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Private Jesuit university in Ohio, U.s.a.

Xavier Academy
Xavier University seal.svg
Latin: Universitas Xaveriana

Onetime names

Athenaeum
(1831-1840)
St. Xavier College
(1840–1930)
Motto Vidit Mirabilia Magna (Latin)

Motto in English

He has seen great wonders
Type Private university
Established 1831; 191 years agone  (1831) [1]

Religious affiliation

Roman Catholic (Jesuit)

Academic affiliations

AJCU ACCU
GCCCU CIC[2]
Endowment $259.30million (2021)[3]
President Colleen Hanycz
Provost Rachel Chrastil

Academic staff

  • 392 Total-time
  • 399 Part-time
[4]
Students 6,651[iv]
Undergraduates 5,145[four]
Postgraduates ane,506[4]
Location

Cincinnati

,

Ohio

,

Usa

Campus 205 acres (83.0 ha)
Colors  Navy Blue -  White -  Silverish [5]
Nickname Musketeers

Sporting affiliations

NCAA Partitioning I – Big East Conference[1]
Mascot D'Artagnan the Musketeer
The Blue Blob[6]
Website www.xavier.edu
Xavier University Shield banner.svg

Xavier University ([7] [8] [9]) is a private Jesuit university in Cincinnati and Norwood, Ohio. It is the sixth-oldest Cosmic and fourth-oldest Jesuit university in the United States.[ten] Xavier has an undergraduate enrollment of 5,145 students and graduate enrollment of i,506 students. The school's system comprises the principal campus in Cincinnati, Ohio, as well as regional locations for the Accelerated Bachelor of Science in Nursing (ABSN) program in Columbus and Cleveland.

Xavier University is primarily an undergraduate, liberal arts institution. It provides an education in the Jesuit tradition, which emphasizes learning through community service, interdisciplinary courses and the date of religion, theology, philosophy and ethics studies.

Xavier's athletic teams, known equally the Xavier Musketeers, compete in the National Collegiate Able-bodied Association (NCAA) Sectionalization I level in the Big East Conference.

History [edit]

St. Xavier Church building, bishop's residence, and St. Xavier College in 1848

Xavier University is the fourth oldest Jesuit University and the sixth oldest Catholic university in the U.s.a..[11] The school was founded in 1831[12] as a men's higher in downtown Cincinnati next to St. Francis Xavier Church building on Sycamore Street. The Athenaeum, as information technology was then chosen, was dedicated to the patronage of Saint Francis Xavier by Bishop Edward Fenwick on Oct 17, 1831.[thirteen] Upon Bishop John Baptist Purcell's request, the Society of Jesus took control of The Athenaeum in 1840, and the proper noun was changed to St. Xavier Higher in award of the 16th century Castilian Jesuit missionary, St. Francis Xavier who, like the founder of the Jesuits, Ignatius Loyola, was a Spanish Basque.

St. Xavier Higher moved in 1912 to its current Norwood location, about 5 miles (viii.0 km) n of downtown Cincinnati, after the purchase of 26 acres (0.11 kmtwo) from the Avondale Able-bodied Club.[14] The "original" Anthenaeum is now the seminary of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati. St. Xavier College and St. Xavier Loftier School officially split in 1919, though they did not go financially contained until 1934. The school's name was inverse a second time to its current name, Xavier University, in 1930.[15]

Xavier fully admitted women starting in 1969, but women began attending the higher in 1914 in the evening, weekend, and summer school divisions.[xvi] Edgecliff College, another Cosmic college in Cincinnati, merged with Xavier University in 1980.[17]

Academics [edit]

Majors and Minors [edit]

Xavier University has more than 90 undergraduate majors and xl graduate programs within the College of Arts and Sciences, The College of Professional Sciences, The College of Nursing and the Williams Higher of Concern.[18] Majors include nursing, business, biomedical sciences, psychology, biology, exploratory, do science, sport management, sport marketing and finance. All students must complete the core curriculum (see beneath).[nineteen]

Rankings [edit]

  • Xavier was ranked fifth (necktie) among 157 Midwest colleges and universities by U.Due south. News & World Report for its 2021 edition of America's Best Colleges report.[20]
  • Forbes ranked Xavier #458 among its 'Top Colleges in America' for 2021[21]
  • Princeton Review ranked Xavier among its 'Best 378 Colleges in America' for 2022[22]
  • Niche ranked Xavier the #3 Cosmic College in Ohio for 2022[23]
  • U.S. News & Globe Study ranked Xavier #6 in 'Most Innovative Schools in the Midwest' for 2021[xx]
  • U.S. News & World Report ranked Xavier #11 in 'Best Undergraduate Instruction Programs in the Midwest' for 2021[20]

Smith Hall, which houses the Williams College of Busines

Core curriculum [edit]

Undergraduate students attending Xavier must consummate a significant number of distribution requirements that are more than unremarkably known as the Cadre Curriculum. In that location are required courses in: Theology, Philosophy, Mathematics, Fine Arts, History, Physical Science, Literature, Second Linguistic communication, and the Social Sciences.

