Butler University: Difference between revisions
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|free = 19 Division I [[National Collegiate Athletic Association|NCAA]] teams,<br/>called Bulldogs |
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|website = [http://www.butler.edu/ www.butler.edu] |
|website = [http://www.butler.edu/ www.butler.edu] |
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|colors = Blue/White |
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Revision as of 19:11, 3 February 2009
Motto | Education, Research, Service |
---|---|
Type | Private coeducational liberal arts |
Established | 1855 |
Endowment | $139.6 million[1] |
President | Bobby Fong |
Students | 4,437 |
Undergraduates | 3,939 |
Postgraduates | 498 |
Location | , , |
Campus | Urban: 290 acres (1.2 km²) |
Athletics | 19 Division I NCAA teams, called Bulldogs |
Colors | Blue/White |
Website | www.butler.edu |
Butler University is a private liberal arts university in Indianapolis, Indiana. It was founded by abolitionist and attorney Ovid Butler in 1855. It serves over 4,000 undergraduate and graduate students in 60 degree programs through five colleges: Business Administration, Education, Liberal Arts and Sciences, Pharmacy and Health Sciences, and the Jordan College of Fine Arts.
North Western Christian University was the name when the school opened on November 1, 1855, at what is now 13th and College, with no president, 2 professors, and 20 students. In 1875, the university moved to a 25-acre (100,000 m2) campus in Irvington. It was there that the school was renamed Butler University "in recognition of Ovid Butler's inspirational vision, determined leadership, and financial support." In 1922, they purchased Fairview Park, and in 1928, moved their campus to the current Fairview location. The campus consists of 31 buildings covering an area of 290 acres (1.2 km²).
Academics
Bobby Fong is the president of Butler. National guides give Butler high marks for academic quality with an emphasis on the liberal arts and sciences. Butler ranks 4th in the US News & World Report's America's Best Colleges 2008 for Top Midwestern Master's Universities.[1] The university emphasizes practicality of knowledge. Butler University offers individual attention to its students with its small class size and no teaching assistants. Butler University has increased its focus on research with the Butler Summer Institute, a 10 week program where Butler students are granted funding to perform independent research with a faculty member. Butler's tuition, room and board total $36,440 annually.
Radio and broadcast television
From 1950 until 1994 Butler University owned and operated, what was at one point, the most powerful student-run radio station in the United States, WAJC, with an effective radiated power of 48,212 watts and circularly polarised transmitting antennas at 500 feet. The tower and transmitter building were located adjacent to Hinkle Fieldhouse. WAJC was initially assigned to 91.9MHz FM in 1947. Objections from the engineers of a local TV station on channel 6, WRTV, based upon the proximity of the channel 6 audio signal (87.75MHz) to the low end of the FM band, raised concerns about potential FM capture interference from WAJC to channel 6 viewers in the near-northside of Indianapolis, in the immediate vicinity of the WAJC transmitter site. WAJC was moved to 104.5MHz in 1956 to reduce the possibility of interference. 104.5 would later be allocated to the commercial portion of the US FCC's bandplan for FM radio, while 92MHz and below was reserved for educational stations. This meant the 104.5 frequency became very commercially valuable in years to come as the band was filled to capacity. In 1993 Butler sold the station and used part of the seven million dollars earned through the sale to upgrade the Telecommunications major and improve a donated building at 2835 N. Illinois Street, the former WIBC (then 1070kHz AM) and WNAP (then 93.1MHz FM) radio studios, to support the program. The School started WTBU, a PBS affiliate, on channel 69. After competing for years with WFYI for PBS audiences, in 1999 then president Geoffrey Bannister then signed agreement to operate under a joint operating agreement, which eventually saw WFYI absorb control of the station, leaving Butler to run the academics. In 2001 New Butler President Bobby Fong opened the Telecommunications building on Butler's campus, and almost simultaneously announced the sale of the traditional broadcast station to Telemundo, moving WTBU to a cable-based campus-only broadcaster. The Telecommunications Arts program was renamed "Media Arts" in 2004 although the focus stayed on broadcast skills, including audio production.The department has temporarily suspended its campus-cable channel, and has focused its attention on the web. The department now produces several shows including the BU Beat, Random Acts, Music Box, and the new sports show, the Bulldog Blitz.[2]. The Bulldog Blitz was picked up by Comcast-On Demand in Indiana in 2008.
