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Henry Kendall College of Arts Sciences University of Tulsa

Private university in Oklahoma, The states

The Academy of Tulsa
UTULSEA1.png

Former names

Henry Kendall College (1894–1920)
Motto Wisdom, Religion, Service
Type Private research university
Established 1894; 128 years ago  (1894)

Academic affiliations

APCU
ORAU
NAICU[1]
Endowment $ane.36 billion (2021)[2]
President Brad Carson[iii]

Academic staff

306 (full-fourth dimension)
Students 3,740
Undergraduates 2,743
Postgraduates 997
Location

Tulsa

,

Oklahoma

,

United States


36°09′08″N 95°56′47″W  /  36.15222°N 95.94639°W  / 36.15222; -95.94639 Coordinates: 36°09′08″N 95°56′47″W  /  36.15222°Due north 95.94639°West  / 36.15222; -95.94639
Campus Urban, 230 acres (930,000 m2)
Colors Royal blue, erstwhile golden, and crimson[4]
Nickname Gilded Hurricane

Sporting affiliations

NCAA Division I (FBS)
The American
Mascot Helm Cane
Website www.utulsa.edu
University of Tulsa logo.svg

The University of Tulsa (TU) is a private research university in Tulsa, Oklahoma.[5] It has a historic affiliation with the Presbyterian Church and the campus architectural style is predominantly Collegiate Gothic. The school traces its origin to the Presbyterian School for Girls, which was established in 1882 in Muskogee, Oklahoma, so a town in Indian Territory, and which evolved into an establishment of college teaching named Henry Kendall College past 1894. The college moved to Tulsa, another town in the Creek Nation during 1904, before the state of Oklahoma was created. In 1920, Kendall College was renamed the University of Tulsa.[6]

The University of Tulsa is classified among "R2: Doctoral Universities – High enquiry action".[7] It manages the Gilcrease Museum, which includes i of the largest collections of American Western art and indigenous American artifacts in the earth.[8] The Bob Dylan Archive TU houses at the Helmerich Centre for American Research. TU too hosts the Tulsa Studies in Women'southward Literature, founded by former TU professor and noted feminist critic Germaine Greer (at present at the University of Cambridge).

TU'due south athletic teams are collectively known equally the Tulsa Gilded Hurricane and compete in Division I of the NCAA as members of the American Athletic Briefing (The American).[nine]

History [edit]

Frontier Origins [edit]

The Presbyterian School for Girls (also known equally "Minerva Domicile")[ten] was founded in Muskogee, Indian Territory, in 1882 to offer a primary education to young women of the Creek Nation.[11]

In 1894, the young school expanded to get Henry Kendall College, named in honor of Reverend Henry Kendall, secretary of the Presbyterian Lath of Domicile Missions.[12] [13] The first president was William A. Caldwell, who served a brief 2-yr term, which concluded in 1896.

Caldwell was succeeded by William Robert King, a Presbyterian government minister and co-founder of the college, who had come up to Oklahoma from Tennessee, by fashion of the Union Theological Seminary in New York Urban center (affiliated with Columbia University). Kendall College, while nevertheless in Muskogee, granted the first post-secondary caste in Oklahoma in June 1898.[14] Under King, the college was moved from its original location in downtown Muskogee to a larger campus on lands donated by Creek Nation Chief Pleasant Porter.

Kendall College students, faculty and administrators were instrumental in efforts to get the Land of Sequoyah recognized; they wrote about of the proposed constitution and designed the seal among other things.[15]

The opening of the new campus coincided with the start of the tenure of the third president, A. Grant Evans. Over the next 10 years, Evans oversaw the struggling schoolhouse's growth. In most years, form sizes remained pocket-size and although the academy, the fastened elementary, middle, and high school was more successful; by the stop of the 1906–07 year Kendall College had had just 27 collegiate graduates. At the request of the administration, the Synod of Indian Territory assumed control as trustees and began to look at alternatives for the future of the school. When the administration was approached by the comparatively smaller town of Tulsa and offered a run a risk to move, the decision was fabricated to relocate.[12] [13] [16] [17]

