Howard L Schrott Center for the Arts Indianapolis in

Private university in Indianapolis, Indiana, Usa

Butler University
Butler University seal.svg

Old names

North-Western Christian University (1855–1877)
Motto Education, Research, Service
Type Private university
Established 1855

Academic affiliations

Council of Contained Colleges
Endowment $212.0 1000000 (2020)[1]
President James Danko
Provost Kathryn Morris

Bookish staff

368[2]
Undergraduates 4,492
Postgraduates 1,052
Location

Indianapolis

,

Indiana

,

Usa


39°50′22″North 86°ten′17″Westward  /  39.83944°N 86.17139°Westward  / 39.83944; -86.17139 Coordinates: 39°50′22″N 86°10′17″Due west  /  39.83944°N 86.17139°W  / 39.83944; -86.17139
Campus Urban: 295 acres (119 ha)[ii]
Colors Butler Blue, Bright Blueish, Cool Grey, White[3]
Nickname Bulldogs

Sporting affiliations

NCAA Sectionalisation I Big East, Pioneer League (football)
Mascot Blue IV "Blue"
Hink
Website www.butler.edu
Butler University logo.svg

Butler Academy is a individual university in Indianapolis, Indiana. Founded in 1855 and named after founder Ovid Butler, the university has over 60 major academic fields of report in six colleges: the Lacy School of Business, Higher of Communication, Higher of Education, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Higher of Chemist's and Health Sciences, and Hashemite kingdom of jordan College of the Arts. Its 295-acre (119 ha) campus is approximately 5 miles (viii.0 km) from downtown Indianapolis.

History [edit]

Illustrations depicting buildings on the school's Irvington campus in 1896

On January 15, 1850, the Indiana General Assembly adopted Ovid Butler's proposed charter for a new Christian academy in Indianapolis. After five years in evolution, the school opened on November 1, 1855, as N-Western Christian Academy at 13th Street and Higher Artery on Indianapolis'due south nigh northside at the eastern edge of the present-24-hour interval Onetime Northside Historic District. Attorney and academy founder Ovid Butler provided the property.[4] [5] [half dozen] The university was founded by members of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), although it was never controlled past the church. The university'southward charter called for "a non-sectarian institution gratuitous from the taint of slavery, offer instruction in every branch of liberal and professional education."[4] The university was the first in Indiana and the 3rd in the Us to admit both men and women.[4]

The academy established the first professorship in English literature and the first Department of English in the state of Indiana. In 1869 Ovid Butler endowed the Demia Butler Chair of English Literature in honor of his daughter who died in 1867. Demia Butler was the kickoff woman to graduate from the Classical grade at the university. The chair was the first endowed position at an American academy designated for a female professor.[4] [7] Catharine Merrill, was the beginning to occupy the Demia Butler Chair of English Literature in 1869. Merrill was just the second female university professor in the land.[8] Today the Demia Butler Chair of English language Literature is occupied by Susan Neville.

The university moved to a new site in the community of Irvington, on the east side of Indianapolis, in 1875, and inverse its name to Butler Academy in 1877.[9] [10]

The university's department of religion became a dissever Christian Church seminary and "college of applied Christianity" in 1924; it was variously called the School of Religion and the College of Religion.[eleven]

In 1930, Butler merged with the Teacher's Higher of Indianapolis, founded by Eliza Cooper Blaker, creating the university'due south second college. The 3rd college, the College of Business Administration, was established in 1937, and the College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences was established in 1945, following a merger that absorbed the Indianapolis College of Pharmacy. The Jordan College of Fine Arts, the academy'southward fifth college, was established in 1951, following a merger with the Arthur Jordan Solarium of Music. Butler'south School of Organized religion, established in 1924, became contained in 1958 and is currently known as the Christian Theological Seminary.[5]

Campuses [edit]

Irvington campus [edit]

The bell belfry inside Holcomb Gardens

The original location of the school was 13th Street and College Avenue on the most-northside of Indianapolis.[six] In 1875, the university, renamed for Ovid Butler "in recognition of Ovid Butler's inspirational vision, determined leadership, and financial support," moved to a 25-acre (x ha) campus in Irvington, which at the time was an independent suburb of Indianapolis. The campus consisted of several buildings, including an observatory, about of which was demolished in 1939. The Bona Thompson Library at the intersection of Downey and University avenues, designed by architects Henry H. Dupont and Jesse T. Johnson, is the only remaining edifice, although several buildings that housed faculty remain, including the Benton Firm.[4] [v]

Fairview campus [edit]