Honorary social club chapters [edit]

Xavier has several honorary society capacity, including:

  • Alpha Sigma Nu, the honor society of Jesuit institutions of college education[24]
  • Beta Alpha Psi, an honor organisation for financial information students and professionals[25]
  • Beta Gamma Sigma, the international accolade society serving business programs accredited by AACSB International[26]
  • Phi Beta Kappa, an elite honor guild present within only x% of universities[27]
  • Mortar Board, national honor society recognizing higher seniors[28]
  • Eta Sigma Phi, an honor society aimed at preserving interest and scholarship in Classical Studies.

Campus [edit]

The Gallagher Student Center.

The campus covers approximately 205 acres (0.83 kmtwo)[29] in the City of Cincinnati (Evanston neighborhood). At the center of campus are the Gallagher Pupil Center and Bellarmine Chapel. Bellarmine Chapel's roof is in the shape of a hyperbolic paraboloid, too known equally a saddle roof, that will not collapse even if the Chapel walls were removed.[xxx] The chapel is as well home to an agile parish community independent of the university.[31]

Academic mall [edit]

Six buildings with castle architecture overlook Victory parkway on ane side of the Bookish Mall: Lindner Hall (dwelling to the Department of Physics),[32] Logan Hall (home to the Chemistry Department),[33] Albers Hall (home to the Biology Department),[34] Hinkle Hall (dwelling to the Departments of Mathematics, Computer science, English, History, Philosophy and Theology),[35] Schmidt Hall (houses the Academy Administration offices) [36] and Edgecliff Hall (home to the Department of Music).[37]

The other side of the Bookish mall includes three buildings: Walter Schott Hall (habitation to the Office of Admission, Office of Fiscal Help and the Departments of Mod Languages, Classics, Communication Arts, Political Scientific discipline and Sociology),[38] McDonald Library (dwelling house to the University Library and Athenaeum)[39] and Alter Hall (main classroom building on campus). [40]

Our Lady of Peace Chapel was relocated to the Academic Mall in 2018. Originally constructed in 1938 past Charles F. and Elizabeth R. Williams on their belongings in Anderson Township, the 22-seat chapel is now located off Dana Artery on the due west end of the Bookish Mall.[41]

Academic Quad [edit]

The Academic Quad, also known as the Hoff Quad, is east of the Bookish Mall. It includes three buildings: Conaton Learning Eatables (home to bookish support services),[42] Smith Hall (home to the Williams College of Business organization)[43] and Hailstones Hall (traditional classroom building).[44]

Residential Mall [edit]

The Residential Mall, due north of the Bookish mall, includes 4 underclassmen residence halls: Brockman Hall,[45] Buenger Hall,[46] Kuhlman Hall[47] and Husman Hall.[48] The all-purpose expanse for students and events between Kuhlman, Husman and Gallagher is referred to equally "The Xavier Yard."

A residential complex called Justice Hall (formerly known as Fenwick Place[49]) opened in autumn 2011 to the south of the Residential Mall. It is home to the campus dining middle in improver to providing housing for upper-class students.

West Campus [edit]

West campus is on the due west side of Victory Parkway. Athletic facilities include J. Page Hayden Field, Corcoran Soccer Field, Schmidt Fieldhouse[50] and the Heidt Champion Heart (formerly O'Connor Recreational Eye).[51]

Academic buildings include: St. Barbara Hall and the Armory (domicile to Xavier's ROTC program),[52] Joseph Hall (Dwelling to the Education and Sports Studies Departments)[53] and Elet Hall (dwelling house to the Department of Psychology).[54]

East Campus [edit]

The Cintas Eye, where the Musketeers host their basketball game games, is adjacent to the Residential Mall. In addition to the 10,250-seat arena, Cintas also includes the Schiff Conference Centre and the James and Caroline Duff Feast Eye. The A. B. Cohen Center, located across the parking lot from Cintas Center, is home to the Art Department and Xavier Fine art Gallery.

