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Fine Arts Building Fa 700 Greek Row Dr Arlington Tx

Public academy in Arlington, Texas, U.s.

Coordinates: 32°43′51″Due north 97°06′53″W  /  32.7307°North 97.1146°Due west  / 32.7307; -97.1146

The University of Texas at Arlington
University of Texas at Arlington seal.svg

Erstwhile names

Arlington College (1895-1902)
Carlisle Military machine Academy (1901-1913)
Arlington Grooming School (1913-1916)
Arlington Military Academy (1916-1917)
Grubb'due south Vocational Higher (1917-1923)
North Texas Agricultural College (1923-1949)
Arlington State College (1949-1967)
Motto Disciplina Praesidium Civitatis (Latin)

Motto in English

"The cultivated heed is the guardian genius of democracy"[1]
Type Public research university
Established 1895; 127 years ago  (1895)

Parent establishment

University of Texas Organisation
Accreditation SACS

Academic affiliations

  • URA
  • ORAU
Endowment $211 million (2021)[2]
President Jennifer Evans-Cowley

Academic staff

2,165[3]
Students 45,949 (Fall 2021)[4]
Undergraduates 32,962 (Fall 2021)
Postgraduates 12,987 (Fall 2021)
Location

Arlington

,

Texas

,

United States

Campus Big City, 420 acres (1.vii km2)[5]
Paper The Shorthorn
Colors  Blueish
 Orange
White[6]
Nickname Mavericks

Sporting affiliations

NCAA Division I – Sun Belt (WAC in July 2022)
Mascot Blaze the Bronco
Website uta.edu
University of Texas at Arlington logo.svg

The University of Texas at Arlington (UTA or UT Arlington)[7] is a public research university in Arlington, Texas. The academy was founded in 1895 and was in the Texas A&M University System for several decades until joining The University of Texas System in 1965.

The university is classified among "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very high research activity."[8] The fall 2021 campus enrollment consisted of 45,949 students[ix] [iv]making it the largest academy in North Texas and fourth-largest in Texas.[10] UT Arlington is the tertiary-largest producer of higher graduates in Texas and offers over 180 baccalaureate, masters, and doctoral degree programs.[11] [12]

UT Arlington participates in fifteen intercollegiate sports as a Division I member of the NCAA and Lord's day Chugalug Conference. UTA sports teams have been known as the Mavericks since 1971.

History [edit]

Institution (1895–1916) [edit]

An undated image of the offset building on the campus of Arlington College

The university traces its roots back to the opening of Arlington Higher in September 1895. Arlington College was established equally a private schoolhouse for primary through secondary level students, equivalent to the modern 1st to 10th grades. At the fourth dimension, the public school system in the city of Arlington was underfunded and understaffed.[thirteen] Local merchant Edward Emmett Rankin organized fellow citizens of the city to donate materials and land to build a schoolhouse where the mod campus is at present located.[14]

Rankin also convinced the two co-principals of the public schoolhouse in Arlington, Lee Morgan Hammond and William Marshall Trimble, to invest in and concur the aforementioned positions at Arlington College. In the first few years, between 75 and 150 students were enrolled in the college. The public school began to rent space at Arlington Higher, and was eventually sold to the city in 1900. The public school building became so unsafe that all of the space in Arlington College was rented for the 1901–1902 school year until the creation of the Arlington Independent School District in 1902. Although the public education system was set to improve, Arlington College was closed and the property was sold to James McCoy Carlisle.

Bird'southward-eye painting of Carlisle Military University, 1911

Carlisle was already established equally a respected educator in the North Texas region, and he opened the Carlisle Military Academy in the fall of 1902. His program consisted of a balance betwixt course work and military preparation. Enrollment increased to 150 students by 1905, and he began a large expansion of the campus. Baseball, football, basketball, and track teams were begun between 1904 and 1908. Effectually the same time, new barracks, a rail, a gymnasium, and an indoor pool were built. The university became known as one of the best at its level in the country.[xiv] Unfortunately, enrollment did not continue to increment with the expansion in facilities and Carlisle ran into serious fiscal bug.

Lawsuits for the mortgages on the holding were filed in 1911, and Carlisle Military Academy was airtight in 1913. In the fall of 1913, Henry Kirby Taylor moved from Missouri, where he was president of the Northwest State Teachers' College, to set up another military academy called Arlington Training School.[fifteen] He also was required to manage the finances and campus for the property owners. Past the 1914–1915 school twelvemonth, the campus contained 11 buildings on 10 acres (40,000 m2) of land with 95 students enrolled.[16] The school was incorporated in 1915 in order to heighten funds to make improvements to the existing buildings, only more financial problems arose and another serial of lawsuits were filed. Taylor left Arlington, and the property owners hired John B. Dodson to establish a tertiary armed services academy for the 1916–1917 school twelvemonth called Arlington Military Academy. Enrollment was apparently very low,[fourteen] and Arlington Military Academy airtight after 1 year.