Relocation to Tulsa [edit]

The Tulsa Commercial Club (a forerunner of the Tulsa Bedchamber of Commerce) decided to bid for the college. Club members who packaged a bid in 1907 to move the higher to Tulsa included: B. Betters, H. O. McClure, L. Northward. Butts, Due west. L. North, James H. Hall (sic), Grant C. Stebbins, Rev. Charles W. Kerr, C. H. Nicholson. The offer included $100,000, 20 acres of real estate and a guarantee for utilities and street car service.[eighteen]

The college opened to thirty-5 students in September 1907, 2 months before Oklahoma became a state. These first students attended classes at the First Presbyterian Church building until permanent buildings could be erected on the new campus. This became the start of higher pedagogy in Tulsa. Kendall Hall, the first building of the new school, was completed in 1908[12] [thirteen] [sixteen] and was quickly followed by two other buildings. All three buildings have since been demolished, with Kendall the concluding to be razed in 1972.[19] The bong that once hung in the Kendall Edifice tower was saved and displayed in Bayless Plaza.

The Kendall College presidents during 1907–1919 were Arthur Grant Evans, Levi Harrison Beeler, Seth Reed Gordon, Frederick William Hawley, Ralph J. Lamb, Charles Evans, James Yard. McMurtry and Arthur L. Odell.[twenty]

In 1918, the Methodist Church proposed edifice a higher in Tulsa, using money donated past Tulsa oilman Robert M. McFarlin. The proposed college was to be named McFarlin College. However, information technology was soon credible that Tulsa could not however support two competing schools. In 1920, Henry Kendall College merged with the proposed McFarlin College to become The University of Tulsa. The McFarlin Library of TU was named for the principal donor of the proposed college. The proper noun of Henry Kendall has lived on to the nowadays as the Kendall College of Arts and Sciences.

20th century [edit]

The University of Tulsa opened its School of Petroleum Engineering in 1928.[21]

The Great Depression hitting the academy difficult. By 1935, the schoolhouse was near to close because of its poor fiscal condition. It had a debt of $250,000, enrollment had fallen to 300 students (including many who could not pay their ain tuition), the faculty was poorly paid and morale was low. It was then that the oil tycoon and TU-patron Waite Phillips offered the school presidency to Clarence Isaiah ("Cy") Pontius, a former investment banker. His principal focus would exist to rescue the schoolhouse's finances. A deans' council would have charge of academic issues.[22]

However, Pontius' accomplishments went beyond raising coin. During his tenure the following events occurred:

  • In 1935, the university opened the College of Business organisation Administration, which it renamed as the Collins College of Business Administration in 2008.[21]
  • The Tulsa Police School, located in downtown Tulsa, became part of the university in 1943.[21]
  • In 1948, oil magnate William G. Skelly donated funds to found the academy radio station, KWGS (named for his initials).

Skelly Business firm, 1-time official residence for the President of the University of Tulsa

After William G. Skelly died, his widow donated the Skelly Mansion, at the corner of 21st Street and Madison Avenue, to the University of Tulsa. The school sold the mansion and its furnishings to individual owners in 1959. On July 5, 2012, the academy announced that it would repurchase the business firm as a residence for its president.

In 1958, Ben Graf Henneke, a scholar of theater and communications, became the starting time alumnus to agree the Presidency of the University of Tulsa. During his tenure the university established new doctoral programs, increased the proportion of faculty with doctorates, started new publications including Petroleum Abstracts and the James Joyce Quarterly, developed a Northward Campus heart for petroleum engineering research, and expanded many main campus facilities. He was succeeded by Dr. Eugene Fifty. Swearingen, a Stanford University-trained economist and Oklahoma native who served on the National Finance Commission for the Jimmy Carter Presidential Campaign.[23] Swearingen increased TU'due south endowment and expanded the footprint of its campus.