The Health United Building opened in 2019.[55] Located betwixt Academy Station and the Eatables Apartments, the facility houses a recreational center, an upgraded wellness and wellness center, and classroom facilities and labs for v academic programs: Nursing, Occupational Therapy, Health Services Administration, Sport Studies and Radiologic Engineering science.[56]

Athletics [edit]

Xavier competes at the NCAA Division I level in the Big East Conference, and their mascot is D'Artagnan the Musketeer. Xavier sponsors eight intercollegiate sports for men, and eight sports for women.[57] The University's graduation charge per unit of 94%[58] is the 3rd highest graduation rate for athletes in the nation backside Knuckles University and Stanford University. Xavier sports teams accept several traditional rivalries with local universities, including the University of Cincinnati and the Villanova University.

Xavier was a founding fellow member of the Midwestern City Conference in 1979. Renamed the Midwestern Collegiate Briefing in 1985, information technology is now known equally the Horizon League. Xavier was a member of the Atlantic 10 Briefing from 1995 to 2013 where information technology enjoyed many successful basketball seasons. On March 20, 2013, the Xavier administration announced that the school volition join the newly created Big East following the realignment of the old Big Eastward Conference,[59] and moved to the new conference July 1, 2013.

The basketball game and volleyball teams play in the 10,250-seat Cintas Center on campus which opened in 2000.[60]

Men'southward basketball game [edit]

The Xavier men'southward basketball game squad is perchance the best known of the sports sponsored at Xavier. The squad has enjoyed considerable recent success, reaching the Aristocracy Eight in the NCAA Tournament in 2004, 2008, and 2017. Since 1985, every men's basketball player who has played every bit a senior has graduated with a degree.[61] During the era of college football'southward at present-defunct Basin Championship Series, Xavier was one of just two schools outside the master BCS conferences (a grouping now known equally the Ability V) to exist listed among the pinnacle 20 most valuable programs in higher basketball (the other being UNLV) according to Forbes.[62]

Football game [edit]

Xavier fielded an NCAA Division I football game squad until the 1973 season.

Baseball game [edit]

Hayden Field seen from Hinkle Hall

The Xavier baseball team won the 2014 Big Eastward Championship and participated in the Nashville Regional. The 2009 Xavier Baseball team won the Atlantic 10 tournament and participated in the Houston Regional.

Swimming [edit]

The Xavier men's swim team earned the school's first Big E Briefing Championship in 2014.[63] The squad was led by caput coach Brent MacDonald, who earned Big East Coach of the Twelvemonth in 2014, 2015, and 2020.[64] The Xavier men's swim team overall has captured the Big East Title in 2014, 2015, 2016, 2019, 2020, and 2021 making it their 2nd three peat and 6th title in their eight years since joining the conference in 2013.[65]

Club sports [edit]

The guild sports program is designed to serve the interests of Xavier University students, faculty, and staff in different sports and recreational activities. These interests may be competitive, recreational, and/or instructional in nature.

The Xavier Men'southward Volleyball Club Team took dwelling house second place at Nationals in April 2019. No other squad in the history of Xavier Sports has made it that far in a national tournament.

Mascots [edit]

Xavier is one of a handful of universities with two mascots.[66] D'Artagnan, the Musketeer, is the university's official mascot and is the origin of the schoolhouse'south nickname, The Xavier Musketeers. The Musketeer concept was suggested in 1925 past the late Reverend Francis J. Finn, S.J.

The Bluish Blob came nearly in 1985 when the spirit squad coordinators realized that a more audience-friendly mascot was needed. The musketeer mascot, who sported a handlebar mustache and a prop sword, scared younger spectators.[half dozen] The Blue Blob is a furry beast that has made several television and magazine appearances over the years, including a controversial PlayBoy advent.[67] The Blue Hulk has Bobble-Body dolls,[68] Plush replicas,[69] and T-shirts made in his likeness, and an annual Blue Blob Appreciation Night during the Musketeer'southward basketball season. He most recently appeared on two ESPN This is SportsCenter commercials with Pro Football game Hall of Fame fellow member Jim Kelly and SportsCenter anchors Scott Van Pelt and John Anderson.[70]

Media [edit]

Virtually Xavier games can be heard on WLW or WKRC-AM. Joe Sunderman does the play-by-play and Byron Larkin does color commentary. Trick Sports Net Ohio holds the local boob tube rights to the Musketeers basketball game games. Brad Johansen does play-by-play and Steve Wolf is the analyst. Over the air stations, WCPO-Idiot box and WSTR-Television have held the rights to Xavier games in the by.

