Loyola University Chicago

Loyola University Chicago
Motto Ad majorem Dei gloriam
Established June 30, 1870
Type Private, Jesuit, Catholic
Endowment $278.9 million[1]
President Michael J. Garanzini, S.J.
Provost John P. Pelissero, PhD
Academic staff 1,100 full time
Students 15,670 [2]
Undergraduates 10,124[2]
Postgraduates 5,546 graduate
Location Chicago, IL, U.S.
Campus 45 acre (182,000 m²) Lake Shore Campus,
10 acre (40,468 m²) Water Tower Campus,
70 acre (283,000 m²) Maywood Campus,
5 acre (20,234 m²) Rome Center
Athletics 11 NCAA Division I teams
Colors      Black
     Gold
     Maroon
Nickname Ramblers
Mascot LU Wolf
Website http://www.luc.edu
Loyolauniversitylogo.png

Loyola University Chicago is a Jesuit private university located in Chicago, Illinois. The university was founded in 1870 as St. Ignatius College, and is the largest Jesuit, Catholic University in the United States.

Loyola University Chicago has four campuses: the Lake Shore Campus (LSC), the Water Tower Campus (WTC), the Stritch School of Medicine in Maywood, Illinois, and the John Felice Rome Center in Italy; and is home to ten schools and colleges: arts and sciences, business administration, communication, education, graduate studies, law, medicine, nursing, continuing and professional studies, and social work. Loyola also serves as the U.S. host university to the Beijing Center for Chinese Studies in Beijing, China.

U.S. News & World Report named the University a "best value" in its 2008 rankings, as well as a tier one national university.[3] Loyola's part-time Graduate School of Business has been ranked in the top 10 by U.S. News & World Report[4], and the University as a whole was ranked the 50th best value in the country.[5] BusinessWeek has ranked Loyola's Graduate School of Business 8th in the nation for its intensive Part-Time MBA program. In 2009, BusinessWeek also ranked Loyola's School of Business Administration (SBA) #1 in Ethics nationwide, a unique distinction amongst hundreds of competitive undergraduate business programs in the United States.[6] [7] The Chronicle of Higher Education reported that Loyola's History Department ranked sixth in the nation in 2006 on the Faculty Scholarly Productivity Index, a respected ranking system of American graduate programs.[8]

Contents

Beginnings and expansions

In 1908 the School of Law was established as the first of the professional programs. St. Ignatius College changed its name to Loyola University in 1909, while also adding the Stritch School of Medicine. 1923 saw the affiliation of the Chicago College of Dental Surgery with Loyola University, later to be known as Loyola University School of Dentistry (no longer open). In 1934 West Baden College affiliated itself with Loyola University, later to be known as the Bellarmine School of Theology then the Jesuit School of Theology in Chicago. Loyola established the Loyola University Chicago School of Nursing in 1935, the first fully accredited collegiate school of nursing in the State of Illinois.

Madonna della Strada Chapel

Loyola then opened the Rome Center for Liberal Arts in 1962, the first American university-sponsored program in Rome. 1969 saw the establishment of the Loyola University Chicago School of Education and the opening of the Loyola University Medical Center in Maywood. In 1979 the School of Nursing was renamed the Marcella Niehoff School of Nursing. The most recent expansion was the 1991 acquisition of neighboring Mundelein College from the Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary.

Since September 20, 2008, Loyola University Chicago has been in the midst of a $500 million capital campaign entitled "Partner: The Campaign for the Future of Loyola."[9] The campaign has established ambitious rejuvenation goals for each of Loyola's campuses. This project strives to enhance Loyola's national and international profile while simultaneously improving the quality of the education for Loyola students.

Main campuses

Loyola University Chicago is anchored at the Lake Shore Campus (on the shore of Lake Michigan) in Rogers Park, the northernmost neighborhood of the city of Chicago. Loyola has developed a ten-year master plan that is designed to revitalize the community by adding an updated arts center as well as a retail district called "Loyola Station" near the CTA's Loyola 'L' stop. Among many others, the science departments are located on this campus.

Loyola's Water Tower Campus is in downtown Chicago off the Magnificent Mile of North Michigan Avenue, steps away from such landmarks as the Water Tower (one of the few structures to survive the 1871 Great Chicago Fire) and the John Hancock Center (one of the tallest buildings in the United States). The School of Business Administration, Graduate School of Business, School of Social Work, Institute of Pastoral Studies, School of Continuing and Professional Studies, School of Communication, and the Law School are located at the Water Tower Campus. Many classes for the College of Arts and Sciences are also held at this campus.