21st century [edit]

In 2004, anthropologist Steadman Upham joined the Academy of Tulsa every bit president, having served in faculty and leadership positions at the University of Oregon and Arizona Country University. Within five years of his arrival, TU saw thirteen major construction projects and renovations on campus, ranging from the structure of the Roxana Rozsa and Robert Eugene Lorton Performance Center to the overhaul of Keplinger Hall, and plans for seven more major projects finalized (despite the nationwide recession).

The university also launched the Oxley College of Wellness Sciences, in downtown Tulsa, named in recognition of a major gift from Tulsa's Oxley Foundation.[24] The university too partnered with the George Kaiser Family unit Foundation to permanently firm The Bob Dylan Archive at TU in 2016. Nether Upham's leadership, the University of Tulsa assumed management of the famous Gilcrease Museum in northwest Tulsa.

In 2022 President Upham retired and was succeeded by Dr. Gerard Clancy who previously served every bit a psychiatry professor and held leadership positions at the University of Iowa and the University of Oklahoma. About 2-and-a-half years into his presidency, in the spring of 2019, President Clancy and Provost Levit announced a restructuring of bookish programs at the university that would eliminate several academic programs. The plan was met with resistance from some faculty who believed it was formulated without adequate input from faculty. Although kinesthesia members voted "no conviction" in the president and provost in November, the university'south board of trustees publicly affirmed their support of the plan.[25]

In Jan 2020, President Clancy informed the Board that he needed to cut dorsum his activities because of unspecified medical issues. The Board named Provost Levit as Acting President of the school, effective in January 2020. [a]

Former Congressman Brad Carson became President of Tulsa Academy, effective July i, 2021. He replaced Interim President, Janet K. Levit.

Academics [edit]

Academy of Tulsa offers liberal arts, sciences, and professional programs, including engineering, English, information science, natural sciences, clinical and industrial/organizational psychology, and other disciplines.[26]

The university also maintains a college of law, which is 1 of the few to specialize in Native American legal issues.

The Tulsa Law Review ranks in the elevation fifteen% of about cited legal periodicals as ranked by Washington and Lee University.[27]

The university's graduate program in petroleum engineering is ranked #five among all national universities according to 2022 rankings from U.South. News & Globe Report[28]

The university has an undergraduate research program, evidenced by 44 students receiving Goldwater Scholarships since 1995.[29] The Tulsa Undergraduate Inquiry Challenge (TURC) allows undergraduates to conduct advanced research with the guidance of meridian TU professors.[30]

There are six colleges at the University of Tulsa:

  • Kendall College of Arts & Sciences
  • Collins Higher of Business concern (formerly College of Business organisation Administration)
  • Higher of Applied science and Natural Sciences
  • College of Law
  • Oxley College of Health Sciences
  • Graduate Schoolhouse

Admission to TU is highly competitive; The 2022 incoming freshman form boasted an average Human action score of 30 and an incoming average GPA of iii.9, the highest in the academy'due south history.[31]

The Tulsa Institute for Trauma, Adversity and Injustice is an interdisciplinary plant committed to evidence-based education, scholarship, enquiry, and service that reduce the incidence and affect of trauma and adversity. This group is equanimous of students and professors primarily in psychology, sociology, and nursing. The group contributes to the fields through presentations at local and major conferences and publications.

Rankings [edit]

Academic rankings
National
Forbes [32] 197
THE/WSJ [33] 195
U.Due south. News & World Report [34] 136
Washington Monthly [35] 383
Global
QS [36] 701–750
THE [37] 401–500

USNWR graduate school rankings [38]

Petroleum Engineering 5
Police 87

USNWR departmental rankings [38]

Clinical Psychology 146
Calculator Science 147
English 67
Psychology 190
Speech–Language Pathology 132

U.S. News & World Study 'south 2022 edition of "Best Colleges" ranked the University of Tulsa 136 among "national universities" and tied at 79th for "Best Value".[28] The university'due south graduate school program in petroleum engineering science was ranked #5.

