Saint Leo University is a private, nonprofit, Roman Catholic liberal arts university established in 1889. Its primary campus is located in St. Leo, Florida, 35 miles north of Tampa.
The university is associated with the Holy Name Monastery, a Benedictine convent, and Saint Leo Abbey, a Benedictine monastery. The university and the abbey are both named for Pope Leo the Great, bishop of Rome from 440 to 461. The name also honors Leo XIII, who was Pope at the time, and Leo Haid, then abbot of Maryhelp Abbey in North Carolina, now Belmont Abbey, who participated in founding the university and served as its first president.
The first Roman Catholic college in Florida, Saint Leo is one of the five largest Catholic colleges in the United States. It enrolls students at the traditional University Campus, at more than 40 education centers and offices, and through its Center for Online Learning. University wide, Saint Leo educates students from all 50 states, the District of Columbia, three U.S. territories, and more than 80 countries. As of Spring 2017, total enrollment was 16,207 students, with 2,088 of those at University Campus.
Saint Leo was one of the first American universities to provide distance learning opportunities to students, beginning with educating military men and women in 1973 during the Vietnam era at the height of the anti-war movement. Today it is a leading provider of education to active-duty military members, veterans, and their families. Saint Leo University offers more than 40 associate, baccalaureate, and master's degrees, and certificate programs and inaugurated its first doctoral program in 2013. As of Fall 2016, the faculty included 219 full-time faculty and 1,157 fully qualified adjunct faculty members. In 2013, the Saint Leo University Polling Institute was established as a source of nonpartisan data on political opinions and cultural attitudes.
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History
Saint Leo traces its history to August 10, 1881, when Edmund F. Dunne, a former chief justice of the Arizona Territory, gained control of 1000,000 acres in Florida. He established a Roman Catholic colony in an area that is now the city of San Antonio and the town of St. Leo.
To accommodate a number of German-speaking colonists, Bishop John Moore of St. Augustine wrote the abbot of Saint Vincent Archabbey in Latrobe, Pennsylvania to request a German-speaking priest. That request led to the Benedictine monks first arriving in the area. In 1888, Saint Vincent Archabbey transferred control of the colony to Mary Help of Christians Abbey (commonly called Maryhelp) in Belmont, North Carolina.
In February 1889, Abbot Leo Haid, OSB, of Maryhelp Abbey accepted a gift from Edmund Dunne of 36 acres on Lake Jovita for the founding of a Benedictine College. That same month, Benedictine nuns arrived from Allegheny, Pennsylvania. On March 11, 1889, they founded Holy Name Monastery. Saint Leo College and Saint Leo Abbey were founded on June 4, 1889. St. Leo's College, the original name of the institution, opened its doors on September 14, 1890. The first student to arrive was 12 years old. He and six others were enrolled on the first day, and the student body grew to 32 for the 1890-1891 school year. The first five students graduated in June 1893 with Master of Accounts degrees.
In 1898, before it was legal in Florida for black and white students to attend school together, Saint Leo enrolled a black student--Rudolph Antorcha from Cuba. Today, he and the welcoming Benedictines are honored with a sculpture titled A Spirit of Belonging, which was dedicated at University Campus in 2013.
Over the years, the school went through a series of varying focuses and name changes: St. Leo's College initially, then St. Leo Military College (1890-1903), St. Leo College (1903-1917), St. Leo College Preparatory School (1917-1918), Saint Leo College (1918-1920), St. Leo College High School (1920-1923), St. Leo Academy (1923-1927), Benedictine High School (1927-1929), Saint Leo College Preparatory School (1929-1964), Saint Leo College (1959-1999), and finally Saint Leo University (1999-present). During that time, it served as a military college within three different periods.
Saint Leo College Preparatory School operated from 1929 to 1964. In addition, Saint Leo returned to its college roots in 1959 and opened a junior college, with the first junior college graduates earning their associate degrees in 1961. The monks managed both the junior college and the prep school from 1959-64. The Saint Leo College Prep School athletic teams were known as the Lions. The Saint Leo College teams were known as the Monarchs. In 1999, the Saint Leo athletic teams readopted the Lions name.
