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Wikipedia

Northeastern University

Northeastern University (NU or NEU) is a private research university with its main campus in Boston, Massachusetts. Established in 1898, it was founded by the Boston Young Men's Christian Association as an all-male institute before being incorporated as Northeastern College in 1916, gaining university status in 1922. With more than 38,000 students, Northeastern is the largest university in Massachusetts by enrollment.[8]

Northeastern University
Former names
Evening Institute for Younger Men (1898–1916)
Northeastern College (1916–1922)
Motto
Lux, Veritas, Virtus (Latin)
Motto in English
"Light, Truth, Courage"
TypePrivate research university
Established1898; 126 years ago (1898)
AccreditationNECHE
Academic affiliations
Endowment$1.3 billion (2022)[1]
PresidentJoseph E. Aoun
ProvostDavid Madigan
Academic staff
3,049 (2020)[2]
Students38,760 (2023)[3]
Undergraduates21,330 (2023)[4]
Postgraduates17,430 (2023)[5]
Location, ,
United States

42°20′24″N 71°05′18″W / 42.34000°N 71.08833°W / 42.34000; -71.08833
CampusLarge city, 73 acres (30 hectares)
Other campuses[6]
NewspaperThe Huntington News
ColorsRed and black[7]
   
NicknameHuskies
Sporting affiliations
MascotPaws the Husky
Websitewww.northeastern.edu

Northeastern is a large, highly residential university which comprises nine schools, including the Northeastern University School of Law. The university's main campus in Boston is located within the center of the city along Huntington Avenue and Columbus Avenue near the Fenway–Kenmore and Roxbury neighborhoods. It offers undergraduate and graduate programs, and most undergraduates participate in a cooperative education program.[9] Northeastern is accredited by the New England Commission of Higher Education and is a member of the Boston Consortium for Higher Education. It is classified among "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very high research activity".[10]

Northeastern maintains satellite campuses in Charlotte, North Carolina; Seattle, Washington; San Jose, California; Oakland, California; Portland, Maine; Burlington, Massachusetts; and Toronto and Vancouver in Canada. In 2019, it purchased the New College of the Humanities, establishing an additional campus in London, England. The university's sports teams, the Northeastern Huskies, compete in NCAA Division I as members of the Coastal Athletic Association (CAA) in 18 varsity sports. The men's and women's hockey teams compete in Hockey East, while the men's and women's rowing teams compete in the Eastern Association of Rowing Colleges (EARC) and Eastern Association of Women's Rowing Colleges (EAWRC), respectively.[11]

History edit

Early development edit

 
The Huntington Avenue YMCA c. 1920, site of the Evening Institute for Younger Men.

In May 1896, directors of the Boston Young Men's Christian Association, the first in the U.S., established an Evening Institute for Younger Men, to merge, coordinate and improve its classes that had evolved over the past 40 years. Included among roughly 30 courses offered were algebra, bookkeeping, literature, French, German, Latin, geography, electricity, music, penmanship and physiology. In addition, a banjo club, camera club, orchestra, and weekly parliamentary debates and discussions were promoted. A good education for "any young man of moral character" with a YMCA membership was promised. Located in a new headquarters building at the corner of Boylston and Berkeley streets in Boston, the institute held its first classes in 1898. After a fire, a new YMCA building was constructed on Huntington Avenue in 1913.[12]

The School of Law was also formally established in 1898 with the assistance of an advisory committee, consisting of James Barr Ames, dean of the Harvard Law School; Samuel Bennett, dean of the Boston University School of Law; and Judge James R. Dunbar. In 1903, the first Automobile Engineering School in the country was established, followed by a Polytechnic School in 1904 and a School of Commerce and Finance in 1907. Day classes began in 1909. In 1916, a bill was introduced into the Massachusetts Legislature to incorporate the institute as Northeastern College. After considerable debate and investigation, it was passed in March 1916.[13]

In 1909, the Polytechnic School began offering co-operative engineering courses to eight students. A four-year daytime program had been established consisting of alternating single weeks of classroom instruction and practical work experience with mostly railroad companies that agreed to accept student workers. In 1920, the Co-operative School of Engineering, which later became the College of Engineering, was first authorized to grant degrees in civil, chemical, electrical and mechanical engineering.[12][14] The cooperative program, the second of its kind in the U.S. after one in Cincinnati, Ohio, was eventually adopted by all departments.[15]

On March 30, 1917, veteran educator Frank Palmer Speare, who had served as director of the institute, was inaugurated as the first president of the newly incorporated Northeastern College. Five years later the college changed its name to Northeastern University to better reflect the increasing depth of its instruction.[16] In March 1923, the university secured general (A.B. and B.S.) degree-granting power from the Legislature, with the exception of the medical and dental degrees.[14]

The College of Liberal Arts was added in 1935. Two years later the Northeastern University Corporation was established, with a board of trustees composed of 31 university members and 8 from the YMCA. Following World War II, Northeastern began admitting women. In 1948, Northeastern separated itself completely from the YMCA.[17] By 1959, when Carl Ell who had expanded the university stepped down as president, Northeastern had a local identity as an independent technical university serving a commuter and adult population.[18]

That reputation began changing during the presidency of Asa S. Knowles, from 1959 to 1975. Facing a postwar educational boom, the university broadened undergraduate offerings, increased graduate offerings, modernized administrative and faculty structures, created a Faculty Senate, launched its first-ever capital campaign, reorganized and expanded adult and continuing education, and increased the number of colleges. The university created the College of Education (1953), University College (1960), now called the College of Professional Studies, and the colleges of Pharmacy and Nursing (1964), which both later merged into the Bouvé College of Health Sciences.[19] The creation of the College of Criminal Justice (1967) followed, and then the Khoury College of Computer Sciences (1982), the first college in the United States dedicated to the field of computer science.[20][21]

Between 1959 and 1975, Northeastern's student population not only grew considerably larger, but also more diverse. At the beginning of this period, most of the student body was composed of white males from New England, the majority of whom came from the Boston-area public schools and primarily studied business or engineering. By 1974–75, women accounted for 33 percent of the nearly 14,000 undergraduates students, while 5 percent were black. Over 900 students came from different foreign countries. Of the graduating class of 2,238, 513 were in Liberal Arts, 462 in Engineering, 389 in Business, 227 in Pharmacy and Allied Health, and the remainder were roughly divided among Education, Boston-Bouvé, Nursing and Criminal Justice.[22]

To attract more women, the university refurbished existing facilities, constructed new women's dormitories and encouraged their participation in all programs. The merger with Boston-Bouvé, a women's college dedicated to physical health, and the creation of the College of Nursing, traditionally a female profession, also contributed to the increase. Though there was an explicit nondiscrimination policy on the books, throughout its history Northeastern had only a handful of black students. In the early 1960s, with financial assistance from the Ford Foundation in New York in the form of scholarships and co-ops to black high school students, Northeastern began actively recruiting black students. By 1975, black student-led organizations included the Afro-photo Society, Student Grill, Health Careers Club, The Onyx (a black student newspaper), Muhindi Literary Guild, the Outing Club, Black Engineering Society, and the first recognized black fraternity at the university, the Omicron Chapter of Iota Phi Theta. In addition, the number of foreign students increased from 170 in the 1950s and 1960s to 960 by 1974–75.[22]

Recent history edit

 
Northeastern's historic Ell Hall on Huntington Avenue.

By the early 1980s, under President Kenneth G. Ryder, the one-time night commuter school had grown into one of the largest private universities in the nation at around 55,000 students. In 1990, the first class with more live-on campus rather than commuter students was graduated. After Ryder's retirement in 1989, the university adopted a slow and more thoughtful approach to change.[23] Following an economic downturn, a 1991 trustee committee report described the situation as "life threatening to Northeastern," warning of a $17 million budget gap with no funding mechanisms to cover it.[23] That year President John A. Curry formulated a new strategy of transforming Northeastern into a "smaller, leaner, better place to work and study," describing unacceptable compromises in the quality and reputation of the university that had been made in the quest for more students. Staff were terminated and admissions targets were reduced, with applicant numbers beginning to rise and attrition rates fall by the end of Curry's tenure.[23]

 
Robert J. Shillman Hall, constructed in 1995.

When Curry left office in 1996, the university population had been systematically reduced to about 25,000. Incoming President Richard M. Freeland decided to focus on recruiting the type of students who were already graduating as the school's prime demographic.[23] Freeland focused on improving academics and restructuring the administration with a goal of "creating the country's premier program of practice oriented education".[23] In the early 1990s, the university began a $485 million construction program that included residence halls, academic and research facilities, and athletic centers. During the university's transition, Freeland reorganized the co-operative education system, decentralizing it into a department based system to allow better integration of classroom learning with workplace experience.[23] Full-time degree programs shifted from a four-quarter system to two traditional semesters and two summer "minimesters," allowing students to both delve more deeply into their academic courses and have longer and more substantive co-op placements, forcing departments to redesign aging programs to fit the longer format.[23] Freeland also created a marketing department, uncommon for universities at the time, and expanded the university advancement office, while setting an ambitious $200 million fundraising target with the goal of reducing dependency on tuition.[23]

Between 1995 and 2007, average SAT exam scores increased more than 200 points, retention rates rose dramatically, and applications doubled.[24] In 1998, Freeland set an admissions target of 2,800 freshman per year, allowing for adequate tuition income without compromising on education.[23] Throughout the transformation, his oft-repeated goal was to crack the top 100 of the U.S. News & World Report's rankings of America's best universities.[25] With this accomplished by 2005, the transformation goal from commuting school to nationally recognized research university was complete. Freeland stepped down on August 15, 2006, and was followed by President Joseph E. Aoun, a former dean at the University of Southern California.[26]

As part of a five-year, $75 million Academic Investment Plan that ran from 2004 to 2009, the university concentrated on undergraduate education, core graduate professional programs, and centers of research excellence. Faculty was originally to be bolstered by 100 new tenured and tenure-track professors, later expanded to include 300 additional tenure and tenure-track faculty in interdisciplinary fields. Aoun also placed more emphasis on improving community relations by reaching out to leaders of the neighborhoods surrounding the university.[27] In addition, Aoun created more academic partnerships with other institutions in the Boston area, including Tufts University, Hebrew College and the School of the Museum of Fine Arts.[28]

During this period, Northeastern rapidly advanced in national rankings. It placed 42nd in the 2014–15 edition of U.S. News & World Report's best colleges and universities rankings, a 7 position jump from 2013–14 and a 27 place gain since 2010–11.[29] Critics have argued that Northeastern's rise in the rankings shows that the university has "cracked the code" to academic rankings, while others suggested it figured out how to "game the system."[30][31] The positive feedback effect of its placement, in turn, allowed the institution to significantly increase its endowment, admit a more-competitive student body, hire new faculty, add to its campuses and expand its flagship co-op program.[32]

