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Saint Marys College of California Dean of the Performing Arts

Private Catholic college in Moraga, California, Usa

Saint Mary's College of California
Saint Mary's College of California seal.svg
Motto Signum Fidei (Latin)

Motto in English

The Sign of Religion
Type Private higher
Established 1863; 159 years ago  (1863)

Religious amalgamation

Catholic (De La Salle Brothers)

Academic affiliations

ACCU
NAICU
WASC
Endowment $215.0 one thousand thousand (2021)[one]
President Richard Plumb [2]

Bookish staff

216[iii]
Students iii,761 (Fall 2018)
Undergraduates two,675 (Fall 2018)[iii]
Postgraduates 1,086 (Autumn 2018)[3]
Location

Moraga, California

,

U.S.


37°50′29″Due north 122°06′33″Due west  /  37.84139°N 122.10917°W  / 37.84139; -122.10917 Coordinates: 37°l′29″N 122°06′33″West  /  37.84139°Northward 122.10917°W  / 37.84139; -122.10917
Campus Suburban, 420 acres (170 ha)[three]
Colors Red and blue[four]
Nickname Gaels

Sporting affiliations

NCAA Division I – WCC
Mascot Gael
Website www.stmarys-ca.edu
Saint Mary's College CA logo.png

Saint Mary'south Higher of California is a private Catholic college in Moraga, California. Established in 1863, it is affiliated with the Catholic Church and administered by the De La Salle Brothers. The college offers undergraduate and graduate programs with a total student count at under 4,000 as of 2018[update].

History [edit]

St. Mary'south Higher began in 1863 every bit a diocesan college for boys established by the Most Rev. Joseph Alemany, a fellow member of the Dominicans and the first archbishop of San Francisco. I of its first donors was Mary Ellen Pleasant, a famed Black Cosmic philanthropist who gave the school roughly $x,000 in today's money to aid get the school off the basis.[5] [6]

Unhappy with the archdiocese's functioning of the higher, Archbishop Alemany practical for assistance from Rome and in 1868 St. Mary'due south College was handed over to the De La Salle Christian Brothers.[vii]

In 1889, the college moved east across San Francisco Bay to Oakland, California. The location on the corner of 30th and Broadway became affectionately known as "The Brickpile"[8] and Saint Mary's Higher would phone call Oakland domicile until 1928, when it moved further eastward to Moraga after a fire severely damaged the Brickpile. The Oakland site is California Historical Landmark #676 and has been marked by a commemorative plaque.[8] The former San Francisco site is now the site of the St. Mary'south Park neighborhood. The college and loftier school sections separated not long later the move to Moraga and the high school is currently located in Albany.

During its first years in Moraga, the college nearly went bankrupt, only eventually managed to proceeds financial security when it was bought by Archbishop John Joseph Mitty, for whom a residence hall is now named. During World War Ii the college was used by the Usa Navy for the preparation of pilots. Former President Gerald Ford was briefly stationed at the schoolhouse and served every bit a naval teacher.[9] The navy erected many buildings, including the world'southward largest indoor pool, but only ane, Assumption Hall, remains on the campus as the school had trivial utilize for nigh of the buildings later the war. Saint Mary's connected to be a male-only school until 1970,[10] when it became coeducational. Since and so, more than women have come up to the college and by 2011, 62% of the students were women.[eleven]

In the 1970s, the college was well known by secondary schools throughout the San Francisco Bay Area for producing the Saint Mary's Math Contest.[12] The pop contest was discontinued in 1978 simply later became the primary inspiration for the Julia Robinson Mathematics Festival which continues to this day.[13]

Roughly two dozen Christian Brothers still alive and work at the school, and the school presidents had always been Brothers until 2013. Recognizing the dwindling number of Christian Brothers, in 2003 the college's bylaws were changed to allow the election of a not-Christian Brother to the presidency if no qualified Brother exists or steps forward. James A. Donahue, a committed and engaged Roman Catholic, became the first not-Christian Brother to serve every bit president in the 150-year history of Saint Mary'south on July ane, 2013.

Academics [edit]

Brousseau Hall is habitation to the School of Science.