Scholarship and fellowship recipients [edit]

TU students accept won 66 Goldwater Scholarships, 5 Marshall Scholarships, three Rhodes Scholarships (9 Rhodes finalists), 25 Fulbright Scholarships, and numerous Department of Defense, National Science Foundation, and Morris One thousand. Udall Fellowships.[39]

Campus [edit]

The campus of the Academy of Tulsa centers on a broad, grassy, quad-like space known as Dietler Commons, formerly chosen "The U." The predominant architectural way is English Gothic. Virtually of the buildings are constructed from tan and rose-colored Crab Orchard sandstone from Tennessee interspersed with stone quarried in Arkansas. Other materials include Bedford limestone from Indiana and slate quarried in Vermont. The university's campus borders Tulsa's Kendall-Whittier neighborhood and is not far from Tulsa's downtown and mid-town neighborhoods. The campus, in particular its football venue Skelly Field, is located on the historic U.S. Route 66, America'southward "Mother Route" stretching from Chicago to Los Angeles.

University of Tulsa has participated in efforts towards sustainability including RecycleMania and Adopt a Recycle Bin. Many campus efforts accept been led by student groups like the Sustainability Committee, the Association of International Students, Student Clan, TU Earth Matters, and the TU Food Garden. The academy strives to accept its buildings meet LEED standards in lodge to reduce the school's overall carbon footprint.

The University of Tulsa viewed from South Delaware Avenue

The University of Tulsa, viewed from S Delaware Avenue

Bayless Plaza [edit]

Completed in 2006, Bayless Plaza houses the Kendall Bong, hanging in the cupola of the former Kendall Hall. The plaza lies straight south of Tyrrell Hall, longtime abode of the School of Music, and serves as the apex of Tucker Drive, the university's main entrance.

H. A. Chapman Stadium [edit]

TU football has played at Skelly Field at H.A. Chapman Stadium since 1930. Information technology was renamed from Skelly Stadium following renovations in 2007. The Case Athletic Complex in the north end of the field provides office facilities for the football staff, a new locker room and trainer facility, a letterman'due south lounge and box seating on the top level, and meeting rooms, a figurer lab, and study spaces for pupil-athletes. Renovations provide seating throughout the stadium, new turf, an updated score lath and Jumbotron, and an expanded press box. The changes likewise include the addition of an extensive plaza area (Thomas Plaza) on the west side of the stadium to conform restrooms, food and drink stands, and souvenir shops.

Donald W. Reynolds Center [edit]

Abode to women'south volleyball forth with the men's and women's basketball programs, the Donald W. Reynolds Center houses role and meeting space, practice and weights facilities, and the main basketball game loonshit. Outset exercises are held in the Reynolds Center in May.

Sharp Chapel [edit]

Named for its principal donors, Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Sharp, Sharp Chapel was completed on November 27, 1959. Information technology replaced the academy's original chapel that was located in Kendall Hall before its devastation and replacement by the electric current Kendall Hall theater edifice. Sharp Chapel houses the Offices of University Chaplain and serves the religious needs of multiple denominations nowadays on campus also as hosting many awards ceremonies and weddings.

Additions to Sharp Chapel were completed in the spring of 2004, including the Westminster Room, an atrium, kitchen, and a second floor including administrative offices and a conference room.

On-campus pupil residences [edit]

On-campus housing consists of half dozen residence halls, six sorority houses, and six university-endemic apartment complexes, including eight apartments designed like townhouses.