The Empower Campaign was launched in May 2013 for student support, faculty advancement/expansion, innovation in education and research. Its goal was to raise $1 billion by 2017, with half of that being from philanthropic support and the other half from industry and government partnerships. The goal was raised to $1.25 billion in 2015. The campaign was inspired by Richard D'Amore and Alan McKim's $60 million donation to the university's business school in 2012.[33] In October 2017, Northeastern revealed that the final total of the Empower campaign was $1.4 billion. More than 100,000 individuals and over 3,800 organizations donated to Empower, from 110 countries.[34]

Presidents edit

Presidents of Northeastern University:

Academics edit

Northeastern offers 291 undergraduate majors; 187 of these are combined majors, such as Business Administration/Communication Studies. At the graduate level, there are 36 PhD programs and 264 other graduate programs. Northeastern had 3,028 faculty in Fall 2021.[35] Academics at Northeastern is grounded in a liberal arts education and the integration of classroom studies with experiential learning opportunities, including cooperative education, student research, service learning, and global experience, including study abroad and international co-op.[36][37] The university's cooperative education program places nearly 10,000 students annually in full-time, paid professional positions with almost 3,000 co-op employers in Boston and around the world.[38][39][35]

Northeastern University is accredited by the New England Commission of Higher Education.[40]

Colleges and schools edit

Northeastern University has eight degree-granting colleges:[41]

  • College of Arts, Media and Design
  • Khoury College of Computer Sciences
  • College of Engineering
  • Bouvé College of Health Sciences
  • College of Professional Studies
  • College of Science
  • College of Social Sciences and Humanities
  • Mills College at Northeastern University (since 2023)

These colleges house schools and departments.[42] There are also two separate schools, not housed within the other colleges:

Honors Program edit

The University Honors Program selects students from the regular applicant pool with no separate application and represent the applicants with the highest GPA and SAT/ACT scores that year. The program includes specialty work in a major field through college-specific choices including specialized advanced honors seminars and an independent research project.[43] Students in the Honors Program exclusively can live in a Living-Learning Community housed in West Villages C[44] and F. 2017 also marked the beginning of the Honors Discovery course and the introduction of the Student Assessed Integrated Learning (SAIL) app.[45]

Co-op/internship program edit

Launched in 1909, Northeastern has one of the largest and oldest cooperative education (co-op) programs in the world.[46] In the co-op program, students alternate periods of academic study with periods of professional employment (usually paid) related to their major. Students can choose to complete one or two co-op experiences to graduate in four years, or they can choose to complete three co-ops to graduate in five years. Students on co-op do not pay tuition and students not living on campus do not pay room and board. The co-op program typically begins the spring of the second year or fall of the third year (after a more traditional program for the first semesters on campus). Students usually take anywhere between one and three with 96% participating in one and 78% participating in two or more.[47]

50% of Northeastern students receive a job offer from a previous co-op employer as of 2017.[48]

Study abroad edit

Northeastern has semester-long study abroad programs with placements in Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, and South America. Some participating schools include: University of Cambridge and London School of Economics, England; University of Edinburgh, Scotland; Reims Management School, France; European School of Business, Germany; University of Cape Town, South Africa; University of Auckland, New Zealand; Swinburne University of Technology, Australia; Obirin University, Japan; American College of Thessaloniki, Greece and Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Chile and also Antarctica.[49]

Northeastern's International Business program is a member of the International Partnership of Business Schools. Through this program International Business students have the opportunity to be awarded a dual-degree from Northeastern as well as from a sister school abroad.[50]

Research edit

The university provides undergraduate students with an opportunity to engage in research through the Center for Experiential Education,[51] CenSSIS Research Experience for Undergraduates,[52] Honors Research, Louis Stokes Alliance for Minority Participation program,[53] and Provost's Office research grants.[54] In FY 2007, annual external research funding exceeded $78 million.[55] In FY 2009–10, the research funding is close to $82 million.[56] In 2002, Northeastern's Center for Subsurface Sensing and Imaging Systems was designated an NSF Engineering Research Center. In 2004, Northeastern was one of six institutions selected by the National Science Foundation as a center for research in nanotechnology. In 2010, Northeastern was granted $12 million by an alum for a Homeland security research facility,[57] to be named the George J. Kostas Research Institute for Homeland Security, after its chief benefactor.[57]

Undergraduate admissions edit

Fall enrollment statistics, freshmen
2023[58] 2022[59][60] 2021[61] 2020[62] 2019[63] 2018[64]
Applicants 96,327 91,086 75,244 64,459 62,263 62,272
Admits ~5,389 6,179 13,829 13,199 11,240 12,042
Admit rate 5.6% 6.7% 18% 20% 18% 19%
Enrolled ~2,900 2,620 4,504 3,128 2,996 2,746
SAT range 1450-1535 1440–1530 1430–1540 1390–1540 1360–1540
ACT range 33-35 33–35 33–35 32–35 33–35

For undergraduate students, Northeastern's 2023 acceptance rate was 5.6%. Of the record-large pool of 96,327 applicants, only ~5,389 were admitted.[58] The sharp rise in applications and drop in admission is attributed to an over enrollment issue that the admission office attempted to fix. 2020 acceptance rate was 18.1%. For the Class of 2024, Northeastern received 64,459 applications, with 13,199 students accepted. In 2018, the record number of applications led to a drop in acceptance rate, eight percentage points lower than the previous year. Additionally, Northeastern was one of the top ten most applied to colleges in 2018.[60]

For the Class of 2022 (enrolling fall 2018), Northeastern received 62,272 applications, accepted 12,042 (19%), and enrolled 2,746.[64] For the freshmen who enrolled, the middle 50% range of SAT scores was 670–750 for reading and writing, 690–790 for math, while the middle 50% range ACT composite range was 32–34.[64]

Of those who applied in 2016, 9,500 were international students, up from 1,128 international applicants in 2006.[65] Of those who enrolled, 20% were international students. In the Power of International Education's 2017 Open Doors report, Northeastern was ranked as the fourth-highest institution in the United States to host international students.[66][67][65]

The number of international students totals over 12,000 representing 138 different nations and over half of the student body. The number of international students at Northeastern has steadily increased by about 1,000 students every year since 2008.[68]

Rankings edit

In the 2024 edition of U.S. News & World Report rankings, Northeastern was tied for 53rd in the National Universities category.[78] The 2021 edition of U.S. News & World Report ranked Northeastern 49th in its annual ranking of national universities.[29] In 2014, College Prowler gave Northeastern an "A+" rating for the quality of classes, professors, and overall academic environment.[79] A 2008 Reader's Digest survey ranked NU as the second safest school in the United States after Johns Hopkins University in Maryland.[80]

Specialty rankings edit

  • 1st in "Best Co-ops/Internships" (U.S. News & World Report) (2020, 2021, 2022, 2023)[78]
  • 1st in "Best Schools for Internships" (Princeton Review) (2017, 2018)[81]
  • 2nd in "Best Graduate Psychology Programs" (2018)[82]
  • 2nd in "Best Physician Assistant Programs" (2018)[82]
  • 3rd in "Best Nursing-Anesthesia Programs" (2018)[82]
  • 3rd in "Best Career Services" (Princeton Review) (2016, 2017, 2018)[83]
  • 4th in "Top 25 Entrepreneurship: Ugrad" (Princeton Review) (2017, 2018) [84]
  • 4th in "Best Health Care Law Programs" (2018)[82]
  • 6th in "Most Innovative Schools" (U.S. News & World Report) (2018) (up from 7th in 2017)[85]
  • 7th in "The Top 25 B.A. Theatre Programs for 2018–19" (OnStage Blog)[86]
  • 9th in "Best Undergraduate International Business Programs" (U.S. News & World Report) (2018)[87]

Campus edit

Northeastern University's main campus is located on 73 acres (30 ha) mostly along Huntington Avenue and Columbus Avenue in an area known as the Fenway Cultural District, part of Boston's Fenway and Roxbury neighborhood, near the Museum of Fine Arts, Symphony Hall, New England Conservatory, and Christian Science Center.[88]

In 2019, the campus was officially designated as an arboretum by ArbNet, making it the only campus in Boston to receive the designation.[89][90]

The first baseball World Series took place on the Huntington Avenue Grounds, now part of the campus. The site is commemorated in front of Churchill Hall by a statue of Cy Young.[91]

In 2014, Northeastern officially launched a Public Art Initiative to place a series of murals and other art around the Boston campus. Among those whose work has been commissioned are French artist Jef Aérosol, Houston-born artist Daniel Anguilu, Los Angeles-based El Mac and Charleston, South Carolina-born artist Shepard Fairey, known for his 2008 Barack Obama "Hope" poster.[92]

Campus development edit

 
Completed in 2002, the Behrakis Health Sciences Center houses the Bouvé College of Health Sciences.

During the Great Depression in the 1930s, as enrollment grew to over 4,600 students, President Frank Palmer Speare announced that Northeastern would build a new campus.[93] Coolidge Shepley Bulfinch and Abbott, a Boston-based architectural firm, was selected to design the campus near the Huntington Avenue YMCA building that continued to house library and classroom spaces. Richards Hall, which housed classrooms, laboratories and administrative offices, was the first building completed in October 1938. Its light gray, glazed brick exterior with vertical strips of windows was replicated in other buildings of what later became known as the 1944 master plan. A mix of Beaux-Arts and Bauhaus architectural styles defined by stripped-down classicism and open courtyards that resembled that of Massachusetts Institute of Technology across the Charles River. In a June 14, 1934 article, the Boston Evening Transcript described the campus design as "modernistic classical."[93]

In 1961, under President Asa Knowles, the university purchased a 7-acre red brick industrial complex once owned by the United Drug Company to build athletic facilities. Three of the buildings facing Forsyth Street were demolished, but due to a need for more office and lab space, the remaining buildings were divided into four sections now called Lake Hall, Holmes Hall, Nightingale Hall and Meserve Hall.[94]

During the last few years, major developments include Northeastern becoming recognized as an arboretum, opening a $225 million research and laboratory complex known as the Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering Complex (ISEC), launching the Institute for Experiential Artificial Intelligence with a $50 million donation, as well as renaming the College of Computer and Information Science to the Khoury College of Computer Sciences with another $50 million donation from Amin Khoury.[89][95][96][97]

EXP, another large research facility created to support Northeastern's work in autonomous vehicles, drones, and humanoid robots recently opened for the 2023-2024 school year.[98] This building is approximately 350,000 square feet (33,000 m2), including a 15,000 square foot makers space for students of all colleges and degree levels.[99][100]

Sustainability edit

 
Northeastern University campus in the spring.

The 2011 Sustainable Endowments Institute's College Sustainability Report Card issued Northeastern a grade of "A−" for its environmental sustainability efforts and programs.[101] Additionally, the Princeton Review rated Northeastern as one of the top 15 "Green Colleges" in the nation in 2010.[102] In 2011, the GreenMetric World University ranking evaluated Northeastern as the second greenest university in the world, and first in the US.[103] Northeastern placed first in the rankings again in 2014.[104]

In accordance with a Boston zoning code amendment in 2007,[105] International Village residence hall was certified as a LEED Gold building in 2010.[106] Dockser Hall was the first building on campus to achieve LEED certification, also Gold, with the completion of its renovation in 2010.[107] East Village was rated LEED Silver in 2016 and the Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering Complex was rated LEED Gold in 2018.[108][109] The university affiliated LightView apartment building is targeting a LEED Platinum certification, the first in student housing in the City of Boston.[110]

In 2004, Northeastern was awarded the gold medal by the Massachusetts Horticultural Society for its Dedham Campus.[111]

 
A pedestrian bridge, spanning five MBTA and Amtrak rail lines, connects the Huntington Avenue and Columbus Avenue sides of the Boston campus.