Enrollment at Butler increased following the end of World War I, prompting the administration to examine the need for a larger campus. The new and electric current campus, designed in function by noted builder George Sheridan, was formed on the site of Fairview Park, a former entertainment park on the city's northwest side.[four] [5] Classes began on the campus in 1928.[2]

Buildings [edit]

The commencement building on the Fairview campus was Arthur Jordan Memorial Hall, designed by Robert Frost Daggett and Thomas Hibben. The construction's Collegiate Gothic style of architecture, also used in the original William Tinsley-designed 13th Street and College Avenue building, gear up the tone for subsequent buildings erected on the campus over the adjacent three decades.[iv] [five] Also, in 1928, the Butler Fieldhouse (after renamed Hinkle Fieldhouse) was completed afterward being designed by architect Fermor Spencer Cannon. The building remained the largest indoor sports facility in the state until the mid-1960s. The Religion Building and Sweeney Chapel were completed in 1942. These structures, designed by Burns and James, were remodeled into Robertson Hall in 1966.[4] [5] The edifice now serves equally the university's alumni and admissions offices.

Holcomb Observatory and Planetarium, home to the largest telescope in the country of Indiana

Following World State of war Ii, construction began on the student heart, Atherton Union (designed past McGuire and Shook). This building was remodeled in 1993 and includes an on-campus Starbucks. McGuire and Shook likewise designed Ross Hall, a dormitory originally designed for men just is now coed, and Schwitzer Hall, a women's dormitory. Art Lindbergh, with help from Daggett, designed the Holcomb Observatory and Planetarium, which was dedicated in 1955. This building houses Indiana's largest telescope.[4] [5]

Acclaimed architect Minoru Yamasaki, who designed the World Trade Centre, designed Irwin Library, which opened in 1963 and serves as the academy'southward main library. Also, in the early on 1960s, Lilly Hall and Clowes Memorial Hall were constructed following the move of the Arthur Hashemite kingdom of jordan Conservatory of Music to the campus. Clowes Hall, which opened in 1963, was co-designed by Indianapolis architect Evans Woollen Iii (founder of Woollen, Molzan and Partners) and John M. Johansen (of New Canaan, Connecticut). Ten years following the construction of Clowes Hall and Irwin Library, the scientific discipline complex of Gallahue Hall and the Holcomb Research Institute (at present known equally Holcomb Building) were built, completing the "U" shaped complex of academic buildings.[four] [v] [12] The Holcomb Edifice now houses the Higher of Business organisation, Ruth Lilly Science Library, and Information technology.[13]

The Residential Higher ("ResCo"), designed by James and Associates, was the academy'south last major structure projection of the twentieth century. Completed in 1990 the building serves as a cafeteria and a dormitory.[4] [5] In 2001, the Fairbanks Center for Communication and Technology was opened to house the school's communication programs of communication studies, journalism, and media arts equally well as informatics. The Fairbanks Centre houses 2 multi-purpose studios for video, tv set, and music production, besides every bit 3 professional person music and audio recording studios. Early 2004 saw the addition of the Eidson-Duckwall Recital Hall onto Robertson Hall. The 140-seat concert venue serves as a showplace for student, faculty, and guest recitals.[fourteen]

Butler built the 85,000-square-human foot (7,900 m2) Health and Recreation Complex (HRC) in 2005. Opening in 2006, the HRC offers a jogging runway around a two-court gymnasium, an aquatic complex, free-weight room, cardio and selectorized weight motorcar surface area, fitness assessment and massage therapy room, a sauna, ii multipurpose rooms, and locker rooms. Exterior of the defended fitness space, the building houses a health center, counseling and consultation services, conference room, juice bar, and student lounge.

The Apartment Village also opened in 2006 as housing for juniors and seniors. Each apartment contains four individual bedrooms with a single bed, dresser, and desk with a chair; two bathrooms; a full kitchen, including a dishwasher, disposal, microwave, and a four-stool dining counter; air-conditioning; cablevision tv; and Ethernet and wireless access in each room. The Village has a centrally located customs center, The Dawghouse, which includes a convenience store, a career and computer a resource lab, a game room, laundry facilities, and a staffed resource desk.

On May 8, 2008, Butler broke ground on a 40,000-foursquare-foot (3,700 mii), four-story add-on to the Chemist's and Health Sciences Building. This building, designed past Browning Mean solar day Mullins Dierdorf, is home to kinesthesia offices, classrooms, and laboratories to support Butler'south Pharmacy and Dr. Banana (PA) programs.[15]

In 2013, the Howard L. Schrott Center for the Arts opened. Information technology features a 450-seat performance hall and sustainable "green" parking improvements.