Bookish rankings
Regional
U.S. News & Earth Report [14] 6
Master's University grade
Washington Monthly [fifteen] 106
National
Forbes [xvi] 297
THE/WSJ [17] 193

There are four schools at Saint Mary's: the School of Liberal Arts, the School of Science, the School of Economics and Business Administration, and the Kalmanovitz School of Education. Saint Mary'southward College is a liberal arts institution, and the majority of undergraduate students are in the Schoolhouse of Liberal Arts. However, the most popular major is Business Assistants. This is followed by Psychology, Communication, Kinesiology, and Accounting. The average grade size is nineteen, with a student faculty ratio of xiii:ane. 91% of classes are taught by full-fourth dimension faculty, of which 95% concur the highest degree in their fields.[11] There are 40 academic majors, with an option to create your own major. Most Saint Mary'due south faculty are required to teach vi courses per year (three per semester).

Collegiate seminar [edit]

In addition to these full general pedagogy courses, students must take four Collegiate Seminar or Nifty Books courses. Although based on the academic programs at St. John'southward College, the Saint Mary'south College program consists of but four courses required for all students regardless of major. The first class is offered in the spring of their first year, in the autumn of their sophomore year, and and then students have the selection of when they want to accept the last two courses during their junior and senior years. In that location is too a seminar course created for transfer students then that they can be just as prepared equally their peers in the post-obit seminar courses.

Integral Programme [edit]

Filippi Hall, abode to the Kalmanovitz School of Education.

The Integral Liberal Arts Program is a "higher-inside-a-college",[18] distinct from a major, at Saint Mary's College that incorporates the Seminar method for all of its classes. Information technology was modeled on St. John'due south Higher.[xix] The Integral Program is a complete four-year Keen Books course of study, roofing all mathematics, science, religious and linguistic communication requirements. Instead of taking four classes in addition to the general pedagogy, Integral students' entire curriculum, including subjects not traditionally related to the "classics," is in the Seminar manner. For example, math is taught through reading and discussing Euclid and Galileo, rather than really completing numerical problem sets. Although the Seminar portion of the plan is twice as long (eight semesters vs. four), moves more quickly and covers more material than the Collegiate Seminar program, it is non an honors program.[20] The program does not have any tests or lectures, still students are expected to consummate a substantial amount of reading per nighttime in preparation for classroom discussions. Although seminal works such as the Bible and the writings of some theologians are organic to the Western Catechism, the programme itself is non-religious. Classics from cultures other than western are in the Plan roughly where they were chronologically introduced into western discourse.

While the Integral Program is housed in the School of Liberal Arts and Integral students receive a Available of Arts degree, Integral Liberal Arts students graduate separately from the Liberal Arts majors. Many students go on to graduate school for pre-med or pre-law studies.

Term schedule [edit]

Saint Mary'south has a "4–1–4" system, similar to Middlebury College: fall semester, January Term, and spring semester. Students are given three weeks off for Christmas following autumn semester, one calendar week off following Jan-Term, and one week in the middle of spring semester for Easter. Fall semester usually begins the Monday before Labor Day and runs through the 2nd week of December. Graduation is ordinarily the third or quaternary calendar week of May.

January Term is an academic session in which during the month of January students are required to accept one class and encouraged to take one outside their major. Jan Term classes are more intensive than a normal fall or spring class. Instead of meeting two or three times a week, they meet four times a calendar week for 2 and a half hours. Students must take four Jan Term classes to graduate. This differs from many colleges at which January Term or "Intersession" is optional. Each year, a committee meets to make up one's mind the year'south January Term theme, and the process includes a vote of the final three selections by the community. Classes during January Term range from Shakespeare to Star Trek, and students have the selection to travel away for their January class. There are besides optional quarter credit classes for January Term and during the semesters, such equally digital photography or weight preparation.

Campus [edit]

Aerial view of St. Mary'due south.

St. Mary's historic campus is located in Moraga, California. The majority of the main buildings on campus are built in the California Churrigueresque style, while the remainder of campus is fabricated upwardly of other styles of Spanish Colonial Revival architecture or Mission Revival architecture.