The Science Building at the North Texas Agricultural College in 1941. The edifice was constructed in 1928 and has since been renamed Preston Hall. It is one of the oldest surviving structures on the campus of the University of Texas at Arlington.

Texas A&M University System (1917–1965) [edit]

NTAC Corps of Cadets on the campus quad, 1920s.

Since the plough of the 20th century, the prospects for turning the campus into a public, inferior vocational college had been discussed. Past 1917, the Agronomical and Mechanical Higher of Texas in College Station was overcrowded and had only ane branch campus, Prairie View A&Grand. Vincent Woodbury Grubb, a lawyer and education abet, organized Arlington officials to lobby the state legislature to create a new junior college.[17] The Arlington campus was established as a branch of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas and was chosen Grubbs Vocational College.[eighteen] Myron L. Williams was appointed as the kickoff dean. Students were either enrolled in a loftier school or junior college program, and all men were required to be cadets.[19] Its name changed again in 1923 to the North Texas Agronomical College (NTAC). Edward Everett Davis replaced Williams as dean in 1925 and held that position for 21 years.[14]

Davis worked continually to ameliorate the quality of students, faculty, and facilities.[20] The Great Depression resulted in major cuts to funding and a turn down in students, so more general college courses were gradually introduced at NTAC instead of vocational classes. During World State of war Ii, the higher trained students with a "war program" focus[21] and participated in the Five-12 Navy College Training Plan, offered at 131 colleges and universities in 1943, which gave students a path to a Navy commission.[22] Dean Davis appointed Ernest H. Hereford, and so Registrar in 1942, to the position of acquaintance dean in 1943. Following Davis's retirement in 1946, Hereford was appointed dean of NTAC.[23]

In 1948, the Texas A&Thou Organization was created and Dean Hereford was named the first president of NTAC.[24] The name was inverse to Arlington State College (ASC) in 1949 to reflect the fact that agronomics was no longer an important office of the curriculum. Efforts began to plough ASC into a iv-twelvemonth establishment, but the Texas A&M arrangement lath refused to consider the idea since it was possible that ASC could abound to exist larger than College Station.[14] [25] [26] The growth of the city of Arlington in the 1950s led to a major expansion of ASC. The student population increased from 1,322 in 1952 to six,528 in 1959,[fourteen] which led to land acquisition and structure of many buildings. Jack Woolf was named president in 1959 as serious efforts began to make ASC a four-year college.[27] The Texas legislature approved the iv-year status on April 27, 1959.[28] Enrollment reached 9,116 students in the fall of 1963, a larger total than the Texas A&1000 College Station campus.[14] Although Texas A&Yard proposed a reorganization for the organisation to recognize ASC's growth, A&M System President James Earl Rudder resisted developing ASC into a university with graduate programs.[29] Rudder and the Texas A&Thousand board of directors, viewing ASC as a threat to the Higher Station campus, withheld construction funding and blocked degree evolution.[xiv]

University of Texas Arrangement (1965–nowadays) [edit]

Aerial view of the Academy of Texas at Arlington campus in 1967

The decision by the Texas A&M University governing lath to block evolution at Arlington State College led officials of the college and a number of Arlington citizens to enlist the support of Governor John Connally and key members of the Texas Legislature to divide Arlington Country College from the Texas A&G University Arrangement and to join The Academy of Texas Arrangement.[14] Every bit part of a plan that reorganized several university systems in Texas, Arlington State College officially became a role of The Academy of Texas System on September 1, 1965. To reflect its new membership within the UT Arrangement, the university adopted its current name in 1967.[thirty]

Joining the UT System was of immediate consequence. In 1966 the Graduate Schoolhouse was established with an initial slate of vi master'south degrees and new construction projects started.[31] The 1969 approval of the kickoff PhD plan, in applied science, was a landmark event which gear up a precedent for other units on campus to follow.

Controversy erupted in the late 1960s over the utilize of a rebel theme that was started in 1951, including Confederate symbols and mock-slave auctions as campus traditions. Subsequently several years of efforts by President Frank Harrison to give students an opportunity to pick another theme, the UT System abolished rebels.[32] The Bohemian theme was adopted after a pupil vote in 1971.