Other important sites on campus include Holcomb Gardens, 20-acre (eight.1 ha) gardens containing a statue of Persephone, a pond, and a local culvert; Clowes Memorial Hall; Hinkle Fieldhouse; Irwin Library, designed by Minoru Yamasaki; and Holcomb Observatory and Planetarium, home to the largest telescope in Indiana.

Facilities [16] has overall responsibility for planning, maintaining and building Butler's campus.

Academics [edit]

Academic rankings
Regional
U.S. News & Globe Report [17] 1
Master's Academy course
Washington Monthly [18] 163
National
Forbes [19] 216
THE/WSJ [20] 217

Over 60 major academic fields of study, viii pre-professional programs, and xix graduate programs are offered in six academic colleges: Arts, Business organisation, Communication, Pedagogy, Liberal Arts and Sciences, and Pharmacy and Wellness Sciences. Butler ranks 1st for Midwest Regional Universities in U.South. News & World Report 'due south 2019 Best Colleges. The university emphasizes the practicality of knowledge and offers individual attending to its students with its small class size and no didactics assistants. Butler University increased its focus on kinesthesia and educatee research with the Butler Institute for Research and Scholarship (BIRS), bolstered by a $1 meg grant from Lilly Endowment.[21] The university as well provides student research opportunities, such equally the Butler Summer Institute, a 10-calendar week program in which Butler students are granted funding to perform contained research with a kinesthesia member.[22]

The university is organized into the following schools and colleges:

  • Andre B. Lacy School of Business organisation
  • Higher of Advice
  • College of Instruction
  • College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
  • College of Chemist's shop and Health Sciences
  • Jordan College of the Arts

Athletics [edit]

Butler's able-bodied teams, known as the Bulldogs, compete in Sectionalisation I of the NCAA. On July 1, 2012, the Bulldogs left the Horizon League, their briefing dwelling house since 1979, for the Atlantic 10 Briefing.[23] [24] Since the A-ten does non sponsor football, the Butler football game squad plays in the FCS'due south Pioneer League. The women's golf team at Butler joined the Metro Atlantic Athletic Briefing, as the A-10 sponsors the sport just for men.

On March 20, 2013, it was officially announced that Butler would leave the Atlantic 10 Conference and became a founding fellow member of the reconfigured Big East Briefing July 1, 2013.[25] [26]

In the past decade, Butler teams have captured 26 conference championships (in iv different leagues). The Bulldogs have made appearances in NCAA National Championship Tournaments in men's and women's basketball game, men's soccer, volleyball, men's cantankerous state, lacrosse, and baseball. Butler won the James J. McCafferty bays, awarded annually by the Horizon League for all-sports excellence based on conference championship points, seven times, including iii-straight from 1996–97 to 1998–99 and dorsum-to-back years in 2001–02 and 2002–03, 2006–07, and 2009–x.[27]

Men'due south basketball [edit]

The Butler programme was one of the most successful "mid-major" basketball programs from 2000 to 2011, having won at to the lowest degree 20 games and reached postseason play eight of the terminal ten seasons, including six NCAA Tournament appearances.[28] Butler also holds two national championships in men'south basketball from the pre-tournament era: i from 1924 (earned via the AAU national tournament), and ane from 1929 (selected by the Veteran Athletes of Philadelphia).[29]

In 2010 and 2011, Butler qualified for consecutive national championship games. The 2010 Butler team, led by star player Gordon Hayward, advanced to the national championship game where they lost a close game to Duke. With a total enrollment of only four,500 students, Butler is the smallest school to play for a national championship since the tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1985. In 2011, the Bulldogs advanced to the title game but finished every bit runners-up again, this time losing to Connecticut.

Butler has the all-time winning percentage and near wins of all Division I men's basketball programs in the land of Indiana over the terminal decade (21.6 wins per year through 2006). Until the 2015 Circular of 32 loss in overtime to the Irish, Butler had won the previous six meetings with in-state rival Notre Matriarch and ii of the last iv against Indiana.[30] [31] Butler defeated both Notre Dame and Indiana during 2006–07 regular season, while besides defeating in-state rival Purdue to motility to 2–0 confronting the Boilermakers this decade. Butler has as well been the defending champion of the Hoosier Archetype men's basketball game tournament since the 2001–02 season,[32] [33] and has advanced to postseason play nine of the last xi years (7 NCAAs, 2 NITs). Butler has been to fifteen NCAA Tournaments and three NITs since 1997.

