Hofstra University
Categories: Universities and colleges in New York | New York botanical gardens | Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools
| Hofstra University | |
| Image:Hofstra logo.jpg | |
| Motto | None |
| Established | 1935 |
| School type | Private university |
| President | Stuart Rabinowitz |
| Location | Hempstead, New York, USA |
| Campus | Suburban, 240 acres (1.0 km²) |
| Enrollment | 8,067 undergraduate, 4,933 graduate (Fall 2004) |
| Faculty | 1,256 |
| Mascot | The Pride |
| Endowment | $154.8 million |
| Official website | www.hofstra.edu |
Hofstra University is a coeducational institution located in Hempstead, Long Island, New York (USA) founded in 1935 on the basis of the estate of William and Kate Hofstra. The school began as a branch of New York University and became an independent school, Hofstra College, several years later. It became a Hofstra University in 1963.
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Academic programs and the campus
Hofstra is known not only for its liberal-arts offerings, but for its schools of business and law and its emerging School of Communication. It is also world-renowned for its annual festival of William Shakespeare plays, which have been held for more than half a century. Hofstra also has its very own Globe Theatre replica in the John Cranford Adams Playhouse which has been used every spring for the Shakespeare productions. (The playhouse is named for the educator who served as Hofstra University president during its period of growth.)
Hofstra University campus also comprises an arboretum, one of only 430 in the United States. The grounds host over 635 different species and varieties of trees. The campus also features a two acre (8,000 m²) bird sanctuary. Hofstra's campus has become a registered member of the American Association of Botanical Gardens and Arboreta.
In the 1960s, the onetime commuter school acquired land on the north side of Fulton Avenue in Hempstead, part of Mitchel Field, a former Air Force base. (The Nassau Coliseum also occupies part of Mitchel.) The new north campus became the home of both the school's new student center and six high-rise residence halls -- Alliance, Bill of Rights, Constitution, Declaration of Independence (now Estabrook) Hall, Enterprise, and Freedom (now Vander Poel) Hall. Because their original names corresponded with the alphabet, they've long often referred to simply by Tower A (for Alliance) or Tower C (Constitution).
Other Hofstra residence halls include the Netherlands, Liberty/Republic, Nassau/Suffolk, Colonial Square, the New Complex and Twin Oaks Apartments (located a half-mile west on Fulton Avenue).
The New York Jets football team has its corporate headquarters at Hofstra and holds its summer camp there. It uses privately-owned fields at Hofstra to practice and train. In 2005, the Jets announced a preliminary deal to move its offices and training facilities to New Jersey.
The university operates Long Island's oldest public radio station, WRHU-FM (88.7). The noncommercial broadcaster was founded in 1950 as WHCH, a campus-limited station, and received its broadcast license on June 9, 1959, using the call letters WVHC. The station became WRHU (for Radio Hofstra University) in 1983.
Athletics and mascots
Hofstra University long had the official nickname of the Flying Dutchmen (or Dutchmen or just Dutch); the school's new nickname is now what was the increasingly-used informal nickname has become "Pride", which started out referring to the feeling, but has become linked to the collective term for lions, starting when a pair of lions became the school's athletic mascots in the late 1980s. The official change of the name came in the summer of 2005 as a way to keep pride in the school's roots and its steps toward the future.
The Pride nickname evolved from the Hofstra Pride on-and off-campus imaging campaign that began in 1987, during the university's dramatic recovery and growth. That had followed a major financial crisis in the 1970s that forced the layoff of more than 100 employees.
The school has featured a pair of lions on its heraldic logo since at least the 1940s -- first two male lions, then (since 1987) a male and female, informally known as Kate and Willy.
Notable alumni and faculty
Alumni
- Wayne Chrebet, New York Jets wide receiver
- Speedy Claxton, New Orleans Hornets point guard
- Norm Coleman, U.S. Senator
- Francis Ford Coppola, Oscar-winning filmmaker
- Butch D'Ambrosio, writer for Mad Magazine
- Nelson DeMille, author
- Steven Epstein, Sony Classical music producer
- Joe Frank, radio monologuist and playwright
- Madeline Kahn, Oscar-nominated actress
- Billy Scafuri, comedy writer, part of Harvard Sailing Team sketch comedy troup
- Susan Sullivan, actress
- Robert Swirsky, author, lecturer, and computer scientist
- Christopher Walken, Oscar-winning actor (never graduated)
- Michael Pastore, All-time record holder for missed layups in a career
Faculty
- Robert N. Sobel, noted professor and prolific author
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