Wendell Nedderman served every bit acting president from 1972 to 1974 and president from 1974 to 1992. His tenure was characterized by increased growth and aspirations. In these years, the graduate educatee population increased from 936 to four,200 and the overall academy enrollment reached 25,135 students. Kinesthesia enquiry and publishing was emphasized along with the addition of doctoral programs in science, applied science, concern, social work, and public and urban administration.[14] The Texas Select Committee on College Educational activity recognized UT Arlington equally an emerging inquiry establishment in 1987.[33] The university experienced significant enrollment gains and rapid dispatch in research nether the leadership of former presidents James D. Spaniolo and Vistasp Karbhari. The physical campus became much more than residential in character and numerous major academic and student life buildings were added.

Campuses [edit]

Main Campus surroundings [edit]

The 420 acre main campus is at the southern border of downtown Arlington, which also includes the largest branch of the public library, City Hall, Theatre Arlington, Levitt Pavilion, Arlington Museum of Art, churches, and numerous types of businesses just south of the Texas and Pacific Railway line, effectually which the city was established.[34]

The Barnett Shale formation sits below the campus and has earned the university millions of dollars from natural gas production since 2008. These funds are used for scholarships, faculty recruitment, and campus infrastructure upgrades.[35]

Trading House Creek, a tributary of the Trinity River, runs along the southern portion of the campus. Cooper Street (which forms a part of Farm to Marketplace Road 157) runs through the campus and provides access to Interstate 20 and Interstate 30. AT&T Stadium, Globe Life Park in Arlington, Globe Life Field, Six Flags Over Texas, and the International Bowling Museum are two miles to the northeast.

Main Campus architecture [edit]

The campus is organized on the city'due south former street grid. The topography generally slopes to the s and eastward to landscaped creeks. Decades of prodigious tree-planting and deliberate attending to mural blueprint have resulted in a shaded campus that is a pleasing pedestrian experience. About streets in the campus core are closed and converted into pedestrian malls. The predominant east–westward walk is the 2nd Street Mall, and the most important north–south passageway is Arlington Walk, extending from the Engineering Research Edifice on the north to the Science & Engineering Innovation & Research Edifice on the south.

The oldest buildings on campus, Bribe Hall, Preston Hall, and College Hall are on the Second Street Mall and date to 1919.[36] The compages of these pre-Earth State of war Ii buildings is traditional. Later buildings from the 1960s, '70s, and '80s are typical of much campus construction of the flow: modernistic, functional, and non especially noteworthy.[37] An exception is the Architecture Edifice (designed by the respected Dallas firm, Pratt, Box, and Henderson)[38] which forms an intimate and visit-worthy courtyard; Pickard Hall, the Mathematics and Nursing Building, is noted for its unusual triangular shape. Texas Hall (George Dahl, architect) is a contributing building with its front portico, and Nedderman Hall is a contributing structure with its large atrium.[39] An beauteous feature of the campus is the aesthetic consistency of limestone and UTA-blend brick. Metal panels have appeared in construction since the late 1990s.[forty]

The Central Library, designed past prominent 20th-century architect George Dahl (well known contributions include Fine art Deco buildings at Dallas Off-white Park), forms ane side of a Library Quad which may be regarded every bit the heart of campus.[41] The Fundamental Library, Texas Hall, and Woolf Hall are of Mid-century Modern design. Attention to building design and the creation of outdoor spaces is evident with the postmodern additions of the Chemistry & Physics Building (Perkins + Will), Maverick Activities Center (Hughes Group with Page), Engineering Enquiry Building (ZGF Architects with Page), College Park Middle (HKS, Inc.), Science & Engineering Innovation & Research Building (ZGF with Folio), and Trinity Hall (Beck Group). The Chemistry & Physics Edifice contains one of the largest and nearly advanced planetariums in the state.[42]

Vandergriff Hall at College Park

The north and east sides of campus have defined edges, beingness bounded past UTA Boulevard and Center Street, respectively. The south and westward sides tend to blend more irregularly into the urban center. Cooper Street is a major artery that runs through campus and is partially depressed and spanned by iii pedestrian bridges. Academic buildings erected over recent decades are on the east side of Cooper Street (defined by signage as "due east campus").

