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Loyola Marymount University

Loyola Marymount University (LMU) is a private Jesuit and Marymount research university in Los Angeles, California. It is located on the west side of the city near Playa Vista. LMU is the parent school to Loyola Law School, which is located in downtown Los Angeles.

Loyola Marymount University
Former names
  • St. Vincent's College (1865–1911, 1915–1917)
  • L.A. College (1911–1915)
  • Loyola College of Los Angeles (1917–1930)
  • Loyola University of Los Angeles (1930–1973)

Also:

  • Marymount Junior College (1932–1948)
  • Marymount College
    (1948–1973)
MottoAd majorem Dei gloriam (Latin)
Tua Luce Dirige (Latin)
Motto in English
For the greater glory of God
Direct us by thy light
TypePrivate research university
Established1865; 158 years ago (1865)
(1911, assignment to Jesuits)
Religious affiliation
Catholic (Jesuit, Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary, Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange)
Academic affiliations
AJCU
ACCU
NAICU
Endowment$642.6 million (2020)[1]
PresidentTimothy Law Snyder
ProvostThomas Poon
Academic staff
615[2]
Students10,004 (fall 2022)[3]
Undergraduates7,138 (fall 2022)[3]
Postgraduates2,866 (fall 2022)[3]
Address
1 LMU Drive
, ,
U.S.
CampusUrban
150 acres (60.7 ha)
Fight song"Fight on Loyola"
Colors   Crimson and blue[4]
NicknameLions
Sporting affiliations
NCAA Division IWCC, PCSC
MascotIggy the Lion
Websitewww.lmu.edu
1. St. Vincent's College, in the Lugo Adobe on the Plaza, 1865
2. St. Vincent's College, first building by Pershing Square, 1867
3. St. Vincent's College, second building by Pershing Square, ca 1875

LMU offers 55 major and 59 minor undergraduate degrees and programs across six undergraduate colleges. The Graduate Division offers 47 master's degree programs, one education doctorate, one doctorate in juridical science, a Juris Doctor and 13 credential programs.[5]

LMU's sports teams are called the Lions and compete at the NCAA Division I level as members of the West Coast Conference in 20 sports.

History

Loyola Marymount University is the product of a merger in 1973 between Loyola College, founded in 1917, and Marymount College, founded in 1932, with its roots in Marymount School which was founded in 1923.[6]

St. Vincent's College

The present university is the product of the first institution of higher learning in Southern California, St. Vincent's College, which was founded and run by the Vincentians until 1911.[7][8]

In 1865, the Vincentian Fathers were commissioned by Bishop Thaddeus Amat y Brusi to found St. Vincent's College for Boys in Los Angeles. Father John Asmuth was the first President Rector. Classes were held for two years in the Lugo Adobe on the east side of the Plaza while a new building was being finished. The historic home, aptly donated by Don Vicente Lugo, was one of few two-story adobes then in town. The house stood in the empty lot across Alameda Street between the Plaza and Union Station (near Olvera Street).

Later, the brick building was replaced with a larger one in stone. The 7th Street property, now called St. Vincent's Place, took up the block bounded by Fort (Broadway), 6th, Hill, and 7th streets. When St. Vincent's later moved to a new campus, the old building became US Army Headquarters, and in 1907, the large Bullock's department store was built and operated here until 1983. In 1869, St. Vincent's was accredited by the state.[9][10]

 
4. St. Vincent's College, from the east over Grand Ave., north of Los Angeles Trade–Technical College, 1905

In 1887, the college moved to a new, more majestic campus—bounded by Grand Avenue, Washington Boulevard, Hope Street, and 18th—which would have a chapel, residence hall, cottages, and a traditional brick-and-ivy complex housing classrooms and lecture halls. Like the second college building by Pershing Square, the new retained a tall, central tower topped with St. Vincent's trademark mansard roof.[11][7]

While the campus underwent many expansions, the athletic program grew, and the Catholic Collegiates competed against Occidental's Presbyterians and USC's Methodists. St. Vincent's athletes were also recruited into professional sports. During this era, from St. Vincent's College graduated many alumni who would become famous in the history of Los Angeles, among whom were Isidore Dockweiler, Eugene Biscailuz and Leo Carrillo.[7]

In 1911, the Vincentians, who had led the college since its founding the century before, were replaced with the Jesuits, who quickly moved the college to a larger property. As planning began on developing a 20th-century university, enrollment was folded into a new college, briefly called "Los Angeles College" that would soon evolve into Loyola. The old campus became St. Vincent's School.[12] In 1922, St. Vincent's campus was sold. Over time, the historic buildings of old St. Vincent's College have been torn down and replaced by, for example, the Grand Olympic Auditorium (1924) and large, open parking lots.[7]

Beginnings of Loyola in L.A.

When the Vincentians pulled out of educational ministry in Los Angeles in 1911, Bishop Thomas Conaty asked the Jesuits to come to Los Angeles and take over St. Vincent's College. Not wishing to assume any of the college's debt, the Jesuits instead founded Los Angeles College in 1911. They simultaneously opened their high school division (Loyola High School) and folded the board, faculty, and students of St. Vincent's College into Los Angeles College at a new location made up of several bungalows at Avenue 52, Highland Park, Los Angeles.[citation needed]

Father Richard A. Gleeson was the first Jesuit President but the board of the college was initially composed of Vincentian Fathers. Rapid growth prompted the Jesuits to seek a new campus on Venice Boulevard in 1917; with this move, the name of the school was changed back to St. Vincent's College. However, in 1918 the name was once again changed to Loyola College of Los Angeles.[citation needed]

Graduate instruction began in 1920 with the foundation of a separate law school. Though instruction at the undergraduate level remained exclusive to male students, women were admitted to the law school. The law school was the second in Los Angeles to admit Jewish students. (USC's law school had done so at least since 1910.)[13][14]

In 1928, the undergraduate division of Loyola relocated, under then-President Joseph A. Sullivan, S.J., to the present Westchester campus and achieved university status in 1930, becoming Loyola University of Los Angeles. Loyola Law School did not move with the rest of the university, but moved later to another location just west of downtown Los Angeles.[citation needed]

World War II had a significant impact on Loyola University. As enrollment began to drop, Father Edward Whelan, president at the time, brokered a deal with the US Army to form an officer training program for both Army and Navy officers. The contract allowed the university to remain open during the war and enrollment hit all-time highs as a result of returning veterans taking advantage of the G.I. Bill in the mid-to-late 1940s. Additionally, Father Whelan recognized the grave injustice of the Japanese internment camps during World War II. At Loyola, he hired and housed many Japanese Americans returning to Los Angeles after their release from the camps. In 1949, Father Charles Cassassa was named president and began one of the most consequential presidencies in the university's history.[citation needed] His work included the formation of a graduate division on the Westchester campus in June 1950, graduate work having formed an integral part of the Teacher Education Program during the preceding two years, expanding campus infrastructure. He then established the Institute of Human Relations to promote improved racial relations in business and in government. Future Mayor of Los Angeles Tom Bradley attended the first year-long program held by the Institute of Human Relations and remained lifelong friends with Father Cassassa.[citation needed]

Father Cassassa also continued Father Whelan's legacy of combating racial injustice. In 1950, he forced the school's football team to forfeit an away game against Texas Western since the school's rules prevented African-American players, such as Loyola's Bill English, to play on their field.[15] During the Cassassa era, the law school moved to its current campus, designed by Frank Gehry, in 1964. Loyola University also continued as an all-male school until its merger with Marymount College in 1973. There were, however, several notable exceptions.[citation needed]

The first exception occurred during the summer months, when the Loyola faculty offered classes for religious women (Catholic nuns) seeking undergraduate degrees. Many sisters from across Los Angeles and Orange County acquired their undergraduate degrees from Loyola. Additionally, women were admitted to several of Loyola's graduate programs prior to the affiliation and merger with Marymount College. Furthermore, there were several female students admitted to Marymount College who later matriculated into Loyola University during the two schools' five-year affiliation prior to 1973, primarily into Engineering and Business majors which Marymount did not offer.[citation needed]

Beginnings of Marymount in L.A.

In separate though parallel developments, the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary began teaching local young women in 1923. Having been invited by Bishop John Cantwell, seven sisters of the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary, under the leadership of Mother Cecilia Rafter, formed what was first an elementary school and, shortly thereafter, a high school. Within ten years, so many young women wished to continue their education with the Marymount sisters beyond high school that Marymount Junior College opened as an all-women's school on the Westwood campus of Marymount High School in 1933.

Mother Gertrude Cain was the first president of the junior college and guided its development into a four-year college in 1948, assuming the name Marymount College of Los Angeles. In 1960, having outgrown its shared Westwood campus, Marymount College moved both its two-year program and its four-year program to the Palos Verdes Peninsula in southwestern Los Angeles. The Palos Verdes campus became Marymount California University.

In 1967 Sister Raymunde McKay, the president of Marymount College, extended an invitation to Sister Mary Felix Montgomery, General Superior of the Sisters of Saint Joseph of Orange, to merge Marymount College with St. Joseph College of Orange, a four-year liberal arts college for women religious run by the Sisters of Saint Joseph of Orange, which Sister Montgomery accepted. St. Joseph College was originally formed as St. Joseph Teacher's College, a junior college affiliated with The Catholic University of America in 1953. In 1959 it was incorporated as an autonomous, four-year institution and assumed the St. Joseph College name.

In 1968 Marymount and St. Joseph's Colleges merged under the Marymount name with an agreement that the traditions and heritage of both the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary and the Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange would be carried in the Marymount name. As part of the Marymount College Agreement, Marymount College was administered "co-equally" by the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary and the Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange as members of both communities partnered in the governing, staffing, and teaching of Marymount College.