Loyola also boasts a campus in Rome, Italy. The John Felice Rome Center was established in 1962 on the site of the 1960 Summer Olympics grounds. It moved to several locations in Rome until finally settling in Monte Mario on the Via Massimi, one of the most affluent districts of the Italian capital. The campus offers a full academic year for Chicago-based Loyola students wishing to study abroad.

Loyola University Chicago also has a medical school, the Stritch School of Medicine, and a hospital and medical center associated with them, all located on a campus in Maywood, Illinois, a western suburb of Chicago.

Loyola's largest campus is the Loyola University Medical Center in Maywood, one of the leading academic medical centers in the United States. During the late 1970s, the center became renowned for achievements in open-heart surgery. Other areas in which it has received recognition include microneurosurgery, kidney transplants, care for burn victims, and care of high-risk infants.[10]

In 2010, Loyola acquired the former Resurrection Retreat Center in Woodstock, Illinois for use as a facility for the university's campus ministry programs as well as for use as a unique learning opportunity for students and faculty interested in the sciences as the property contains 20 acres of natural habitat that includes ponds, streams, woods, and prairie land. The campus is officially named the Loyola University Chicago Retreat and Ecology Campus.[11]

Loyola's former Mallinckrodt Campus in north suburban Wilmette housed the School of Education from 1991 until 2001 when Loyola sold the campus and moved the School to the Water Tower Campus. The Campus was the former Mallinckrodt College, founded in 1918 by the Sisters of Christian Charity.[12]

Notable buildings

Cudahy Science Hall
The Klarchek Information Commons overlooks Lake Michigan.

Sustainability

Through its University Sustainability Iniative, Loyola is continuing to improve environmental sustainability in many different areas on campus.[13] Efforts in progress include all new construction being LEED-certified and installing green roofs for all new construction of the Mundelein Center, Info Commons, Quinlan and Baumhart Hall.[14] In January 2009 Loyola University Chicago appointed Dr. James Marshall Eames as the University’s new Sustainability Director, a position that will be housed within Loyola’s Center for Urban Environmental Research and Policy (CUERP).[13] Loyola University Chicago was given an overall grade of “C+” on the 2009 College Sustainability Report Card,[15] having improved its grade since the 2008 Report.[16]

Libraries

Cudahy Library

Loyola's largest library is the E.M. Cudahy Memorial Library on the Lake Shore Campus, which contains over 900,000 volumes and 3,600 periodical subscriptions.[17] Connected to the Cudahy Library is the RIchard J. Klarchek Information Commons, which opened in 2008 to provide additional academic and social space, with a focus on the undergraduate population.[18]

Additional Loyola libraries include the law school library, a health sciences library, and the Lewis Library, which is located on the Water Tower Campus and supports the academic programs there.[19]

Religious education

A statue of Ignatius of Loyola was dedicated in 2000. The statue has since been relocated to the lobby of the Klarchek Information Commons.

Religious education is still one of Loyola's hallmarks as it is home to Saint Joseph College Seminary as well as the Jesuit First Studies program.

Loyola's First Studies Program is one of three in the country, with Fordham University and Saint Louis University housing the other two. During this three-year period, Jesuit Scholastics and Brothers generally study philosophy and some theology. First Studies is one part of an eleven-year formation process toward the Jesuit priesthood. This program is administered by the Chicago Province Society of Jesus.

Saint Joseph College Seminary serves the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago and provides vocational training to candidates of diocesan priesthood. Loyola University also provides rigorous religious education for those seeking careers in lay ministry with the Loyola University Institute of Pastoral Studies as well as degree opportunities in interdisciplinary Catholic studies

Loyola also offers undergraduate courses in the study of Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, and religions of Asia. Students are not just limited to the study of Catholicism.

Student life

Residential Life

Freshmen live in Campion, Creighton, Mertz, Regis, or Simpson on the Lake Shore Campus, and sophomores and upperclassmen live in various apartment complexes Loyola owns in the Rogers Park neighborhood surrounding Lake Shore Campus or in Baumhart Hall at Water Tower Campus in downtown Chicago.

Most of Loyola's residence halls are named after other Jesuit colleges and universities.

Water Tower Campus

Lake Shore Campus

Freshman Residence Halls

Upperclassman Apartment-Style Residence Halls

Athletics

LU Wolf at Loyola Men's basketball game vs. Bradley

Loyola is home to 11 varsity teams, all ranked in NCAA Division I. The teams include men and women's basketball, cross country, men and women's golf, men and women's soccer, softball, track, and men and women's volleyball. The nickname "Ramblers" was first applied to Loyola's football team in 1926, because they frequently traveled throughout the United States.[20]

LU Wolf is the mascot for the University. He was inspired by the coat-of-arms of St. Ignatius of Loyola, from whom Loyola derives its name, which depicts two wolves standing over a kettle. He is ever-present at Loyola's basketball games, encouraging fans to show their support for the Ramblers. The team won the Men's 1963 national championship in basketball. As of 2010, Loyola is the only Division I NCAA school in Illinois that has ever won a national title.[21]

Greek life

Loyola University Chicago is home to several Greek letter organizations. Among them are traditional social fraternities and sororities and cultural interest fraternities and sororities.[22]

Inter-Fraternity Council chapters include Sigma Pi, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, and Tau Kappa Epsilon.