Residence halls:

  • John Mabee Hall – all-male residence hall located at the Northwest cease of Dietler Eatables. Information technology is known on campus as "The John".
  • Lottie Jane Mabee Hall – all-female residence hall located at the Southwest end of Deitler Commons. It is known on campus as "Lottie."
  • LaFortune Hall – coed residence hall close to the athletics areas. Information technology is domicile to the university's International Living Customs. It is named for the family of iii Tulsa mayors.
  • William F. Fisher Hall – coed freshman residence hall immediately side by side to the facility formerly known as Twin Towers, first opened to students in the fall of 1984. It was known as Twin South from 1984 to 2009.[ citation needed ] It is now known on campus as "Southward" or "Fisher South."
  • Fisher W Suites – coed residence hall immediately adjacent to the Dining Hall and part of the edifice formerly known as Twin Towers. Information technology is known on campus as "West" or "Fisher W."
  • Hardesty Hall – coed residence hall suites close to Allen Chapman Student Union.

Flat complexes include Brownish Village, Lorton Village (includes townhouses), Mayo Village, Norman Village, University Square South, and University Foursquare West.

Museums and libraries [edit]

McFarlin Library: Resources and Notable Collections

At the summit of Deitler Commons sits one of the campus' nigh notable landmarks, the McFarlin Library, named subsequently Robert and Ida McFarlin, the library's primary benefactors. The McFarlins had merely one stipulation with their souvenir: that the view of Downtown Tulsa from McFarlin could never be blocked. Groundbreaking ceremonies took place on May 3, 1929, and the building was dedicated on June 1, 1930. The library continued to grow over the years, adding a five-story improver in 1967, an hole-and-corner stacks expanse in by 1979, and technology wing in 2007. The library contains over two 1000000 items.

Currently, the library'due south Department of Special Collections and University Athenaeum houses over twelve million archival items and has over a yard collections on a broad-ranging array of topics including 20th-century British, Irish, and American literature, which includes the world's second largest collection of materials by James Joyce. It also houses the papers of Nobel Prize winners V.S. Naipaul and Doris Lessing, as well as novelists and poets Jean Rhys, Eliot Bliss, David Plante, Anna Kavan, and Stevie Smith, just to name a few. In addition to these famous novelists, McFarlin Library's houses the papers of Congresswoman Alice Mary Robertson, literary critic Richard Ellmann, comic book innovator E. Nelson Bridwell, Cherokee Primary Chief J.B. Milam, and author/sexologist Edward Charles, amongst others. The Department of Special Collections also contains a vast collection of books on Native American history.[40]

Partnership with the Gilcrease Museum [edit]

In July 2008, the University of Tulsa took over management of the Gilcrease Museum in a public-private partnership with the City of Tulsa. The museum has one of the largest collections of American Western art in the earth (including famous works by Frederic Remington, Thomas Moran, and others) and houses growing collections in artifacts from Central and South America. The museum sits on 460 acres (ane.9 km2) in northwest Tulsa, a considerable distance from the main university campus.[41]

The Bob Dylan Archive [edit]

The Bob Dylan Archive is a collection of documents and objects relating to iconic American singer-songwriter Bob Dylan (whose mentor was Oklahoman Woody Guthrie). It was announced on March 2, 2016, that the archive had been acquired by the George Kaiser Family Foundation (GKFF) and the University of Tulsa. The university has since relinquished buying to GKFF. It volition be nether the care of the university'due south Helmerich Center for American Research.[42]

Student body and student life [edit]

Students at the University of Tulsa represent 46 states and over 60 foreign countries, of which 54% are Oklahoma residents.[31] Amidst the almost mutual countries of origin for TU international students are Cathay, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, India, Nigeria, Angola and the United Kingdom.[43]

The Academy of Tulsa is domicile to more than 150 educatee organizations, registered with and partially funded by the Student Association.

Diversity and campus life [edit]

A number of groups exist to support diversity on the University of Tulsa campus. There at least 25 campus organizations existing to support and sustain a diverse campus community.[44] In addition, TU hosts the Chevron Multicultural Resources Heart, funded by a gift from the energy company, which hosts events and programming to promote diversity on campus.

