University of Tennessee at Chattanooga 

University of Tennessee at Chattanooga

Motto: Faciemus (We shall achieve)
Established: 1886, 1969
Type: State-funded
Chancellor: Dr. Roger Brown
President: John Petersen
Staff: 347
Undergraduates: 9,002
Postgraduates: 1,284 (graduate, pre-professional, doctoral)
Location: Chattanooga, TN, USA
Campus: Urban, 83 acres (336,000 m²)
Athletics: Southern Conference, NCAA Division I
Nickname: Mocs
Mascot:
Scrappy
Website: http://www.utc.edu

University of Tennessee at Chattanooga is a university located in Chattanooga, Tennessee. The university, often referred to as UTC or simply "Chattanooga" (especially in reference to collegiate athletics), is one of three universities and two other affiliated institutions in the University of Tennessee System.

UTC was founded in 1886 as then-private Chattanooga University (later known as Grant College). In 1907, the university changed its name to the University of Chattanooga. In 1969, the university merged with Chattanooga City College to form the modern UTC campus as part of the University of Tennessee System.

Contents

Administration

Chattanooga uses the semester system, with five optional "mini-terms" in the summer. The leadership of the campus rests upon the chancellor, who answers to the University President. The current chancellor is Dr. Roger Brown.

List of past leaders of University of Tennessee at Chattanooga

Student Government Association of UTC

A voice for student leadership on campus. SGA consists of senators representing districts/the college they belong to, such as, the College of Arts and Sciences. It is led by a three student executive board voted into office by their peers. The President is Scott Stuart, a Maryville, TN political science major. The Vice President is Tyler Forrest, a Finance and Accounting major from Athens, TN. The Treasurer is Daniel Hunley, a Marketing and Entrepreneurship student from Jackson, TN.

Academics

Chattanooga is best known for its Business[2], Engineering[3], Nursing[4], English[5], Chemistry[6], Accounting [7],Psychology[8], and Education departments. The university offers 43 undergraduate majors and 39 undergraduate minors. Chattanooga also offers 21 graduate programs, including a highly ranked1 master's program in Industrial and Organizational Psychology[9] and Ph.D. programs in Education, Computational Engineering and Physical Therapy. In an effort to expand the horizons of its students body, Chattanooga recently began exchange with Kangnung National University of Kangnung, South Korea [10]

Publications

Research

About the campus

The University is served by CARTA bus routes 4, 7, 10, 14, 19, and 28. Route 14 only operates on weekdays during fall and spring terms, when the University is session. The route runs within and without the Chattanooga campus on McCallie, Houston, Vine, Douglas, Fifth, and Palmetto Streets. A recent extension serves Third, O'Neal and Central Streets, as well as Erlanger Hospital, and a large parking lot at Engel Stadium. All students showing valid University identification cards (aka MocsCards) ride for free on all CARTA routes, year-round.

The campus also operates its own in-house television station and runs an independent radio station, WUTC.

Student residences

Prospective resident students can choose from four different dormitory complexes, each with different room configurations to choose from.

Academic buildings

Note: Dates of construction given when known

Founder's Hall

Library

The Lupton Memorial Library, named for T. Cartter and Margaret Rawlings Lupton was constructed in 1974 to replace the aging John Storrs Fletcher Library (which has since been restored and renamed Fletcher Hall). As of 2005, the library's collection includes nearly 2 million items, including the Fellowship of Southern Writers archives. In early 2008 the University was granted funding to build a new library and is currently in the planning phase of the project.3

Greek Life

Sororities: National Panhellenic Conference

National Pan-Hellenic Council

Fraternities: North-American Interfraternity Conference

National Pan-Hellenic Council

Other Greek Organizations:

Notable alumni, students and faculty

Athletics

Chattanooga's colors are blue and gold; their men's teams and athletes are nicknamed Mocs, and women's teams and athletes are Lady Mocs. Chattanooga athletics teams compete in NCAA Division I (FCS for football) in the Southern Conference.

Chattanooga's men's basketball program has dominated the Southern Conference for the last 25 years, claiming more league championships than any other team. In 1997, led by coach Mack McCarthy, the Mocs made a run to the Sweet 16 as a #14 seed, beating Georgia and Illinois before falling to Providence. Before making the move to Division I, Chattanooga won the Division II National Championship in 1977.citation needed In July 2008, the team was ranked number 48 on the ESPN list of the most prestigious basketball programs since the 1984-85 season.4

Chattanooga is home to the only NCAA Division I wrestling program in the state of Tennessee, in the past years the Chattanooga Mat Mocs have become one of the nations premier wrestling programs.citation needed

The Chattanooga Lady Mocs basketball and softball teams have also been dominant forces in the Southern Conference in the last decade. The Lady Moc basketball team has won the Southern Conference Regular Season Championship nine years in a row and 14 times since winning the first SoCon title in 1984.citation needed

Athletic venues

University mascot

Chattanooga Mocs main logo
Chattanooga Mocs alternate logo

The school's athletic teams are called the Mocs. The teams were nicknamed Moccasins until 1996. (The origin of the name is uncertain; however, Moccasin Bend is a large horseshoe-shaped bend in the Tennessee River directly below Lookout Mountain.)

The mascot has taken on four distinct forms, with a water moccasin being the mascot in the 1920s, and then a moccasin shoe (known as "The Shoe") was actually used as the school's mascot at times in the 1960s and 1970s. From the 1970s until 1996, the mascot was Chief Moccanooga, an exaggerated Cherokee tribesman.

In 1996, due in to concerns over ethnic sensitivity,5 the Moccasins name and image were dropped in favor of the shortened "Mocs" and an anthropomorphized mockingbird named "Scrappy" dressed as a railroad engineer. The school's main athletic logo features Scrappy riding a train (a reference to Chattanooga's history as a major railroad hub and to the song "Chattanooga Choo Choo"). The mascot takes its name from former football coach A.C. "Scrappy" Moore.

Fight Song

The fight song for Chattanooga is Fight Chattanooga. The lyrics are:

Fight Chattanooga,
'til the victory is won
Mighty Mocs you know
we're counting on you,
Go UTC Gold and Blue
Fight! Fight!
Roll on Chattanooga,
Ride the rails to victory
Ever more we pledge
to be true to UTC.

Band

The Director of Bands of the University is Dr. Stuart Benkert.

The marching band is referred to as the "Marching Mocs" and is approximately 150 members strong. The marching band performs at all home games, as well as some away games, and two or three exhibitions across the south-east every year. The Marching Mocs embrace a unique style of performance and mix both the "music of today" with the "music of yesterday" to please the crowds at Finley Stadium.

A smaller pep band, named the "World's Most Dangerous Pep Band" plays at all home men's and women's Southern Conference basketball games, as well as most non-conference home games. The pep band accompanies the teams to the Southern Conference and NCAA tournaments. The pep band has occasionally been found at volleyball, wrestling and softball games.

References

  1. ^ Kraiger & Abalos, "Rankings of Graduate Programs in I-O Psychology Based on Student Ratings of Quality"[1]
  2. ^ UT SimCenter at Chattanooga | TOP500 Supercomputing Sites
  3. ^ Library Building Project Wiki at UTC
  4. ^ Harold Shelton, Nick Loucks and Chris Fallica, "Counting down the most prestigious programs since 1984-85", ESPN, July 21, 2008
  5. ^ George Dohrmann, "Big Mack has 'em loving the Mocs; McCarthy's team, in the Sweet 16, may even rate over barbecue in Chattanooga", LA Times, Mar 19, 1997

External links