Surface parking is pushed to the outer edges of campus, particularly s of the bookish cadre, resulting in students getting more exercise than they may desire during peak periods. The Due west Campus Parking Garage and the Higher Park parking garages on the northwest and northeast campus corners, respectively, provide some relief and advance the master plan goal of reducing surface parking. Light-green spaces, or outdoor rooms, have increased in the 2000s about notably with the cosmos of the Greene Inquiry Quad, the Green at College Park, a sunken courtyard at Davis Hall, Brazos Park, and the Davis Street west campus border. Located in diverse regions of campus are fiberglass horse statues with uniquely colored blue and orange patterns called "Spirit Horses."[43]

The Higher Park District is a $160 one thousand thousand development completed in 2012 that significantly expanded the campus eastward.[44] The commune has an arena with seating for 7,000 spectators, dormitory, educatee apartments, retail space, an 1,800-machine parking garage, a welcome center, a credit union, and a v-acre park chosen The Green at College Park.[45]

The on-campus resident population is over 5,000, creating a lively 24/7 environs.[46] Large numbers of students live in Arlington Hall, Kalpana Chawla Hall, Vandergriff Hall, W Hall, and numerous on-campus apartments. The Dallas Morning News editorialized on June 23, 2012, that "UTA of a sudden offers a new sense of place that surprises people who haven't taken a look for a few years."

Shown beneath are: Nedderman Hall, Engineering Research Building, Arlington Hall, CAPPA Building, Texas Hall, Jack Woolf Hall, The Commons, and College of Business.

Fort Worth Campus [edit]

In 2007, UTA opened the celebrated and renovated Santa Fe Freight building in downtown Fort Worth for educational purposes. Initially, UTA offered merely Masters of Business Assistants classes only later expanded to offering more classes for several degree programs on the graduate and undergraduate levels. The Fort Worth campus has over 25,000 square feet of state-of-the-art classrooms, services, and assiduities space.[47]

Academics [edit]

Bookish rankings
National
ARWU [48] 155-175
Forbes [49] 501
U.S. News & World Report [fifty] 288
Washington Monthly [51] 103
Global
ARWU [52] 601-700
THE [53] 601-800
U.S. News & World Report [54] 459

UT Arlington is classified by the Carnegie Foundation as a "Highest Research Activity" establishment and the only Texas institution named a "Next Generation University" by the New America Foundation for existence a leader in diversity and innovation.[55] [56] UT Arlington is the 4th institution to achieve designation equally a Texas Tier One university which is a significant milestone of excellence in academics and enquiry that brings with information technology access to the state's National Research University Fund.[57]

As of 2019[update], UT Arlington has fifteen professors every bit fellows in the National Academy of Inventors which is the highest number of any institution in Texas and sixth highest in the nation.[58]

UT Arlington leads all University of Texas System institutions in baccalaureate caste production ratio.[59]

The College of Nursing and Health Innovation produces the most registered nurses in Texas and is among the top five largest producers of registered nurses in the nation.[60]

The Higher of Engineering offers eleven baccalaureate, fourteen master'southward and 9 doctoral programs. It is 1 of the largest engineering colleges in Texas with over 7,000 students.[61] The engineering faculty includes over 50 Fellows in professional societies.[62]

The School of Social Work offers three main academic programs: the Bachelor of Social Work (BSW), the Master of Science in Social Work (MSSW), and the Ph.D. in social work. The BSW and MSSW programs are fully accredited past the Council on Social Work Teaching.[63]

The Higher of Business organization is one of the largest and nigh comprehensive in the nation. The college ranked 128 out of 472 ranked programs in the 2018 U.Southward. News & Globe Report All-time Colleges list.[64] The part-time MBA program ranked 82 out of 470 programs and among the top 50 for public universities in the 2017 U.S. News & World Report graduate school rankings.[65] The college has one of the largest executive MBA programs in China, and offers a U.South. Executive MBA program that features a study trip to Cathay.[66] CEO Magazine ranked the Executive MBA plan No. 1 in Texas, No. xvi in the nation, and No. 21 in the world.[67] The college'southward endowed Goolsby Leadership Academy is a highly selective accomplice program for high-achieving undergraduate business students and distinguished faculty.[68]

The College of Science consists of six departments: Biology, Chemistry & Biochemistry, Earth & Environmental Sciences, Mathematics, Physics and Psychology. The college offers over 50 bachelor's, master's and doctoral degree programs, including fast-track programs in select departments which allow students to earn avant-garde degrees in a shorter period of time than traditional caste programs. The college's faculty includes members of the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Inventors, as well equally Fellows in various professional person organizations and recipients of numerous national, state and UT Arrangement teaching awards. The college's High Free energy Physics grouping is involved in ongoing experiments at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN and fabricated major contributions to the discovery of the Higgs boson particle in 2012, working on detectors and computational information assay.[69]

The College of Education had a 95% pass rate on the Texas state licensure examination during the 2014–2015 academic school year. The College of Education certification laissez passer rates have consistently been above the land average.[70] [71]

The College of Liberal Arts offers unique programs such as Southwestern Studies, and its Center for Mexican American Studies (CMAS) and Center for African American Studies (CAAS) offers minors in Mexican-American and African-American Studies, respectively.