Public transportation edit

The MBTA subway Orange Line and Green Line E branch pass through the Northeastern campus. Five stations serve the campus: Massachusetts Avenue and Ruggles on the Orange Line; and Symphony, Northeastern University, and Museum of Fine Arts on the Green Line. The Green Line is paralleled by MBTA bus route 39. Ruggles station is also served by the Needham, Providence/Stoughton, and Franklin/Foxboro Lines of the MBTA Commuter Rail system and is a major transfer point for MBTA bus routes.[112]

Landmarks edit

Centers and commons edit

Facing Huntington Avenue, Krentzman Quadrangle is the main quadrangle on the campus of Northeastern. It is recognizable by the "Northeastern University" brick sign in front. The quad lies at the heart of the original campus between Ell, Dodge and Richards halls, and serves as a gathering space for community members and outdoor activities. It was named after Harvey Krentzman, a businessman and 1949 alumnus.[113]

Centennial Common is a lawn created to mark the 100th anniversary of Northeastern University in 1998. The grassy area borders Shillman Hall, Ryder Hall, Meserve Hall, Leon Street, Forsyth Street and Ruggles Station, and serves as a gateway to the West Campus. The area is a popular gathering spot frequently used by students for recreational purposes and outdoor activities by student organizations.[114]

The Marino Recreation Center, named after 1961 alumnus Roger Marino, co-founder of EMC Corporation, is an indoor fitness center that opened in the Fall of 1996.[115]

Halls and auditoriums edit

 
View of Ell Hall, constructed in 1947.

Ell Hall, completed in 1947, is one of the oldest buildings on campus and is centered on Krentzman Quadrangle. It contains administrative offices, classrooms, art display space, a 992-seat auditorium and the Northeastern Bookstore. Like Dodge Hall, Ell Hall has five floors and also connects to the tunnel network. The tunnels interconnect the major administrative and traditional academic buildings for use in inclement weather.[116] Ell Hall was named for Carl Ell, president of Northeastern from 1940 to 1959, who is credited with expanding the campus and making cooperative education an integral part of the university-wide curriculum.[93]

Blackman Auditorium, Northeastern's largest event space, hosts many different types of events for classes, theater groups, dance teams, musical groups, choral groups, fraternities, sororities, and orchestral ensembles. Blackman has hosted many talented individuals from Maya Angelou to Seth Meyers.[117]

Gallery 360 is Northeastern University's art gallery, which is free and open to the public throughout the year. The 1,000-square-foot (93 m2) space houses temporary exhibits of artworks by visiting artists, students, faculty, and the surrounding community. Some larger exhibits also include the adjacent hallways for additional space. Curation and administration is under the supervision of the College of Arts Media and Design (CAMD).[118]

 
Centennial Common

Dodge Hall sits on Krentzman Quadrangle and primarily serves as the home of Northeastern's D'Amore-McKim School of Business. The building was completed in 1952 and named for Robert Gray Dodge, a former chairman of Northeastern's board of trustees. It has five floors.[119] From 1953 until Snell Library opened in 1990, Dodge Hall's basement served as the university's main library.[120][121] Originally known as West Building, Richards Hall borders Krentzman Quadrangle and was the first building constructed on campus in October 1938. Its light gray brick and vertical window strips design was the work of alumnus Herman Voss and was replicated in other surrounding buildings.[93] Richards Hall was named for Boston industrialist James Lorin Richards, a former board trustee.[12]

 
Interior of the Interdisciplinary Science & Engineering Complex (ISEC).

Interdisciplinary Science & Engineering Complex edit

On February 21, 2014, Northeastern had its groundbreaking ceremony for the new Interdisciplinary Science & Engineering Complex (ISEC) on Columbus Avenue.[122] Completed in 2017, the 220,000-square-foot (20,000 m2) building provides research and educational space for students and faculty from the College of Science, Bouvé College of Health Sciences, College of Engineering, and Khoury College of Computer Sciences. The centerpiece of the complex includes a large atrium, a spiral staircase, and a 280-seat auditorium.[123]

Matthews Arena edit

 
Matthews Arena, home to Northeastern's hockey and basketball teams.

Opened in 1910 and originally known as the Boston Arena, Matthews Arena is the world's oldest surviving indoor ice hockey arena.[124] Located on the eastern edge of Northeastern University's campus, it is home to the Northeastern Huskies men's and women's hockey teams, and men's basketball team as well as the Wentworth Institute of Technology's men's hockey team. The arena is named after former university Board of Trustees Chairman George J. Matthews, a 1956 graduate, and his wife, the late Hope M. Matthews, who helped fund a major renovation in 1982.[125] The arena is the original home of the NHL Boston Bruins and the WHA New England Whalers (now the NHL Carolina Hurricanes). It was also the secondary home to the NBA Boston Celtics in the 1940s. It has hosted all or part of the America East Conference men's basketball tournament a total of seven times and hosted the 1960 Frozen Four. The arena also served as the original home to the annual Beanpot tournament between Boston's four major college hockey programs.[126]

 
Marino Recreation Center, completed in 1996.
Dorms and housing edit

East Village is Northeastern's newest dorm building and only houses freshmen and upperclassmen who are in the University Honors Program.[127] The building is located at 291 St. Botolph Street and opened in January 2015.[128][129] Honors freshman live in its suite-style rooms whereas upperclassmen can choose full apartments with kitchen facilities. The building also contains 5 classrooms in the basement and an event space on the 17th Floor.[130]

 
West Village A North residence hall

In 2008, West Village Building F was recognized in American Institute of Architects New England 2008 Merit Awards for Design Excellence.[131]

South Campus (Columbus Avenue) edit

Northeastern's southernmost section of campus is located along Columbus Avenue in Roxbury, parallel to the Orange line. The university expanded south into Roxbury at the same time as they were building West Village. In 2001, Davenport Commons was opened, providing 585 students housing in two residence halls while 75 families representing a range of incomes have been able to purchase a condo or townhouse at or below Boston's market value. Davenport Commons also created commercial space on Tremont Street.[132]

During the summer of 2006, Northeastern proposed a new residence hall further away from the main campus, at the corner of Tremont Street and Ruggles Street. Construction began in late February 2007. In the spring of 2009, the complex was named International Village and opened later that summer. It consists of three interconnected residential towers, an office tower, administration building, and a gym.[133] A 400-seat dining hall is available to all members of the Northeastern community as well as the public.[134]

Lightview was launched in 2019, which was Boston's first developer-led, equity-financed student housing project built and financed by American Campus Communities exclusively for Northeastern students. The building is 20 stories tall and includes a fitness area as well as social and recreational spaces.[135]

Library facilities edit

Northeastern University Libraries include the Snell Library and the John D. O'Bryant African-American Institute Library. The NU School of Law Library is separately administered by the NU School of Law.[136] The NU Libraries received federal depository designation in 1963.[120]

The Snell Library opened in 1990 at a cost of $35 million.[120] It is also home to the Northeastern University Archives and Special Collections department, which includes the Benjamin LaGuer papers collection. The Special Collections focus on records of Boston-area community-based organizations that are concerned with social justice issues.[137] In June 2016, the library staff adopted an open-access policy to make its members' professional research publicly accessible online.[138]

Network campuses edit

In addition to Northeastern's main Boston campus, the university operates a number of satellite locations in Massachusetts, including the George J. Kostas Research Institute in Burlington, a Financial District campus in the Hilton Hotel near Faneuil Hall in downtown Boston, a Dedham Campus in Dedham, and a Marine Science Center in Nahant.[139] The Kostas Research Institute for Homeland Security, which opened in 2011, contains the Laboratory for Structural Testing of Resilient and Sustainable Systems (STReSS Laboratory). The laboratory is "equipped to test full-scale and large-scale structural systems and materials to failure so as to explore the development of new strategies for designing, simulating, and sensing structural and infrastructure systems".[140]

 
Photo of Northeastern University satellite campus in Seattle, Washington

The university has also launched a number of full-service remote network campuses in North America, including in Charlotte, North Carolina, in October 2011, Seattle, in January 2013, San Jose, California, in March 2015, Toronto, in 2016 and Vancouver, British Columbia in 2019. In January 2020, Northeastern announced that it was opening the Roux Institute in Portland, Maine, a new research institute focused on artificial intelligence and machine learning in digital and life sciences.[141] The decision came after Northeastern was selected for a $100 million donation by David Roux, in hopes of turning the city into a new tech hub and in an attempt to spark economic growth in the region.[142]

More recently, the university has continued to focus on global expansion. In late 2018, Northeastern announced the acquisition of the New College of the Humanities, a small private London-based college founded by the philosopher A. C. Grayling. The move was seen as unorthodox as most U.S. colleges have typically chosen to build new campus branches abroad, rather than purchasing existing ones.[143][144]

On July 1, 2022, Mills College in Oakland, California was renamed to Mills College at Northeastern University through a merger between the university and the liberal arts college, which had financial troubles.[145]

Student organizations edit

Northeastern has more than 16 varsity teams competing in the NCAA, over 30 club sports teams and over 400 student clubs and organizations. Among the student-run organizations are: Resident Student Association (RSA), Student Government Association (SGA), The Huntington News, Northeastern Television (NUTV), Fraternity and Sorority Life (FSL), Social Justice Resource Center (SJRC), and the Council for University Programs (CUP) organize activities for Northeastern students as well as the surrounding community.[146]

Northeastern hosts six student-run a cappella groups on campus: three mixed ensembles (Distilled Harmony, The Downbeats, and The Nor'easters), two treble ensembles (Pitch, Please! and Treble on Huntington), and one TTBB ensemble (UniSons). All groups regularly compete in the International Championship of Collegiate A Cappella (ICCA). The Nor'easters have performed at ICCA finals in New York City three times and won the ICCA title in 2013 and 2017. Pitch, Please! competed at ICCA finals in 2019.[147]

Athletics edit

 
Northeastern Huskies logo

Since 1927, Northeastern University's intercollegiate athletic teams have been known as the Huskies.[148] Prior to 1927, Northeastern had no official mascot. A committee was formed to choose a mascot and members eventually settled on the Siberian Husky. In February 1927, a pup was selected from legendary Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race competitor Leonhard Seppala's kennel in Poland Springs, Maine. On March 4, 1927, King Husky I arrived at Northeastern in a campus celebration for which classes were canceled. Since then, live mascots have been a Siberian Husky breed, but after losing two mascots in three months in the early 1970s and after upheaval due to having live canine mascots, the university's administration was reluctant to continue the live mascot tradition. In 2005, the university resumed the live mascot tradition; the current live mascot is named Moses.[149] The university's official costumed mascot is Paws.

