Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Missouri Western State University

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Motto
  
Everything is Possible

Established
  
1915 (1915)

Students
  
5,795 (Fall 2014)

Mascot
  
Max the Griffon

Graduation rate
  
34.9% (2014)

Colors
  
Black, Gold

Type
  
Public

Provost
  
Jeanne Daffron

Undergraduates
  
5,616 (Fall 2014)

Phone
  
+1 816-271-4200

President
  
Robert A. Vartabedian

Missouri Western State University

Address
  
4525 Downs Dr, St Joseph, MO 64507, USA

Undergraduate tuition and fees
  
Local tuition: 6,790 USD (2015), Domestic tuition: 12,420 USD (2015)

Notable alumni
  
Roger Allen III, Paul Rhoads, Gijon Robinson, Robert Schaaf, Greg Zuerlein

Similar
  
Northwest Missouri State Uni, Missouri Southern State Uni, University of Central Missouri, Southwest Baptist University, Washburn University

Profiles

Missouri western state university football complex


Missouri Western State University is a public, co-educational university located in Saint Joseph, Missouri, United States. The school enrolls 6,010 undergraduate students and 124 graduate students.

Contents

History

Missouri Western State University was founded in 1915 as a two-year institution called St. Joseph Junior College and held courses in the original location of Central High School (St. Joseph, Missouri) at 13th and Patee. In 1933 when Central High School moved to its current location the junior college relocated to the Robidoux Polytechnic High School building at 10th Street between Edmond and Charles. In 1917 it adopted the Griffon as its mascot.

The establishment of a four-year school was a central campaign issue in the 1964 Missouri Governor's race. Warren Hearnes from southeast Missouri who was challenging Hilary A. Bush who was from western Missouri for governor. Hearnes promised to transform the school into a four-year school despite the presence of another state university (Northwest Missouri State University) 40 miles (64 km) to the north in Maryville, Missouri.

Hearnes narrowly won the primary and then won general election. The college became a four-year school in 1969 during Hearnes second term.

School officials, saying the four-college would never have occurred without Hearnes, named the school's library for him.

Shortly after the conversion, the school acquired the farm of St. Joseph State Hospital #2, on the east side of Interstate 29, for its campus on the east edge of St. Joseph. The original plan had called for it to be built across from the hospital, just west of Bishop LeBlond High School and closer to downtown St. Joseph.

In 1988 Shalia Aery, commissioner of higher education under Governor John Ashcroft recommended Northwest should close and leave Missouri Western as the surviving school. That plan was ultimately dropped.

Legislation in 2005 changed the institution's name to Missouri Western State University. That legislation designated Missouri Western as Missouri's Applied Learning Institution and allowed it to grant master's degrees. The university hooded its first 12 master's degree recipients in May 2009. In its first six years offering graduate degrees, graduate enrollment at Western has grown by 100% or more each year. As of 2011, Western has graduate programs in 14 areas.

In 2010, the Stephen L. Craig School of Business was accredited by AACSB International.

The school's most visible corporate affiliation is with Hillyard, Inc., a cleaning supplies company. The school's Spratt Memorial Stadium is named for Elliot "Bub" Spratt, an executive at the company. Leah Spratt Hall is named for a sister of Elliot. The school hosts the Hillyard Tip Off Basketball Classic tournament.

Presidents

  • M. O. Looney (1969–1983)
  • Janet Gorman Murphy (1983–2000)
  • James Scanlon (2001–2008)
  • Robert Vartabedian (2008–present)
  • Campus buildings

    The main buildings of Missouri Western State University are all dedicated to someone who is an important part in MWSU's history.

    Athletics

    Missouri Western is the home of the Griffons. MWSU competes in the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association and is in NCAA Division II. Its highest attended football games are in the Northwest Missouri-Missouri Western football rivalry. The university currently fields 10 sports (Men's baseball, basketball, football, golf; Women's basketball, golf, soccer, softball, tennis, volleyball) as a NCAA Division II school. The University currently fields teams in 10 sports, including:

    Kansas City Chiefs Summer Training Camp

    The school has been the summer training camp for the Kansas City Chiefs since 2010. The $15.7 million facility was paid for by $10 million from the Chiefs (from state tax credits) and $1.2 million from student fees at Missouri Western, with the rest coming from the City of St. Joseph, Buchanan County and private donations. It was designed by St. Joseph architect firm Ellison-Auxier Architects, Inc., which designed the school's Spratt Hall and clock tower.

    A climate-controlled, 120-yard NFL regulation grass indoor field, with a locker room, weight room, training room, classrooms and office space was completed in the summer of 2010. This facility is referred to as the "Griffon Indoor Sports Complex."

    Notable alumni

  • Roger Allen III, NFL offensive lineman
  • David Bass, NFL defensive lineman
  • Charles Bruffy, Grammy Award-winning artistic director of the Kansas City Chorale and the Phoenix Chorale and chorus director of the Kansas City Symphony
  • Richard Durst, Baldwin-Wallace University president emeritus
  • Brice Garnett, PGA Tour golfer
  • Esther George, president of Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
  • Elijah Haahr, Missouri state representative
  • Michael Hill, NFL running back
  • Christel Marquardt, judge on the Kansas Court of Appeals
  • Jerry Partridge, Missouri Western football coach
  • Travis Partridge, Canadian Football League player
  • Paul Rhoads, Iowa State University head football coach
  • Gijon Robinson, NFL tight end
  • Rob Schaaf, Missouri state senator
  • Kenneth Wilson, Missouri state representative
  • Greg Zuerlein, NFL kicker
  • References

    Missouri Western State University Wikipedia