UT Arlington has the only accredited architecture, urban planning, and landscape architecture programs in the Due north Texas region.[72] The College of Engineering science in conjunction with the architecture section is the first and only to offer a bachelor'south degree in architectural engineering in the region also.[73]

The Interdisciplinary Studies program (INTS), a program nether the Honors College,[74] is one of the fastest-growing programs on campus. The INTS programme allows students to custom build their own plan of study resulting in either a B.A.I.South. or B.Due south.I.S. caste. Interdisciplinary studies is a 35-yr-old academic field and the thirteenth-near popular major across the United States. The INTS program at UTA is the largest programme of its kind in Texas. In edifice custom degree plans, students mix the required core components with various disciplinary components to run into the academic and professional needs of the student.

The Honors Higher is a highly selective interdisciplinary college that caters to high-achieving undergraduate students of all majors and interests. UT Arlington'south Honors College is the showtime of its kind in North Texas and third in Texas.[75]

Colleges and schools [edit]

The university consists of x colleges and schools, each listed with its founding date:[76]

  • Higher of Engineering (1959)[77]
  • College of Liberal Arts (1959)
  • Higher of Compages, Planning and Public Affairs (CAPPA) (2015)
  • School of Social Piece of work (1967)
  • Graduate School (1966)[77]
  • College of Science (1959)
  • College of Nursing and Health Innovation (1976)
  • Higher of Business (1959)
  • Higher of Instruction (1963)
  • Honors Higher (1998)

UTA Libraries [edit]

Black-and-white map depicting New Spain, in modern-day Northern and Central America

Girolamo Ruscelli's 1561 map of New Spain, Nueva Hispania Tabula Nova. Image from the UTA Libraries Special Collections

UT Arlington Libraries accept three locations: Cardinal Library, the Architecture and Fine Arts Library, and the Scientific discipline and Engineering Library. Central Library is open 24/7 during the fall and spring semesters.

The Libraries Collections includes historical collections on Texas, Mexico, the Mexican–American War, and the greater southwest. An extensive cartography collection holds maps and atlases of the western hemisphere covering 5 centuries. Also included is the Fort Worth Star-Telegram photo archives, a collection representing over 100 years of N and Westward Texas history. All together, Special Collections holds more than 30,000 volumes, seven,000 linear feet of manuscripts and archival collections, five,000 historical maps, 3.six million prints and negatives, and thousands of items in other formats. Some of the Library'due south more rare and interesting materials are available online in their digital collections.[78]

Enquiry [edit]

UT Arlington'south enquiry expenditure in fiscal year 2018 was $105.vii million.[79] According to the university's Research Administration, total enquiry expenditures for fiscal yr 2019 totaled $117 one thousand thousand. Upwards 52% over five years.[80] In that location are several enquiry institutes and facilities on campus. Some notable ones include:

  • The Shimadzu Institute for Inquiry Technologies (SIRT) at UT Arlington is a centralized inquiry resource focused on providing access to instrumentation and expertise to support enquiry in biochemistry, biology, chemistry, cognition, engineering, geoscience, textile science, nanotechnology, and neuroscience.[81]
  • The UTA Aerodynamics Enquiry Eye is a enquiry facility that operates under the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering.
  • UT Arlington is home of a university-based nanotechnology research facility, NanoFab Research and Education Facility.[82]
  • The Centre for Amphibian and Reptile Variety Enquiry is one of the earth'southward collections of specimens from Primal and South America and is used past herpetology researchers from effectually the globe.[83]

Scientific discipline and Engineering Innovation and Research (SEIR) Building

  • The Eye for Mexican American Studies (CMAS) at The University of Texas at Arlington is an bookish research eye that promotes research and the recruitment, retention, and professional evolution of UTA kinesthesia actively engaged in studies on Latino issues. The center hosts kinesthesia enquiry assembly from several departments, and administers a minor in Mexican American Studies. The Director of the heart is Dr. Christian Zloniski from the Section of Sociology & Anthropology & the Acquaintance Director is Dr. Ignacio Ruiz-Perez from the Department of Mod Languages. The centre was founded in 1993 by a Texas state mandate.[84]
  • The UT Arlington Research Institute (UTARI) is a research and evolution unit of The University of Texas at Arlington.[85]
  • The Center for Transportation Equity, Decisions, and Dollars is a Academy Transportation Centre housed within the College of Compages, Planning and Public Affairs. Funded through a grant from the The states Department of Transportation, C-TEDD conducts policy research into the economic, political, and regulatory aspects of America'southward transportation systems.[86]
  • The Genomics Core Facility (GCF) provides UT Arlington with one of the interdisciplinary research facilities in North Texas.[87]
  • The Learning Innovation and Networked Noesis Research (LINK) Research Lab is a inquiry laboratory.[88]
  • The Science, Engineering, Innovation and Research (SEIR) building is a half dozen-story, 220,000-foursquare-pes edifice completed in 2018 for $125 million. The SEIR building houses research laboratories and 900 teaching seats in lecture halls and classrooms.[89]