The university's official colors are Northeastern red and black, with white often used as an alternate color. The university fight song, "All Hail, Northeastern," was composed by Charles A. Pethybridge, class of 1932.[150] Since 2005, 14 of 18 Northeastern varsity sports teams primarily compete in NCAA Division I's Colonial Athletic Association (CAA).[151]

During its first decades, Northeastern initially had seven athletics teams: basketball, cross country, indoor track, outdoor track, crew and football.[93]

Northeastern sponsors the following sports teams:[151]

 
Lightview under construction in 2019

The baseball, soccer, lacrosse and rugby teams compete at Parsons Field, a multipurpose facility located in Brookline, a mile and a half from the campus. The field's baseball diamond was named Friedman Diamond in 1988. The field hockey team, along with the Huskies' track and field teams, compete at a sports complex about 10 miles (16 km) away from campus in Dedham.[152] Matthews Arena, which opened 1910, is home to the hockey and basketball programs. The 4,666-seat arena is located close to campus, just off Massachusetts Avenue. It is considered the world's oldest multi-purpose athletic building. Henderson Boathouse is home to the Huskies' men's & women's rowing squads. The Henderson Boathouse is located on the Charles River near Soldiers Field Road in Allston. The university also maintains the Cabot Physical Education Center, which opened in 1954 and includes a basketball court; an indoor track and natatorium; the 10,755 square feet (999.2 m2) Gries Center for Sports Medicine and Performance Center; a squash facility; and the William E. Carter Playground, a renovated community park on Columbus Avenue.[153]

The baseball team was founded in 1921 and has since competed in one College World Series and played in the NCAA regionals seven times.[151] In the 2008 National Championship, the team made the Grand Finals and placed fourth behind University of Wisconsin–Madison, University of Washington, and University of California, Berkeley, while defeating Brown University, Princeton University, University of Pennsylvania and Harvard University.[154]

In 2009, Northeastern eliminated its 74-year-old football program.[155] From 1933 to 2009, the Northeastern Huskies football program's all-time record was 290-365-17 (.444), it produced 20 All-Americans and won the 2002 Atlantic 10 Conference championship.[156] Citing sparse attendance, numerous losing seasons and the expense to renovate Parsons Field to an acceptable standard, the university's Board of Trustees voted on November 20, 2009, to end the football program. According to President Joseph Aoun, "Leadership requires that we make these choices. This decision allows us to focus on our existing athletic programs."[157]

In addition to intercollegiate athletics, Northeastern offers 40 club sports, including sailing, judo, rugby, lacrosse, Olympic-Style taekwondo, alpine skiing, squash, cycling, and ultimate Frisbee. In 2005 the women's rugby team finished third in the nation in Division II, while in the same year the men's rugby team won the largest annual tournament in the United States. Recently, the women's rugby team competed and placed 11th at the Collegiate Rugby Championship. In the 2008–09 academic year the Northeastern Club Field Hockey and Women's Basketball teams won their respective National Championships. From 2007 to 2009, the Northeastern Club Baseball team won three straight New England Club Baseball Association championships.[158] The Club Taekwondo team placed 1st overall in Division II for the 2018–19 Season in the Eastern Collegiate Taekwondo Conference.[159]

On May 25, 2010, the club baseball team defeated Penn State to win the National Club Baseball Association Division II World Series and the national championship.[160]

Ice hockey edit

The men's and women's hockey teams compete in the Hockey East conference. Northeastern defeated Boston College, 4–2, to win the 2019 Beanpot and defeated Boston University, 5–4, to win the 2020 Beanpot.[161] In 2020, Northeastern beat Boston University, 5–4, in overtime to win the Beanpot for the third year in a row.[162] In addition to winning the Beanpot title, Northeastern took home both awards with the award for most valuable player being presented to Adam Gaudette and the Eberly Award being presented to Cayden Primeau who had a save percentage of .974 (making him the goalie with second highest save percentage to win the award in the 44 years the award has been given).[163]

Traditions edit

Underwear ("Undie") Run edit

Started in 2005, the Underwear Run is a Northeastern-sponsored event around fall midterm season in which students strip down to their underwear and run a track around campus and near parts of the city. The Northeastern University Police Department (NUPD) supervises the event to maintain the flow of traffic through the city. Students have described it as a "liberating experience" that "brings a sense of community and builds school spirit."[164] Though the event was officially cancelled in 2020 and 2021 due to COVID-19 concerns, it was unofficially organized by students in fall of 2021.[165]

Husky Hunt edit

Organized by the Resident Student Association, Husky Hunt is a 24-hour city-wide scavenger hunt that has 50 teams of students roaming around the Greater Boston area in search of locations that correspond to clues, games, puzzles, and riddles.[166] The scavenger hunt starts with a preliminary qualifying quiz of which only 1/3 of the total group of participating teams progress to the hunt.[167]

Notable alumni and faculty edit

Northeastern University has more than 275,000 living alumni based in over 180 countries around the world.[168]

Notable faculty edit

See also edit

References edit

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  155. ^ Pennington, Bill (December 27, 2019). "Adding Football Saved One College. Dumping It Boosted Another". The New York Times. from the original on June 2, 2021. Retrieved May 29, 2021.
  156. ^ "Football History". from the original on June 29, 2021. Retrieved May 29, 2021.
  157. ^ "Northeastern cuts 74-year-old football program – ESPN Boston". Espn.com. Sports.espn.go.com. November 23, 2009. from the original on November 27, 2009. Retrieved March 4, 2010.
  158. ^ "NECBA Championships". New England Club Baseball Association. from the original on July 14, 2011. Retrieved March 4, 2010.
  159. ^ "ECTC Season Standings". from the original on December 21, 2019. Retrieved November 26, 2019.
  160. ^ . NCBA. Archived from the original on April 27, 2010. Retrieved May 27, 2010.
  161. ^ Garden, T. D. "The Beanpot Results | TD Garden". www.tdgarden.com. from the original on October 30, 2021. Retrieved October 30, 2021.
  162. ^ "2020 Beanpot: Northeastern beats Boston University hockey in 2OT for third straight title | NCAA.com". www.ncaa.com. from the original on September 19, 2020. Retrieved January 24, 2022.
  163. ^ "Gaudette nets hat trick as Northeastern wins Beanpot". si.com. February 13, 2018. from the original on February 15, 2018. Retrieved February 14, 2018.
  164. ^ "Northeastern students strip for Annual Underwear Run". The Huntington News. October 25, 2018. from the original on December 7, 2020. Retrieved April 8, 2022.
  165. ^ Hill, Marta (October 29, 2021). "'Spooky 15th Underwear Run' marks unofficial return to beloved campus tradition". The Huntington News. from the original on January 21, 2022. Retrieved April 8, 2022.
  166. ^ "Traditions". Northeastern Student Life. from the original on January 26, 2022. Retrieved April 8, 2022.
  167. ^ Manning, Kathryn (October 29, 2021). "Husky Haunt is coming: Here's how NU students are preparing". The Huntington News. from the original on January 21, 2022. Retrieved April 8, 2022.
  168. ^ "Home". Northeastern Alumni Relations. from the original on July 13, 2022. Retrieved July 22, 2022.

