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St. Olaf College was founded in 1874 as a coeducational, residential, four-year private liberal arts college and is affiliated with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA).
St. Olaf enrolls over 3,000 students, and its academic divisions provide 38 Bachelor of Arts and four Bachelor of Music degree programs at the undergraduate level. This college offers pre-professional preparation in architecture, dentistry, engineering, law, medicine, pharmacy, social work, theology, and veterinary medicine.
Most St. Olaf students reside on its 345 acre (1.4 km²) campus, which is located in Northfield, Minnesota, 40 miles (60 km) south of Minneapolis/St. Paul.
St. Olaf's music program, founded by F. Melius Christiansen in 1903, is world-renowned. Its band, choir and orchestra tour the continental U.S annually and have made several critically-acclaimed international tours. The St. Olaf Band was the first American college musical organization to conduct a concert tour abroad when it travelled to Norway in 1906. The band is also credited with introducing the saxophone and the game of baseball to Norway.
The St. Olaf Choir, founded by Christiansen in 1907 as the St. John's Lutheran Church Choir, is regarded as one of the premiere a cappella college choirs in the United States. It has toured Europe several times, as well as China, Korea, and Australia, performing before heads of state and producing over a dozen recordings. The choir performs in the nationally-broadcast annual St. Olaf Christmas Festival along with St. Olaf Orchestra and 5 of the college's other choirs.
The following is a quote from St. Olaf's promotional material:
St. Olaf is the traditional athletic and academic rival of Carleton College.