Football [edit]

Over the course of 81 seasons from 1932 to 2013, Bulldog football game teams have won 34 briefing championships. This includes vii straight Indiana Collegiate Conference titles from 1934 to 1940, league titles in 1946, 1947, 1952, and 1953, and vii direct from 1958 to 1964, all under Tony Hinkle. Following the motion from the College Sectionalization to NCAA Division 2, Butler won iv straight conference championships from 1972 to 1975, and in 1977, all under the guidance of Bill Sylvester, Sr. Butler went on to win league titles in 1983, 1985, and iii straight from 1987 to 1989, under coach Bill Lynch. The Bulldogs too went to the NCAA Division Ii playoffs in 1983 and 1988. Butler and beau HCC member schools joined with the Neat Lakes Valley Conference to form the Midwest Intercollegiate Football Conference (now the Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference). Butler'due south football game dominance continued in this new briefing with MIFC Conference Championships in both 1991 and 1992. These championships included a trip to the NCAA Division II playoffs in 1991 pairing Butler against eventual Partitioning Two champion Pittsburg Land.

Following the 1992 flavour, Butler and member schoolhouse Valparaiso moved up to NCAA Partition I-AA (now Division I FCS) to join with Dayton, Drake, Evansville, and San Diego to form the Pioneer Football game League. Butler won another conference championship in 1994. In this era, "the Dawgs" were led by Arnold Mickens who bankrupt numerous NCAA Sectionalisation I rushing records, including viii straight 200-yard (180 thousand) performances during the campaign. In 2009, Butler won its 32nd league championship past winning the Pioneer Football League championship under Coach Jeff Voris. The Bulldogs set a school tape with 11 wins and went on to the Gridiron Classic, winning over Fundamental Connecticut State 28–23. The Bulldogs' latest championships came in 2012 and 2013 when the Bulldogs won vii league victories each season to secure the share of the PFL Championships. This is the Bulldogs' fourth PFL Championship and the third in the last five years. Butler also earned a berth to the 2013 Division I FCS playoffs, the PFL's outset automatic bid for the Division I football game championships.

Hoosier Helmet Trophy [edit]

The Hoosier Helmet Trophy was established equally the trophy helmet for the rivalry football played between Butler and Valparaiso University. The Hoosier Helmet was created prior to the 2006 season to commemorate the football game rivalry that has existed since 1921. The helmet trophy was created to farther intensify the rivalry between these two teams. A group of Butler players, along with their head charabanc, Jeff Voris, came up with the idea. After Valparaiso caput coach Stacey Adams agreed to play for the helmet, Butler equipment manager John Harding put the trophy together.

The white helmet is mounted on a hardwood plaque and features each team'south logo on the respective sides of the helmet. A gold plate is added each yr to commemorate the winner and score of the competition. Currently, Butler holds a 9–iv series lead when playing for the Hoosier Helmet. Both Butler and Valparaiso compete in the NCAA Division I-FCS (formerly Segmentation I-AA), non-scholarship Pioneer Football game League.

Men's soccer [edit]

Butler'south men'south soccer qualified for the NCAA Tournament in 1995, 1997, 1998, 2001, 2009, 2010, 2016, and 2017, reaching the round of 16 in 1995, 1998, and 2017. Butler won the Big E tournament title in 2016 and the Horizon League (formerly the MCC) tournament titles in 1995, 1997, 1998, 2001, and 2010. They also won or shared the regular-season title seven times, including 1994, 1996, 1998, 2004, 2008, 2009 and 2010. The 1998 squad enjoyed national rankings every bit high every bit No. eight in the country, and the 2010 squad finished the regular season as the just undefeated team nationally and were ranked as high as No. vi in the country.

Cross state [edit]

Some of Butler'due south near notable able-bodied accomplishments have come up in cantankerous country. Butler won thirteen directly Horizon League Championships in men'southward cross country and 8 women'southward championships. Since moving to the Big Due east, both teams have captured Large East Conference Championships. The men's team placed 4th in the nation in 2004 earning a team trophy at the NCAA Partition I championships, and finished 13th in the nation at the 2020 NCAA Division 1 championships. Both teams have ofttimes qualified for nationals in recent years, placing individuals as high every bit 3rd (Mark Tucker, 2003). All-Americans from the Butler cross country team include Julius Mwangi, Justin Young, Fraser Thompson (A Rhodes Scholar), Mark Tucker, Olly Laws, and Andrew Baker, Katie Clark, Mara Olson, Erik Peterson, Olivia Pratt, Euan Makepeace, and Simon Bedard. Quondam coach Joe Franklin was named NCAA Partition I Coach of the Year for leading the Bulldogs to their 2004 4th-place finish. In 2013, the women's cantankerous country team added some other trophy finish past placing tertiary in the country at the NCAA cross country championships. With the contempo move into the Large East Conference, Butler has aligned itself with some of the most notable programs in the land.

