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The Tulsa Law School, located in downtown Tulsa, became part of the university in 1943. [23] In 1948, oil magnate William G. Skelly donated funds to found the university radio station, KWGS (named for his initials), now known as Public Radio Tulsa. Skelly House, one-time official residence for the president of the University of Tulsa
Tulsa is home to a variety of colleges and universities, including: National American University- Tulsa campus [1] New York University - Tulsa Global Site [2] Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences - (Tulsa) Langston University - Tulsa campus; Oklahoma State University Institute of Technology (OSUIT Okmulgee)
Masters University: 1,242 1890 Oklahoma State University: Stillwater: Public Research University 25,372 1890 Oklahoma State University: Tulsa: Public Research University (included with main campus) 1999 Oklahoma State University - Center for Health Sciences: Tulsa: Public Research University 1,459 1972 Rogers State University: Claremore: Public
The Collegian is the official student newspaper at The University of Tulsa.It is a weekly issue in broadsheet format. The Collegian is an independently operated, edited, and written by the students apart from the administration, which has occasionally led to conflict with the administration when it is critical of or has contrary views to administration policy.
Tulsa has 15 institutions of higher education, including two private universities: the University of Tulsa, a school founded in 1894, and Oral Roberts University, a school founded by evangelist Oral Roberts in 1963. [citation needed] The University of Tulsa has an enrollment of 3,832 undergraduate and graduate students as of 2021. [218]
The University of Tulsa College of Law was founded by local attorneys during one of Tulsa's oil booms in 1923 with Washington E. Hudson, a state senator and Ku Klux Klan leader, serving as dean from 1923 to 1943. [3] [4] The law school was originally known simply as the Tulsa Law School and was independent of the University of Tulsa. Initially ...
Jim R. Caldwell – first Republican member of the Arkansas State Senate in the 20th century, 1969–1978; retired Church of Christ minister in Tulsa; studied in doctoral program at University of Tulsa; Craig Campbell (BA, Political Science, 1974) – Lieutenant Governor of Alaska; Samuel H. Cassidy (Law, 1975) – former Lieutenant Governor of ...
The Michael D. Case Tennis Center is a 2,000-seat tennis arena on the campus of the University of Tulsa in Tulsa, Oklahoma. The center officially opened on 2001-12-14 and was named after Mike Case, a local developer and philanthropist. In 2003, the facility was named the top facility in the country by the United States Tennis Association.