External links edit

  Media related to Northeastern University at Wikimedia Commons

  • Official website  
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northeastern, university, this, article, about, private, university, based, united, states, public, university, shenyang, china, china, private, research, university, with, main, campus, boston, massachusetts, established, 1898, founded, boston, young, christi. This article is about the private university based in the United States For the public university in Shenyang China see Northeastern University China Northeastern University NU or NEU is a private research university with its main campus in Boston Massachusetts Established in 1898 it was founded by the Boston Young Men s Christian Association as an all male institute before being incorporated as Northeastern College in 1916 gaining university status in 1922 With more than 38 000 students Northeastern is the largest university in Massachusetts by enrollment 8 Northeastern UniversityFormer namesEvening Institute for Younger Men 1898 1916 Northeastern College 1916 1922 MottoLux Veritas Virtus Latin Motto in English Light Truth Courage TypePrivate research universityEstablished1898 126 years ago 1898 AccreditationNECHEAcademic affiliationsAICUMNAICUURASpace grantEndowment 1 3 billion 2022 1 PresidentJoseph E AounProvostDavid MadiganAcademic staff3 049 2020 2 Students38 760 2023 3 Undergraduates21 330 2023 4 Postgraduates17 430 2023 5 LocationBoston Massachusetts United States42 20 24 N 71 05 18 W 42 34000 N 71 08833 W 42 34000 71 08833CampusLarge city 73 acres 30 hectares Other campuses 6 ArlingtonBurlingtonCharlotteNahantOaklandPortlandSilicon ValleySeattleLondonTorontoVancouverNewspaperThe Huntington NewsColorsRed and black 7 NicknameHuskiesSporting affiliationsNCAA Division I CAAHockey EastEARCEAWRCNEISAIRAMascotPaws the HuskyWebsitewww wbr northeastern wbr edu Northeastern is a large highly residential university which comprises nine schools including the Northeastern University School of Law The university s main campus in Boston is located within the center of the city along Huntington Avenue and Columbus Avenue near the Fenway Kenmore and Roxbury neighborhoods It offers undergraduate and graduate programs and most undergraduates participate in a cooperative education program 9 Northeastern is accredited by the New England Commission of Higher Education and is a member of the Boston Consortium for Higher Education It is classified among R1 Doctoral Universities Very high research activity 10 Northeastern maintains satellite campuses in Charlotte North Carolina Seattle Washington San Jose California Oakland California Portland Maine Burlington Massachusetts and Toronto and Vancouver in Canada In 2019 it purchased the New College of the Humanities establishing an additional campus in London England The university s sports teams the Northeastern Huskies compete in NCAA Division I as members of the Coastal Athletic Association CAA in 18 varsity sports The men s and women s hockey teams compete in Hockey East while the men s and women s rowing teams compete in the Eastern Association of Rowing Colleges EARC and Eastern Association of Women s Rowing Colleges EAWRC respectively 11 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early development 1 2 Recent history 1 3 Presidents 2 Academics 2 1 Colleges and schools 2 2 Honors Program 2 3 Co op internship program 2 4 Study abroad 2 5 Research 3 Undergraduate admissions 4 Rankings 4 1 Specialty rankings 5 Campus 5 1 Campus development 5 2 Sustainability 5 3 Public transportation 5 4 Landmarks 5 4 1 Centers and commons 5 4 2 Halls and auditoriums 5 4 3 Interdisciplinary Science amp Engineering Complex 5 4 4 Matthews Arena 5 4 4 1 Dorms and housing 5 4 5 South Campus Columbus Avenue 5 4 6 Library facilities 6 Network campuses 7 Student organizations 7 1 Athletics 7 2 Ice hockey 7 3 Traditions 7 3 1 Underwear Undie Run 7 3 2 Husky Hunt 8 Notable alumni and faculty 8 1 Notable faculty 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistory editEarly development edit nbsp The Huntington Avenue YMCA c 1920 site of the Evening Institute for Younger Men In May 1896 directors of the Boston Young Men s Christian Association the first in the U S established an Evening Institute for Younger Men to merge coordinate and improve its classes that had evolved over the past 40 years Included among roughly 30 courses offered were algebra bookkeeping literature French German Latin geography electricity music penmanship and physiology In addition a banjo club camera club orchestra and weekly parliamentary debates and discussions were promoted A good education for any young man of moral character with a YMCA membership was promised Located in a new headquarters building at the corner of Boylston and Berkeley streets in Boston the institute held its first classes in 1898 After a fire a new YMCA building was constructed on Huntington Avenue in 1913 12 The School of Law was also formally established in 1898 with the assistance of an advisory committee consisting of James Barr Ames dean of the Harvard Law School Samuel Bennett dean of the Boston University School of Law and Judge James R Dunbar In 1903 the first Automobile Engineering School in the country was established followed by a Polytechnic School in 1904 and a School of Commerce and Finance in 1907 Day classes began in 1909 In 1916 a bill was introduced into the Massachusetts Legislature to incorporate the institute as Northeastern College After considerable debate and investigation it was passed in March 1916 13 In 1909 the Polytechnic School began offering co operative engineering courses to eight students A four year daytime program had been established consisting of alternating single weeks of classroom instruction and practical work experience with mostly railroad companies that agreed to accept student workers In 1920 the Co operative School of Engineering which later became the College of Engineering was first authorized to grant degrees in civil chemical electrical and mechanical engineering 12 14 The cooperative program the second of its kind in the U S after one in Cincinnati Ohio was eventually adopted by all departments 15 On March 30 1917 veteran educator Frank Palmer Speare who had served as director of the institute was inaugurated as the first president of the newly incorporated Northeastern College Five years later the college changed its name to Northeastern University to better reflect the increasing depth of its instruction 16 In March 1923 the university secured general A B and B S degree granting power from the Legislature with the exception of the medical and dental degrees 14 The College of Liberal Arts was added in 1935 Two years later the Northeastern University Corporation was established with a board of trustees composed of 31 university members and 8 from the YMCA Following World War II Northeastern began admitting women In 1948 Northeastern separated itself completely from the YMCA 17 By 1959 when Carl Ell who had expanded the university stepped down as president Northeastern had a local identity as an independent technical university serving a commuter and adult population 18 That reputation began changing during the presidency of Asa S Knowles from 1959 to 1975 Facing a postwar educational boom the university broadened undergraduate offerings increased graduate offerings modernized administrative and faculty structures created a Faculty Senate launched its first ever capital campaign reorganized and expanded adult and continuing education and increased the number of colleges The university created the College of Education 1953 University College 1960 now called the College of Professional Studies and the colleges of Pharmacy and Nursing 1964 which both later merged into the Bouve College of Health Sciences 19 The creation of the College of Criminal Justice 1967 followed and then the Khoury College of Computer Sciences 1982 the first college in the United States dedicated to the field of computer science 20 21 Between 1959 and 1975 Northeastern s student population not only grew considerably larger but also more diverse At the beginning of this period most of the student body was composed of white males from New England the majority of whom came from the Boston area public schools and primarily studied business or engineering By 1974 75 women accounted for 33 percent of the nearly 14 000 undergraduates students while 5 percent were black Over 900 students came from different foreign countries Of the graduating class of 2 238 513 were in Liberal Arts 462 in Engineering 389 in Business 227 in Pharmacy and Allied Health and the remainder were roughly divided among Education Boston Bouve Nursing and Criminal Justice 22 To attract more women the university refurbished existing facilities constructed new women s dormitories and encouraged their participation in all programs The merger with Boston Bouve a women s college dedicated to physical health and the creation of the College of Nursing traditionally a female profession also contributed to the increase Though there was an explicit nondiscrimination policy on the books throughout its history Northeastern had only a handful of black students In the early 1960s with financial assistance from the Ford Foundation in New York in the form of scholarships and co ops to black high school students Northeastern began actively recruiting black students By 1975 black student led organizations included the Afro photo Society Student Grill Health Careers Club The Onyx a black student newspaper Muhindi Literary Guild the Outing Club Black Engineering Society and the first recognized black fraternity at the university the Omicron Chapter of Iota Phi Theta In addition the number of foreign students increased from 170 in the 1950s and 1960s to 960 by 1974 75 22 Recent history edit nbsp Northeastern s historic Ell Hall on Huntington Avenue By the early 1980s under President Kenneth G Ryder the one time night commuter school had grown into one of the largest private universities in the nation at around 55 000 students In 1990 the first class with more live on campus rather than commuter students was graduated After Ryder s retirement in 1989 the university adopted a slow and more thoughtful approach to change 23 Following an economic downturn a 1991 trustee committee report described the situation as life threatening to Northeastern warning of a 17 million budget gap with no funding mechanisms to cover it 23 That year President John A Curry formulated a new strategy of transforming Northeastern into a smaller leaner better place to work and study describing unacceptable compromises in the quality and reputation of the university that had been made in the quest for more students Staff were terminated and admissions targets were reduced with applicant numbers beginning to rise and attrition rates fall by the end of Curry s tenure 23 nbsp Robert J Shillman Hall constructed in 1995 When Curry left office in 1996 the university population had been systematically reduced to about 25 000 Incoming President Richard M Freeland decided to focus on recruiting the type of students who were already graduating as the school s prime demographic 23 Freeland focused on improving academics and restructuring the administration with a goal of creating the country s premier program of practice oriented education 23 In the early 1990s the university began a 485 million construction program that included residence halls academic and research facilities and athletic centers During the university s transition Freeland reorganized the co operative education system decentralizing it into a department based system to allow better integration of classroom learning with workplace experience 23 Full time degree programs shifted from a four quarter system to two traditional semesters and two summer minimesters allowing students to both delve more deeply into their academic courses and have longer and more substantive co op placements forcing departments to redesign aging programs to fit the longer format 23 Freeland also created a marketing department uncommon for universities at the time and expanded the university advancement office while setting an ambitious 200 million fundraising target with the goal of reducing dependency on tuition 23 Between 1995 and 2007 average SAT exam scores increased more than 200 points retention rates rose dramatically and applications doubled 24 In 1998 Freeland set an admissions target of 2 800 freshman per year allowing for adequate tuition income without compromising on education 23 Throughout the transformation his oft repeated goal was to crack the top 100 of the U S News amp World Report s rankings of America s best universities 25 With this accomplished by 2005 the transformation goal from commuting school to nationally recognized research university was complete Freeland stepped down on August 15 2006 and was followed by President Joseph E Aoun a former dean at the University of Southern California 26 As part of a five year 75 million Academic Investment Plan that ran from 2004 to 2009 the university concentrated on undergraduate education core graduate professional programs and centers of research excellence Faculty was originally to be bolstered by 100 new tenured and tenure track professors later expanded to include 300 additional tenure and tenure track faculty in interdisciplinary fields Aoun also placed more emphasis on improving community relations by reaching out to leaders of the neighborhoods surrounding the university 27 In addition Aoun created more academic partnerships with other institutions in the Boston area including Tufts University Hebrew College and the School of the Museum of Fine Arts 28 During this period Northeastern rapidly advanced in national rankings It placed 42nd in the 2014 15 edition of U S News amp World Report s best colleges and universities rankings a 7 position jump from 2013 14 and a 27 place gain since 2010 11 29 Critics have argued that Northeastern s rise in the rankings shows that the university has cracked the code to academic rankings while others suggested it figured out how to game the system 30 31 The positive feedback effect of its placement in turn allowed the institution to significantly increase its endowment admit a more competitive student body hire new faculty add to its campuses and expand its flagship co op program 32 The Empower Campaign was launched in May 