Student life [edit]

Students at Butler University participate in more than 150 student organizations and dozens of club and intramural sports, and many multi-cultural programs and services. More than 94 percent of students are involved in campus activities.[34]

Greek organizations [edit]

Greek life is a popular option at Butler with over 35 percent of undergraduates becoming members of social fraternities or sororities.[34] Fraternities and sororities take long been a part of student life at Butler, with the first fraternity established in 1859, and the starting time sorority established in 1874. Today, representatives from each of the seven active fraternities make up the Interfraternity Quango (IFC), which coordinates men'southward recruitment and works with the Panhellenic Council to plan all-campus events.[35] The Panhellenic Quango has representatives from each of Butler'due south seven agile sororities and women's fraternities.

Interfraternity Council chapters [edit]

  • Delta Tau Delta—Beta Zeta chapter (est. 1878)
  • Phi Delta Theta—Indiana Gamma chapter (est. 1859)
  • Sigma Chi—Rho chapter (est. 1865)
  • Sigma Nu—Epsilon Mu chapter (est. 1926)
  • Beta Theta Pi - Alpha Psi Affiliate (est. 2017)
  • Lambda Chi Alpha - Alpha Alpha Zeta (re-est. 2019)
  • Phi Kappa Psi—Indiana Zeta chapter (re-est. 2021)

Panhellenic Quango capacity [edit]

  • Blastoff Chi Omega—Alpha Chi chapter (est. 1925)
  • Alpha Phi—Epsilon Beta affiliate (est. 1967)
  • Delta Delta Delta—Delta Lambda chapter (est. 1914, closed 1995, re-est. 2005)
  • Delta Gamma—Blastoff Tau chapter (est. 1925)
  • Kappa Kappa Gamma—Mu chapter (est. 1878)
  • Kappa Alpha Theta—Gamma chapter (est. 1874, closed 1886, re-est. 1906)
  • Pi Beta Phi—Indiana Gamma chapter (est. 1897)
Airtight chapters [edit]
  • Zeta Tau Blastoff—Alpha Delta chapter (1920–1956)
  • Alpha Delta Theta—Epsilon chapter (1923–1933)
  • Delta Zeta—Alpha Nu affiliate (1924–1935)
  • Alpha Delta Pi—Alpha Phi chapter (1925–1933)
  • Alpha Omicron Pi—Beta Theta chapter (1927–1940)
  • Alpha Sigma Blastoff (1928–1933)
  • Kappa Delta Rho—Omicron chapter (1928-1937)
  • Sigma Sigma Sigma—Alpha Eta chapter (1928–1933)
  • Pi Kappa Sigma—Alpha Iota affiliate (1929–1937)
  • Kappa Delta—Alpha Omega chapter (1931–1935)
  • Tau Kappa Epsilon—Gamma Psi affiliate (1951–2012)

National Panhellenic Council chapters [edit]

On Sunday, November 12, 1922, the Alpha affiliate of Sigma Gamma Rho was founded at Butler University by a mix of undergraduate and graduate students.[36] The sorority had its beginnings on the original Irvington campus of Butler University. While about NPHC undergraduate chapters have citywide memberships with students from more than one university, the Alpha chapter of Sigma Gamma Rho is composed only of Butler students.[37] Role of the original Divine 9 of Blackness Greek letter organizations, Sigma Gamma Rho is one of ii Indiana based historically all-blackness Greek organizations in the state.

Today at that place is a commemorative stained glass window located just outside the tower room at the south end of Atherton Union, too every bit decorative bricks on the right side of Atherton.

  • Sigma Gamma Rho—Alpha chapter (est. 1922)

Service and professional fraternities [edit]

  • Alpha Kappa Psi, National Professional Business Society, Lambda Upsilon chapter
  • Alpha Phi Omega, National Coed Service Fraternity, Alpha Tau chapter
  • Alpha Psi Omega, Theatre Professional person Society, Omicron Epsilon chapter
  • Kappa Psi, National Professional Social club in Pharmacy
  • Lambda Kappa Sigma, International Fraternity of Women in Pharmacy
  • Mu Phi Epsilon, Professional person Music Pedagogy Guild
  • Sigma Blastoff Iota, International Women's Music Fraternity
  • Sigma Rho Delta, National Dance Society, Blastoff affiliate (est. 1967)
  • Phi Delta Chi, National Professional Pharmacy Order, Alpha Phi chapter (est. 1955)
  • Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, National Music Fraternity, Alpha Sigma affiliate

Honor societies [edit]