Theatre
Butler's Department of Theatre is known for producing works not commonly seen elsewhere. Focusing on physical and International theatre, Butler has staged experimental interpretations of Samuel Beckett, a complete season of Caryl Churchill works, St. Joan as a montage performance piece and productions incorporating music, dance and media projection in collaboration with the other three departments of the Jordan College of Fine Arts. Each summer a professional artist is invited to present a two-week intensive course on a topic not covered in the usual academic text. This has included work with Italian and Russian directors, an Indian classical dancer, Australian installation artists and a multi-national montage performance group. Butler Theater's web page is: [3]
Athletics
Butler University's athletic teams, known as the Bulldogs, compete in the NCAA Division I Horizon League. Butler's basketball arena, Hinkle Fieldhouse, was the largest basketball arena in the US for several decades. It is considered a Hoosier Hysteria icon: from its opening in 1928 until 1971, it was the site of the final rounds of the Indiana state high school basketball tournament and was the site for the championship game in the movie Hoosiers. Butler holds two national championships in men's basketball; one from 1924, and one from 1929. [4]
In 1954, Butler hosted the historic final when Milan High School (enrollment 161) defeated Muncie High School [now Muncie Central] (enrollment over 1,600) to win the state title. The state final depicted in the 1986 movie Hoosiers, loosely based on the Milan Miracle story, was shot in Hinkle Fieldhouse. A renovation of the Butler Bowl (football stadium) is now finished and includes field turf, which allows the Butler Bowl to host football, soccer, and other events.
The 2006-2007 men's Butler basketball team won the NIT Season Tip-Off, which in part helped them to be named one of the top 12 underdog sports stories of 2006 by ESPN. [5]For the third time in six years, the Bulldogs won their first ten games. Butler finished the regular season ranked No. 19 in both the latest ESPN/USA Today Coaches and AP Top 25 Polls. [6] [7] The Butler program has traditionally been one of the best of the so-called "mid-major" basketball programs over the last decade, having won at least 20 games and reached postseason play eight of the last ten seasons, including five NCAA Tournaments.[8] The now-unique style of team play that many have said harkens back to the Hoosier glory days, as well as being called the way the game should be played, has been dubbed "The Butler Way" by the Bulldog program. [9] During the 06-07 season, Butler junior guard AJ Graves was named a Wooden Award National Player of the Year finalist in men's college basketball, while Head Coach Todd Lickliter was also awarded the 2006-07 mid-season Jim Phelan National Coach of the Year[10] and the National Association of Basketball Coaches National Coach of the Year honors.
In the 2007 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament Butler earned a 5th seed, the highest seed in the school's history. It's previous highest seed was 10th in 2001. Butler was ranked in the AP Top 25 throughout the 2006-2007 season, and as high as No. 9, another school record. In the first round of the Midwest Regional, Butler defeated 12th seeded Old Dominion University 57-46. In round two of the Midwest Regional, Butler defeated the 4th seeded Maryland by a score of 62 to 59, earning a trip to the Sweet Sixteen in St. Louis, MO to play #1 seed University of Florida. This marked the second time in five years and the third time in the school's history that Butler has reached the Sweet Sixteen.