Subsequently, St. Joseph College of Orange was renamed Marymount College of Orange. During the academic year, it remained a college for women religious seeking their baccalaureate degrees; college courses were offered to men and women during the summers at the Orange campus. The same year, Marymount College began its affiliation with Loyola University, moving its four-year program at the Palos Verdes campus to the Westchester campus of Loyola University. Marymount College then operated on three campuses: Palos Verdes retained its two-year program, Orange remained a campus for religious women in Orange County, and Westchester was a campus for both lay and religious women.[11]

Affiliation and merger of Loyola and Marymount

By the mid-1960s, Loyola University of Los Angeles had unsuccessfully petitioned the Archbishop of Los Angeles, Cardinal James Francis McIntyre, to allow coeducation at Loyola for several years. In 1967, however, Sister McKay, President of Marymount College, received permission from Cardinal McIntyre to begin affiliation with Loyola University on Loyola's Westchester campus. Sister McKay and Father Charles Cassassa, President of Loyola University, held a joint press conference to announce the affiliation.

The affiliation of Marymount College and Loyola University began in 1968 when Marymount's four-year program moved to Loyola's Westchester campus; this arrangement (two independent schools on one campus) continued for five years. In 1970, the Student Governments of Loyola University (ASLU—Associated Students of Loyola University) and Marymount College (ASMC—Associated Students of Marymount College) joined to form the Associated Students of Loyola and Marymount (ASLM).

After five years of sharing faculties and facilities, Loyola University and Marymount College merged and assumed the name Loyola Marymount University in 1973. Through this union, the expanded university maintained the century-old mission of Catholic higher education in Los Angeles and incorporated the educational traditions of the Jesuits, Marymount sisters, and Orange sisters into one institution. At this time, ASLM became known as the Associated Students of Loyola Marymount University (ASLMU).

Father Donald Merrifield, who became president of Loyola University in 1969, continued as the university's president.[16] The academic vice president of Marymount College, Sister Renee Harrangue, became the provost. During Father Merrifield's tenure as president thirteen new buildings were constructed on Loyola Marymount's main campus.[17] Father Merrifield oversaw the expansion of Loyola Law School's campus in Pico-Union, near downtown Los Angeles.[17] Merrifield and the university commissioned architect Frank Gehry to design the new campus, which was needed to accommodate increased enrollment.[17]

Merrifield also implemented a number of programs to increase minority enrollment, such as financial aid packages and scholarships, and added African American and Latino studies programs. He stepped down as president of Loyola Marymount in 1984, but remained the university's chancellor until 2002.[16][17]

Marymount College's four-year program subsequently separated from its two-year program. The Marymount two-year program remained incorporated as a separate institution and received accreditation in 1971 as the independently run Marymount College, Palos Verdes, which is currently operates in Rancho Palos Verdes, California. In 2010, Marymount College, Palos Verdes received accreditation as a four-year institution.[citation needed]

With the merger of Loyola University and Marymount College in 1973, the Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange joined the Society of Jesus and the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary as one of the sponsoring religious communities of Loyola Marymount University. Marymount College of Orange was renamed the Orange Campus of Loyola Marymount University. The Orange Campus offered continuing education and summer courses to men and women through the 1980s.[citation needed]

Recent history

In 2007, the university reestablished its presence in Orange County, California when the Theological Studies Department began offering a two-year master's program in Pastoral Theology in Orange, California. The first cohort graduated in the Spring of 2009, and three additional cohorts completed a three-year master's degree in Pastoral Theology until the cohort program ended in 2018. The classes were held in the Marywood offices of the Diocese of Orange and then at the Diocese's Christ Cathedral campus, both not far from the now defunct Orange Campus of Loyola Marymount University.[citation needed]

 
The Sunken Gardens and Sacred Heart Chapel
 
Xavier Hall

On March 1, 2010, Loyola Marymount President, Father Robert B. Lawton, announced his retirement as head of the university, effective at the end of the academic year in May 2010.[18] Lawton cited health problems, including a slow recovery from a 2009 back surgery, as the main reason for his departure.[18] He had served as president for eleven years, beginning his tenure in 1999.[19]

David W. Burcham, a 1984 graduate of Loyola Law School became the first lay president in the school's history. Burcham held the office for five years, from 2010 to 2015. Burcham, who presided over LMU's centennial in 2011, opted not to stay on after his term ended. The LMU board of trustees elected Timothy Law Snyder, as the 16th president and he took office on June 1, 2015.[20][21]

Campus

LMU is located on the Del Rey Hills in the Westchester neighborhood of Los Angeles. It overlooks the former site of Hughes Aircraft. The original 99 acres (40 ha) were donated to the university by Harry Culver. Xavier Hall, named for St. Francis Xavier, and St. Robert's Hall, named after St. Robert Bellarmine, a cardinal and Doctor of the Church, were the first two buildings to be built on the current Westchester Campus. Following their completion in 1929, Xavier Hall housed both the Jesuit Faculty and the students at the time while St. Robert's Hall served as the academic and administrative building.[22]

Sacred Heart Chapel and the Regents Bell Tower were the next non-residential structures to be built on the campus (1953–55). The Malone Student Center, named after Lorenzo M. Malone, an alumnus of the university and former dean of students and treasurer of the university, was completed in 1958 and renovated in 1996. LMU now houses 36 academic, athletic, administrative, and event facilities as well as twelve on-campus residence halls and six on-campus apartment complexes. The campus houses four large open grass areas not reserved exclusively for athletic play.

The university's acquisition of University Hall in 2000 brought the campus a new entrance as well as much-needed office and classroom space. University Hall was originally constructed for Hughes Aircraft as their world headquarters. It was then sold to the university.

LMU acquired the 1,000,000-square-foot (93,000 m2) building in January 2000 from Raytheon, which bought Hughes Aircraft. LMU completed the interior remodel in April 2001. The building, which houses the university's Bellarmine College of Liberal Arts, is constructed of steel and concrete and is divided into seven structures above ground.

In 2022The Princeton Review ranked LMU as having the fourth-most beautiful campus in America.[23] CampusSqueeze college e-zine ranked LMU as having the third-most beautiful campus in America.[24] In 2022

Sustainability

LMU has a large solar electric rooftop array that generates 868,000 kilowatt-hours of electricity annually, providing 6% of the annual campus electrical needs.[25][non-primary source needed] The university purchased another 6 percent of its electrical energy through Renewable Energy Credits.[26]

There are three LEED-certified buildings on campus, including the William H. Hannon Library. All new and renovated roofing projects include installation of a highly reflective white membrane cool roof.[27]

Student sustainability jobs are available in the recycling program. Loyola Marymount earned a grade of a "B−" on the College Sustainability Report Card 2010,[28] published by the Sustainable Endowments Institute.[29]

Academics

In addition to being the parent school of Loyola Law School in downtown Los Angeles, Loyola Marymount is the home to six colleges and schools. LMU offers an Air Force ROTC program, an Honors Program in which the students have a different core curriculum, and several year-long, semester, and summer study abroad programs across the Americas, Europe, Africa, Asia, and Australia. Admission to LMU is competitive. Students from every U.S. state attend LMU.[citation needed]

Admissions

Freshman Admission Statistics[30][31][32][33][34][35]
  2022 2018 2014 2013 2012 2011
Applicants 21,312 18,081 12,117 11,472 11,913 11,309
Admits 8,240 8,498 6,387 6,209 5,975 6,043
% Admitted 38% 47% 52.7% 54.1 50.2% 53.4%
Enrolled 1,710 1,500 1,348 1,341 1,278 1,288
SAT Math +
Reading range
1290-1420 1210-1390 1100-1300 1090-1300 1100-1300 1100-1280
ACT range 28-32 27-31 25-30 25-29 24-29 24-28
Avg GPA 3.92 3.81 3.75 3.72 3.76 3.71

U.S. News & World Report classifies Loyola Marymount's selectivity as "more selective."[36]

For Fall 2022, LMU received over 20,000 freshman applications—admitting 38% and enrolling a class of 1,710 first year students. Members of the Class of 2022 earned an average high school GPA of 3.90 with the middle 50% scoring between 1290 and 1420 on the SAT.

Rankings

Undergraduate demographics as of Fall 2020
Race and ethnicity[41] Total
White 43% 43
 
Hispanic 23% 23
 
Asian 10% 10
 
Foreign national 10% 10
 
Other[a] 7% 7
 
Black 7% 7
 
Economic diversity
Low-income[b] 12% 12
 
Affluent[c] 88% 88
 
  • U.S. News & World Report's "Best Colleges 2021" ranked Loyola Marymount tied for 66th in the U.S. among national universities. U.S. News & World Report also ranked Loyola Marymount tied for 31st in Best Undergraduate Teaching, tied for 38th Best for Veterans, and 98th Best Value school in the national universities category, and tied for 26th best undergraduate engineering program at schools where doctorates are not offered.[42]
  • The Wall Street Journal, in its "2020 WSJ/THE College Rankings," ranked Loyola Marymount 90th in the country.[43]
  • The Hollywood Reporter, in its "Top 25 American Film Schools" 2014 edition,[44] 2015 edition,[45] 2016 edition,[46] 2017 edition,[47] 2018 edition,[48] and 2019 edition[49] ranked Loyola Marymount eighth in the country, and in its 2020 edition, ranked it seventh in the country.[50]
  • The Wrap ranked LMU eighth in the country in its Top 50 Film Schools of 2018.[51]

Bellarmine College of Liberal Arts

The Bellarmine College of Liberal Arts includes twenty-five undergraduate programs of study as well as five graduate programs. It embodies the wider university goals of liberal education, which is the heart of the university's core curriculum for all undergraduates. The college is named for Saint Robert Bellarmine.[52]

College of Communication and Fine Arts

The College of Communication and Fine Arts offers majors in Art History, Communication Studies, Dance, Music, Studio Arts, and Theatre Arts as well as a graduate program in Marital and Family Therapy. Students are able to choose a specific emphasis within the studio art (STAR) major such as drawing, painting, photography, art education, sculpture, and multimedia.[53]

There are beginning (lower division) and advanced (upper division) courses offered in the STAR department that explore fine art practices in two-dimensional design, ceramics, typography, visual thinking, and graphic design.[54] The current dean of the College of Communication and Fine Arts is Bryant Alexander.[citation needed]

The Department of Music includes two choruses. The 100-voice Concert Choir presents music for mixed voices. The smaller, more advanced Consort Singers presents varying styles of choral music and frequently appears in the Los Angeles area as the ambassador group for the university.

Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Beth Henley teaches playwriting in the Theatre Department. Colin Hanks transferred to LMU from the acting program and Chapman University. Linda Cardellini and Busy Philipps are also alumni from the Theatre Department. Many of the faculty in the department are currently working in the industry.[52]

College of Business Administration

The College of Business Administration teaches effective principles and practice of business through foundation building, undergraduate programs, and flexible graduate programs for advancing professionals. It is home to eight undergraduate programs of study as well as an MBA program for graduate studies.[52]

Rankings

  • LMU's Part-Time MBA Program was ranked 6th nationwide by Bloomberg Businessweek in their 2013 rankings[55]
  • U.S. News ranked Loyola in its 2017 list of "America's Best Colleges" as tied for 94th in the nation for Best Undergraduate Business Program.[56]

Frank R. Seaver College of Science and Engineering

The Frank R. Seaver College of Science and Engineering sees its purpose to be the education of principled leaders. It contains thirteen undergraduate programs of study as well as six graduate programs. Graduate programs are offered in civil, electrical and mechanical engineering, in environmental science, in computer science, in systems engineering, and in dual program called systems engineering and leadership (SE+MBA).[citation needed]

Undergraduate students experience close interactions with the faculty as a result of small class sizes. Students conduct sophisticated state-of-the-art research by working very closely with their professors and they participate in various undergraduate student research conferences and student design competitions.[52]

School of Education

The School of Education at Loyola Marymount has four undergraduate and nine graduate programs of study including a Doctorate in Education (Ed.D.).[52] Many students seeking a credential in Elementary Education major in the Bellarmine College of Liberal Arts' Liberal Studies program, which is designed to educate one in the various arts and letters they will be teaching children.

School of Film and Television

The School of Film and Television was established in 2003 by consolidating LMU's programs in film and television. Admission to the undergraduate program is competitive, with 19% of applicants admitted to the program.[57] It is the seventh highest ranked film program in America, according to The Hollywood Reporter[48][49] and the fifth highest ranked program, according to College Factual (USA Today).[58] In 2018, it opened a 35,000 square foot facility, primarily for graduate film students.[59] The Playa Vista campus includes three greenscreen studios, eight Avid editing rooms and a Foley stage. In the Spring of 2020, dean Peggy Rajski broke ground on the Howard B. Fitzpatrick Pavilion, a 25,000-square-foot structure equipped with a screening theater, a camera-teaching stage and a motion-capture workspace, which is due to open in the Fall of 2021.[60] Unlike some other film programs, LMU film students own the intellectual property rights to the films they create while they are in college.[61]

The School of Film and Television offers bachelor's degrees in Film and Television Production, Screenwriting, Animation, and Recording Arts along with a minor in Film Studies and also Master's programs in Writing and Producing for Television, Film and Television Production, and Feature Film Screenwriting. A range of advanced facilities and equipment are available to students, including two soundstages, advanced editing labs, a fully equipped theater, and top-of-the-line camera equipment including five RED One Cameras.

The School of Film and Television also offers a wide range of internship opportunities through more than 400 partner companies.

Notable alumni from LMU's film school include Barbara Broccoli, producer of James Bond films since 1990, James Wong, Brian Helgeland, writer/director of the Jackie Robinson biopic 42, Francis Lawrence, director of three of The Hunger Games films, and David Mirkin, an executive producer and showrunner for The Simpsons.[62]

Loyola Law School

Loyola Law School's Frank Gehry-designed campus[63] is in the Pico-Union neighborhood west of downtown Los Angeles and is separate from the Westchester main university campus.[citation needed]

Including its day and evening J.D. programs, Loyola was the first California law school with a pro bono graduation requirement,[64] under which students perform 40 hours of pro bono work.[65]

Organization

The governing body of the university is the school's independent board of trustees, headed by a chairman. The university's executive officer is the president. Prior to 2009, a prerequisite to serve as the university's president was membership in the Society of Jesus; however, the board of trustees voted to allow educators not a part of the Jesuit Order to become president. These changes were made at the recommendation of the American Assistancy of Jesuits, the collective body of Jesuits in the United States in response to the declining number of Jesuits as well as those prepared to serve as the president of a major university. See a list of past presidents.

The president is assisted by the chancellor, assistant to the president, director internal audit, the vice president for mission and ministry (under whose direction the Office of Campus Ministry and the Center for Ignatian Spirituality operates) and the vice president for intercultural affairs. The executive vice president & provost reports directly to the president and oversees all campus operations.

The university cabinet consists of: the president, executive vice president & provost, senior vice president & chief academic officer (under whose direction the deans of the Bellarmine College of Liberal Arts, College of Business Administration, College of Communication and Fine Arts, Seaver College of Science and Engineering, School of Education, School of Film and Television, and University Libraries operate), senior vice president for administration, senior vice president & chief financial officer, senior vice president for student affairs, senior vice president for university relations, and senior vice president Fritz B. Burns Dean of Loyola Law School.[66]

The Jesuit Community is headed by a rector (appointed by the Superior General of the Society of Jesus); the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary are led by local coordinator who report to the provincial superior of the Western American Province; and the Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange are led by a local superior who reports to the general superior of their congregation. Each of the three sponsoring religious communities is represented on the board of trustees.[67]

Sponsoring religious orders

LMU is sponsored primarily by three religious orders that have long been associated with education, the Society of Jesus, the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary, and the Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange. However, other religious orders such as the Order of Our Lady of Mount Carmel (Carmelites) and the Sisters of Saint Louis have members employed on campus.[citation needed]

Society of Jesus

The Jesuit Community of LMU is the largest in the California Province of the Society of Jesus. The campus's Jesuits were housed in Xavier Hall until the recent completion of the new Jesuit Community Complex. LMU is home to 51 Jesuits (2006–2007 academic school year) holding various positions in administrative, staff, and faculty positions throughout the university. Even though there are a lot of Jesuits on the campus, the majority of them are not involved with school.[citation needed]

Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary

The Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary also house several religious sisters adjacent campus. From 1968 until 1999 the sisters lived on campus in the Thomas and Dorothy Leavey Center. In 1999, they donated the building to the university and moved into residential houses off campus. The Western American provincial center, which had been in the Leavey center, was moved to Montebello. The Marymount Sisters sponsor the Marymount Institute for Faith, Culture, and the Arts which attempts to preserve the transformative educational tradition of the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary and promotes a dialogue between faith and culture as expressed in fine, performing, literary and communication arts.[67]

Sisters of Saint Joseph of Orange

Like the Jesuits and Marymount Sisters, the Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange play a great role in preserving the Catholic identity of the school. Several sisters of the order reside adjacent to the campus, working in administrative, staff, and faculty roles.[citation needed]

Campus ministry

Loyola Marymount's Office of Campus Ministry is a component to the promotion of the university's mission and identity. Founded in 1911 as the University Chaplain, this division became known as Campus Ministry in 1973 with a stipulation that the Director would be a Jesuit. By 1986 this requirement was waived when Sr. Margaret Mary Dolan, R.S.H.M. became the director. Dolan, an alumna of Marymount College's class of 1958, received her Master's from LMU in 1974 and also served the university as a campus minister, director of alumni relations, residence hall minister, and alumni chaplain since 1973.

In 2008, as part of the university's Centennial Capital Campaign, it was announced that an $8 million fundraising goal was set to endow the office as the "Peg Dolan, RSHM Campus Ministry Center" in honor of Dolan's contributions to the university. The same year, the university asked her to address the class of 2008 at the undergraduate commencement exercises and she was awarded an honorary doctorate. At the dedication ceremony in September 2008, over 700 alumni returned to campus to honor her legacy at the university. When Dolan died in 2009, more than 1,000 people returned to campus for two days of liturgies celebrating her life.[68]

Located at the north end of the university, Sacred Heart Chapel is the main worship space on campus. A basilica-style church, Sacred Heart has two side altars and the Mary chapel, which is located behind the crucifix, in addition to the main chapel space. The chapel is lined by tall stained-glass windows. Each window bears the seal of one of the 28 other Jesuit universities in the United States; additionally, following the 1973 merger, edged glass window of the other four Marymount colleges and universities in the United States were added.[citation needed]

Academy of Catholic Thought and Imagination

The Academy of Catholic Thought and Imagination (ACTI) at Loyola Marymount University is a hub for scholarship, interdisciplinary research, pedagogy, and outreach on LMU's campus and in the southwest United States. ACTI sponsors and co-sponsors events, supports interdisciplinary dialogue within the university, and publishes academic work promoting its mission. Founded in April 2014 and Directed by Dr. Brian Treanor, ACTI has been sponsoring and organizing events since April 2015.[69]

The Marymount Institute for Faith, Culture, and the Arts

Founded in 1991, the Marymount Institute encourages interdisciplinary and intercultural scholarly and artistic activity in the form of research, publication, exhibits, performances, conferences, seminars, and lectures.

2008 saw the opening of the Marymount Institute Press. Itself an imprint of Tsehai Publishers and Distributors, the MIP was founded by the Ethiopian-born journalist, publisher, and social activist, Elias Wondimu, and already has two publications to its credit: "Panim el Panim: Facing Genesis, Visual Midrash" and "A Journey into Love: Meditating with Piers Plowman".

The President's Marymount Institute Professor in Residence is Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka.[69]

Athletics

Athletic teams at Loyola Marymount are known as Lions; the school's primary athletic affiliation is with the West Coast Conference. While LMU has had success in several sports, it is probably best remembered for its men's basketball teams between 1985 and 1990, with Paul Westhead as coach and for the death of star player Hank Gathers (#44), who collapsed during the second round of the WCC tournament on March 4, 1990, and for his friendship with teammate Bo Kimble (#30). Their jerseys have been retired at LMU.

Especially well-remembered was the 1990 team, led by Gathers and Kimble until tragedy struck in the WCC tournament. Gathers collapsed during a game and died due to a previously diagnosed heart condition. Playing for their fallen teammate, the Lions advanced to the Elite Eight (regional final) of the NCAA tournament before falling to eventual champions UNLV.