  • Kappa Delta Pi, National Honorary Society in Education
  • Kappa Kappa Psi, National Honorary Ring Society, Blastoff Beta chapter (est. 1929)
  • Lambda Pi Eta, National Advice Honorary Society, Upsilon Delta chapter (est. 2007)
  • Pi Sigma Blastoff, National Political Science Honorary Social club, Sigma Gamma affiliate
  • Pi Kappa Delta, National Forensics Honorary (defended to Speech communication and Fence), Zeta chapter (2011)
  • Sigma Delta Pi, National Collegiate Hispanic Honor Society, Delta Upsilon affiliate
  • Sigma Pi Sigma, Physics Honorary Order
  • Tau Beta Sigma, National Honorary Band Guild, Epsilon chapter (est. 1946)
  • Upsilon Pi Epsilon, Estimator and Data Honorary Society (est. 2001)
  • Phi Beta Kappa, Academic Award Society (est. 2009)
  • Phi Eta Sigma, National Honorary Society for Freshmen
  • Phi Lambda Sigma, National Chemist's Honorary Gild, Pi chapter
  • Rho Chi, Professional Honorary Society for Students and Professors of Pharmacy, Blastoff Phi chapter (est. 1953)
  • Psi Chi, International Honor Society in Psychology (est. 1997)
  • Order of Omega, National Greek Leadership Society, Nu Upsilon Chapter (est. 1993)

Spiritual organizations [edit]

The Center for Faith and Vocation[38] (known on campus as "The Blue House") is the hub for campus faith communities. The CFV helps students connect their spiritual journeys with career goals. The CFV places students in internship experiences[39] to help decide their vocation. The Faculty/Staff Workshop[40]—held twice a year—trains staff and faculty on how to assist students live lives of purpose and significant.

Faith communities on campus:

  • Butler Catholic Customs
  • Butler Meditation Group
  • Coalition for Christian Outreach (non-denominational)
  • Converge (non-denominational Christian)
  • Cru (evangelical Christian)
  • Grace Unlimited
  • Hillel
  • Muslim Student Association
  • Orthodox Christian Association
  • Reclaimed (United Methodist)
  • Secular Student Alliance
  • Voices of Deliverance
  • Young Life

Competitive organizations [edit]

  • Forensics (Speech and Contend)
  • E-Sports Teams

Notable people [edit]

Alumni [edit]

  • Clotilde Betances Jaeger, feminist author and announcer
  • Stanley A. Cain, botanist and plant ecologist
  • Kevin Calabro, play-by-play journalist in basketball and Seattle sports radio host
  • Ed Carpenter, IndyCar Series commuter
  • Grace Julian Clarke, author, journalist, and women'due south suffrage activist
  • Barry South. Collier, current Butler University athletic manager and sometime head basketball double-decker at Butler and University of Nebraska
  • Arthur C. Cope, pharmacist and originator of the Cope reaction and Cope rearrangement
  • Richard N. Côté, author and lecturer
  • George Daugherty, conductor of major American and international symphony orchestras; Emmy winner and five-time Emmy nominee
  • Scott Drew, Baylor University men's basketball coach
  • Sarah Fisher, IndyCar Series driver
  • Luke Flynn, composer
  • Talitha Gerlach, American YWCA worker who spent most of her life as a social worker in Shanghai, China
  • John V. Hadley, Justice of the Indiana Supreme Court
  • Lawson Harvey, Justice of the Indiana Supreme Courtroom
  • Gordon Hayward, professional basketball histrion and professional e-sports athlete
  • Bill Hazen, play-by-play announcer in basketball and syndicated radio host
  • Howard A. Howe, polio researcher
  • Freddie Hubbard, trumpeter and composer
  • Robert G. Jacobson, chair of pediatrics at Mayo Dispensary
  • Dan Johnson, professional baseball player
  • Jim Jones, cult leader who ordered a mass suicide and mass murder of 918 commune members in 1978
  • David Starr Jordan, president of Indiana Academy and offset president of Stanford University
  • Peter Kassig, aid worker taken hostage and ultimately beheaded by The Islamic State[41]
  • Marker Kurlansky, journalist and writer of general interest non-fiction
  • Todd Lickliter, former University of Iowa men's basketball caput coach and former Butler basketball game head double-decker
  • Peter Lupus, bodybuilder and histrion
  • Shelvin Mack, professional basketball histrion
  • Thad Matta, former Ohio State University men's basketball game head coach and former Butler basketball head bus
  • Elizabeth Miller (1878-1961), novelist
  • Pat Neshek, professional baseball player
  • Harry S. New, U.S. Senator from Indiana and Us Postmaster General
  • Ronald Nored, caput coach of the NBA D-League Long Island Nets
  • Madge Oberholtzer, Indiana state employee whose death at the hands of D.C. Stephenson hastened the demise of the Ku Klux Klan in the state
  • Scott Overall, Olympic athlete
  • Johann Sebastian Paetsch, musician and cellist
  • Rebecca Paul, Tennessee Lottery president and CEO
  • Karen Pence, Second Lady of the United States
  • Bobby Plump, Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame inductee, and hero of the 1954 Milan Loftier School team whose story provided the basis for the 1986 film Hoosiers
  • George Ryan, former Illinois governor
  • Chris Salvi, professional football actor
  • Avriel Shull, architect
  • Jay Stewart, television and radio announcer
  • Wendi C. Thomas, journalist and founder of MLK50
  • Elaine C. Wagner, Rear Admiral, U.s. Navy) and 36th Chief, United States Navy Dental Corps
  • Ryan Ward, professional lacrosse, PE & health teacher
  • Maurine Dallas Watkins, announcer, playwright; author of play Chicago
  • Tyler Wideman (born 1995), basketball histrion in the Israeli National League
  • Marguerite Young, author of poetry, fiction, not-fiction, and criticism