Student life [edit]

Student profile [edit]

The U.Due south. News & Globe Written report consistently ranked UT Arlington in the superlative 10 in the nation for achieving the most ethnically diverse undergraduate educatee body.[90] Females account for virtually 55% of the total population. The tiptop four countries of origin for international students are India, Red china, Taiwan, and Nigeria.[91]

Demographics of Autumn 2019 educatee body [92] [93]
UTA Texas U.S. Census
African American 14% xiii% thirteen%
Asian American eleven% five% 5%
Non-Hispanic White 34% 44% 62%
Hispanic American 27% 39% 17%
Other 3% N/A N/A
International students 10% N/A N/A

Residential life [edit]

The campus has four residence halls with a total capacity of at least 5,600 students.[94] The academy besides has 18 on-campus apartment complexes and a express number of houses for students with dependent children. The four halls are Arlington Hall, Kalpana Chawla Hall (KC Hall), Vandergriff Hall at College Park, and Due west Hall.[95] [96]

Traditions [edit]

  • Bed Races: Since 1980, hundreds of students have gathered to watch teams consisting of 4 pushers and a rider race against each other in a race just over the length of a football field. Teams consist of student organizations, Greek organizations, and residence halls from effectually UT Arlington.[97]
  • Homecoming: Paired with the beginning of basketball flavour in the autumn, UT Arlington Homecoming features numerous various activities. These include alumni events, The Bash, Boom at Noon firing of the Carlisle Cannons, the Parade, fireworks display, pep rally, and homecoming game match-ups.[98]
  • Mav Bandy: This annual tradition encourages students to trade apparel from their high schoolhouse or another college for free UT Arlington gear.[99]
  • International Calendar week: "I-Week" is hosted by the International Educatee Organization, and branches out throughout the UT Arlington community in its entirety, jubilant variety betwixt cultures on campus. I-week typically includes a Food Fair, Fashion Prove, Global Extravaganza, Exhibits, and more.[100]
  • MavsMeet Convocation: MavsMeet, the New Student Convocation, is a formal assembly commemorating the beginning of the academic year. Students, faculty and staff are welcomed by the University president, provost, pupil congress president, and a distinguished UT Arlington faculty speaker. This major bookish event honors all undergraduate and graduate students, but particularly new UT Arlington students. Immediately post-obit the New Student Convocation, the MavsMeet AfterParty kicks off the year with live music acts, gratis food, games and activities.[101]
  • Oozeball: An annual upshot hosted by the Student Alumni Association[102] and Campus Recreation[103] to raise coin for the Student Alumni Association Sophomore Scholarship. In one case the amount for the scholarship is reached, all excess funds are donated to charity. In Oozeball, students play volleyball in artificial mud pits. Since its creation in 1989 in the Greek Life community, Oozeball has become one of the most pop student traditions.[104]
  • Rubbing Hereford'southward Head: Dr. E. H. Hereford was president of ASC. His sculpted bust sits on a pedestal in the Academy Center, e'er since information technology debuted in February 1959.[105] Superstition holds that rubbing Dr. Hereford'due south head gives expert luck on exams.
  • Soaping the fountain: Occasionally mischievous students will pollute the main fountain at the east end of the flying bridge over Cooper street with soap, causing it to be filled with suds and requiring information technology to be drained and cleaned. Less often other fountains on campus are subject to the same soap corruption.[ citation needed ]
  • UT Arlington Marching Band: Known as "The Ambassadors of the University," the UT Arlington Marching Band is ane of the few college marching bands in the nation to exist without a football team. The band performs annually for crowds numbering 100,000 and is featured in exhibition performances at state and local contests, such as Bands of America and Regional UIL, as well as festivals and loftier school and professional football games. In 2001, the band performed in exhibition at the Bands of America Chiliad Nationals Championship, held in Indianapolis, Indiana. The 175 student musicians in the ring stand for well-nigh all bookish disciplines and majors within the University.[106]

Greek life [edit]

The fraternity and sorority community at UT Arlington consists of 31 national and local organizations with four governing councils.[107] Traditionally, between v and ten pct of undergraduate students participate within the councils.[108] The year indicates the original lease date:

Interfraternity Quango

  • Alpha Tau Omega, 2004
  • Beta Theta Pi, 1971
  • Delta Tau Delta[109]
  • Delta Upsilon, 1967
  • Kappa Alpha Guild, 1968
  • Kappa Sigma, 1967
  • Phi Delta Theta, 1968
  • Phi Gamma Delta, 1968 (suspended)[110]
  • Pi Kappa Alpha, 1973
  • Pi Kappa Phi, 1978 (inactive)[111]
  • Sigma Chi, 1984 (suspended)[112]
  • Sigma Lambda Beta, 1996
  • Sigma Phi Epsilon, 1971 (suspended)[113]

Athletics [edit]

UT Arlington'southward able-bodied teams are known as the Mavericks (the option was fabricated in 1971 and predated the Dallas Mavericks' pick in 1980). UT Arlington was a lease member of the Southland Conference.[115] UT Arlington won the Southland Conference's Commissioners Loving cup three times since the award was first instituted in 1998. The Commissioners Loving cup is awarded to the athletics programme with the highest all-around performance in all conference events, including all men'southward and women's events.

A cheerleader gives the "Go Mavs" hand symbol at the 1985 homecoming bonfire. The symbol is identical to UTEP's "Picks Upward" symbol, but because of its resemblance of the letter "M" formed past the index, center, and ring fingers, it is used by UTA to stand for the commencement initial for the team name (the "Mavericks").

UT Arlington's basketball and volleyball teams play at Higher Park Centre, which opened with a women/men basketball double header on February 1, 2012. The new arena seats about 7,000 fans for sporting events and toll an estimated $78 million. Athletic director Jim Baker began work on the same date.

UT Arlington became a fellow member of the Western Athletic Conference on July 1, 2012.[116] After a single flavour in the WAC, the Mavericks joined the Lord's day Belt Conference on July 1, 2013.[117] The switch came after continued shakeups in college conference membership.

A later phase of briefing realignment in the early on 2020s saw the Lord's day Belt Conference announce the pending addition of 4 new football members, bringing that briefing'southward football game membership to fourteen. Shortly after this expansion was appear, UTA appear that it would rejoin the WAC in July 2022.[118]

Varsity sports [edit]

UT Arlington fields teams or competitors in 15 NCAA Partition I events, including baseball, basketball (men'south and women'south), tennis, golf, softball, track, cross country and women'due south volleyball.

Volleyball achieved the greatest squad success in the history of the academy by advancing to the 1989 NCAA Volleyball Final Four. The women's basketball team played in the 2005 and 2007 NCAA tournaments; the men's basketball team fabricated its beginning appearance in the 2008 NCAA tournament, losing in the first round confronting No. 1 seed Memphis, who was later forced to vacate this and all other wins from the 2007–2008 season. The men's basketball team earned a berth the National Invitation Tournament for the tertiary time during the 2016–2017 flavour, advancing to the quarter finals. The quarter-final run included a win at BYU and two home games at College Park Heart in front of large crowds (demand citation). In 2011–2012, the men's team advanced to the National Invitation Tournament, falling to the Washington Huskies on their dwelling courtroom in a highly competitive game in the opening round.[119]

UT Arlington fielded a football game team, playing out of Maverick Stadium, until it was discontinued afterward the 1985 season. The university administration noted major financial losses of about $ane 1000000 per year and low average attendance (5,600, the student body at the time was 23,100). The plan was funded by the academy's auxiliary enterprise income while the other fourteen sports were nether-funded, as football accounted for half the total able-bodied budget.[120] Discussions have place periodically well-nigh restarting football game just have non gained traction equally an institutional priority.[121]

UTA Cheer [edit]

UTA's small coed cheerleading team has become a perennial power in Division I competitive cheerleading. The team has been crowned National Cheerleaders Association Collegiate National Champions in 2010, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, and 2018.[122]

Sports rivalries [edit]

The Spirit Horse at the Higher Park Center

The Texas Country Bobcats, from a Central Texas peer establishment, are a primary in-conference rival dating back to 1987 with concurrent memberships in three different conferences. As of the conclusion of the 2016–2017 seasons, UTA leads the all-fourth dimension series in men's basketball game (36–33), volleyball (42–35), softball (61–59), and football (2–0), and the Bobcats pb in women's basketball (31–39), and baseball (43–66).