The primary indoor athletic facility is the Gersten Pavilion. Former Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim pitcher C. J. Wilson attended and pitched at Loyola Marymount in 2001. LMU Softball holds many records. It owns more titles than any other PCSC (Pacific Coast Softball Conference) team, with three in 2003, 2005, and 2007. In 2007, Tiffany Pagano and LMU beat UCLA 4–2 in the Los Angeles regional in the NCAA Tournament, to mark their first win over the Bruins, and the first time that UCLA had not won a regional and advanced to the Women's College World Series.[70]

Student government

ASLMU, The Associated Students of Loyola Marymount University, is the functioning student government. The government body is composed of an Executive Branch, composed of the Management Team and Cabinet Departments; a Legislative Branch, composed of the Senate; and a Judicial Branch, composed of the Judicial Committee. The only elected positions are those of the President, Vice President and the Senate. Unlike the senators, the President and Vice President have a limited term of two years.[71]

Student media

The Los Angeles Loyolan

The Los Angeles Loyolan newspaper has been published for 100 years. It was originally titled The Cinder for the cinders kicked up by the trains passing the downtown campus of St. Vincent's College.[citation needed] In 2007, The Loyolan moved from its long-standing weekly Wednesday publication schedule to a twice a week—Monday and Thursday—schedule. As of 2020, publication is completely digital.

The paper is supported by its advertising department, which has historically paid from 80% to 100% of the cost of publication. Its regular sections include News, Opinion, Sports, Social Justice, and Life+Arts. Special sections include Business, Travel, Cartoon and the parody section, named The Bluff after LMU's distinctive landmark.

In August 2013, the student staff of the Loyolan took the publication to a digital-focused format, publishing stories and video segments online daily.[72]

This transition will take place over a three-year period in which the staff will focus on mobile, social media and the web. As part of this digital focus, the Loyolan announced that beginning in the spring semester of 2015 there will only be one print edition published per week.[73]

Tower Yearbook

Over the years, the Loyola University Los Angeles yearbook was known by several titles, including the Lair Annual. After the merger the university began publishing the annual Tower Yearbook which is financed through a mandatory annual student yearbook fee (collected along with tuition).

The student-run yearbook at Loyola Marymount University was named "Best in Show" at the 85th Annual National College Media Conference in St. Louis, Mo. on October 30. "The Tower" took first place in the "Yearbook 300-Plus" category among other prestigious colleges from around the nation.

In 2016, the National Scholastic Press Association awarded the Tower yearbook the Pacemaker Award. SEEK, the winning issue was headed by Mali McGuire the editor-in-chief for the year. The 2015-16 yearbook was also awarded the Gold Crown by the Columbia Scholastic Press Association.

Campus radio

KXLU (88.9 FM) is an FM radio station broadcasting out of Loyola Marymount University in southwest Los Angeles, California. It was first on the air in 1957, and recently celebrated its 60th anniversary. It is a non-commercial college radio station that plays many styles of music broadly classified under rock, specialty, fine arts, and Latin jazz.

ROAR Studios

ROAR Studios is the newest student media on-campus. It provides a forum for student produced programming to be broadcast both via the on-campus cable TV system and, eventually, via the Public-access television cable TV system(s).

ROAR Studios is the only TV station made for, and run by, students on the LMU campus. The station provides student produced programming every two weeks, with its primetime block from 10:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. every night.[74]

Service organizations

Center for Service and Action

CSA also oversees LMU's student service organizations. The ten service organizations work to help the university and surrounding community of Los Angeles. The members of these organizations make themselves available for on-campus service as well as on-going commitments to serve at specific non-profit agencies in Southern California. Each organization has a moderator and a chaplain (though in some of the organizations the same priest or woman religious serves as both moderator and chaplain).

CSA coordinates communication between the leadership of these organizations, the Service Organization Council. CSA also coordinates the distribution of the On-Campus Service Requests.

The organizations and their respective dates of founding are Crimson Circle (1929), Belles (1960), Gryphon Circle (1968), Ignatians (1981), Sursum Corda (1992), Marians (2003), Magis (2003), Creare (2009), Espérer (2012), and Agapé (2017).[75]

 
LMU EMTs in a golf cart working Graduation 2016

Emergency Medical Services

LMU EMS is the on-campus emergency medical services program, consisting of volunteer full-time undergraduate students who are nationally certified EMTs. The organization is 1 of 27 active members of the National Collegiate Emergency Medical Services Foundation (NCEMSF) and the first collegiate EMS group on the West Coast, founded in 1986.[76] LMU EMS responds to between 300-500 medical calls on the LMU Westchester campus during the academic year, whenever the campus health clinic is closed, which establishes 24/7 medical coverage of the campus during the school year, serving more than 10,000 work hours annually. As a non-transporting agency, LMU EMS works with the Los Angeles Fire Department for transportation of patients to local emergency departments. LMU EMS was honored as the smallest school to win NCEMSF’s Organization of the Year award and Debbie Wilson, the program’s founder, was also the first woman to win NCEMSF’s Collegiate EMS Advisor of the Year award.[77] The program has also won nine university-wide awards,[78] and four national awards.[77]

Fraternities and sororities

LMU is also home to a number of campus Greek organizations. The campus fraternities associated with the North American Interfraternity Council (NIC) are Alpha Delta Gamma (1952), Sigma Chi (1991), Sigma Phi Epsilon (1996), Sigma Lambda Beta (1999), Lambda Chi Alpha (2002), Beta Theta Pi (2005), Delta Sigma Phi (2012), and Phi Delta Theta (2014).[79]

The campus sororities that are part of the National Panhellenic Conference (NPC) Affiliates are Alpha Phi (1976), Delta Gamma (1981), Delta Zeta (1986), Kappa Alpha Theta (1999), Pi Beta Phi (2002), and Alpha Chi Omega (2014).[citation needed]

LMU also has multi-cultural Greek organizations including Sigma Lambda Gamma (2000), and chapters from the National Pan-Hellenic Council include Alpha Kappa Alpha (2011), Delta Sigma Theta (2000), Kappa Alpha Psi, and Sigma Gamma Rho (2006).[citation needed]

See also

Notelist

  1. ^ Other consists of Multiracial Americans & those who prefer to not say.
  2. ^ The percentage of students who received an income-based federal Pell grant intended for low-income students.
  3. ^ The percentage of students who are a part of the American middle class at the bare minimum.

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External links

  • Official website
  • Panorama of historic St. Vincent's College, Loyola's original 1887 campus in downtown LA.