Kinesthesia and staff [edit]

  • Igor Buketoff, conductor and teacher
  • Gordon Clark, philosopher and Calvinist theologian
  • Michael J. Colburn, 27th Director of the Us Marine Band and a colonel in the Marine Corps.
  • Joe Franklin, 2004 NCAA Division I Cross State Jitney of the Yr
  • Paul D. "Tony" Hinkle, developed the orange basketball
  • Henry Leck, Acquaintance Professor of Music and Managing director of Indianapolis Children'southward Choir
  • Catharine Merrill, first Demia Butler Chair of English Literature[8]
  • Susan Neville, current Demia Butler Chair in English, writer, and creative writing professor
  • Matt Pivec, saxophonist
  • Samuel Due east. Perkins, Justice of the Indiana Supreme Court, taught police force
  • Michael Schelle, composer and instructor
  • Marvin Scott, professor, onetime President of St. Paul's College, Virginia, and 2004 Republican Candidate for the U.S. Senate
  • Brad Stevens, a former caput basketball coach from 2007 to 2013, quondam double-decker and current President of Basketball game Operations of the Boston Celtics
  • Emma Lou Thornbrough, historian of the Midwest and of African American history

See also [edit]

References [edit]

  1. ^ As of June 30, 2020. U.S. and Canadian Institutions Listed by Fiscal Yr 2020 Endowment Market Value and Alter in Endowment Marketplace Value from FY19 to FY20 (Report). National Association of College and University Business Officers and TIAA. February nineteen, 2021. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
  2. ^ a b c At a Glance Archived March 29, 2010, at the Wayback Auto, (Butler University), retrieved March 16, 2010
  3. ^ "Color Palette". Retrieved May 31, 2017. [ permanent dead link ]
  4. ^ a b c d eastward f g h i j k "Butler Academy" in Bodenhamer, David J., and Barrows, Robert G., eds. (1994). The Encyclopedia of Indianapolis. Bloomington: Indiana University Printing. pp. 372–74. ISBN0-253-31222-1. CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ a b c d east f g h i "Butler Academy Architecture" in Bodenhamer and Barrows, eds., The Encyclopedia of Indianapolis, pp. 374–75.
  6. ^ a b Nearly Butler Academy [ permanent dead link ] , (Butler University), retrieved Apr 5, 2010.
  7. ^ As of 2015 the chair has been held been twice by male professors: William Howe (1904–05) and John Samuel Kenyon (1906–13). See "The Demia Butler Chair of English language Literature" (PDF). Butler University Endowed Chairs and Professorships. Butler Academy. Archived from the original (PDF) on January xiii, 2017. Retrieved January 28, 2016.
  8. ^ a b Merrill began her fourteen-yr teaching career at the schoolhouse in its 1869–seventy academic yr and resigned the professorship in 1883. Run into: Burriss, Natalie (Spring 2014). "Quite Progressive: The Life and Accomplishments of Catharine Merrill, 1824–1900". Connections: The Hoosier Geneolgist. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society. 54 (1): 52–53. See also: Linda C. Gugin and James E. St. Clair, ed. (2015). Indiana's 200: The People Who Shaped the Hoosier State. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society Press. p. 41. ISBN978-0-87195-387-2.
  9. ^ Catharine Merrill and Katharine Merrill Graydon (1934). Catharine Merrill, Life and Letters: Nerveless and Arranged. Greenfield, IN: The Mitchell Company. pp. 373–74, 376–77. OCLC 7102104. {{cite book}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  10. ^ Waller, George 1000. (2006). Butler Academy : A Sesquicentennial History. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Printing. p. 85. ISBN0-253-34723-viii.
  11. ^ Waller, George "Mac" (2006). Butler Academy: A Sesquicentennial History. Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press. p. 149. ISBN0-253-34723-viii.
