moscow
      HC CSKA Moscow is a Russian ice hockey club that plays in the Kontinental Hockey League. It is referred to in the West as "Central Red Army" or the "Red Army Team" for its past affiliation with the Soviet Army, popularly known as the Red Army...

    • John Hawkes
      John Hawkes (actor)
      John Hawkes is an American film and television actor. He is known for his portrayal of the merchant Sol Star on the HBO series Deadwood, Dustin Powers on Eastbound & Down, and his Academy Award-nominated performance as the menacing backwoods meth addict Teardrop in Winter's Bone.-Life and...

       - Film and television actor
    • Bret Hedican
      Bret Hedican
      Bret Michael Hedican is a retired American professional ice hockey player and a two-time US Olympian.-Playing career:Hedican was drafted 198th overall by the St. Louis Blues in the 1988 NHL Entry Draft. A product of St. Cloud State University, Hedican made his NHL debut in the 1991–92 season with...

       - Former professional hockey player, Olympian and Stanley Cup winner.
    • Lawrence Heinemi
      Lawrence Heinemi
      Larry Heinemi is a retired professional wrestler better known by the name of Lars Anderson. His career spans over a decade of performing in National Wrestling Alliance territories as well as American Wrestling Association .-Career:...

       - Professional wrestler who competed as Lars Anderson
    • Matt Hendricks
      Matt Hendricks
      Matthew J. Hendricks is an American ice hockey forward who is currently playing with the Washington Capitals of the NHL.-Playing career:...

       - Professional hockey player, Washington Capitals
      Washington Capitals
      The Washington Capitals are a professional ice hockey team based in Washington, D.C. They are members of the Southeast Division of the Eastern Conference of the National Hockey League . Since their founding in 1974, "The Caps" have won one conference championship to reach the 1998 Stanley Cup...

    • Bonnie Henrickson
      Bonnie Henrickson
      Bonnie Henrickson is the head women's college basketball coach at the University of Kansas. She was born in Willmar, Minnesota, and attended St. Cloud State University where she graduated in 1986...

       - University of Kansas women's basketball head coach
    • Jodi Huisentruit
      Jodi Huisentruit
      Jodi Sue Huisentruit was a television news anchor for KIMT, based in Mason City, Iowa in the United States. She disappeared in the early morning hours of June 27, 1995 and is believed to have been abducted. She was 27 years old at the time.-Early life:Huisentruit grew up in Long Prairie, Minnesota...

       - Former television news anchor who went missing June 27, 1995
    • Bruce Hyde - An actor who played Lt. Kevin Reilly on two episodes of Star Trek: The Original Series
      Star Trek: The Original Series
      Star Trek is an American science fiction television series created by Gene Roddenberry, produced by Desilu Productions . Star Trek was telecast on NBC from September 8, 1966, through June 3, 1969...

    • Jessica Kresa
      Jessica Kresa
      Jessica Kresa is an American professional wrestler and actress better known as ODB , currently working for Total Nonstop Action Wrestling, where she is a former three–time TNA Women's Knockout Champion....

       - TNA
      TNA
      TNA may refer to:*Tamil National Alliance, a political coalition in Sri Lanka*The National Archives, in the United Kingdom*The New Amsterdams, a band*Threose nucleic acid, an analog of the nucleic acid DNA*Tonga Nurses' Association...

       professional wrestler known as ODB
    • Leo Kottke
      Leo Kottke
      Leo Kottke is an acoustic guitarist. He is widely known for his innovative fingerpicking style, which draws on influences from blues, jazz, and folk music, and his syncopated, polyphonic melodies...

       - Fingerstyle acoustic guitar virtuoso with a four-decades long recording career
    • Ryan Malone
      Ryan Malone
      Ryan Malone is an American professional ice hockey forward currently playing for the Tampa Bay Lightning in the National Hockey League .-Playing career:...

       - Professional hockey player, Tampa Bay Lightning
      Tampa Bay Lightning
      The Tampa Bay Lightning are a professional ice hockey team based in Tampa, Florida. They are members of the Southeast Division of the Eastern Conference of the National Hockey League . They have one Stanley Cup championship in their history, in 2003–04. They are often referred to as the...