Coordinates: 33°58′12″N 118°25′05″W / 33.9700°N 118.418°W / 33.9700; -118.418

loyola, marymount, university, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, contains, content, that, written, like, advertisement, please, help, impro. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Loyola Marymount University news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Loyola Marymount University LMU is a private Jesuit and Marymount research university in Los Angeles California It is located on the west side of the city near Playa Vista LMU is the parent school to Loyola Law School which is located in downtown Los Angeles Loyola Marymount UniversityFormer namesSt Vincent s College 1865 1911 1915 1917 L A College 1911 1915 Loyola College of Los Angeles 1917 1930 Loyola University of Los Angeles 1930 1973 Also Marymount Junior College 1932 1948 Marymount College 1948 1973 MottoAd majorem Dei gloriam Latin Tua Luce Dirige Latin Motto in EnglishFor the greater glory of GodDirect us by thy lightTypePrivate research universityEstablished1865 158 years ago 1865 1911 assignment to Jesuits Religious affiliationCatholic Jesuit Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary Sisters of St Joseph of Orange Academic affiliationsAJCUACCUNAICUEndowment 642 6 million 2020 1 PresidentTimothy Law SnyderProvostThomas PoonAcademic staff615 2 Students10 004 fall 2022 3 Undergraduates7 138 fall 2022 3 Postgraduates2 866 fall 2022 3 Address1 LMU Drive Westchester Los Angeles California U S CampusUrban150 acres 60 7 ha Fight song Fight on Loyola Colors Crimson and blue 4 NicknameLionsSporting affiliationsNCAA Division I WCC PCSCMascotIggy the LionWebsitewww wbr lmu wbr edu1 St Vincent s College in the Lugo Adobe on the Plaza 1865 2 St Vincent s College first building by Pershing Square 1867 3 St Vincent s College second building by Pershing Square ca 1875 LMU offers 55 major and 59 minor undergraduate degrees and programs across six undergraduate colleges The Graduate Division offers 47 master s degree programs one education doctorate one doctorate in juridical science a Juris Doctor and 13 credential programs 5 LMU s sports teams are called the Lions and compete at the NCAA Division I level as members of the West Coast Conference in 20 sports Contents 1 History 1 1 St Vincent s College 1 2 Beginnings of Loyola in L A 1 3 Beginnings of Marymount in L A 1 4 Affiliation and merger of Loyola and Marymount 1 5 Recent history 2 Campus 2 1 Sustainability 3 Academics 3 1 Admissions 3 2 Rankings 3 3 Bellarmine College of Liberal Arts 3 4 College of Communication and Fine Arts 3 5 College of Business Administration 3 5 1 Rankings 3 6 Frank R Seaver College of Science and Engineering 3 7 School of Education 3 8 School of Film and Television 3 9 Loyola Law School 4 Organization 5 Sponsoring religious orders 5 1 Society of Jesus 5 2 Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary 5 3 Sisters of Saint Joseph of Orange 6 Campus ministry 7 Academy of Catholic Thought and Imagination 8 The Marymount Institute for Faith Culture and the Arts 9 Athletics 10 Student government 11 Student media 11 1 The Los Angeles Loyolan 11 2 Tower Yearbook 11 3 Campus radio 11 4 ROAR Studios 12 Service organizations 12 1 Center for Service and Action 12 2 Emergency Medical Services 13 Fraternities and sororities 14 See also 15 Notelist 16 References 17 External linksHistory EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Loyola Marymount University news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Loyola Marymount University is the product of a merger in 1973 between Loyola College founded in 1917 and Marymount College founded in 1932 with its roots in Marymount School which was founded in 1923 6 St Vincent s College Edit The present university is the product of the first institution of higher learning in Southern California St Vincent s College which was founded and run by the Vincentians until 1911 7 8 In 1865 the Vincentian Fathers were commissioned by Bishop Thaddeus Amat y Brusi to found St Vincent s College for Boys in Los Angeles Father John Asmuth was the first President Rector Classes were held for two years in the Lugo Adobe on the east side of the Plaza while a new building was being finished The historic home aptly donated by Don Vicente Lugo was one of few two story adobes then in town The house stood in the empty lot across Alameda Street between the Plaza and Union Station near Olvera Street Later the brick building was replaced with a larger one in stone The 7th Street property now called St Vincent s Place took up the block bounded by Fort Broadway 6th Hill and 7th streets When St Vincent s later moved to a new campus the old building became US Army Headquarters and in 1907 the large Bullock s department store was built and operated here until 1983 In 1869 St Vincent s was accredited by the state 9 10 4 St Vincent s College from the east over Grand Ave north of Los Angeles Trade Technical College 1905 In 1887 the college moved to a new more majestic campus bounded by Grand Avenue Washington Boulevard Hope Street and 18th which would have a chapel residence hall cottages and a traditional brick and ivy complex housing classrooms and lecture halls Like the second college building by Pershing Square the new retained a tall central tower topped with St Vincent s trademark mansard roof 11 7 While the campus underwent many expansions the athletic program grew and the Catholic Collegiates competed against Occidental s Presbyterians and USC s Methodists St Vincent s athletes were also recruited into professional sports During this era from St Vincent s College graduated many alumni who would become famous in the history of Los Angeles among whom were Isidore Dockweiler Eugene Biscailuz and Leo Carrillo 7 In 1911 the Vincentians who had led the college since its founding the century before were replaced with the Jesuits who quickly moved the college to a larger property As planning began on developing a 20th century university enrollment was folded into a new college briefly called Los Angeles College that would soon evolve into Loyola The old campus became St Vincent s School 12 In 1922 St Vincent s campus was sold Over time the historic buildings of old St Vincent s College have been torn down and replaced by for example the Grand Olympic Auditorium 1924 and large open parking lots 7 Beginnings of Loyola in L A Edit When the Vincentians pulled out of educational ministry in Los Angeles in 1911 Bishop Thomas Conaty asked the Jesuits to come to Los Angeles and take over St Vincent s College Not wishing to assume any of the college s debt the Jesuits instead founded Los Angeles College in 1911 They simultaneously opened their high school division Loyola High School and folded the board faculty and students of St Vincent s College into Los Angeles College at a new location made up of several bungalows at Avenue 52 Highland Park Los Angeles citation needed Father Richard A Gleeson was the first Jesuit President but the board of the college was initially composed of Vincentian Fathers Rapid growth prompted the Jesuits to seek a new campus on Venice Boulevard in 1917 with this move the name of the school was changed back to St Vincent s College However in 1918 the name was once again changed to Loyola College of Los Angeles citation needed Graduate instruction began in 1920 with the foundation of a separate law school Though instruction at the undergraduate level remained exclusive to male students women were admitted to the law school The law school was the second in Los Angeles to admit Jewish students USC s law school had done so at least since 1910 13 14 In 1928 the undergraduate division of Loyola relocated under then President Joseph A Sullivan S J to the present Westchester campus and achieved university status in 1930 becoming Loyola University of Los Angeles Loyola Law School did not move with the rest of the university but moved later to another location just west of downtown Los Angeles citation needed World War II had a significant impact on Loyola University As enrollment began to drop Father Edward Whelan president at the time brokered a deal with the US Army to form an officer training program for both Army and Navy officers The contract allowed the university to remain open during the war and enrollment hit all time highs as a result of returning veterans taking advantage of the G I Bill in the mid to late 1940s Additionally Father Whelan recognized the grave injustice of the Japanese internment camps during World War II At Loyola he hired and housed many Japanese Americans returning to Los Angeles after their release from the camps In 1949 Father Charles Cassassa was named president and began one of the most consequential presidencies in the university s history citation needed His work included the formation of a graduate division on the Westchester campus in June 1950 graduate work having formed an integral part of the Teacher Education Program during the preceding two years expanding campus infrastructure He then established the Institute of Human Relations to promote improved racial relations in business and in government Future Mayor of Los Angeles Tom Bradley attended the first year long program held by the Institute of Human Relations and remained lifelong friends with Father Cassassa citation needed Father Cassassa also continued Father Whelan s legacy of combating racial injustice In 1950 he forced the school s football team to forfeit an away game against Texas Western since the school s rules prevented African American players such as Loyola s Bill English to play on their field 15 During the Cassassa era the law school moved to its current campus designed by Frank Gehry in 1964 Loyola University also continued as an all male school until its merger with Marymount College in 1973 There were however several notable exceptions citation needed The first exception occurred during the summer months when the Loyola faculty offered classes for religious women Catholic nuns seeking undergraduate degrees Many sisters from across Los Angeles and Orange County acquired their undergraduate degrees from Loyola Additionally women were admitted to several of Loyola s graduate programs prior to the affiliation and merger with Marymount College Furthermore there were several female students admitted to Marymount College who later matriculated into Loyola University during the two schools five year affiliation prior to 1973 primarily into Engineering and Business majors which Marymount did not offer citation needed Beginnings of Marymount in L A Edit In separate though parallel developments the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary began teaching local young women in 1923 Having been invited by Bishop John Cantwell seven sisters of the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary under the leadership of Mother Cecilia Rafter formed what was first an elementary school and shortly thereafter a high school Within ten years so many young women wished to continue their education with the Marymount sisters beyond high school that Marymount Junior College opened as an all women s school on the Westwood campus of Marymount High School in 1933 Mother Gertrude Cain was the first president of the junior college and guided its development into a four year college in 1948 assuming the name Marymount College of Los Angeles In 1960 having outgrown its shared Westwood campus Marymount College moved both its two year program and its four year program to the Palos Verdes Peninsula in southwestern Los Angeles The Palos Verdes campus became Marymount California University In 1967 Sister Raymunde McKay the president of Marymount College extended an invitation to Sister Mary Felix Montgomery General Superior of the Sisters of Saint Joseph of Orange to merge Marymount College with St Joseph College of Orange a four year liberal arts college for women religious run by the Sisters of Saint Joseph of Orange which Sister Montgomery accepted St Joseph College was originally formed as St Joseph Teacher s College a junior college affiliated with The Catholic University of America in 1953 In 1959 it was incorporated as an autonomous four year institution and assumed the St Joseph College name In 1968 Marymount and St Joseph s Colleges merged under the Marymount name with an agreement that the traditions and heritage of both the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary and the Sisters of St Joseph of Orange would be carried in the Marymount name As part of the Marymount College Agreement Marymount College was administered co equally by the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary and the Sisters of St Joseph of Orange as members of both communities partnered in the governing staffing and teaching of Marymount College Subsequently St Joseph College of Orange was renamed Marymount College of Orange During the academic year it remained a college for women religious seeking their baccalaureate degrees college courses were offered to men and women during the summers at the Orange campus The same year Marymount College began its affiliation with Loyola University moving its four year program at the Palos Verdes campus to the Westchester campus of Loyola University Marymount College then operated on three campuses Palos Verdes retained its two year program Orange remained a campus for religious women in Orange County and Westchester