Although TU has historic ties to the Presbyterian Church, the university has long embraced religious variety. In 2002, TU was home to the first mosque built on an American university campus.[45] [46] TU also hosts a chapter of Hillel International, an organization to support Jewish life on campus.[47] The university also hosts a number of organizations reflecting different streams of Christian spiritual exercise, including Protestant, Catholic and Orthodox.[48]

Student Clan [edit]

The Pupil Association is the University of Tulsa pupil government body. It is organized into three branches: the Executive Branch, which includes Chiffonier and is in accuse of organizing large campus-broad events and activities; the Judicial Branch; and the Legislative Branch, or Educatee Senate, which coordinates funding, supports student organisation charters, and addresses general problems impacting pupil life on campus. Its budget is provided partially by the university and partially by a fee paid by students each semester.

Traditionally, the Student Clan coordinates Homecoming activities, including cantankerous campus competitions and the homecoming game tailgate. Another traditional event is Springfest, a week-long serial of events including food, various on-campus activities, and a concert bringing in such names every bit Imagine Dragons, Panic! At the Disco, and Ben Rector. In improver to traditional campus events, Educatee Association provides smaller campus programs including community service activities, social awareness events, and variety programming. Activities organized by Pupil Association are free to all TU students.

College traditions [edit]

  • Kendall Bong: The Kendall Bell, now housed in Bayless Plaza, is traditionally rung by graduating seniors upon completion of their last last test at the academy. The bell was cleaved by a group of students in May 2008. They were trying to steal it, and dropped it in their escape.
  • Homecoming Blaze: Traditionally held the Friday evening prior to the Homecoming football game. The Homecoming courtroom is honored along with the Jess Chouteau Top Ten Seniors.
  • Alma Mater: "Hail to Tulsa U" is sung by alumni and current students prior to major sporting events and at the end of all beginning ceremonies. Alumni and students remain continuing as a sign of respect. The tune is played by the Precipitous Chapel carillon daily at 5 pm.

Greek life [edit]

There are six IFC fraternities and six NPC sororities on campus. The living quarters in the back of the sorority houses are academy-owned residence halls, only, traditionally, just current members of the sororities live there.

Fraternities:

  • Pi Kappa Alpha – est. June half-dozen, 1936
  • Kappa Alpha Order – est. May viii, 1937
  • Lambda Chi Blastoff – est. December 29, 1937
  • Kappa Sigma – est. November 29, 1948
  • Sigma Chi – est. Feb 3, 1951
  • Sigma Nu - est. Jan, 1951

Sororities:

  • Chi Omega – est. April 18, 1929
  • Delta Delta Delta – est. May 9, 1931
  • Kappa Delta – est. September 11, 1937
  • Kappa Kappa Gamma – est. October 31, 1946
  • Delta Gamma – est. Oct 10, 1947
  • Kappa Alpha Theta – est. February three, 1951

Other fraternities on campus that do non fall nether the various councils include:

  • Blastoff Phi Omega co-ed service fraternity
  • Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia music fraternity
  • Sigma Alpha Iota music sorority
  • Delta Theta Phi co-ed law fraternity
  • Phi Alpha Delta co-ed constabulary fraternity
  • Phi Delta Phi co-ed law fraternity
  • Sigma Phi Lambda Christian sorority
  • Beta Upsilon Chi Christian fraternity[49] [50]

2015 student speech controversy [edit]

In February 2015, after the University of Tulsa suspended a pupil under its zero tolerance policy for harassment for allegedly threatening and defamatory Facebook postings by his fiancée against other faculty and a female student, administrators attempted to discourage the campus newspaper from publishing confidential information considering of the non-disclosure agreement the suspended educatee and academy had entered into.[51] The controversy was picked up by several online sites which criticized the administration for using "threats" and "intimidation" to "cover upward" their handling of the disciplinary issue.[52] [53] In January 2016, the former student filed a lawsuit against the university, claiming his dismissal was unfair and was a breach of the institution's commitment to due process.[54] The incident earned the academy a spot on the Foundation for Individual Rights in Didactics'southward 2022 "ten Worst Colleges for Gratis Speech".[55] The lawsuit was dismissed in favor of the university in 2021.