2013 for student support faculty advancement expansion innovation in education and research Its goal was to raise 1 billion by 2017 with half of that being from philanthropic support and the other half from industry and government partnerships The goal was raised to 1 25 billion in 2015 The campaign was inspired by Richard D Amore and Alan McKim s 60 million donation to the university s business school in 2012 33 In October 2017 Northeastern revealed that the final total of the Empower campaign was 1 4 billion More than 100 000 individuals and over 3 800 organizations donated to Empower from 110 countries 34 Presidents edit Presidents of Northeastern University Frank Palmer Speare 1898 1940 Carl Stephens Ell 1940 1959 Asa S Knowles 1959 1975 Kenneth G Ryder 1975 1989 John A Curry 1989 1996 Richard M Freeland 1996 2006 Joseph E Aoun 2006 present Academics editNortheastern offers 291 undergraduate majors 187 of these are combined majors such as Business Administration Communication Studies At the graduate level there are 36 PhD programs and 264 other graduate programs Northeastern had 3 028 faculty in Fall 2021 35 Academics at Northeastern is grounded in a liberal arts education and the integration of classroom studies with experiential learning opportunities including cooperative education student research service learning and global experience including study abroad and international co op 36 37 The university s cooperative education program places nearly 10 000 students annually in full time paid professional positions with almost 3 000 co op employers in Boston and around the world 38 39 35 Northeastern University is accredited by the New England Commission of Higher Education 40 Colleges and schools edit Northeastern University has eight degree granting colleges 41 College of Arts Media and Design Khoury College of Computer Sciences College of Engineering Bouve College of Health Sciences College of Professional Studies College of Science College of Social Sciences and Humanities Mills College at Northeastern University since 2023 These colleges house schools and departments 42 There are also two separate schools not housed within the other colleges D Amore McKim School of Business Northeastern University School of Law Honors Program edit The University Honors Program selects students from the regular applicant pool with no separate application and represent the applicants with the highest GPA and SAT ACT scores that year The program includes specialty work in a major field through college specific choices including specialized advanced honors seminars and an independent research project 43 Students in the Honors Program exclusively can live in a Living Learning Community housed in West Villages C 44 and F 2017 also marked the beginning of the Honors Discovery course and the introduction of the Student Assessed Integrated Learning SAIL app 45 Co op internship program edit Launched in 1909 Northeastern has one of the largest and oldest cooperative education co op programs in the world 46 In the co op program students alternate periods of academic study with periods of professional employment usually paid related to their major Students can choose to complete one or two co op experiences to graduate in four years or they can choose to complete three co ops to graduate in five years Students on co op do not pay tuition and students not living on campus do not pay room and board The co op program typically begins the spring of the second year or fall of the third year after a more traditional program for the first semesters on campus Students usually take anywhere between one and three with 96 participating in one and 78 participating in two or more 47 50 of Northeastern students receive a job offer from a previous co op employer as of 2017 update 48 Study abroad edit Northeastern has semester long study abroad programs with placements in Africa Asia Australia Europe and South America Some participating schools include University of Cambridge and London School of Economics England University of Edinburgh Scotland Reims Management School France European School of Business Germany University of Cape Town South Africa University of Auckland New Zealand Swinburne University of Technology Australia Obirin University Japan American College of Thessaloniki Greece and Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile Chile and also Antarctica 49 Northeastern s International Business program is a member of the International Partnership of Business Schools Through this program International Business students have the opportunity to be awarded a dual degree from Northeastern as well as from a sister school abroad 50 Research edit The university provides undergraduate students with an opportunity to engage in research through the Center for Experiential Education 51 CenSSIS Research Experience for Undergraduates 52 Honors Research Louis Stokes Alliance for Minority Participation program 53 and Provost s Office research grants 54 In FY 2007 annual external research funding exceeded 78 million 55 In FY 2009 10 the research funding is close to 82 million 56 In 2002 Northeastern s Center for Subsurface Sensing and Imaging Systems was designated an NSF Engineering Research Center In 2004 Northeastern was one of six institutions selected by the National Science Foundation as a center for research in nanotechnology In 2010 Northeastern was granted 12 million by an alum for a Homeland security research facility 57 to be named the George J Kostas Research Institute for Homeland Security after its chief benefactor 57 Undergraduate admissions editFall enrollment statistics freshmen 2023 58 2022 59 60 2021 61 2020 62 2019 63 2018 64 Applicants 96 327 91 086 75 244 64 459 62 263 62 272 Admits 5 389 6 179 13 829 13 199 11 240 12 042 Admit rate 5 6 6 7 18 20 18 19 Enrolled 2 900 2 620 4 504 3 128 2 996 2 746 SAT range 1450 1535 1440 1530 1430 1540 1390 1540 1360 1540 ACT range 33 35 33 35 33 35 32 35 33 35 For undergraduate students Northeastern s 2023 acceptance rate was 5 6 Of the record large pool of 96 327 applicants only 5 389 were admitted 58 The sharp rise in applications and drop in admission is attributed to an over enrollment issue that the admission office attempted to fix 2020 acceptance rate was 18 1 For the Class of 2024 Northeastern received 64 459 applications with 13 199 students accepted In 2018 the record number of applications led to a drop in acceptance rate eight percentage points lower than the previous year Additionally Northeastern was one of the top ten most applied to colleges in 2018 60 For the Class of 2022 enrolling fall 2018 Northeastern received 62 272 applications accepted 12 042 19 and enrolled 2 746 64 For the freshmen who enrolled the middle 50 range of SAT scores was 670 750 for reading and writing 690 790 for math while the middle 50 range ACT composite range was 32 34 64 Of those who applied in 2016 9 500 were international students up from 1 128 international applicants in 2006 65 Of those who enrolled 20 were international students In the Power of International Education s 2017 Open Doors report Northeastern was ranked as the fourth highest institution in the United States to host international students 66 67 65 The number of international students totals over 12 000 representing 138 different nations and over half of the student body The number of international students at Northeastern has steadily increased by about 1 000 students every year since 2008 68 Rankings editAcademic rankingsNationalARWU 69 62 82Forbes 70 85U S News amp World Report 71 53Washington Monthly 72 139WSJ College Pulse 73 138GlobalARWU 74 201 300QS 75 375 THE 76 201 250U S News amp World Report 77 198 In the 2024 edition of U S News amp World Report rankings Northeastern was tied for 53rd in the National Universities category 78 The 2021 edition of U S News amp World Report ranked Northeastern 49th in its annual ranking of national universities 29 In 2014 College Prowler gave Northeastern an A rating for the quality of classes professors and overall academic environment 79 A 2008 Reader s Digest survey ranked NU as the second safest school in the United States after Johns Hopkins University in Maryland 80 Specialty rankings edit 1st in Best Co ops Internships U S News amp World Report 2020 2021 2022 2023 78 1st in Best Schools for Internships Princeton Review 2017 2018 81 2nd in Best Graduate Psychology Programs 2018 82 2nd in Best Physician Assistant Programs 2018 82 3rd in Best Nursing Anesthesia Programs 2018 82 3rd in Best Career Services Princeton Review 2016 2017 2018 83 4th in Top 25 Entrepreneurship Ugrad Princeton Review 2017 2018 84 4th in Best Health Care Law Programs 2018 82 6th in Most Innovative Schools U S News amp World Report 2018 up from 7th in 2017 85 7th in The Top 25 B A Theatre Programs for 2018 19 OnStage Blog 86 9th in Best Undergraduate International Business Programs U S News amp World Report 2018 87 Campus editNortheastern University s main campus is located on 73 acres 30 ha mostly along Huntington Avenue and Columbus Avenue in an area known as the Fenway Cultural District part of Boston s Fenway and Roxbury neighborhood near the Museum of Fine Arts Symphony Hall New England Conservatory and Christian Science Center 88 In 2019 the campus was officially designated as an arboretum by ArbNet making it the only campus in Boston to receive the designation 89 90 The first baseball World Series took place on the Huntington Avenue Grounds now part of the campus The site is commemorated in front of Churchill Hall by a statue of Cy Young 91 In 2014 Northeastern officially launched a Public Art Initiative to place a series of murals and other art around the Boston campus Among those whose work has been commissioned are French artist Jef Aerosol Houston born artist Daniel Anguilu Los Angeles based El Mac and Charleston South Carolina born artist Shepard Fairey known for his 2008 Barack Obama Hope poster 92 Campus development edit nbsp Completed in 2002 the Behrakis Health Sciences Center houses the Bouve College of Health Sciences During the Great Depression in the 1930s as enrollment grew to over 4 600 students President Frank Palmer Speare announced that Northeastern would build a new campus 93 Coolidge Shepley Bulfinch and Abbott a Boston based architectural firm was selected to design the campus near the Huntington Avenue YMCA building that continued to house library and classroom spaces Richards Hall which housed classrooms laboratories and administrative offices was the first building completed in October 1938 Its light gray glazed brick exterior with vertical strips of windows was replicated in other buildings of what later became known as the 1944 master plan A mix of Beaux Arts and Bauhaus architectural styles defined by stripped down classicism and open courtyards that resembled that of Massachusetts Institute of Technology across the Charles River In a June 14 1934 article the Boston Evening Transcript described the campus design as modernistic classical 93 In 1961 under President Asa Knowles the university purchased a 7 acre red brick industrial complex once owned by the United Drug Company to build athletic facilities Three of the buildings facing Forsyth Street were demolished but due to a need for more office and lab space the remaining buildings were divided into four sections now called Lake Hall Holmes Hall Nightingale Hall and Meserve Hall 94 During the last few years major developments include Northeastern becoming recognized as an arboretum opening a 225 million research and laboratory complex known as the Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering Complex ISEC launching the Institute for Experiential Artificial Intelligence with a 50 million donation as well as renaming the College of Computer and Information Science to the Khoury College of Computer Sciences with another 50 million donation from Amin Khoury 89 95 96 97 EXP another large research facility created to support Northeastern s work in autonomous vehicles drones and humanoid robots recently opened for the 2023 2024 school year 98 This building is approximately 350 000 square feet 33 000 m2 including a 15 000 square foot makers space for students of all colleges and degree levels 99 100 Sustainability edit nbsp Northeastern University campus in the spring The 2011 Sustainable Endowments Institute s College Sustainability Report Card issued Northeastern a grade of A for its environmental sustainability efforts and programs 101 Additionally the Princeton Review rated Northeastern as one of the top 15 Green Colleges in the nation in 2010 102 In 2011 the GreenMetric World University ranking evaluated Northeastern as the second greenest university in the world and first in the US 103 Northeastern placed first in the rankings again in 2014 104 In accordance with a Boston zoning code amendment in 2007 105 International Village residence hall was certified as a LEED Gold building in 2010 106 Dockser Hall was the first building on campus to achieve LEED certification also Gold with the completion of its renovation in 2010 107 East Village was rated LEED Silver in 2016 and the Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering Complex was rated LEED Gold in 2018 108 109 The university affiliated LightView apartment building is targeting a LEED Platinum certification the first in student housing in the City of Boston 110 In 2004 Northeastern was awarded the gold medal by the Massachusetts Horticultural Society for its Dedham Campus 111 nbsp A pedestrian bridge spanning five MBTA and Amtrak rail lines connects the Huntington Avenue and Columbus Avenue sides of the Boston campus Public transportation edit The MBTA subway Orange Line and Green Line E branch pass through the Northeastern campus Five stations serve the campus Massachusetts Avenue and Ruggles on the Orange Line and Symphony Northeastern University and Museum of Fine Arts on the Green Line The Green Line is paralleled by MBTA bus route 39 Ruggles station is also served by the Needham Providence Stoughton and Franklin Foxboro Lines of the MBTA Commuter Rail system and is a major transfer point for MBTA bus routes 112 Landmarks edit Centers and commons edit Facing Huntington Avenue Krentzman Quadrangle is the main quadrangle on the campus of Northeastern It is recognizable by the Northeastern University brick sign in front The quad lies at the heart of the original campus between Ell Dodge and Richards halls and serves as