Georgia Southern University

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Georgia Southern University

Established December 1, 1906
Type: Public
Endowment: 62 million
President: Dr. Bruce Grube
Staff: 1,795
Students: 16,425
Undergraduates: 14,483
Postgraduates: 1,942
Location Statesboro, Georgia, USA
Campus: "College town"; 675 acres (2.73 km²)
Athletics: Division I
14 varsity sports
Colors: Blue and White           
Nickname: Eagles
Mascot: GUS the Eagle
Glory and Freedom-Live mascot
Website: http://www.georgiasouthern.edu
On Forest Drive looking between the College of Education and the Nursing building towards the College of Information Technology.
On Forest Drive looking between the College of Education and the Nursing building towards the College of Information Technology.
Standing on the pedestrium looking across towards the lake.
Standing on the pedestrium looking across towards the lake.
Standing on the lake side looking towards Russell Union student center and Betty Foy-Sanders art building.
Standing on the lake side looking towards Russell Union student center and Betty Foy-Sanders art building.
Standing on the pedestrium looking towards College of Business Administration and the College of Education.
Standing on the pedestrium looking towards College of Business Administration and the College of Education.
Late evening standing in the grass circle next to the College of Education building looking towards the pedestrium between the College of Information Technology on the left and the College of Business on the right.
Late evening standing in the grass circle next to the College of Education building looking towards the pedestrium between the College of Information Technology on the left and the College of Business on the right.
The Builders of the University terrace behind the administrative buildings around Sweeetheart Circle.
The Builders of the University terrace behind the administrative buildings around Sweeetheart Circle.

Georgia Southern University, established 1906, is a regional university located in Statesboro, Georgia, USA, and part of the University System of Georgia. It is the largest center of higher education in the southern half of Georgia and is the sixth largest institution in the University System.[1] The University has a residential campus of 16,425 students, with every state and 87 nations represented in the student body.

Contents

The President of Georgia Southern University is the head administrator and is appointed and overseen by the Georgia Board of Regents.

The University offers more than 120 bachelor's degree, masters degree, and Doctorate programs in eight colleges:

Beginning Fall 2007, four new graduate programs, including two Doctoral programs will be introduced.

The College of Business Administration houses the only School of Economic Development in the southeastern United States.

The College of Information Technology is the only one in Southeastern United States, and one of the few in the nation.

The Zach S. Henderson Library[3] is undergoing major renovation and expansion[4] and will be completed in the Fall of 2008. Henderson Library is the only one in Georgia which operates a 24-hour schedule. Special Collections[5] include the Marvin S. Pittman Research Collection and the Oral History Collection. The librarians provide free reference and research assistance via instant messaging[6], or by e-mail, telephone, or in person. Henderson Library welcomes any and all visitors.

Black Issues in Higher Education has recognized Georgia Southern University among the top institutions in the country for the number of bachelor’s degrees awarded to African-American students.

Georgia Southern is home to the world-renowned Institute of Arthropodology and Parasitology. An integral part of this program is the U.S. National Tick Collection; it is the largest collection of ticks in the world, with more than one million specimens, representing most of the world's 850 species.

As of April 2006, Georgia Southern was classified as a Doctoral/Research Institution[7] and ranks as one of the top 262 national universities by US News.[8]

The University’s Master of Business Administration and the Master of Accounting are featured in Best 282 Business Schools published by The Princeton Review. [9]

US News & World Report consistently ranks the University’s Family Nurse Practitioner Program among the best in the nation, and has once again recently ranked the program in its 2007 edition. The program ranked 11th in the nation; ahead of schools like Emory and Vanderbilt [10]

Georgia Southern University has one of the best Logistics programs in the nation. According to Supply Chain Management, the University is ranked 16th among private and public institutions. [11]

The prestigious American Chemical Society consistently ranks the University’s Department of Chemistry among the top 25 in the nation for certified baccalaureate graduates.[12]

The town of Statesboro is located inland from the east coast off of Interstate 16 between the cities of Macon (which is in central Georgia) and Savannah (located on the coast of Georgia at the mouth of the Savannah River). Statesboro is less than one hour's drive from Savannah or Augusta, about two hours from Macon, and about three and a half hours from Atlanta.

The school which was to become Georgia Southern University was founded as a district agricultural school named First District A&M in 1906 as one of several agricultural and mechanical trades schools chartered by the Georgia General Assembly, the state legislature. During the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s the school expanded, offering a richer curriculum with an emphasis on education and changed its name for the first time to Georgia Normal School. It progressed from a two-year to a four-year teacher's college called South Georgia Teacher's College during those years. In 1959, the school became known as Georgia Southern College when it became a senior college within the University System of Georgia followed by receiving university status in 1990. In April 2006, The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching officially announced that Georgia Southern changed classifications from its previous Masters I designation to the National Doctoral/Research University level. Despite this classification change, the University System of Georgia will continue to consider Georgia Southern a regional university for its organizational purposes and budget/tuition calculations. [13]On October 30, 2006, Georgia Southern University was visited by President George W. Bush, marking the first time that a current President has visited the campus. The presidential visit was a first for Statesboro, Georgia as well.