Faith and Service [edit]

The Dorothy Day Center for Faith and Justice is an important role of Xavier University's mission to course men and women for others.[71]

Pupil programs [edit]

At the beginning of freshman year, the Center gives students opportunities to form customs amid themselves, with an attempt at inclusiveness across all lines of religion and culture.[72] They are then encouraged to join the other students in choosing from a diverseness of service opportunities.

Students can pursue community service through the post-obit programs: work in the Nexus community garden, weekly service with organizations in the Cincinnati area through the Ten-Alter program, Customs Action Day when the whole XU community and alumni are encouraged to give a twenty-four hour period of service to the larger customs, a monthly service opportunity at St. Francis Seraph Soup Kitchen,[73] and Culling Breaks offering opportunities to serve in the United states and abroad during fall and spring breaks.[74] A full of 25 immersion trips are offered.[75] It is estimated that students perform more than sixty,000 service hours in a year.[76]

Most programs include reflection components, and the post-obit programs facilitated by the Center are also staged to provoke reflection: Ignatian Family Teach-In for Justice, Stories of Solidarity, Jesuit Martyrs of El Salvador commemoration, and Contemplatives in Action.[77]

More intensive service experiences include the following:

  • Summer Service Internship allows 20 students to live on campus while being paid for working at an area non-profit.[78]
  • Graduate Internship employs graduates to work forth with the CFJ staff.[79]
  • Xavier eRecruiting is the Heart'due south listing of non-profit internships nationwide. This is supplemented by Idealist.org which includes also international listings. Sponsors of internships include Scripps Howard Foundation, the Catholic Archdiocese, the Catholic Campaign for Human Evolution, and Customs Shares.[80]
  • GetAway for Beginning Yr Students, with opportunities to organize and make spiritual retreats.[81]
  • Graduate Schoolhouse and Year-of-Service Fair introduces students to over 50 options for a yr of service afterward graduation, at home and abroad. Some of the more popular are Peace Corps, Jesuit Volunteer Corps, Public Allies, and Americorps. Long listings of possibilities are on websites hosted past Stanford, Notre Dame, Service Leader, and Volunteer.gov.[82]

Notable alumni [edit]