UTA too maintains a relatively heated non-conference rivalry with the Academy of Northward Texas Mean Green. Periodic sporting events between the two are amidst the best attended for each team. Information technology is the longest continuing sport rivalry is men's basketball, which began in 1925.[123]

One of UTA'south most anticipated baseball game rivalries is with the TCU Horned Frogs. The two Tarrant County teams play annually in games that generate loftier omnipresence from both universities. 4,015 people saw the UTA/TCU friction match-up at Earth Life Park in Arlington in 2013. V of the top nine well-nigh attended games at Clay Gould Ballpark feature TCU every bit the visiting squad.

With UTA get-go Dominicus Belt membership in 2013, briefing rivalries were resumed with the Arkansas State Crimson Wolves, Louisiana Ragin' Cajuns, and Louisiana–Monroe Warhawks, who were all members of the Southland Briefing at various points during UTA's tenure.

During UTA'south nine years in the Dominicus Chugalug, the WAC experienced major membership turnover; when the Mavericks return in 2022, the only WAC members who were in the league during their 1 flavor in that league will be New United mexican states Country, which will leave for Briefing USA in 2023, and Seattle. UTA will arrive in the WAC alongside the San Antonio-based Incarnate Discussion; they will join vi other Texas schools in the conference—Abilene Christian, Lamar, Sam Houston, Stephen F. Austin, Tarleton, and UTRGV, though Sam Houston volition exit the WAC for Conference The states in 2023.

Notable people [edit]

University leaders [edit]

Presidents, deans, and other heads of UT Arlington and its predecessor institutions:

  • Lee Morgan Hammond and William H. Trimble, Arlington Higher, 1895–1898[124] [125] [126]
  • Lee Morgan Hammond, Arlington Higher, 1898–1900[126] [127]
  • West. W. Franklin, Arlington College, 1900–1902[128]
  • James M. Carlisle, Carlisle Military University, 1902–1913[129] [130]
  • Henry Kirby Taylor, Arlington Grooming School, 1913–1916[131] [132]
  • John B. Dodson, Arlington Military University, 1916–1917[133]
  • Myron L. Williams, Dean, Grubbs Vocational College and North Texas Agricultural College (NTAC), 1917–1925[134] [135]
  • Edward Everett Davis, Dean, NTAC, 1925–1946[134] [136]
  • Ernest H. Hereford, PhD, Dean, NTAC, 1946–1948,[134] [137] and President, Arlington State College (ASC), 1948–1958[138] [139]
  • Jack R. Woolf, PhD, President, ASC and UT Arlington (UTA), 1959–1968[139] [140]
  • Frank Harrison, PhD, President, UTA, 1968–1972[141] [142]
  • Wendell Nedderman, PhD, President, UTA, 1972–1992[141] [142]
  • Ryan C. Amacher, PhD, President, UTA, 1992–1995[141] [143] [144]
  • Robert E. Witt, PhD, President, UTA, 1995–2003[141] [145] [146]
  • Charles A. Sorber, PhD, Acting President, UTA, 2003–2004[147]
  • James D. Spaniolo, M.P.A., J.D., President, UTA, 2004–2013[148] [149] [150]
  • Vistasp Karbhari, PhD, President, UTA, 2013–2020[151] [152]
  • Teik C. Lim, Acting President, UTA, 2020–present[153] [154]

Alumni [edit]

  • Kalpana Chawla, first Indian-American astronaut and first Indian adult female in space
  • Pat Choate, American economist, 1996 Reform Political party candidate for Vice President
  • Waded Cruzado, educator, the 12th president of Montana Land University
  • Roland G. Fryer Jr., educator, Professor of Economics at Harvard University
  • Caitlin Glass, voice actress
  • Marjorie Herrera Lewis, author
  • Lou Diamond Phillips, actor and director
  • R. Byron Pipes, educator, researcher in polymer sciences and the seventeenth president of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
  • Doug Russell, Olympic champion, and former world record-holder in iii different events
  • Robert L. Stewart, astronaut and starting time active-duty U.Due south. Army soldier to make a spaceflight
  • Sajeeb Ahmed Wazed, businessman, political leader and Counselor to the Authorities of Bangladesh on Information and Communication Technology

See also [edit]

  • Maverick Speakers Series, UT Arlington'southward on-campus distinguished lecture serial
  • UTA Radio, UT Arlington's student-run radio station

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Sources [edit]

  • Saxon, Gerald D. (1995). Transitions: A Centennial History of the University of Texas at Arlington, 1895-1995. Arlington, Texas: UTA Press. ISBN0932408192.
  • Barker, Evelyn; Worcester, Lea (2015). Academy of Texas at Arlington. Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN9781439649732.

External links [edit]

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata
  • Texas–Arlington Athletics website

taoworkly.blogspot.com

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

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