Athletics [edit]

Tulsa's sports teams participate in NCAA Division I as a fellow member of the American Athletic Conference (The American); its football team is part of the Football Basin Subdivision (FBS). Tulsa has the smallest undergraduate enrollment of any FBS school.[56] TU has had a rivalry with the slightly larger Rice University and a football rivalry with the substantially larger Academy of Houston. It likewise has two electric current rivalries with D-I schools that do non sponsor football—an in-conference rivalry with Wichita State University, particularly in men'due south basketball, and a crosstown rivalry, most prominently in basketball game, with Summit League member Oral Roberts Academy.

The university'south nickname is the Golden Hurricane (information technology was originally the Gilt Tornadoes). The Sound of the Golden Hurricane marching ring plays at all home football and basketball game games as well as traveling to championships in support of the Gilt Hurricane. Tulsa has won half-dozen national championships (iii NCAA): four in women's golf and 2 in men'due south basketball game. The University of Tulsa currently fields a varsity team in seven men'southward sports and ten women's sports.[9]

Athletic facilities are distributed throughout a number of buildings on campus. Mabee Gym houses an extensive indoor rowing facility, an indoor golf practice facility, and volleyball practise gyms. Renovations in leap 2008 incorporated FieldTurf into an indoor practice field for the soccer, softball, and football programs. The tennis teams are housed in the Michael D. Case Lawn tennis Center, which includes a number of indoor and outdoor courts (and spectator seating for 2,000). The Hurricane Soccer & Rails Stadium is home to the track and field and soccer programs.

Symbols [edit]

The school'south colors are old gold (PMS 4525), regal blue (PMS 288), and crimson (PMS 186).[57]

The university's original motto was, in total: "Religion, Wisdom, Service: For Christ, For Land."

Publications [edit]

The University of Tulsa Collegian is the long-standing independent and pupil-run newspaper on campus.

The post-obit scholarly journals are published by the university:

  • Nimrod International Periodical of Prose and Poetry
  • James Joyce Quarterly
  • Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature
  • Lithic Applied science
  • Russian Studies in History
  • Energy Police force Journal
  • Tulsa Journal of Comparative & International Law
  • Tulsa Law Review

In 2003 Tulsa joined the efforts of Brown University on the Modernist Journals Project, an online archive of early 20th-century periodicals. Tulsa has contributed diverse modernist texts from McFarlin Library's Special Collections to the projection'south website.

Dr. Sean Latham, editor of the James Joyce Quarterly, brought the 2003 North American James Joyce Conference to the University of Tulsa.

Notable people [edit]

Alumni [edit]

The University of Tulsa counts a number of distinguished individuals among its alumni, including electric current Walmart CEO Doug McMillon, New York School poet Ted Berrigan, The Outsiders author S.Eastward. Hinton, voicemail inventor Gordon Matthews, Gilt Girls actress Rue McClanahan, thespian Peter McRobbie, roboticist and author Daniel H. Wilson, radio legend Paul Harvey, Kuwaiti Petroleum Company CEO Hani Abdulaziz Al Hussein, TV personality Dr. Phil McGraw (who played football for TU but did not graduate), Cherokee Nation Chief Chad "Corntassel" Smith, botanist and ecologist Harriet George Barclay, US Congressman and Pro Football game Hall of Fame wide receiver Steve Largent, NBA basketball thespian Steve Bracey, and Brazilian billionaire man of affairs Ermirio Pereira de Moraes; HE Suhail Al Mazroui, Minister of Energy & Industry for the United Arab Emirates,[58] fellow member of the Supreme Petroleum Council, and sits on the executive committee and other sections of Mubadala Investment Visitor .