  12. ^ Drawbaugh, Kevin A. (February xvi, 1988). "Woollen'south Mark Seen on Major Indiana Buildings". Indianapolis News. Indianapolis: C3. See: "Biographical" Sketch in Woollen, Molzan and Partners, Inc. Architectural Records, ca. 1912–2011. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Club. 2017. See besides: Mary Ellen Gadski, "Woollen, Molzan and Partners" in David J. Bodenhamer and Robert G. Barrows, ed. (1994). The Encyclopedia of Indianapolis. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press. pp. 1453–54. ISBN0-253-31222-1.
  13. ^ Information Technology.
  14. ^ Eidson-Duckwall Recital Hall Archived June 2, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, (Butler University), retrieved June 12, 2010.
  15. ^ Butler Breaks Ground on $14 One thousand thousand Chemist's, Health Sciences Add-on Archived February 24, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, (Butler Academy), published May 8, 2008.
  16. ^ Facilities
  17. ^ "Best Colleges 2021: Regional Universities Rankings". U.South. News & World Report . Retrieved September 24, 2020.
  18. ^ "2020 Rankings -- Masters Universities". Washington Monthly . Retrieved Baronial 31, 2020.
  19. ^ "America's Height Colleges 2021". Forbes . Retrieved September 9, 2021.
  20. ^ "Wall Street Journal/Times Higher Pedagogy College Rankings 2021". The Wall Street Journal/Times Higher Education . Retrieved Oct xx, 2020.
  21. ^ Constitute for Research and Scholarship, (Butler University), retrieved March xvi, 2010.
  22. ^ Butler Summer Plant Archived May 9, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, (Butler University – Institute for Inquiry and Scholarship), retrieved March sixteen, 2010.
  23. ^ "Butler University-Bulldogs - Indianapolis Star - indystar.com". Indianapolis Star.
  24. ^ Butler joins A10 for 2012 Archived June 1, 2012, at the Wayback Automobile
  25. ^ "New Big East adds Butler Bulldogs, Creighton Bluejays, Xavier Musketeers – ESPN". ESPN.com.
  26. ^ "Butler Academy To Join Large East For 2013–fourteen". butlersports.com. Archived from the original on December 7, 2013.
  27. ^ Butler Athletics Archived October 27, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, (ButlerSports), retrieved June 7, 2010.
  28. ^ ESPN's NCAA Basketball game Tournament History – Butler Bulldogs, (ESPN), retrieved March 15, 2010.
  29. ^ Butler To Induct Seven Individuals, 2 Teams Into Hall of Fame Archived Oct thirty, 2010, at the Wayback Motorcar, (Butler University – The Official Athletics Site), retrieved March 15, 2010.
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  32. ^ 'Canis familiaris Days Archived March 25, 2007, at the Wayback Auto (New York Mail service), retrieved March 15, 2010
  33. ^ 2001–02 Men'due south Basketball game Schedule and Results Archived December 17, 2006, at the Wayback Car (Indiana Academy Athletics), retrieved March 15, 2010
  34. ^ a b "Archived copy". Archived from the original on October nineteen, 2014. Retrieved February 15, 2013. {{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived re-create as title (link) (Butler University), retrieved February 15, 2013.
  35. ^ Interfraternity Council Chapters Archived June x, 2010, at the Wayback Machine (Butler University), retrieved June nine, 2010.
  36. ^ "Sigma Gamma Rho", Wikipedia, Feb 19, 2020, retrieved March 2, 2020
  37. ^ National Pan-Hellenic Council Archived June 3, 2010, at the Wayback Motorcar, (Butler University), retrieved June 10, 2010.
  38. ^ "Center for Faith & Vocation". Butler.edu.
  39. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on March 12, 2011. Retrieved February 17, 2011. {{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy equally title (link)
  40. ^ Kinesthesia/Staff Workshop Archived November 21, 2010, at the Wayback Motorcar
  41. ^ Eason, Brian; Wang, Stephanie; Adams, Michael Anthony (October 3, 2014). "Indianapolis native Peter Kassig named side by side ISIS target". Indianapolis Star.

External links [edit]

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata
  • Butler Athletics website
  • "Butler Higher". Collier's New Encyclopedia. 1921.

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

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