was a campus for both lay and religious women 11 Affiliation and merger of Loyola and Marymount Edit By the mid 1960s Loyola University of Los Angeles had unsuccessfully petitioned the Archbishop of Los Angeles Cardinal James Francis McIntyre to allow coeducation at Loyola for several years In 1967 however Sister McKay President of Marymount College received permission from Cardinal McIntyre to begin affiliation with Loyola University on Loyola s Westchester campus Sister McKay and Father Charles Cassassa President of Loyola University held a joint press conference to announce the affiliation The affiliation of Marymount College and Loyola University began in 1968 when Marymount s four year program moved to Loyola s Westchester campus this arrangement two independent schools on one campus continued for five years In 1970 the Student Governments of Loyola University ASLU Associated Students of Loyola University and Marymount College ASMC Associated Students of Marymount College joined to form the Associated Students of Loyola and Marymount ASLM After five years of sharing faculties and facilities Loyola University and Marymount College merged and assumed the name Loyola Marymount University in 1973 Through this union the expanded university maintained the century old mission of Catholic higher education in Los Angeles and incorporated the educational traditions of the Jesuits Marymount sisters and Orange sisters into one institution At this time ASLM became known as the Associated Students of Loyola Marymount University ASLMU Father Donald Merrifield who became president of Loyola University in 1969 continued as the university s president 16 The academic vice president of Marymount College Sister Renee Harrangue became the provost During Father Merrifield s tenure as president thirteen new buildings were constructed on Loyola Marymount s main campus 17 Father Merrifield oversaw the expansion of Loyola Law School s campus in Pico Union near downtown Los Angeles 17 Merrifield and the university commissioned architect Frank Gehry to design the new campus which was needed to accommodate increased enrollment 17 Merrifield also implemented a number of programs to increase minority enrollment such as financial aid packages and scholarships and added African American and Latino studies programs He stepped down as president of Loyola Marymount in 1984 but remained the university s chancellor until 2002 16 17 Marymount College s four year program subsequently separated from its two year program The Marymount two year program remained incorporated as a separate institution and received accreditation in 1971 as the independently run Marymount College Palos Verdes which is currently operates in Rancho Palos Verdes California In 2010 Marymount College Palos Verdes received accreditation as a four year institution citation needed With the merger of Loyola University and Marymount College in 1973 the Sisters of St Joseph of Orange joined the Society of Jesus and the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary as one of the sponsoring religious communities of Loyola Marymount University Marymount College of Orange was renamed the Orange Campus of Loyola Marymount University The Orange Campus offered continuing education and summer courses to men and women through the 1980s citation needed Recent history Edit In 2007 the university reestablished its presence in Orange County California when the Theological Studies Department began offering a two year master s program in Pastoral Theology in Orange California The first cohort graduated in the Spring of 2009 and three additional cohorts completed a three year master s degree in Pastoral Theology until the cohort program ended in 2018 The classes were held in the Marywood offices of the Diocese of Orange and then at the Diocese s Christ Cathedral campus both not far from the now defunct Orange Campus of Loyola Marymount University citation needed The Sunken Gardens and Sacred Heart Chapel Xavier Hall On March 1 2010 Loyola Marymount President Father Robert B Lawton announced his retirement as head of the university effective at the end of the academic year in May 2010 18 Lawton cited health problems including a slow recovery from a 2009 back surgery as the main reason for his departure 18 He had served as president for eleven years beginning his tenure in 1999 19 David W Burcham a 1984 graduate of Loyola Law School became the first lay president in the school s history Burcham held the office for five years from 2010 to 2015 Burcham who presided over LMU s centennial in 2011 opted not to stay on after his term ended The LMU board of trustees elected Timothy Law Snyder as the 16th president and he took office on June 1 2015 20 21 Campus EditLMU is located on the Del Rey Hills in the Westchester neighborhood of Los Angeles It overlooks the former site of Hughes Aircraft The original 99 acres 40 ha were donated to the university by Harry Culver Xavier Hall named for St Francis Xavier and St Robert s Hall named after St Robert Bellarmine a cardinal and Doctor of the Church were the first two buildings to be built on the current Westchester Campus Following their completion in 1929 Xavier Hall housed both the Jesuit Faculty and the students at the time while St Robert s Hall served as the academic and administrative building 22 Sacred Heart Chapel and the Regents Bell Tower were the next non residential structures to be built on the campus 1953 55 The Malone Student Center named after Lorenzo M Malone an alumnus of the university and former dean of students and treasurer of the university was completed in 1958 and renovated in 1996 LMU now houses 36 academic athletic administrative and event facilities as well as twelve on campus residence halls and six on campus apartment complexes The campus houses four large open grass areas not reserved exclusively for athletic play The university s acquisition of University Hall in 2000 brought the campus a new entrance as well as much needed office and classroom space University Hall was originally constructed for Hughes Aircraft as their world headquarters It was then sold to the university LMU acquired the 1 000 000 square foot 93 000 m2 building in January 2000 from Raytheon which bought Hughes Aircraft LMU completed the interior remodel in April 2001 The building which houses the university s Bellarmine College of Liberal Arts is constructed of steel and concrete and is divided into seven structures above ground In 2022The Princeton Review ranked LMU as having the fourth most beautiful campus in America 23 CampusSqueeze college e zine ranked LMU as having the third most beautiful campus in America 24 In 2022 Sustainability Edit LMU has a large solar electric rooftop array that generates 868 000 kilowatt hours of electricity annually providing 6 of the annual campus electrical needs 25 non primary source needed The university purchased another 6 percent of its electrical energy through Renewable Energy Credits 26 There are three LEED certified buildings on campus including the William H Hannon Library All new and renovated roofing projects include installation of a highly reflective white membrane cool roof 27 Student sustainability jobs are available in the recycling program Loyola Marymount earned a grade of a B on the College Sustainability Report Card 2010 28 published by the Sustainable Endowments Institute 29 Academics EditIn addition to being the parent school of Loyola Law School in downtown Los Angeles Loyola Marymount is the home to six colleges and schools LMU offers an Air Force ROTC program an Honors Program in which the students have a different core curriculum and several year long semester and summer study abroad programs across the Americas Europe Africa Asia and Australia Admission to LMU is competitive Students from every U S state attend LMU citation needed Admissions Edit Freshman Admission Statistics 30 31 32 33 34 35 2022 2018 2014 2013 2012 2011Applicants 21 312 18 081 12 117 11 472 11 913 11 309Admits 8 240 8 498 6 387 6 209 5 975 6 043 Admitted 38 47 52 7 54 1 50 2 53 4 Enrolled 1 710 1 500 1 348 1 341 1 278 1 288SAT Math Reading range 1290 1420 1210 1390 1100 1300 1090 1300 1100 1300 1100 1280ACT range 28 32 27 31 25 30 25 29 24 29 24 28Avg GPA 3 92 3 81 3 75 3 72 3 76 3 71U S News amp World Report classifies Loyola Marymount s selectivity as more selective 36 For Fall 2022 LMU received over 20 000 freshman applications admitting 38 and enrolling a class of 1 710 first year students Members of the Class of 2022 earned an average high school GPA of 3 90 with the middle 50 scoring between 1290 and 1420 on the SAT Rankings Edit Academic rankingsNationalForbes 37 100THE WSJ 38 77U S News amp World Report 39 66Washington Monthly 40 230Undergraduate demographics as of Fall 2020 Race and ethnicity 41 TotalWhite 43 43 Hispanic 23 23 Asian 10 10 Foreign national 10 10 Other a 7 7 Black 7 7 Economic diversityLow income b 12 12 Affluent c 88 88 U S News amp World Report s Best Colleges 2021 ranked Loyola Marymount tied for 66th in the U S among national universities U S News amp World Report also ranked Loyola Marymount tied for 31st in Best Undergraduate Teaching tied for 38th Best for Veterans and 98th Best Value school in the national universities category and tied for 26th best undergraduate engineering program at schools where doctorates are not offered 42 The Wall Street Journal in its 2020 WSJ THE College Rankings ranked Loyola Marymount 90th in the country 43 The Hollywood Reporter in its Top 25 American Film Schools 2014 edition 44 2015 edition 45 2016 edition 46 2017 edition 47 2018 edition 48 and 2019 edition 49 ranked Loyola Marymount eighth in the country and in its 2020 edition ranked it seventh in the country 50 The Wrap ranked LMU eighth in the country in its Top 50 Film Schools of 2018 51 Bellarmine College of Liberal Arts Edit The Bellarmine College of Liberal Arts includes twenty five undergraduate programs of study as well as five graduate programs It embodies the wider university goals of liberal education which is the heart of the university s core curriculum for all undergraduates The college is named for Saint Robert Bellarmine 52 College of Communication and Fine Arts Edit The College of Communication and Fine Arts offers majors in Art History Communication Studies Dance Music Studio Arts and Theatre Arts as well as a graduate program in Marital and Family Therapy Students are able to choose a specific emphasis within the studio art STAR major such as drawing painting photography art education sculpture and multimedia 53 There are beginning lower division and advanced upper division courses offered in the STAR department that explore fine art practices in two dimensional design ceramics typography visual thinking and graphic design 54 The current dean of the College of Communication and Fine Arts is Bryant Alexander citation needed The Department of Music includes two choruses The 100 voice Concert Choir presents music for mixed voices The smaller more advanced Consort Singers presents varying styles of choral music and frequently appears in the Los Angeles area as the ambassador group for the university Pulitzer Prize winning playwright Beth Henley teaches playwriting in the Theatre Department Colin Hanks transferred to LMU from the acting program and Chapman University Linda Cardellini and Busy Philipps are also alumni from the Theatre Department Many of the faculty in the department are currently working in the industry 52 College of Business Administration Edit The College of Business Administration teaches effective principles and practice of business through foundation building undergraduate programs and flexible graduate programs for advancing professionals It is home to eight undergraduate programs of study as well as an MBA program for graduate studies 52 Rankings Edit LMU s Part Time MBA Program was ranked 6th nationwide by Bloomberg Businessweek in their 2013 rankings 55 U S News ranked Loyola in its 2017 list of America s Best Colleges as tied for 94th in the nation for Best Undergraduate Business Program 56 Frank R Seaver College of Science and Engineering Edit The Frank R Seaver College of Science and Engineering sees its purpose to be the education of principled leaders It contains thirteen undergraduate programs of study as well as six graduate programs Graduate programs are offered in civil electrical and mechanical engineering in environmental science in computer science in systems engineering and in dual program called systems engineering and leadership SE MBA citation needed Undergraduate students experience close interactions with the faculty as a result of small class sizes Students conduct sophisticated state of the art research by working very closely with their professors and they participate in various undergraduate student research conferences and student design competitions 52 School of Education Edit The School of Education at Loyola Marymount has four undergraduate and nine graduate programs of study including a Doctorate in Education Ed D 52 Many students seeking a credential in Elementary Education major in the Bellarmine College of Liberal Arts Liberal Studies program which is designed to educate one in the various arts and letters they will be teaching children School of Film and Television Edit The School of Film and Television was established in 2003 by consolidating LMU s programs