Aquinas College (Michigan)

Aquinas College
Motto Non nisi te, Domine (Latin)
Motto in English
nothing but You, Lord[1]
Type Private liberal arts college
Established 1886
Affiliation Roman Catholic (Dominican Sisters of Grand Rapids)
Endowment $42 million[2]
President Juan R. Olivarez PhD
Provost Stephen Barrows PhD
Academic staff
86 FT and 159 PT
Students 2,001[3]
Undergraduates 1,634 full-time
229 part-time
Postgraduates 15 full-time
123 part-time
Location Grand Rapids, Michigan, United States
Campus Urban, total 117 acres (0.47 km2)
Colors Maroon and White          
Athletics NAIAWHAC
Nickname Saints
Mascot Nelson the St. Bernard
Affiliations AACU
Website www.aquinas.edu

Coordinates: 42°57′36″N 85°37′43″W / 42.96009°N 85.62862°W / 42.96009; -85.62862Aquinas College is a small Catholic college that aims to provide a liberal arts education located in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Aquinas was ranked among the "Best Regional Universities – Midwest" by U.S. News & World Report (2012).

History

Founded by the Dominican Sisters of Grand Rapids in 1886, Aquinas has a Catholic heritage. Aquinas began as a novitiate normal school, for young women who had yet to take their vows to the Dominican religious order.

In 1922, the Dominican Sisters merged their newly created college for lay women with the normal school. This new college received a charter from the state of Michigan to grant degrees in 1923. In 1931, it became the first Catholic college in the US to go co-ed, and was reorganized as Catholic Junior College.

The college began to operate as a four-year institution in 1941, when it was renamed in honor of Saint Thomas Aquinas.

Campus

The college campus is in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Aquinas College has 4 dorms, including Dominican Hall, Hruby Hall, St. Joseph Hall, and Regina. Aquinas also has 5 on campus apartments, and 5 on campus living learning communities (Houses).

The Moose

Student Publications and Radio

Organization and administration

The school's first administrator was Monsignor Bukowski, for whom the school's chapel is named. In February, 1969, Dr. Norbert J. Hruby succeeded Monsignor Bukowski as President. Hruby Hall, an administrative building and residence hall on campus, bears his name. Aquinas’ third president, Dr. Peter D. O’Connor, took office in 1986 and served until 1990. In 1990 Mr. R. Paul Nelson was named the College’s fourth president, serving until 1997. Dr. Harry J. Knopke became the fifth president of Aquinas College in 1997. Dr. Knopke served from 1997 through 2006. On July 1, 2006, Provost C. Edward Balog was named Interim President and he became the College’s sixth president in May 2007. Dr. Balog retired from Aquinas College on June 30, 2011. Dr. Juan Olivarez became the seventh president of Aquinas College on July 1, 2011. In March 2014 Dr. Gilda Gely became Provost and Dean of Faculty for Aquinas College. Previous to Aquinas, Dr. Gely was provost and executive vice president at Grand Rapids Community College.

Notable Board of Trustees members include Chairman Lt. General John Nowak, United States Air Force (Ret.) and Sr. Nathalie Meyer, O.P., Prioress of the Grand Rapids Dominicans. Trustees Emeriti include Msgr. William Duncan Vicar General of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Grand Rapids, Sr. M. Aquinas Weber, O.P., and local philanthropists Martin Allen, Jr., Peter Wege and Kate Pew Wolters.

Academic profile

Aquinas has more than 2,000 students and offers over 60 majors, awarding Bachelor's degrees and Master's degrees. It is accredited by The Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association. Many Aquinas graduates go on to graduate schools: approximately 90% of pre-med students from Aquinas are accepted into medical schools. The opportunity to study abroad is a draw for many Aquinas students, as many take a semester at an international university. A study abroad program in Rome was added in 2010.

Bukowski

Sport

Indoor Track
AQ Gym

Aquinas College teams, previously known as the Tommies, are now known as the Saints. The college is a member of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), primarily competing in the Wolverine–Hoosier Athletic Conference (WHAC), while men's ice hockey competes at the Division III level of the American Collegiate Hockey Association (ACHA) Michigan Collegiate Hockey Conference (MCHC) and women's lacrosse competes in the National Women's Lacrosse League (NWLL). Men's Sports include baseball, basketball, bowling, cross country, golf, ice hockey, lacrosse, soccer, tennis, and track & field; while women's sports include basketball, bowling, cheerleading, cross country, dance, golf, lacrosse, soccer, softball, tennis, track & field, and volleyball.

Nelson, a St. Bernard, is the mascot of the Aquinas Saints. As Aquinas has never fielded a football team, the men's and women's soccer and basketball teams prove big draws. The men's cross country team holds the nation's longest current active streak of being ranked in the Top 25. The Saints have been a mainstay in the poll for 135 consecutive weeks dating back to September 2000. The Athletic Department is led by long-time men's baseball coach Terry Bocian, who retired from coaching in 2002 to focus solely on his duties as athletic director.

Aquinas College teams have been national runners-up three. In 1963, the Aquinas men's golf team narrowly lost to host Southwest Missouri State in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division II tournament. The '63 squad was inducted into the Aquinas College Athletic Hall of Fame on September 26, 2003. In 2004, the men's cross country team finished second to Virginia Intermont College at the NAIA national meet in Louisville, Kentucky. In 2016, the men's ice hockey team lost to Oakland University in the ACHA Division III national championship 5-3. Five Aquinas athletes have won seven individual national titles in golf and indoor and outdoor track and field.

National Champions:

Notable Alumni

References

External links

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