Butler reached the Sweet Sixteen as a No. 12 seed in the 2003 NCAA Tournament by defeating No. 5 Mississippi State and No. 4 Louisville, becoming that year's Cinderella. Butler also defeated Wake Forest, 79-63, in the first round of the 2001 NCAA Tournament as a No. 10 seed, while their heartbreaking 69-68 overtime loss to eventual national runner-up Florida in the 2000 tournament as a No. 12 seed has seen regular rotation on TV over the years as an ESPN "Classic." Butler's exclusion as a 25-5 team from the 2002 tournament was also considered by many as the biggest NCAA selection "snub" in several years. [11][12][13]
Of note, Butler has the best winning percentage and most wins of all D-I men's basketball programs in the state of Indiana over the last decade (21.6 wins per year through 2006), while having won the last six meetings with in-state rival Notre Dame and two of the last four against Indiana University.[14][15] Butler defeated both Notre Dame and Indiana during the 2006-07 regular season, while also defeating in-state rival Purdue to move to 2-0 against the Boilermakers this decade. Butler has also been the defending champion of the Hoosier Classic men's basketball tournament since the 2001-02 season,[16][17] and has advanced to postseason play eight of the last ten years (5 NCAA's, 3 NIT's). Butler has been to six NCAA Tournaments since 1997. [18]
Butler also has a strong history in soccer. The Bulldogs reached the NCAA Tournaments round of 16 in the sport in both 1995 and 1998. Butler has won the Horizon League (formerly MCC) tournament title in 1995, 1997, 1998, and 2001. The 1998 squad enjoyed national rankings as high as No. 8 in the country.
In 2000, the Butler University Hockey Team won the American Collegiate Hockey Association's Division III National Championship, beating National Runner-Up Georgia Tech. The tournament was hosted by the US Naval Academy.
Some of Butler's most notable athletic accomplishments have come in Cross Country. Butler has won nine straight Horizon League Championships in Men's Cross Country and five straight Women's Championships. The Men's team has placed as high as 4th in the nation in recent years, earning a team trophy at the NCAA Division I championships in 2004. Both teams have frequently qualified for nationals in recent years, placing individuals as high as 3rd (Mark Tucker, 2003). All-Americans from the Butler Cross Country Team include Julius Mwangi, Justin Young, Fraser Thompson (A Rhodes Scholar), Mark Tucker, and Olly Laws. Coach Joe Franklin was named NCAA Division I Coach of the Year for leading the Bulldogs to their 2004 4th place finish.
Fight Song
Butler War Song
We'll sing the Butler war song,
We'll give a fighting cry;
We'll fight the Butler battle--
Bulldogs ever do or die.
And in the glow of the victory firelight,
Hist'ry cannot deny
To add a page or two
For Butler's fighting crew
Beneath the Hoosier sky.
- [http://www.butler.edu/spirit/webSnap/mp3/warsong.mp3 Audio Version
Notable alumni
- Kurt Vonnegut, attended & honorary degree
- Marguerite Young (author of poetry, fiction, non-fiction, and criticism)
- David Starr Jordan (PhD, President of Indiana University and first president of Stanford University)
- Bobby Plump (Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame Inductee, and hero of the 1954 Milan High School Championship Basketball Team.)