in film and television Admission to the undergraduate program is competitive with 19 of applicants admitted to the program 57 It is the seventh highest ranked film program in America according to The Hollywood Reporter 48 49 and the fifth highest ranked program according to College Factual USA Today 58 In 2018 it opened a 35 000 square foot facility primarily for graduate film students 59 The Playa Vista campus includes three greenscreen studios eight Avid editing rooms and a Foley stage In the Spring of 2020 dean Peggy Rajski broke ground on the Howard B Fitzpatrick Pavilion a 25 000 square foot structure equipped with a screening theater a camera teaching stage and a motion capture workspace which is due to open in the Fall of 2021 60 Unlike some other film programs LMU film students own the intellectual property rights to the films they create while they are in college 61 The School of Film and Television offers bachelor s degrees in Film and Television Production Screenwriting Animation and Recording Arts along with a minor in Film Studies and also Master s programs in Writing and Producing for Television Film and Television Production and Feature Film Screenwriting A range of advanced facilities and equipment are available to students including two soundstages advanced editing labs a fully equipped theater and top of the line camera equipment including five RED One Cameras The School of Film and Television also offers a wide range of internship opportunities through more than 400 partner companies Notable alumni from LMU s film school include Barbara Broccoli producer of James Bond films since 1990 James Wong Brian Helgeland writer director of the Jackie Robinson biopic 42 Francis Lawrence director of three of The Hunger Games films and David Mirkin an executive producer and showrunner for The Simpsons 62 Loyola Law School Edit Main article Loyola Law SchoolLoyola Law School s Frank Gehry designed campus 63 is in the Pico Union neighborhood west of downtown Los Angeles and is separate from the Westchester main university campus citation needed Including its day and evening J D programs Loyola was the first California law school with a pro bono graduation requirement 64 under which students perform 40 hours of pro bono work 65 Organization EditThe governing body of the university is the school s independent board of trustees headed by a chairman The university s executive officer is the president Prior to 2009 a prerequisite to serve as the university s president was membership in the Society of Jesus however the board of trustees voted to allow educators not a part of the Jesuit Order to become president These changes were made at the recommendation of the American Assistancy of Jesuits the collective body of Jesuits in the United States in response to the declining number of Jesuits as well as those prepared to serve as the president of a major university See a list of past presidents The president is assisted by the chancellor assistant to the president director internal audit the vice president for mission and ministry under whose direction the Office of Campus Ministry and the Center for Ignatian Spirituality operates and the vice president for intercultural affairs The executive vice president amp provost reports directly to the president and oversees all campus operations The university cabinet consists of the president executive vice president amp provost senior vice president amp chief academic officer under whose direction the deans of the Bellarmine College of Liberal Arts College of Business Administration College of Communication and Fine Arts Seaver College of Science and Engineering School of Education School of Film and Television and University Libraries operate senior vice president for administration senior vice president amp chief financial officer senior vice president for student affairs senior vice president for university relations and senior vice president Fritz B Burns Dean of Loyola Law School 66 The Jesuit Community is headed by a rector appointed by the Superior General of the Society of Jesus the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary are led by local coordinator who report to the provincial superior of the Western American Province and the Sisters of St Joseph of Orange are led by a local superior who reports to the general superior of their congregation Each of the three sponsoring religious communities is represented on the board of trustees 67 Sponsoring religious orders EditLMU is sponsored primarily by three religious orders that have long been associated with education the Society of Jesus the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary and the Sisters of St Joseph of Orange However other religious orders such as the Order of Our Lady of Mount Carmel Carmelites and the Sisters of Saint Louis have members employed on campus citation needed Society of Jesus Edit The Jesuit Community of LMU is the largest in the California Province of the Society of Jesus The campus s Jesuits were housed in Xavier Hall until the recent completion of the new Jesuit Community Complex LMU is home to 51 Jesuits 2006 2007 academic school year holding various positions in administrative staff and faculty positions throughout the university Even though there are a lot of Jesuits on the campus the majority of them are not involved with school citation needed Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary Edit The Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary also house several religious sisters adjacent campus From 1968 until 1999 the sisters lived on campus in the Thomas and Dorothy Leavey Center In 1999 they donated the building to the university and moved into residential houses off campus The Western American provincial center which had been in the Leavey center was moved to Montebello The Marymount Sisters sponsor the Marymount Institute for Faith Culture and the Arts which attempts to preserve the transformative educational tradition of the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary and promotes a dialogue between faith and culture as expressed in fine performing literary and communication arts 67 Sisters of Saint Joseph of Orange Edit Like the Jesuits and Marymount Sisters the Sisters of St Joseph of Orange play a great role in preserving the Catholic identity of the school Several sisters of the order reside adjacent to the campus working in administrative staff and faculty roles citation needed Campus ministry EditThis section relies largely or entirely on a single source Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources Find sources Loyola Marymount University news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2018 Loyola Marymount s Office of Campus Ministry is a component to the promotion of the university s mission and identity Founded in 1911 as the University Chaplain this division became known as Campus Ministry in 1973 with a stipulation that the Director would be a Jesuit By 1986 this requirement was waived when Sr Margaret Mary Dolan R S H M became the director Dolan an alumna of Marymount College s class of 1958 received her Master s from LMU in 1974 and also served the university as a campus minister director of alumni relations residence hall minister and alumni chaplain since 1973 In 2008 as part of the university s Centennial Capital Campaign it was announced that an 8 million fundraising goal was set to endow the office as the Peg Dolan RSHM Campus Ministry Center in honor of Dolan s contributions to the university The same year the university asked her to address the class of 2008 at the undergraduate commencement exercises and she was awarded an honorary doctorate At the dedication ceremony in September 2008 over 700 alumni returned to campus to honor her legacy at the university When Dolan died in 2009 more than 1 000 people returned to campus for two days of liturgies celebrating her life 68 Located at the north end of the university Sacred Heart Chapel is the main worship space on campus A basilica style church Sacred Heart has two side altars and the Mary chapel which is located behind the crucifix in addition to the main chapel space The chapel is lined by tall stained glass windows Each window bears the seal of one of the 28 other Jesuit universities in the United States additionally following the 1973 merger edged glass window of the other four Marymount colleges and universities in the United States were added citation needed Academy of Catholic Thought and Imagination EditThe Academy of Catholic Thought and Imagination ACTI at Loyola Marymount University is a hub for scholarship interdisciplinary research pedagogy and outreach on LMU s campus and in the southwest United States ACTI sponsors and co sponsors events supports interdisciplinary dialogue within the university and publishes academic work promoting its mission Founded in April 2014 and Directed by Dr Brian Treanor ACTI has been sponsoring and organizing events since April 2015 69 The Marymount Institute for Faith Culture and the Arts EditFounded in 1991 the Marymount Institute encourages interdisciplinary and intercultural scholarly and artistic activity in the form of research publication exhibits performances conferences seminars and lectures 2008 saw the opening of the Marymount Institute Press Itself an imprint of Tsehai Publishers and Distributors the MIP was founded by the Ethiopian born journalist publisher and social activist Elias Wondimu and already has two publications to its credit Panim el Panim Facing Genesis Visual Midrash and A Journey into Love Meditating with Piers Plowman The President s Marymount Institute Professor in Residence is Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka 69 Athletics EditThis section relies largely or entirely on a single source Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources Find sources Loyola Marymount University news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2018 Main article Loyola Marymount Lions Athletic teams at Loyola Marymount are known as Lions the school s primary athletic affiliation is with the West Coast Conference While LMU has had success in several sports it is probably best remembered for its men s basketball teams between 1985 and 1990 with Paul Westhead as coach and for the death of star player Hank Gathers 44 who collapsed during the second round of the WCC tournament on March 4 1990 and for his friendship with teammate Bo Kimble 30 Their jerseys have been retired at LMU Especially well remembered was the 1990 team led by Gathers and Kimble until tragedy struck in the WCC tournament Gathers collapsed during a game and died due to a previously diagnosed heart condition Playing for their fallen teammate the Lions advanced to the Elite Eight regional final of the NCAA tournament before falling to eventual champions UNLV The primary indoor athletic facility is the Gersten Pavilion Former Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim pitcher C J Wilson attended and pitched at Loyola Marymount in 2001 LMU Softball holds many records It owns more titles than any other PCSC Pacific Coast Softball Conference team with three in 2003 2005 and 2007 In 2007 Tiffany Pagano and LMU beat UCLA 4 2 in the Los Angeles regional in the NCAA Tournament to mark their first win over the Bruins and the first time that UCLA had not won a regional and advanced to the Women s College World Series 70 Student government EditASLMU The Associated Students of Loyola Marymount University is the functioning student government The government body is composed of an Executive Branch composed of the Management Team and Cabinet Departments a Legislative Branch composed of the Senate and a Judicial Branch composed of the Judicial Committee The only elected positions are those of the President Vice President and the Senate Unlike the senators the President and Vice President have a limited term of two years 71 Student media EditThe Los Angeles Loyolan Edit The Los Angeles Loyolan newspaper has been published for 100 years It was originally titled The Cinder for the cinders kicked up by the trains passing the downtown campus of St Vincent s College citation needed In 2007 The Loyolan moved from its long standing weekly Wednesday publication schedule to a twice a week Monday and Thursday schedule As of 2020 publication is completely digital The paper is supported by its advertising department which has historically paid from 80 to 100 of the cost of publication Its regular sections include News Opinion Sports Social Justice and Life Arts Special sections include Business Travel Cartoon and the parody section named The Bluff after LMU s distinctive landmark In August 2013 the student staff of the Loyolan took the publication to a digital focused format publishing stories and video segments online daily 72 This transition will take place over a three year period in which the staff will focus on mobile social media and the web As part of this digital focus the Loyolan announced that beginning in the spring semester of 2015 there will only be one print edition published per week 73 Tower Yearbook Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Over the years the Loyola University Los Angeles yearbook was known by several titles including the Lair Annual After the merger the university began publishing the annual Tower Yearbook which is financed through a mandatory annual student yearbook fee