In 2011, Saint Leo University created a lion mascot named Fritz. He was named for a Saint Bernard that was owned by Father Charles Mohr, who served as abbot of Saint Leo Abbey from 1902-31.
The Benedictine sisters at Holy Name Monastery, its neighboring community, closed their Holy Name Academy in 1963 and assisted Saint Leo, which transitioned to a four-year program. Saint Leo College conferred its first bachelor's degree on April 23, 1967, on 51 men and 13 women. The college was accredited by the Southern Educational Association that November, retroactive to the degree date. In 1973, the college responded to requests from the armed services to offer degree programs on U.S. military bases. More education centers followed--on military bases, on community college campuses, and at standalone facilities--in seven states.
In 1998, the university's Center for Online Learning was created, allowing students to take classes online from any location. Since 1959, when the junior college was started, Saint Leo has had nine presidents: Dr. John I. Leonard (1959-1961), Rev. Stephen Hermann, OSB (1961-1968), Dr. Anthony W. Zaitz (1968-1970), Rev. Marion Bowman, OSB (1970-1971), Dr. Thomas B. Southard (1971-1985), Dr. M. Daniel Henry (1985-1987), Monsignor Frank M. Mouch (1987-1996), Dr. Arthur F. Kirk Jr. (1997-2015), and Dr. William J. Lennox Jr. (2015-present).
Awards and recognition
Saint Leo was named a 2017 Best Regional University-South and Best Value University-South by U.S. News & World Report. The school was also included in U.S. News & World Report's list of 2017 Best Online Bachelor's Programs and Best Online Bachelor's Programs for Veterans.
The university earned the 2017 Military Friendly® School designation by Victory Media, publisher of "G.I. Jobs", "STEM Jobs", and "Military Spouse". It was also a Top 10 Gold-level Military Friendly® School Award recipient in the category of large, private institutions for 2017, as well as a 2017 Military Spouse Friendly School.
For the fourth consecutive year, Saint Leo University received recognition from Military Advanced Education & Transition (MAE&T) as a leader in the nation for providing education to those who are serving or who have served in the armed forces. Saint Leo earned the designation of Top School in its 2017 Guide to Colleges & Universities, measuring best practices in military and veteran education.
Saint Leo University was selected as one of the Best for Vets: Colleges 2017 by Military Times. Saint Leo ranked eighth in the country in the Online & Nontraditional School category, which recognizes the university's commitment to educating military personnel, veterans, and their families wherever they may be--even if they are deployed.
For five consecutive years, Saint Leo University's online MBA Sport Business program was recognized as one of the top online sports management programs in the world by the prestigious industry publication SportBusiness International. Saint Leo's commitment to community service recently garnered national honors as the university was named to the President's Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll for 2015 for measurable acts of community service by students, faculty, and staff.
In 2016, the university was named a National Center of Academic Excellence in Cyber Defense Education, a designation jointly sponsored and approved by the National Security Agency (NSA) and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). The recognition is awarded through 2021.
Accreditation
Saint Leo University is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges to award the associate, bachelor's, master's, specialist, and doctoral degrees. The Saint Leo School of Business received initial accreditation by the International Assembly for Collegiate Business Education in September 1999. In 2014, accreditation was obtained from the Accreditation Council for Business Schools and Programs (ACBSP).
Saint Leo University's degree program in social work is accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of the Council on Social Work Education (MSW, BSW and Bridge programs). Saint Leo University's undergraduate Sport Business program and MBA Sport Business Concentration are accredited by the Commission on Sport Management Accreditation (COSMA). Saint Leo University has Teacher Education Programs approval by the Florida Department of Education.
Affiliations
The university's many affiliations include the American Council on Education (ACE), the Association of Governing Boards of Universities and Colleges, Independent Colleges and Universities of Florida (ICUF), the American Association of Adult and Continuing Education, the National Collegiate Honor Society, the National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities, the University Continuing Education Association (UCEA), the National Association of Institutions for Military Education Services (NAIMES), Service Members Opportunity Colleges, National Catholic Education Association, and the Association of Catholic Colleges and Universities (ACCU).