  • Danny Abramowicz (born 1945), NFL wide receiver
  • George Billman, physiology professor at Ohio State
  • J. Kenneth Blackwell, Ohio Secretary of State, 2006 Republican Ohio gubernatorial candidate
  • John Boehner, Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives for the 112th Congress and 113th Congress, U.S. House of Representatives Minority Leader and Majority Leader
  • Phil H. Bucklew, Naval Officer and professional football player. Widely credited as the "Male parent of Naval Special Warfare"
  • Jim Bunning, U.S. Senator from Kentucky, member of Baseball Hall of Fame. Threw baseball's 7th perfect game as a fellow member of the Philadelphia Phillies in 1964
  • Derrick Brown, small frontwards for the New York Knicks
  • John A. Cade, Maryland Land Senator
  • Lionel Chalmers, professional basketball actor
  • Donald D. Clancy, Congressman
  • Bill Cunningham, radio talk show host for Cincinnati'south 700 WLW
  • Dane Dastillung, American football game player
  • Dennis E. Eckart, Congressman
  • Russell Findlay, first chief marketing officer, Major League Soccer
  • Thomas J. Fogarty, surgeon and inventor of the balloon embolectomy catheter
  • Edward J. Gardner, Congressman
  • GEN Michael X. Garrett, Commanding General, U.s. Army Forces Command
  • Kaiser Gates (born 1996), basketball player for Hapoel Jerusalem of the Israeli Basketball Premier League
  • Charles Geschke, President and co-founder of Adobe Systems
  • Brian Grant, NBA frontward Los Angeles Lakers
  • Nick Hagglund (born 1992), MLS player
  • Richard Hague (born 1947), poet
  • Victor Westward. Hall, U.Southward. Navy admiral
  • Michael Hawkins (built-in 1972), NBA thespian
  • Bob Heleringer (class of 1973), member of the Kentucky Firm of Representatives and Louisville lawyer[83]
  • Howard V. Hendrix, science fiction author
  • Patricia L. Herbold, U.S. Ambassador to Singapore
  • Paul John Hilbert, member of the Texas Firm of Representatives[84]
  • Tyrone Hill, NBA All Star frontward; played 14 seasons with 5 teams
  • Jack Hoffman (1930-2001), NFL player
  • Greg J. Holbrock, U.S. representative
  • Tu Holloway (born 1989), basketball actor for Maccabi Rishon LeZion in the Israeli Basketball Premier League.
  • Robert Huebner (1914-1998), virologist[85]
  • Tyrique Jones (built-in 1997), basketball player for Hapoel Tel Aviv in the Israeli Basketball Premier League
  • Jason Kokrak, professional golfer
  • Alfred James Lechner, Jr., US federal judge
  • John C. Lechleiter, President, CEO, and Chairman of Eli Lilly and Visitor
  • John Logsdon, Director of the Infinite Policy Institute at George Washington University
  • Ken Lucas, U.S. Representative from Kentucky
  • Tom Luken, Ohio politician
  • Mark Lyons, basketball game thespian, summit scorer in the Israel Basketball Premier League in both 2015 and 2017
  • Nora McInerny, writer
  • Rhine McLin, Mayor of Dayton
  • Fine art Mergenthal, American football player
  • Jack Miles, Pulitzer Prize winner
  • Ryan Nemeth, professional wrestler signed to WWE
  • Donald C. Nugent, Usa federal judge
  • David Nordyke, educator
  • Daniel Edward Pilarczyk, archbishop
  • James Posey, forward for the New Orleans Hornets, two-time NBA champion with the Miami Estrus and Boston Celtics.
  • Jalen Reynolds (born 1992), basketball game role player for Maccabi Tel Aviv of the Israeli Basketball Premier League and Euroleague.
  • Dennis L. Riley (born 1945), pol who served in the New Jersey General Associates, represented the fourth Legislative District from 1980 to 1990.[86]
  • Richard Romanus, actor best known for recurring role in The Sopranos
  • Robert Romanus, actor best known for role in Fast Times at Ridgemont Loftier
  • Romain Sato, Central African basketball player
  • Chris Seelbach, Cincinnati Metropolis Council member
  • Dom Sigillo, American football player
  • Julianne Smith, U.Due south. Ambassador to NATO
  • Matt Stainbrook, basketball player in the German language Bundesliga
  • Derek Strong (built-in 1968), NBA player
  • Francis Wade, philosopher
  • David W, power forrard for the Aureate State Warriors. 2003 USBWA National Player of the Twelvemonth and ii-time NBA All-Star
  • Carroll Williams, player of gridiron football
  • Garry Wills, Pulitzer Prize-winning author

Notable faculty [edit]

  • Arthur J. Dewey, New Testament scholar
  • John J. Gilligan, Congressman and Governor of Ohio
  • Paul F. Knitter, theologian
  • Richard Polt, Heidegger scholar; manual typewriter enthusiast
  • Henry Heimlich, "inventor" of Heimlich Maneuver, Avant-garde Clinical Science Professor 1977–89
  • Boris Podolsky, physicist and "creator" of the EPR paradox
  • Norman Finkelstein, poet and literary critic

See likewise [edit]

  • List of Jesuit sites
  • Xavier Newswire

References [edit]

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  2. ^ "Institutional Memberships". Xavier University. Retrieved July 25, 2019.
  3. ^ As of June 30, 2021 . {{cite report |url= https://www.xavier.edu/treasury/index}
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  85. ^ Noble, Holcomb B. (September 5, 1998). "Robert Huebner, 84, Dies; Constitute Virus-Cancer Connections". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved June 23, 2020.
  86. ^ Staff. Manual of the Legislature of New Jersey: 1987 edition, p. 243. E. J. Mullin, 1987. Accessed September 13, 2016. "Dennis L. Riley, Dem., Gloucester Township - Mr. Riley was born Sept. 13, 1945, in Ottawa, Ill. He studied at Xavier Academy and the University of Cincinnati, and received his police force degree at the Camden Police force School of Rutgers University in 1972, the yr of his admission to the bar."

Further reading [edit]

  • Fortin, Roger Antonio (Nov 1, 2006). To See Nifty Wonders: A History of Xavier University, 1831–2006. Scranton, Pennsylvania: University of Scranton Printing. ISBN1-58966-152-iv . Retrieved January eleven, 2016.

External links [edit]

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata
  • Xavier Athletics website

Coordinates: 39°08′55″N 84°28′41″W  /  39.14868°N 84.47799°W  / 39.14868; -84.47799

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xavier_University

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