a gathering space for community members and outdoor activities It was named after Harvey Krentzman a businessman and 1949 alumnus 113 Centennial Common is a lawn created to mark the 100th anniversary of Northeastern University in 1998 The grassy area borders Shillman Hall Ryder Hall Meserve Hall Leon Street Forsyth Street and Ruggles Station and serves as a gateway to the West Campus The area is a popular gathering spot frequently used by students for recreational purposes and outdoor activities by student organizations 114 The Marino Recreation Center named after 1961 alumnus Roger Marino co founder of EMC Corporation is an indoor fitness center that opened in the Fall of 1996 115 Halls and auditoriums edit nbsp View of Ell Hall constructed in 1947 Ell Hall completed in 1947 is one of the oldest buildings on campus and is centered on Krentzman Quadrangle It contains administrative offices classrooms art display space a 992 seat auditorium and the Northeastern Bookstore Like Dodge Hall Ell Hall has five floors and also connects to the tunnel network The tunnels interconnect the major administrative and traditional academic buildings for use in inclement weather 116 Ell Hall was named for Carl Ell president of Northeastern from 1940 to 1959 who is credited with expanding the campus and making cooperative education an integral part of the university wide curriculum 93 Blackman Auditorium Northeastern s largest event space hosts many different types of events for classes theater groups dance teams musical groups choral groups fraternities sororities and orchestral ensembles Blackman has hosted many talented individuals from Maya Angelou to Seth Meyers 117 Gallery 360 is Northeastern University s art gallery which is free and open to the public throughout the year The 1 000 square foot 93 m2 space houses temporary exhibits of artworks by visiting artists students faculty and the surrounding community Some larger exhibits also include the adjacent hallways for additional space Curation and administration is under the supervision of the College of Arts Media and Design CAMD 118 nbsp Centennial CommonDodge Hall sits on Krentzman Quadrangle and primarily serves as the home of Northeastern s D Amore McKim School of Business The building was completed in 1952 and named for Robert Gray Dodge a former chairman of Northeastern s board of trustees It has five floors 119 From 1953 until Snell Library opened in 1990 Dodge Hall s basement served as the university s main library 120 121 Originally known as West Building Richards Hall borders Krentzman Quadrangle and was the first building constructed on campus in October 1938 Its light gray brick and vertical window strips design was the work of alumnus Herman Voss and was replicated in other surrounding buildings 93 Richards Hall was named for Boston industrialist James Lorin Richards a former board trustee 12 nbsp Interior of the Interdisciplinary Science amp Engineering Complex ISEC Interdisciplinary Science amp Engineering Complex edit Main article Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering Complex On February 21 2014 Northeastern had its groundbreaking ceremony for the new Interdisciplinary Science amp Engineering Complex ISEC on Columbus Avenue 122 Completed in 2017 the 220 000 square foot 20 000 m2 building provides research and educational space for students and faculty from the College of Science Bouve College of Health Sciences College of Engineering and Khoury College of Computer Sciences The centerpiece of the complex includes a large atrium a spiral staircase and a 280 seat auditorium 123 Matthews Arena edit Main article Matthews Arena nbsp Matthews Arena home to Northeastern s hockey and basketball teams Opened in 1910 and originally known as the Boston Arena Matthews Arena is the world s oldest surviving indoor ice hockey arena 124 Located on the eastern edge of Northeastern University s campus it is home to the Northeastern Huskies men s and women s hockey teams and men s basketball team as well as the Wentworth Institute of Technology s men s hockey team The arena is named after former university Board of Trustees Chairman George J Matthews a 1956 graduate and his wife the late Hope M Matthews who helped fund a major renovation in 1982 125 The arena is the original home of the NHL Boston Bruins and the WHA New England Whalers now the NHL Carolina Hurricanes It was also the secondary home to the NBA Boston Celtics in the 1940s It has hosted all or part of the America East Conference men s basketball tournament a total of seven times and hosted the 1960 Frozen Four The arena also served as the original home to the annual Beanpot tournament between Boston s four major college hockey programs 126 nbsp Marino Recreation Center completed in 1996 Dorms and housing editEast Village is Northeastern s newest dorm building and only houses freshmen and upperclassmen who are in the University Honors Program 127 The building is located at 291 St Botolph Street and opened in January 2015 128 129 Honors freshman live in its suite style rooms whereas upperclassmen can choose full apartments with kitchen facilities The building also contains 5 classrooms in the basement and an event space on the 17th Floor 130 nbsp West Village A North residence hallIn 2008 West Village Building F was recognized in American Institute of Architects New England 2008 Merit Awards for Design Excellence 131 South Campus Columbus Avenue edit Northeastern s southernmost section of campus is located along Columbus Avenue in Roxbury parallel to the Orange line The university expanded south into Roxbury at the same time as they were building West Village In 2001 Davenport Commons was opened providing 585 students housing in two residence halls while 75 families representing a range of incomes have been able to purchase a condo or townhouse at or below Boston s market value Davenport Commons also created commercial space on Tremont Street 132 During the summer of 2006 Northeastern proposed a new residence hall further away from the main campus at the corner of Tremont Street and Ruggles Street Construction began in late February 2007 In the spring of 2009 the complex was named International Village and opened later that summer It consists of three interconnected residential towers an office tower administration building and a gym 133 A 400 seat dining hall is available to all members of the Northeastern community as well as the public 134 Lightview was launched in 2019 which was Boston s first developer led equity financed student housing project built and financed by American Campus Communities exclusively for Northeastern students The building is 20 stories tall and includes a fitness area as well as social and recreational spaces 135 Library facilities edit Northeastern University Libraries include the Snell Library and the John D O Bryant African American Institute Library The NU School of Law Library is separately administered by the NU School of Law 136 The NU Libraries received federal depository designation in 1963 120 The Snell Library opened in 1990 at a cost of 35 million 120 It is also home to the Northeastern University Archives and Special Collections department which includes the Benjamin LaGuer papers collection The Special Collections focus on records of Boston area community based organizations that are concerned with social justice issues 137 In June 2016 the library staff adopted an open access policy to make its members professional research publicly accessible online 138 Network campuses editIn addition to Northeastern s main Boston campus the university operates a number of satellite locations in Massachusetts including the George J Kostas Research Institute in Burlington a Financial District campus in the Hilton Hotel near Faneuil Hall in downtown Boston a Dedham Campus in Dedham and a Marine Science Center in Nahant 139 The Kostas Research Institute for Homeland Security which opened in 2011 contains the Laboratory for Structural Testing of Resilient and Sustainable Systems STReSS Laboratory The laboratory is equipped to test full scale and large scale structural systems and materials to failure so as to explore the development of new strategies for designing simulating and sensing structural and infrastructure systems 140 nbsp Photo of Northeastern University satellite campus in Seattle WashingtonThe university has also launched a number of full service remote network campuses in North America including in Charlotte North Carolina in October 2011 Seattle in January 2013 San Jose California in March 2015 Toronto in 2016 and Vancouver British Columbia in 2019 In January 2020 Northeastern announced that it was opening the Roux Institute in Portland Maine a new research institute focused on artificial intelligence and machine learning in digital and life sciences 141 The decision came after Northeastern was selected for a 100 million donation by David Roux in hopes of turning the city into a new tech hub and in an attempt to spark economic growth in the region 142 More recently the university has continued to focus on global expansion In late 2018 Northeastern announced the acquisition of the New College of the Humanities a small private London based college founded by the philosopher A C Grayling The move was seen as unorthodox as most U S colleges have typically chosen to build new campus branches abroad rather than purchasing existing ones 143 144 On July 1 2022 Mills College in Oakland California was renamed to Mills College at Northeastern University through a merger between the university and the liberal arts college which had financial troubles 145 Student organizations editNortheastern has more than 16 varsity teams competing in the NCAA over 30 club sports teams and over 400 student clubs and organizations Among the student run organizations are Resident Student Association RSA Student Government Association SGA The Huntington News Northeastern Television NUTV Fraternity and Sorority Life FSL Social Justice Resource Center SJRC and the Council for University Programs CUP organize activities for Northeastern students as well as the surrounding community 146 Northeastern hosts six student run a cappella groups on campus three mixed ensembles Distilled Harmony The Downbeats and The Nor easters two treble ensembles Pitch Please and Treble on Huntington and one TTBB ensemble UniSons All groups regularly compete in the International Championship of Collegiate A Cappella ICCA The Nor easters have performed at ICCA finals in New York City three times and won the ICCA title in 2013 and 2017 Pitch Please competed at ICCA finals in 2019 147 Athletics edit Main article Northeastern Huskies nbsp Northeastern Huskies logoSince 1927 Northeastern University s intercollegiate athletic teams have been known as the Huskies 148 Prior to 1927 Northeastern had no official mascot A committee was formed to choose a mascot and members eventually settled on the Siberian Husky In February 1927 a pup was selected from legendary Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race competitor Leonhard Seppala s kennel in Poland Springs Maine On March 4 1927 King Husky I arrived at Northeastern in a campus celebration for which classes were canceled Since then live mascots have been a Siberian Husky breed but after losing two mascots in three months in the early 1970s and after upheaval due to having live canine mascots the university s administration was reluctant to continue the live mascot tradition In 2005 the university resumed the live mascot tradition the current live mascot is named Moses 149 The university s official costumed mascot is Paws The university s official colors are Northeastern red and black with white often used as an alternate color The university fight song All Hail Northeastern was composed by Charles A Pethybridge class of 1932 150 Since 2005 14 of 18 Northeastern varsity sports teams primarily compete in NCAA Division I s Colonial Athletic Association CAA 151 During its first decades Northeastern initially had seven athletics teams basketball cross country indoor track outdoor track crew and football 93 Northeastern sponsors the following sports teams 151 M Baseball M W Basketball M W Cross country W Field hockey M W Ice hockey in Hockey East M W Rowing in Eastern Association of Rowing Colleges and Eastern Association of Women s Rowing Colleges M W Soccer W Swimming and diving M W Track and field W Volleyball nbsp Lightview under construction in 2019 The baseball soccer lacrosse and rugby teams compete at Parsons Field a multipurpose facility located in Brookline a mile and a half from the campus The field s baseball diamond was named Friedman Diamond in 1988 The field hockey team along with the Huskies track and field teams compete at a sports complex about 10 miles 16 km away from campus in Dedham 152 Matthews Arena which opened 1910 is home to the hockey and basketball programs The 4 666 seat arena is located close to campus just off Massachusetts Avenue It is considered the world s oldest multi purpose athletic building Henderson Boathouse is home to the Huskies men s amp women s rowing squads The Henderson Boathouse is located on the Charles River near Soldiers Field Road in Allston The university also maintains the Cabot Physical Education Center which opened in 1954 and includes a basketball court an indoor track and natatorium the 10 755 square feet 999 2 m2 Gries Center for Sports Medicine and Performance Center a squash facility and the William E Carter Playground a renovated community park on Columbus Avenue 153 The baseball team was founded in 1921 and has since competed in one College World Series and played in the NCAA regionals seven times 151 In the 2008 National Championship the team made the Grand Finals and placed fourth behind University of Wisconsin Madison University of Washington and University of California Berkeley while defeating Brown University Princeton University University of Pennsylvania and Harvard University 154 In 2009 Northeastern eliminated its 74 year old football program 155 From 1933 to 2009 the Northeastern Huskies football program s all time record was 290 365 17 444 it produced 20 All Americans and won the 2002 Atlantic 10 Conference championship 156 Citing sparse attendance numerous losing seasons and the expense to renovate Parsons Field to an acceptable standard the university s Board of Trustees voted on November 20 2009 to end the football program According to President Joseph Aoun