Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Union College (Nebraska)

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Type
  
Private

President
  
Vinita Sauder

Acceptance rate
  
52.1% (2014)

Total enrollment
  
901 (2010)

Established
  
1891 (1891)

Undergraduate tuition and fees
  
21,080 USD (2015)

Phone
  
+1 402-486-2600

Union College (Nebraska)

Motto
  
Erunt Omnes Docibi Les Dei (Latin)

Motto in English
  
They shall be taught of God (from John 6:45)

Affiliation
  
Seventh-day Adventist Church

Address
  
3800 S 48th St, Lincoln, NE 68506, USA

Similar
  
Nebraska Wesleyan University, Southwestern Adventist University, Southern Adventist University, Andrews University, Southeast Community College

Profiles

Union College is a private Seventh-day Adventist four-year coeducational college located in Lincoln, Nebraska, United States. Founded in 1891, it is owned and operated by the Mid-American Union Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. It is accredited by the Adventist Accrediting Association (AAA) and the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools (NCA). The college is home to the Center for Interfaith Studies and Culture. It is a part of the Seventh-day Adventist education system, the world's second largest Christian school system.

Contents

History

L. A. Hoopes and a committee of church leaders, including influential Adventist scholar and administrator W. W. Prescott, came to Lincoln, Nebraska in search of land to establish a college in the Mid-West. In September 1891, Union College opened its doors to students with Prescott serving as its first president. The present-day community of College View grew around the college campus. During the 1920s, the college experienced a difficult period due to the shrinking enrollment and budget deficits. In 1939, former Mayor of Lincoln Don Lathrop Love donated money for the college to build an industrial building and established a life annuity with the college a year later. The 1970s saw major expansion of the college, including the construction of the iconic 100-foot clock tower, Everett Dick Administration Building, the college's lab school George Stone School and College View Church. Founded on barren landscape, the college is the location of the Joshua C. Turner Arboretum, a site of the Nebraska Statewide Arboretum, hosting over 100 species of plants.

The college previously owned the radio station KUCV, now the flagship station of NET Radio; the call-sign letters are named after the college.

In athletics, Union College plays as the Warriors and fields a limited number of sports, but is not a member of a major colliege sports associatation, such as the NCAA or NAIA, or smaller Christian athletic associations, existing as an independent school. As such, their teams tend to play against bible colleges, community colleges, and JV teams. The college also host two tournaments each year (one for basketball and one for volleyball) for Seventh-day Adventist high school teams.

Academics

The college is organized into eight divisions:

  • Business and Computer Science
  • Emergency Management and Exercise Science
  • Fine Arts
  • Human Development
  • Humanities
  • Nursing
  • Religion
  • Science & Math
  • In addition, the college offers a Master of Physician Assistant Studies program.

    Presidents

    This is a list of Union College's presidents.

    Alumni

  • Wayne Hooper, gospel music composer
  • T. R. M. Howard
  • Rukebai K. Inabo, Senator of Palau
  • Milton E. Kern, educator
  • Sandra Pierantozzi, former Vice President of Palau
  • Chester Wickwire, chaplain, civil rights and peace activist
  • Faculty

  • Jonathan M. Butler, historian
  • Frank Lewis Marsh, biologist, educator
  • John Gottlieb Matteson, minister who brought the Seventh-day Adventist Church to Denmark
  • C. Mervyn Maxwell, professor of church history and noted figure in the Historic Adventism movement and author of Tell It to the World
  • Mike Mennard, recording artist, current literature and communications lecturer
  • References

    Union College (Nebraska) Wikipedia