collected along with tuition The student run yearbook at Loyola Marymount University was named Best in Show at the 85th Annual National College Media Conference in St Louis Mo on October 30 The Tower took first place in the Yearbook 300 Plus category among other prestigious colleges from around the nation In 2016 the National Scholastic Press Association awarded the Tower yearbook the Pacemaker Award SEEK the winning issue was headed by Mali McGuire the editor in chief for the year The 2015 16 yearbook was also awarded the Gold Crown by the Columbia Scholastic Press Association Campus radio Edit KXLU 88 9 FM is an FM radio station broadcasting out of Loyola Marymount University in southwest Los Angeles California It was first on the air in 1957 and recently celebrated its 60th anniversary It is a non commercial college radio station that plays many styles of music broadly classified under rock specialty fine arts and Latin jazz ROAR Studios Edit ROAR Studios is the newest student media on campus It provides a forum for student produced programming to be broadcast both via the on campus cable TV system and eventually via the Public access television cable TV system s ROAR Studios is the only TV station made for and run by students on the LMU campus The station provides student produced programming every two weeks with its primetime block from 10 00 p m to 2 00 a m every night 74 Service organizations EditCenter for Service and Action Edit CSA also oversees LMU s student service organizations The ten service organizations work to help the university and surrounding community of Los Angeles The members of these organizations make themselves available for on campus service as well as on going commitments to serve at specific non profit agencies in Southern California Each organization has a moderator and a chaplain though in some of the organizations the same priest or woman religious serves as both moderator and chaplain CSA coordinates communication between the leadership of these organizations the Service Organization Council CSA also coordinates the distribution of the On Campus Service Requests The organizations and their respective dates of founding are Crimson Circle 1929 Belles 1960 Gryphon Circle 1968 Ignatians 1981 Sursum Corda 1992 Marians 2003 Magis 2003 Creare 2009 Esperer 2012 and Agape 2017 75 LMU EMTs in a golf cart working Graduation 2016 Emergency Medical Services Edit LMU EMS is the on campus emergency medical services program consisting of volunteer full time undergraduate students who are nationally certified EMTs The organization is 1 of 27 active members of the National Collegiate Emergency Medical Services Foundation NCEMSF and the first collegiate EMS group on the West Coast founded in 1986 76 LMU EMS responds to between 300 500 medical calls on the LMU Westchester campus during the academic year whenever the campus health clinic is closed which establishes 24 7 medical coverage of the campus during the school year serving more than 10 000 work hours annually As a non transporting agency LMU EMS works with the Los Angeles Fire Department for transportation of patients to local emergency departments LMU EMS was honored as the smallest school to win NCEMSF s Organization of the Year award and Debbie Wilson the program s founder was also the first woman to win NCEMSF s Collegiate EMS Advisor of the Year award 77 The program has also won nine university wide awards 78 and four national awards 77 Fraternities and sororities EditLMU is also home to a number of campus Greek organizations The campus fraternities associated with the North American Interfraternity Council NIC are Alpha Delta Gamma 1952 Sigma Chi 1991 Sigma Phi Epsilon 1996 Sigma Lambda Beta 1999 Lambda Chi Alpha 2002 Beta Theta Pi 2005 Delta Sigma Phi 2012 and Phi Delta Theta 2014 79 The campus sororities that are part of the National Panhellenic Conference NPC Affiliates are Alpha Phi 1976 Delta Gamma 1981 Delta Zeta 1986 Kappa Alpha Theta 1999 Pi Beta Phi 2002 and Alpha Chi Omega 2014 citation needed LMU also has multi cultural Greek organizations including Sigma Lambda Gamma 2000 and chapters from the National Pan Hellenic Council include Alpha Kappa Alpha 2011 Delta Sigma Theta 2000 Kappa Alpha Psi and Sigma Gamma Rho 2006 citation needed See also Edit Los Angeles portalList of Catholic universities and colleges in the United States List of Jesuit sitesNotelist Edit Other consists of Multiracial Americans amp those who prefer to not say The percentage of students who received an income based federal Pell grant intended for low income students The percentage of students who are a part of the American middle class at the bare minimum References Edit As of Sept 30 2021 U S and Canadian Institutions Listed by Fiscal Year 2020 Endowment Market Value and Change in Endowment Market Value from FY19 to FY20 Report National Association of College and University Business Officers and TIAA February 19 2021 Retrieved February 20 2021 LMU At A Glance PDF Loyola Marymount University Archived from the original PDF on April 2 2015 Retrieved May 17 2013 a b c Facts Figures and Rankings Loyola Marymount University Colors Retrieved 2019 06 29 Facts amp Figures PDF Loyola Marymount University Retrieved 2020 01 04 University Loyola Marymount History Loyola Marymount University www lmu edu Retrieved 2023 02 17 a b c d Berman Jay The School The City Forgot Los Angeles Downtown News The Voice of Downtown Los Angeles Water and Power Associates waterandpower org See description in watermark Historic Core of Los Angeles amazon com accessed June 10 2018 a b St Vincent history Archived from the original on May 27 2016 Retrieved September 2 2017 St Vincent School stvincentla net Chaim Shapiro 1910 13 and several graduates of the class of 1915 Stare Decisis USC law school yearbooks for 1913 and 1915 on file in USC Libraries archives Alumni Loyola Law School Los Angeles Alumni lls edu Retrieved 25 April 2018 LMU Magazine No One Left Behind 31 August 2010 Retrieved 25 April 2018 a b Thursby Keith 2010 03 03 Donald P Merrifield dies at 81 former president of Loyola Marymount Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2010 03 10 a b c d Former LMU President Donald Merrifield S J Dies at 81 Loyola Marymount University Archived from the original on 2011 07 19 Retrieved 2010 03 10 a b Riparbelli Laura 2010 03 01 Lawton resigns as University president Fr Robert B Lawton S J steps down after 11 year term Los Angeles Loyolan Retrieved 2010 03 15 dead link Gordon Larry 2010 03 03 President of Loyola Marymount University to step down cites back surgery Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2010 03 15 Interim president David Burcham named 15th president of LMU The Argonaut Southland Publishing Inc 2010 10 07 Retrieved 2018 09 24 Song Jason 2015 03 29 Timothy Law Snyder chosen to lead Loyola Marymount University Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2018 09 24 Xavier Hall and St Robert s Hall Loyola University Calisphere Retrieved 2021 03 14 Test Prep Online Tutoring College amp Grad Admissions The Princeton Review Princetonreview com Retrieved 2 September 2017 Atlanta GA Top 20 Most Beautiful Colleges Retrieved September 2 2017 permanent dead link LMU Helps Lead the Way to a Greener L A Loyola Marymount University Archived from the original on 2011 09 27 Retrieved 2009 09 10 Energy Management Green LMU Loyola Marymount University Archived from the original on 2010 06 02 Retrieved 2021 10 05 Built Environment Loyola Marymount University Archived from the original on August 14 2009 Retrieved 2009 09 10 Loyola Marymount University Green Report Card 2010 Greenreportcard org 2008 06 30 Retrieved 2013 08 31 Sustainable Endowments Institute Endowmentinstitute org Retrieved 2013 08 31 Loyola Marymount University Common Data Set 2015 2016 Part C PDF Loyola Marymount University Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 12 Loyola Marymount University Common Data Set 2014 2015 Part C PDF Loyola Marymount University Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 12 Loyola Marymount University Common Data Set 2013 2014 Part C PDF Loyola Marymount University Loyola Marymount University Common Data Set 2012 2013 PDF Loyola Marymount University Loyola Marymount University Common Data Set 2011 2012 Part C PDF Loyola Marymount University Loyola Marymount University Common Data Set 2018 2019 PDF Loyola Marymount University U S News amp World Report Retrieved January 4 2020 Forbes America s Top Colleges List 2022 Forbes Retrieved September 13 2022 Wall Street Journal Times Higher Education College Rankings 2022 The Wall Street Journal Times Higher Education Retrieved July 26 2022 2022 2023 Best National Universities U S News amp World Report Retrieved September 13 2022 2022 National University Rankings Washington Monthly Retrieved September 13 2022 College Scorecard Loyola Marymount University United States Department of Education Retrieved May 8 2022 Loyola Marymount University Rankings U S News amp World Report Retrieved September 26 2020 Explore the Full WSJ THE College Rankings Wall Street Journal 4 September 2019 Loyola Marymount University The Top 25 Film Schools in the United States 2014 The Hollywood Reporter 30 July 2014 Retrieved 2019 04 05 Ithaca College The Top 25 Film Schools in the United States 2015 The Hollywood Reporter 2 October 2015 Retrieved 2019 04 05 Loyola Marymount University THR Ranks the Top 25 American Film Schools The Hollywood Reporter 18 August 2016 Retrieved 2019 04 05 1 USC The Top 25 American Film Schools 2017 The Hollywood Reporter 16 August 2017 Retrieved 2019 04 05 a b 8 Loyola Marymount University The Top 25 American Film Schools The Hollywood Reporter 16 August 2018 Retrieved 2019 04 05 a b The Top 25 American Film Schools Ranked The Hollywood Reporter 15 August 2019 Retrieved 2019 08 17 2020 s Top 25 American Film Schools Ranked The Hollywood Reporter 24 August 2020 Top 50 Film Schools of 2018 Ranked From USC to ASU www thewrap com 22 October 2018 Retrieved 2019 04 05 a b c d e University Loyola Marymount Degrees amp Programs Loyola Marymount University Lmu edu Retrieved September 2 2017 University Loyola Marymount Studio Arts Loyola Marymount University Cfa lmu edu Retrieved 25 April 2018 University Loyola Marymount Academics Loyola Marymount University Cfa lmu edu Retrieved 25 April 2018 Bloomberg Businessweek Business Schools Rankings amp Profiles Part Time MBA programs Bloomberg Businessweek Archived from the original on 2013 11 30 Retrieved 2013 12 01 Best Colleges Rankings Loyola Marymount University U S News amp World Report Retrieved 2016 09 28 Johnson Ross 2005 05 22 To Be as a City Upon a Hollywood Hill The New York Times Retrieved 2010 05 11 The Best Film Video amp Photographic Arts Schools College Factual 2013 02 20 Retrieved 2019 04 05 Loyola Marymount s new Playa Vista film school is a high tech wonder to behold Daily News Retrieved 2019 04 05 Loyola Marymount University The Top 25 American Film Schools Ranked The Hollywood Reporter 15 August 2019 Retrieved 2019 08 17 USC Cinematic Arts Copyright at SCA SCU Retrieved 2019 04 05 Notable LMU Alumni LMU SFTV Archived from the original on October 23 2013 Retrieved October 22 2013 Loyola Law School Gehry designed campus Archived from the original on 2006 09 01 Retrieved 2012 05 19 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Loyola Law School Los Angeles Lls edu Archived from the original on 2012 05 18 Retrieved 2013 08 31 LLS Public Interest Law Department Pro Bono Graduation Requirement Intranet lls edu Archived from the original on 2002 12 25 Retrieved 2016 09 28 University Loyola Marymount Executive Leadership Loyola Marymount University Lmu edu Retrieved September 2 2017 a b University Loyola Marymount Board of Trustees Loyola Marymount University Lmu edu Retrieved 2 September 2017 University Loyola Marymount Campus Ministry Loyola Marymount University Mission lmu edu Retrieved September 2 2017 a b University Loyola Marymount Centers Institutes Loyola Marymount University Lmu edu Retrieved 2 September 2017 Loyola Marymount Official Athletic Site LMULIONS com Retrieved September 2 2017 1 Archived June 7 2007 at the Wayback Machine Editorial Board 2013 05 08 Loyolan to shift to digital focus Los Angeles Loyolan Opinion Laloyolan com Retrieved 2016 09 28 Board Executive The Loyolan s shift to once a week print helps emphasize digital focus Los Angeles Loyolan Retrieved 2021 05 12 Student media Archived from the original on April 15 2017 Retrieved September 2 2017 Service Archived from the original on April 15 2017 Retrieved September 2 2017 University SCHOOL Loyola Marymount Loyola Marymount University NCEMSF Retrieved 2022 07 18 a b Hall of Fame www ncemsf org Retrieved 2022 07 18 University Loyola Marymount Student Service amp Leadership Awards Loyola Marymount University studentaffairs lmu edu Retrieved 2022 07 18 Greek Life Studentaffairs lmu edu Archived from the original on 2016 10 11 Retrieved 2016 09 28 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Loyola Marymount University Official website Panorama of historic St Vincent s College Loyola s original 1887 campus in downtown LA Coordinates 33 58 12 N 118 25 05 W 33 9700 N 118 418 W 33 9700 118 418 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Loyola Marymount University amp oldid 1142685471, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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