Leadership requires that we make these choices This decision allows us to focus on our existing athletic programs 157 In addition to intercollegiate athletics Northeastern offers 40 club sports including sailing judo rugby lacrosse Olympic Style taekwondo alpine skiing squash cycling and ultimate Frisbee In 2005 the women s rugby team finished third in the nation in Division II while in the same year the men s rugby team won the largest annual tournament in the United States Recently the women s rugby team competed and placed 11th at the Collegiate Rugby Championship In the 2008 09 academic year the Northeastern Club Field Hockey and Women s Basketball teams won their respective National Championships From 2007 to 2009 the Northeastern Club Baseball team won three straight New England Club Baseball Association championships 158 The Club Taekwondo team placed 1st overall in Division II for the 2018 19 Season in the Eastern Collegiate Taekwondo Conference 159 On May 25 2010 the club baseball team defeated Penn State to win the National Club Baseball Association Division II World Series and the national championship 160 Ice hockey edit The men s and women s hockey teams compete in the Hockey East conference Northeastern defeated Boston College 4 2 to win the 2019 Beanpot and defeated Boston University 5 4 to win the 2020 Beanpot 161 In 2020 Northeastern beat Boston University 5 4 in overtime to win the Beanpot for the third year in a row 162 In addition to winning the Beanpot title Northeastern took home both awards with the award for most valuable player being presented to Adam Gaudette and the Eberly Award being presented to Cayden Primeau who had a save percentage of 974 making him the goalie with second highest save percentage to win the award in the 44 years the award has been given 163 Traditions edit Underwear Undie Run edit Started in 2005 the Underwear Run is a Northeastern sponsored event around fall midterm season in which students strip down to their underwear and run a track around campus and near parts of the city The Northeastern University Police Department NUPD supervises the event to maintain the flow of traffic through the city Students have described it as a liberating experience that brings a sense of community and builds school spirit 164 Though the event was officially cancelled in 2020 and 2021 due to COVID 19 concerns it was unofficially organized by students in fall of 2021 165 Husky Hunt edit Organized by the Resident Student Association Husky Hunt is a 24 hour city wide scavenger hunt that has 50 teams of students roaming around the Greater Boston area in search of locations that correspond to clues games puzzles and riddles 166 The scavenger hunt starts with a preliminary qualifying quiz of which only 1 3 of the total group of participating teams progress to the hunt 167 Notable alumni and faculty editMain article List of Northeastern University people Northeastern University has more than 275 000 living alumni based in over 180 countries around the world 168 nbsp Nikesh AroraCEO of Palo Alto Networks and former senior executive at Google nbsp Maggie HassanUnited States Senator and former Governor of New Hampshire nbsp J Geilsmusician and leader of The J Geils Band nbsp Mo Cowanformer United States Senator from Massachusetts nbsp Gregory Jarvisastronaut on Space Shuttle Challenger nbsp Jeff Clarkeformer CEO of Kodak nbsp John Pastoreformer United States Senator from Rhode Island nbsp Beverly Johnsonfashion model and actress nbsp Urvashi VaidLGBT rights activist lawyer and writer nbsp Jane Curtinactress comedian and original cast member of Saturday Night Live nbsp Biz Stoneco founder of Twitter nbsp Wendy Williamsmedia personality host of The Wendy Williams Show nbsp Carlos Penaformer Major League Baseball MLB player nbsp Shawn Fanningco founder of Napster Notable faculty edit Michael Dukakis Former Governor of Massachusetts Democratic Presidential Nominee in 1988 Professor of Political Science Matthias Felleisen Author of How to Design Programs Professor of Computer Science Mary Florentine psychoacoustician Matthews Distinguished Professor Pran Nath co developer of the theory of supergravity Nada Sanders Distinguished Professor of Supply Chain Management at the D Amore McKim School of Business Ena Vazquez Nuttall 1937 2011 psychologist and former dean of Bouve College of Health Sciences Susan Whitfield Gabrieli professor of psychology Founding Director of the Biomedical Imaging CenterSee also editBoston Guild for the Hard of Hearing Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering Complex Khoury College of Computer Sciences Northeastern University MBTA station Ruggles MBTA station South End Grounds Timeline of Boston History of education in Dedham MassachusettsReferences edit As of March 7 2022 U S and Canadian Institutions Listed by Fiscal Year 2021 Endowment Market Value and Change in Endowment Market Value from FY20 to FY21 Report National Association of College and University Business Officers and TIAA 2022 Retrieved June 5 2023 Facts and Figures 2020 Northeastern University Archived from the original on January 16 2021 Retrieved February 5 2021 2023 2024 Common Data Set University Decision Support Northeastern University 2024 Retrieved April 21 2024 2023 2024 Common Data Set University Decision Support Northeastern University 2024 Retrieved April 21 2024 2023 2024 Common Data Set University Decision Support Northeastern University 2024 Retrieved April 21 2024 Northeastern University A University Like No Other Archived from the original on October 16 2018 Retrieved November 10 2017 Northeastern University Brand Center Archived from the original on August 7 2022 Retrieved August 7 2022 McFadden Sean March 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Retrieved September 9 2010 The son of Greek immigrants Kostas graduated from Northeastern University with a bachelor s degree in chemical engineering in 1943 a b news Spatz Emily August 20 2023 Northeastern acceptance rate drops to 5 6 after record number of applications The Huntington News Retrieved August 21 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last1 has generic name help Callahan Molly July 17 2022 Northeastern to invest record 450M in financial aid in 2022 23 Northeastern Global News Archived from the original on July 25 2022 Retrieved July 25 2022 a b Armanini Kate April 21 2022 Northeastern acceptance rate drops to 6 7 The Huntington News Archived from the original on July 14 2022 Retrieved July 18 2022 2021 2022 Common Data Set Archived August 18 2022 at the Wayback Machine Northeastern University Retrieved June 28 2022 2020 2021 Common Data Set Archived January 20 2021 at the Wayback Machine Northeastern University Retrieved June 28 2022 2019 2020 Common Data Set Northeastern University Archived from the original on February 2 2020 Retrieved February 1 2020 a b c 2018 2019 Common Data Set Northeastern University Archived from the original on November 21 2020 Retrieved October 31 2019 a b Undergraduate applications to Northeastern show consistent rise in quality and quantity Northeastern March 14 2016 Archived from the original on March 31 2018 Retrieved March 30 2018 Leading Host Institutions www iie org Archived from the original on December 1 2017 Retrieved November 27 2017 Northeastern University From the School The Princeton Review Archived from the original on March 31 2018 Retrieved March 30 2018 Office of Global Services www northeastern edu Archived from the original on March 1 2018 Retrieved March 1 2018 ShanghaiRanking s 2023 Academic Ranking of World Universities Shanghai Ranking Consultancy Retrieved February 10 2024 Forbes America s Top Colleges List 2023 Forbes Retrieved September 22 2023 2023 2024 Best 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Boston campus is officially an arboretum The Boston Globe Archived from the original on August 26 2019 Retrieved January 29 2020 Northeastern University s Boston campus has been officially recognized as a level two arboretum by ArbNet news northeastern edu May 23 2019 Archived from the original on June 28 2019 Retrieved August 26 2019 Huntington Avenue Baseball Grounds Historical Analysis by Baseball Almanac www baseball almanac com Archived from the original on August 26 2019 Retrieved August 26 2019 Khvan Olga June 17 2015 Northeastern Revs Up Public Art Initiative Bostonmagazine com Archived from the original on May 9 2021 Retrieved March 3 2022 a b c d e Baker Brook K 1998 Tradition and Innovation Reflections on Northeastern University s First Century Northeastern University Publications Finding aid for the United Drug Company products collection www lib neu edu Archived from the original on August 22 1999 Retrieved April 29 2021 Hagan Allison December 17 2018 Northeastern receives 50 million gift to further AI studies The Boston Globe Archived from the original on January 29 2020 Retrieved January 29 2020 Young Colin A Northeastern University formally opens 225 million science engineering facility The Boston Globe Archived from the original on January 29 2020 Retrieved January 29 2020 O Brien Kelly J December 17 2018 Northeastern to rename computer science school following record 50M gift Boston Business Journal Archived from the original on April 16 2021 Retrieved January 29 2020 Contreras Cesareo September 6 2023 New EXP building opens an exciting resource for the entire Northeastern community Northeastern Global News Retrieved October 13 2023 EXP Facilities facilities northeastern edu Retrieved October 13 2023 EVERY WEEK FOR ONE YEAR The EXP Makerspace Northeastern University The Maker Space Program Retrieved October 13 2023 Northeastern University Green Report Card 2011 Archived from the original on August 20 2011 Retrieved August 3 2015 Top Green Colleges and Universities Greenworld365 com August 6 2009 Archived from the original on August 30 2010 Retrieved July 25 2012 UI GreenMetric World University Ranking Archived from the original on April 5 2014 Retrieved October 1 2017 Northeastern ranked America s greenest university news northeastern edu January 28 2014 Archived from the original on August 26 2019 Retrieved August 26 2019 Article 37 Green Buildings PDF City of Boston January 10 2007 Archived PDF from the original on July 9 2017 Retrieved October 1 2017 How Northeastern Goes Green Northeastern University Archived from the original on August 6 2020 Retrieved June 2 2020 Dockser Hall Archived from the original on July 10 2015 Retrieved August 3 2015 Northeastern University East Village U S Green Building Council www usgbc org Archived from the original on August 26 2019 Retrieved August 26 2019 Northeastern University ISEC Earns LEED Gold Payette October 3 2018 Archived from the original on August 26 2019 Retrieved August 26 2019 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2013 Northeastern University opens George J Kostas Institute for Homeland Security Civil amp Environmental Engineering Northeastern University www civ neu edu Archived from the original on December 15 2017 Retrieved December 15 2017 Northeastern University launches 100 million research center in Maine www insidehighered com Archived from the original on February 26 2020 Retrieved January 29 2020 Porter Eduardo January 27 2020 A 100 Million Bet That Vacationland Can Be a Tech Hub Too The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 29 2020 Retrieved January 29 2020 Belkin Douglas November 14 2018 Northeastern University to Buy Small School in London The Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Archived from the original on January 29 2020 Retrieved January 29 2020 Northeastern U to buy London campus amid push for international expansion Education Dive Archived from the original on January 29 2020 Retrieved January 29 2020 Mills Becomes a Part of Northeastern Inside 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Archived from the original on June 2 2021 Retrieved May 30 2021 Northeastern Investing 26 Million to Redo Carter Playground May 21 2015 Archived from the original on June 2 2021 Retrieved May 29 2021 Huskies advance to Grand Final at IRA Championship Retrieved October 1 2017 permanent dead link Pennington Bill December 27 2019 Adding Football Saved One College Dumping It Boosted Another The New York Times Archived from the original on June 2 2021 Retrieved May 29 2021 Football History Archived from the original on June 29 2021 Retrieved May 29 2021 Northeastern cuts 74 year old football program ESPN Boston Espn com Sports espn go com November 23 2009 Archived from the original on November 27 2009 Retrieved March 4 2010 NECBA Championships New England Club Baseball Association Archived from the original on July 14 2011 Retrieved March 4 2010 ECTC Season Standings Archived from the original on December 21 2019 Retrieved November 26 2019 NCBA Division II World Series NCBA Archived from the original on April 27 2010 Retrieved May 27 2010 Garden T D The Beanpot Results TD Garden www tdgarden com Archived from the original on October 30 2021 Retrieved October 30 2021 2020 Beanpot Northeastern beats Boston University hockey in 2OT for third straight title NCAA com www ncaa com Archived from the original on September 19 2020 Retrieved January 24 2022 Gaudette nets hat trick as Northeastern wins Beanpot si com February 13 2018 Archived from the original on February 15 2018 Retrieved February 14 2018 Northeastern students strip for Annual Underwear Run The Huntington News October 25 2018 Archived from the original on December 7 2020 Retrieved April 8 2022 Hill Marta October 29 2021 Spooky 15th Underwear Run marks unofficial return to beloved campus tradition The Huntington News Archived from the original on January 21 2022 Retrieved April 8 2022 Traditions Northeastern Student Life Archived from the original on January 26 2022 Retrieved April 8 2022 Manning Kathryn October 29 2021 Husky Haunt is coming Here s how NU students are preparing The Huntington News Archived from the original on January 21 2022 Retrieved April 8 2022 Home Northeastern Alumni Relations Archived from the original on July 13 2022 Retrieved July 22 2022 External links edit nbsp Media related to Northeastern University at Wikimedia Commons Official website nbsp Northeastern University Athletics website Portal nbsp United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Northeastern University amp oldid 1222626940, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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