    • Bob Motzko
      Bob Motzko
      Bob Motzko is the head coach of the St. Cloud State University Huskies hockey team in St. Cloud, Minnesota. He was named the WCHA Coach of the Year in 2006 and again in 2007. He has guided the Huskies to four WCHA Final Five appearances , and three NCAA Division I tournament appearances in 2007,...

       - Men's hockey head coach at St. Cloud State
    • Joe Motzko
      Joe Motzko
      Joseph Andrew Motzko is an American ice hockey forward currently with ERC Ingolstadt of the Deutsche Eishockey Liga.-Playing career:...

       - Professional hockey player
    • Harold J. Nevin, Jr.
      Harold J. Nevin, Jr.
      Harold J. Nevin is a retired Brigadier General in the National Guard of the United States and former Assistant Adjutant General for Readiness and Training of the Wisconsin Army National Guard.-Education:*Graduate - United States Army Officer Candidate School...

      , U.S. National Guard general
    • Andreas Nödl
      Andreas Nödl
      Andreas Nödl is an Austrian professional ice hockey right winger currently playing for the Carolina Hurricanes of the National Hockey League .-Playing career:...

       - Professional hockey player, Philadelphia Flyers
      Philadelphia Flyers
      The Philadelphia Flyers are a professional ice hockey team based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. They are members of the Atlantic Division of the Eastern Conference of the National Hockey League...

    • Mark Parrish
      Mark Parrish
      Mark Daniel Parrish is an American professional ice hockey right winger in the Ottawa Senators organization. He has played 10 seasons in the NHL for the Florida Panthers, New York Islanders, Los Angeles Kings, Minnesota Wild, Dallas Stars, Tampa Bay Lightning and Buffalo Sabres-Playing...

       - Professional hockey player, Buffalo Sabres
      Buffalo Sabres
      The Buffalo Sabres are a professional ice hockey team based in Buffalo, New York. They are members of the Northeast Division of the Eastern Conference of the National Hockey League .-Founding and early success: 1970-71—1980-81:...

    • John Stumpf
      John Stumpf
      John Stumpf became Chairman for Wells Fargo & Company in January 2010. He was named Chief Executive Officer in June 2007, elected to Wells Fargo’s Board of Directors in June 2006, and has been President since August 2005....

       - Chief executive officer of Wells Fargo & Company
    • David Swanson - former chief executive officer of R.H. Donnelley Publishing/Dex One (Dex Yellow Pages)
    • H. Timothy ("Tim") Vakoc
      Tim Vakoc
      Henry Timothy "Tim" Vakoc was a Roman Catholic priest and a United States Army chaplain during the Iraq War, attaining the rank of major. Vakoc was the first U.S. military chaplain to die from wounds received in the Iraq War...

       – the first U.S. military chaplain to die from wounds received in the Iraq War.
    • Steve Martinson
      Steve Martinson
      Steven Martinson is a retired American professional ice hockey player. He played in 50 NHL games with the Detroit Red Wings, Montreal Canadiens, and Minnesota North Stars over parts of four seasons...

       - Retired professional hockey player, current professional hockey head coach (Chicago Express)

    Notable Faculty and Staff

    • Herb Brooks
      Herb Brooks
      Herbert Paul Brooks, Jr. was an American ice hockey player and coach. He notably coached the United States' men's hockey team to a 4-3 upset of the heavily favored Soviet Union in the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, New York on February 22, 1980...

      , former St. Cloud State and U.S. Olympic Men's hockey coach
    • Bruce Hyde, original cast member of the American TV show Star Trek
    • Christopher Lehman, author of history books on African Americans
    • Mary Wingerd, author and Minnesota historian
    • John Harlander, designer of optical spectrometers used in near-space research
    • Heiko Schoenfuss, expert on the effects of man-made contaminants in lakes and streams

    Presidents of St. Cloud State

    External links

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