Student life
Students are active on campus through a variety of associations, clubs and societies, including the Computer Science Association and the International Tourism Club, LEAD scholars, Honor societies, Sociology club, Pre-Medical, Debate club and official organization of the Student Government Union.
Campus Activities Board
The Saint Leo Campus Activities Board is headed by the elected Student Government Union Vice President of Activities. Among other duties, the Board plans a calendar of events focused on student entertainment and education. In the past events have included Halloween Horror Nights at Universal Studios, campus laser tag, and a "Spring Fling" weekend featuring artists such as Lonestar, Everclear and Nick Hagelin from The Voice. Currently Andrea Dobo runs the off campus trips.
Greek life
There are currently seven fraternities and seven sororities on campus. Greek life is an active part of campus life. Chapters must meet requirements of a certain amount of social activities, educational programs, and philanthropy/community service each year. First-year students must wait one semester before joining a Greek organization and must have a 2.5 minimum GPA. The undergraduate chapters are only on the University Campus, but graduate students at learning centers may be able to join NPHC graduate chapters if their local area has them.
Lions SHARE
The next-generation learning system at Saint Leo University Lions SHARE is designed as a multi-modal platform, leveraging learning analytics to better help teachers and students throughout all aspects of the learning cycle. This is a place where all students, staff, faculty, parents, and friends can come together to explore, interact and collaborate. Face to face instructors can leverage tools that incorporate brain science, learning research, and education psychology into workflows appropriate to the live audience.
Athletics
Saint Leo University's athletic teams are known as the Lions. They participate as a member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association's Division II in the Sunshine State Conference (SSC). Men's sports include baseball, basketball, cross country, golf, lacrosse, soccer, swimming, tennis and distance track; women's sports include basketball, cross country, golf, lacrosse, soccer, softball, swimming, tennis, distance track and volleyball. Saint Leo will be adding the sport of beach volleyball to begin competition in Spring 2018. The school won its first NCAA Division II National Title in 2016 when the Lions' men's golf team took down Chico State, 3-2, in the NCAA DII Championship roud at Green Valley Ranch Golf Club in Denver, Colorado as part of the 2016 NCAA Division II Spring Championships Festival. Saint Leo also played host to the 2016 NCAA Division II Cross Country Championships at The Abbey Course.
Notable alumni and attendees
Notable alumni and attendees:
- Desi Arnaz - Musician, producer, director (attended Camp St. Leo in 1934)
- Charles Henri Baker - Haitian industrialist and presidential candidate
- Red Barrett - Major League Baseball pitcher and two-time World Series champion (Saint Leo College Preparatory School)
- Richard Corcoran - Speaker of the Florida House of Representatives
- Jim Corsi - Major League Baseball pitcher and World Series Champion
- Frank DiPino - Major League Baseball pitcher
- Brian Dayett - Major League Baseball outfielder
- Lee Marvin - Academy Award-winning actor (attended St. Leo College Preparatory School)
- Sankar Montoute - NFL player
- J.P. Ricciardi - Special assistant to the general manager, New York Mets
- Brian Sabean - Executive vice president of baseball operations, San Francisco Giants
- Anastasio Somoza - President of Nicaragua 1967-1972
- Luis A. Somoza - President of Nicaragua 1956-1963
- Stephen Stills - Musician and Rock and Roll Hall of Famer (attended Saint Leo College Preparatory school)
- Bob Tewksbury - Major League Baseball pitcher, 1992 All-Star; MLB director of player development
WLSL-LP FM 92.7
In January 2014 Saint Leo University received a construction permit for a Low Power FM Station to operate on 92.7 mHz. The call sign is WLSL-LP. (We Love Saint Leo).
The station's studio facilities are located on main campus with the transmitter and antenna facilities located at Pasco High School in Dade City. WLSL-LP covers the communities of Saint Leo, Dade City, and San Antonio and can be heard in a car radio as far north as Ridge Manor and south of Zephyrhills. The station was fully licensed on October 19, 2015.
Source of the article : Wikipedia
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