Georgia Southern Eagles logo
Georgia Southern Eagles logo

The Georgia Southern Eagles compete in baseball, basketball, football, golf, tennis, volleyball, soccer, softball and track & field. The football team has won a record six NCAA Division I-AA national championships (1985, 1986, 1989, 1990, 1999 and 2000). It also has been to the College World Series twice (1973,1990). The university also offers intramural teams for all varsity level sports, as well as others such as equestrian events, fencing, and judo. Georgia Southern's football team plays at Allen E. Paulson Stadium.

In 1982, former University of Georgia Defensive Coordinator Erksine "Erk" Russell was hired to restart the football program at Georgia Southern College (as the university was called at the time), a program that had not competed in forty years. Three years after beginning the team, Coach Russell had won his first of three National Titles (1985, 1986, and 1989). Russell's bald head, coupled with the fact that he coached the Eagles, gave him the nickname "The Bald Eagle". After the Eagles moved to Division I-AA in 1984, he fashioned a 70-14 (.825) mark. Russell averaged 10.4 wins per season. He entered the 1989 season as America's winningest coach, orchestrator of two national championships, 68 wins and 14 All-America selections -- all during a seven-year period. In the ensuing 105 days, Georgia Southern ascended to the top spot in the NCAA I-AA football poll and Russell smoked 15 victory cigars. The Eagles extended Division I's longest home win streak from 26 to 37 games, en route to gaining distinction as the only 15-0 college team of the twentieth century. Russell's final record at Georgia Southern, after his retirement in 1989, was 83-22-1 (.788). During the Mike Sewak Era, Russell unfortunately cut ties with GSU after his son Rusty was fired from the coaching staff. In 2006, with the hire of new Head Coach Brian VanGorder, he was reunited with the program. He addressed the team the night before his shocking and sudden death on September 8, 2006. Georgia Southern University and thousands of friends, family, and fans gathered at Paulson Stadium to mourn the passing of Erk Russell, one of America's most exciting and successful college football coaches. The cause of death was a stroke while pulling out of a gas station on the west side of Statesboro. He was 80. Since Russell's departure, football has continued to be prominent at Georgia Southern, which now lays claim as the most successful Division I-AA program ever. Head coach Tim Stowers succeeded Russell and won the 1990 national title, while Paul Johnson added two more in 1999 and 2000 with teams led by all-time Division I rushing leader Adrian Peterson. On December 9, 2005, Brian VanGorder became the sixth head football coach at Georgia Southern. In January 2007, Coach VanGorder left the Eagles to be the Linebackers Coach of the NFL's Atlanta Falcons. Not long after VanGorder's departure, Athletics Director Sam Baker announced Chris Hatcher to take over the Eagles. Hatcher, who was previously the head coach at Valdosta State University, where he had an all time record of 76-12, promised more championships will be added to the six that have already been won.

The university has a botanical garden at Bland Cottage, the Performing Arts Center where national acts as well as Georgia Southern student shows are performed, a college radio station (WVGS 91.9 The Buzz), and a daily college newspaper, The George-Anne Daily. Various departments within the university offer students the opportunity to participate in as well as enjoy events such as concerts, plays, and musicals. Several national organizations such as the ACM are represented by student chapters.

The Recreation and Activities Center (the RAC) has an area for weight lifting, several basketball courts, an indoor track, two dance studios, equipment for yoga and pilates, several racquetball courts, and an indoor climbing wall. During Spring and Fall 2006 semesters, the RAC was expanded, adding additional basketball and multi-purpose courts, weight and fitness rooms, a Olympic size swimming pool, a rehabilitation pool, and more space for CRI (Campus Recreation and Intramural) personnel. With completed expansion, the RAC is now one of the finest collegiate recreational facilities in the nation.

There are three governing bodies for Greek organizations at Georgia Southern University, governing all NIC, NPC, and NPHC recognized organizations on campus. The first North American Interfraternity Conference (NIC), National Panhellenic Conference (NPC), or National Pan-Hellenic Council (NPHC) Greek organization at Georgia Southern was Tau Kappa Epsilon, which colonized on the campus in 1967 and chartered in 1968. The Southern Greek Housing Corporation, a 501(c)3 corporation representing NIC and NPC Greek organizations on campus, owns and operates the Greek housing community, which maintains property adjacent to the University. The corporation is managed by a board of directors, consisting of fraternity and sorority alumni. There are also Greek-letter professional fraternities (such as Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia which was founded at Georgia Southern in 1953), along with a number of academic honor societies (such as Alpha Upsilon Alpha and Phi Alpha Theta).

Social Sororities (NPC, NPHC)

Social Fraternities (NIC, NPHC)

Some notable Alumni of Georgia Southern include:

  • Jody O'Donnell (radio personality) Beach104

Lee Berger (Explorer)

  • "TSC Blues Review Interview with Erk Russell" Southern-Connection.com August 2002
  • * Presley, Delma Eugene (2006). The Southern Century: Georgia Southern University 1906-2006. Georgia Southern University. ISBN 13:978-0-9788650-0-9. 

  1. ^ "Semester Enrollment Reports - Fiscal Year 2007", University System of Georgia, 2006-11-10. Retrieved on 2007-04-01. 
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