Kinesthesia [edit]

A number of notable individuals have served on the University of Tulsa's faculty over the years. Current notable faculty members include psychologist Robert Hogan, political scientist Robert Donaldson, Catholic philosopher F. Russell Hittinger, computer scientist Sujeet Shenoi,[59] and one-time U.s.a. Congressman Brad Carson. Noted artist Adah Robinson was the founder and first chairperson of the university'southward Department of Art.[60] Several renowned literary figures and critics accept served on Tulsa'south faculty, including feminist pioneer Germaine Greer, Booker-prize winning novelist Paul Scott, author and critic Darcy O'Brien, and the famous Russian poet and dissident intellectual Yevgeny Yevtushenko until his death in 2017. Other notable former faculty members include legal scholars Paul Finkelman and Larry Catá Capitalist, psychologist Brent Roberts, painter Alexandre Hogue, Catholic Bishop Daniel Henry Mueggenborg, and others.

Notes [edit]

Levit thus became the commencement woman to lead the school in its history.

  1. ^ Dr. Levit thus became the starting time woman, and 2d TU alum, to lead the schoolhouse in its history.

References [edit]

  1. ^ NAICU – Fellow member Directory Archived November 9, 2015, at the Wayback Automobile
  2. ^ Equally of June thirty, 2021. U.Due south. and Canadian Institutions Listed by Fiscal Year 2022 Endowment Market place Value and Change in Endowment Market Value from FY20 to FY21 (Report). National Association of Higher and University Business Officers and TIAA. February xviii, 2022. Retrieved Feb xviii, 2022.
  3. ^ Krehbiel, Randy. "Former Congressman Brad Carson named new Academy of Tulsa president". Tulsaworld.com. Tulsa World. Retrieved April 5, 2021.
  4. ^ Academy of Tulsa Manner Guide (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on April 17, 2015. Retrieved May 31, 2017.
  5. ^ "Carnegie Research Classification: Academy of Tulsa". The Carnegie Nomenclature of Institutions of Higher Educational activity . Retrieved May 28, 2017.
  6. ^ [https://utulsa.edu/about/history-traditions/ University of Tulsa. "History & Traditions." Undated.
  7. ^ "Carnegie Classifications Establishment Lookup". carnegieclassifications.iu.edu. Eye for Postsecondary Education. Retrieved September thirteen, 2020.
  8. ^ "About United states of america". The Thomas Gilcrease Institute of American History and Art . Retrieved December xix, 2018.
  9. ^ a b "TU Athletics Points of Pride". CSTV Networks, Inc. Archived from the original on December 30, 2007. Retrieved Jan 10, 2008.
  10. ^ Mullins, Jonita. Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture. "Muskogee County." Retrieved April 22, 2013.
  11. ^ "History page".
  12. ^ a b c Logsdon, Guy William. "The University of Tulsa: a history from 1882–1972." Norman, Okla.; 1975.
  13. ^ a b c Delfraisse, Betty Dew. "The history of the University of Tulsa." Austin, Tex.: [S.l.], 1929.
  14. ^ "Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture: Muskogee". Archived from the original on June 15, 2010. Retrieved February 16, 2011.
  15. ^ Junior League of Tulsa (February 7, 1980). "Interview with Guy Logsdon". Tulsa City-County Library. Archived from the original on July sixteen, 2018. Retrieved Baronial two, 2017.
  16. ^ a b "Henry Kendall College Bulletin"
  17. ^ Carlson, Marc. "Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History & Culture" . Oklahoma Historical Lodge. Archived from the original on July 29, 2010. Retrieved May iii, 2012.
  18. ^ The University of Tulsa, "Tulsa Commercial Club 'had a hunch and bet a bunch.'" Archived April 16, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ Campbell, Joshua. "TU'south history highlights change." The Collegian. October 16, 2007. Retrieved Baronial 27, 2011."Archived copy". Archived from the original on March xix, 2012. Retrieved August 27, 2011. {{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy every bit championship (link)
  20. ^ "TUAlumni 1907–1919".
  21. ^ a b c .Tulsa University Website "History of TU." Accessed Feb 24, 2011 Archived March 17, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
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External links [edit]

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata
  • Tulsa Golden Hurricane Athletics website

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

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