- Ed Carpenter (IndyCar Series Driver)
- Michael Lynn Miles (Walgreens' first pharmacist)
- George Ryan (former Illinois Governor)
- Howard Caldwell (long-time Indianapolis TV news anchor)
- Peter Lupus (actor and bodybuilder)
- Lance McAllister (Cincinnati talk show host)
- Corey McPherrin (sportscaster)
- Jay B. Love (CEO of eTapestry)
- Thad Matta (Ohio State Men's Basketball Head Coach)
- Todd Lickliter (University of Iowa Men's Basketball Head Coach)
- John Minko (WFAN update anchor, play-by-play announcer for Army football)
- Pat Neshek (MLB - Minnesota Twins Pitcher)
- Dan Johnson (baseball) (MLB - Tampa Bay Devil Rays Infielder/ DH)
- Johann Sebastian Paetsch (musician and cellist)
- Robert Marshall (attended; international speed skater)
- Lawrence Trissel (pharmacist and author of Trissel's Tables)
- Sarah Fisher (attended; IndyCar Series Driver)
- Harry S. New (U.S. Senator from Indiana and Postmaster General)
- Thaddeus Davis (Notable choreographer of contemporary ballet)
- Dave Calabro,(Current track announcer for Indianapolis Motor Speedway and Sports Director/Anchor for WTHR in Indianapolis)
- Arthur C. Cope (deceased), American Chemist and originator of the Cope elimination and Cope rearrangement
- Barry S. Collier (Athletic Director Butler University and former Head Basketball Coach)
- Avriel Shull (Notable Mid-Century Modern architect)
- Jim Jones (notorious founder of the Peoples Temple)
- Ensemble 48 (Modern classical music ensemble)
Notable faculty
- Dan Barden, author of John Wayne: A Novel
- John Beversluis, author of C.S. Lewis and the Search for Rational Religion and Cross Examining Socrates
- Joe Franklin, 2004 NCAA Division I Cross Country Coach of the Year
- Jerry Farrell, mathematics professor best-known for designing some famous New York Times crossword puzzles, such as 1996 "Election Day"
- Paul D. "Tony" Hinkle, developed the orange basketball
- James Mulholland, prolific composer of choral and instrumental music
- Lauren Smith, actress
- Dr. Jon Sorenson, mathematician and head of the computer science department
- Dean Michael Zimmerman, evolutionary biologist and founder of The Clergy Letter Project.
- Rosanna Ruffo, Former dancer with the Mariinski theatre.
- Jim Phillippe (deceased), Former track announcer for Indianapolis Motor Speedway and recipient of Butler Medal of Honor
- Gordon Clark (deceased), American philosopher and Calvinist theologian
- Andrea Gullickson, widely regarded as one of the best and most well known concert oboists in the world, Chair of the School of Music until 2008, she was fired by Dean of JCFA. Controversial has also raised public awareness of Butler community.
Greek organizations
Fraternities
- Alpha Phi Alpha Citywide Charter, although it has members who attend Butler University
- Delta Tau Delta
- Lambda Chi Alpha
- Phi Delta Theta
- Phi Kappa Psi
- Sigma Chi
- Sigma Nu
- Soda Club
- Tau Kappa Epsilon
Sororities
- Alpha Kappa Alpha Citywide Charter, although it has members who attend Butler University
- Alpha Chi Omega
- Alpha Phi
- Delta Delta Delta
- Delta Gamma
- Kappa Kappa Gamma
- Kappa Alpha Theta
- Pi Beta Phi
- Sigma Gamma Rho (Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc. was founded November 12, 1922, at Butler University. A commemorative stained glass window is located just outside the tower room at the south end of Atherton Union.)
Honorary
- Kappa Kappa Psi, National Honorary Band Fraternity, Alpha Beta Chapter
- Sigma Rho Delta, National Dance Fraternity/Sorority, Alpha Chapter
- Tau Beta Sigma, National Honorary Band Sorority, Epsilon Chapter
Professional Fraternites
- Pi Sigma Alpha, Sigma Gamma Chapter
- Phi Delta Chi
- Kappa Psi
- Alpha Kappa Psi
- Psi Chi
Points of interest
- Holcomb Gardens - 20 acre gardens containing a statue of Persephone, a pond, and a local canal.
- Clowes Memorial Hall
- Hinkle Fieldhouse
- Irwin Library, designed by Minoru Yamasaki
- Holcomb Observatory and Planetarium - home to the largest telescope in Indiana
References
- 1 endowment "America's Best Colleges 2006". U.S. News & World Report. Retrieved 2006-01-24.
External links
- Official website
- Admission website
- Student bloggers and forums
- Official athletics website
- Campus map
- Butler University Libraries website
- Butler University Information Technology
- Butler University Academics
Template:Associated New American Colleges 39°50′22″N 86°10′17″W / 39.83944°N 86.17139°W