Loyola was home to the founding chapter of Alpha Delta Gamma Fraternity, the only Greek letter organization to have a chartered house on Loyola's campus, until the organization was suspended for alcohol violations related to a 2009 house party.[23] [24] The Alpha Delta Gamma chapter at Loyola had a long history of violations with judicial affairs including charges related to possession of excessive amounts of alcohol, hazing and bodily harm. [25]

Pan-Hellenic Council chapters include Alpha Chi Omega, Alpha Sigma Alpha, Phi Sigma Sigma and Kappa Kappa Gamma.

Cultural interest fraternities include the National Association of Latino Fraternal Organizations (NALFO) co-ed fraternity Alpha Psi Lambda. Loyola is also home to Lambda Upsilon Lambda Fraternity, also known as "La Unidad Latina".[26] and the African-American Fraternity Phi Beta Sigma. [27]

Cultural interest sororities include Gamma Phi Omega, Sigma Lambda Gamma, Lambda Theta Alpha, Delta Phi Lambda, Delta Sigma Theta and Zeta Phi Beta.

Notable alumni

In popular culture

See also

References

  1. As of June 30, 2009. "U.S. and Canadian Institutions Listed by Fiscal Year 2009 Endowment Market Value and Percentage Change in Endowment Market Value from FY 2008 to FY 2009" (PDF). 2009 NACUBO-Commonfund Study of Endowments. National Association of College and University Business Officers. http://www.nacubo.org/Documents/research/2009_NCSE_Public_Tables_Endowment_Market_Values.pdf. Retrieved March 10, 2010. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Loyola University Chicago Fact Sheet". Loyola University Chicago. http://www.luc.edu/undergrad/academics/factsheets/facts_at_a_glance.pdf. Retrieved 2009-08-14. 
  3. "U.S News and World Report", 27 July 2009, retrieved 28 July 2009
  4. Loyola University Chicago- Rankings
  5. USNews.com: America's Best Colleges 2008: National Universities
  6. BusinessWeek’s 2009 ranking of the top undergraduate business schools
  7. Undergraduate Business Specialties: The Best of the Best
  8. The Chronicle of Higher Education, Top Research Universities Faculty Scholarly Productivity Index
  9. Partner: The Campaign for the Future of Loyola
  10. "Loyola University Chicago." World Book Online Reference Center, 2008, Place of access: Niles West High School, 21 Aug. 2008 [1]
  11. http://webapps.luc.edu/newsevents/public/news_release.cfm?newsID=25389
  12. The Loyola PHOENIX
  13. 13.0 13.1 "University Sustainability Initiative". Loyola University Chicago. http://www.luc.edu/cuerp/Sustain_Initiative.shtml. Retrieved 2009-06-05. 
  14. "Department of Facilities Management Report". Loyola University Chicago. http://www.luc.edu/cuerp/pdfs/Sustainability_Facitlies_Update_Nov_07.pdf. Retrieved 2009-06-05. 
  15. "2009 College Sustainability Report Card". http://greenreportcard.org/report-card-2009/schools/loyola-university-of-chicago. Retrieved 2009-06-05. 
  16. "2009 College Sustainability Report Card". http://greenreportcard.org/report-card-2008/schools/loyola-university-of-chicago. Retrieved 2009-06-05. 
  17. About Cudahy Library - Loyola University Chicago Libraries
  18. LUC Information Commons: Welcome
  19. About Lewis Library - Loyola University Chicago Libraries
  20. Ramin, Nathan (2005). College Prowler: Loyola University Chicago Off the Record. College Prowler. p. 6. ISBN 9781596580770. 
  21. McGrath, Dan (2010-03-18). "Forget Illinois Shutout; Relive Tourney’s Past". NY Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/19/us/19cncsports.html. Retrieved 2010-04-02. 
  22. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_interest_fraternities_and_sororities
  23. http://www.loyolaphoenix.com/2.3233/frat-kicked-off-campus-1.332551
  24. http://collegeprowler.com/loyola-university-chicago/greek-life/
  25. http://www.loyolaphoenix.com/2.3233/frat-kicked-off-campus-1.332551
  26. http://www.launidadlatina.org/
  27. http://www.pbs1914.org/history/

External links