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Washburn University

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Washburn University
Motto Purificatus non consumptus
Purified but not consumed
Established 1865
Type Publicly funded, independently governed, state coordinated university.
Endowment $112.5 million[1]
President Dr. Jerry Farley
Faculty 87 percent of full-time faculty hold doctorates or the highest degree in their discipline.
Students 7,300
Location Topeka, Kansas, USA
Campus urban: 160 acres (0.647 km²)
Athletics 10 Division II NCAA teams[2]
Colors Blue (PMS654)
Nickname Men: Ichabods
Women: Lady Blues
Mascot The Ichabod
Website www.washburn.edu

Washburn University, located in Topeka, Kansas, provides broadly-based liberal arts and professional education through more than 200 certificate, associate, baccalaureate, master’s and juris doctor programs through the College of Arts and Sciences and the Schools of Law, Business, Nursing and Applied Studies.

Washburn University was established in February 1865 as Lincoln College by a charter issued by the State of Kansas and the General Association of Congregational Ministers and Churches of Kansas on land donated by abolitionist John Ritchie. The school was renamed Washburn College in 1868 after receiving a $25,000 donation from Ichabod Washburn, a church deacon and industrialist who resided in Worcester, Massachusetts.

The Washburn family coat of arms is also the school's coat of arms.

Washburn’s mascot honors the school’s early benefactor, Ichabod Washburn. The original design of the studious-looking, tuxedo-clad figure was created in 1938 by Bradbury Thompson (ba ‘34), who became an internationally acclaimed graphic artist. The men's athletic teams use the Ichabods nickname; the school's women's teams are known as Lady Blues. Washburn is a member of the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Associationand The National Collegiate Athletic Association Division II.

Formerly a municipal university, the university's primary funding was moved from city property tax to county sales tax sources in 1999, with the school retaining status as a municipal subdivision of the state. Washburn is governed by its own nine-member Board of Regents.

In 2005 the Washburn Lady Blues won the NCAA division II national basketball championship, defeating Seattle Pacific University 70-53. The 2004-05 team set the school record for wins, going 35-2 on the year.

Contents

[edit] Campus attractions

  • KTWU-TV, the first public television station in Kansas. KTWU is a non-commercial, public television station authorized by the Federal Communications Commission, Washington, D.C. and licensed to Washburn University. KTWU commenced telecasting Oct. 21, 1965.
  • Mulvane Art Museum. The Mulvane Art Museum, the oldest accredited art museum west of the Mississippi River, opened in 1924. The museum's permanent collection, though international in scope, emphasizes the work of artists of Kansas and the Midwest.
  • Crane Observatory houses an 1898 Warner & Swasey refracting telescope.

[edit] Notable graduates

[edit] Institutional Partnerships with Washburn

[edit] Study abroad summer/short term programs

Washburn sponsors summer/short term language programs in Austria, England, France, Ireland, Japan and Spain.

[edit] Study abroad semester programs

[edit] External links


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