All first-yr students at Saint Mary'due south live on campus. 55% of the full student population lives on campus. There are half dozen first yr residence halls (Augustine, Justin, Mitty, De La Salle, Aquinas and Assumption Halls). All first year residence halls (with the exception of Aquinas) are prepare "customs style," in which two or iii students ordinarily share a room and the unabridged floor shares a central bathroom. Floors are usually separated by sex in first year halls (considering of the shared bathrooms). The but exceptions are Aquinas hall which has students alive in suites with their own bathroom, and the start floor of Assumption, which is coeducational with separate bathrooms for each sex. Currently, starting time years living on campus are guaranteed a spot on campus for their 2d twelvemonth. Sophomores live in Becket Hall, More Hall, Due north and South Claeys Halls, and Ageno A, B, and C Halls. All of these halls are "suite" style living and each suite comes with three or four bedrooms, accommodates six students, and has its ain bathroom and shower. Floors on suite buildings are co-ed. Juniors and seniors enter into a housing lottery to make up one's mind if they can live on campus. Many upperclassmen alive in "townhouse" buildings: Ageno Due east and West, Guerreri East and Westward, Freitas, Thille, Syufy and Sabatte Halls. All townhouses come with two or iii bedrooms (accommodating five to six students), a bathroom and shower, kitchen and living room. Upperclassmen also alive off-campus in Moraga, Orinda, Lafayette, and Walnut Creek. Upperclassmen resident advisers, likewise as a few other upperclassmen, live in the traditionally freshman and sophomore halls. All residence hall rooms are fully furnished and come with two phones with gratis long altitude, free Internet, and free TV cable outlet. Others oftentimes choose to alive at dwelling if they are within one-half an hr of campus. In addition to several student resident advisers, each residence hall too has at least i resident managing director, who is a Brother or a faculty or staff member and lives in the residence hall.

At that place are 4 Living Learning Communities on campus. The Honors/Science living learning community is bachelor only for showtime years and is located in Assumption Hall. Live-in tutors specializing in the sciences and the humanities – along with live-in kinesthesia – help to create this intellectually stimulating and supportive community. The International Community is located in Claeys Hall North, where both international and domestic students can learn skills important in both cantankerous-cultural communication and living globally. The Lasallian Community is a customs of sophomores living in Becket Hall. They participate in a class, service and customs time together and are focused on learning the life and principles of Saint John Baptist De La Salle. The Santiago Community is a customs of juniors and Seniors living in Ageno West who are focused on a Faith, Service, and Community attribute, and learning near Br. James Santiago Miller who died when his work to brainwash the poor came in opposition to the military powers.

The majority of classes are held in Galileo, Dante and Garaventa halls, which each have 3 floors. Most of the professors' offices are likewise in these halls. A science edifice, known every bit Brousseau Hall was congenital in 2000. Sichel Hall is a smaller, media-oriented classroom edifice used by the Communication Department, and Syufy Performing Arts Hall houses big and small practice rooms for arts students. The newest building on campus is Filippi Academic Hall, which houses the Schoolhouse of Instruction. The library, St. Albert Hall, is located near the freshmen dorms.

The cafeteria is called Oliver Hall and its neighbor, Dryden Hall has recently been retrofitted into overflow seating for Oliver Hall and is also used for other events around campus. The Cassin Student Union is a student lounge, adjacent to Dryden. Fastened to Cassin is Café Louis, a java shop, which is operated by Sodexo, the same company that runs the dining hall. Other spaces oft used by students are the Delphine Intercultural Center, the Women's Resource Center and the bookstore.

Athletics facilities include McKeon Pavilion (basketball and volleyball), Saint Mary's Stadium (soccer and rugby), Madigan Gym, Louis Guisto Field (baseball), Cottrell Field (softball) every bit well every bit boosted soccer, rugby and intramural fields. The college likewise operates Timothy Korth Tennis Complex and frequently hosts conference, expanse and regional tennis tournaments. In March 2015, the higher opened the new 50,000-square-foot (4,600 mtwo) Joseph L. Alioto Recreation Center.[21]

2 other of import buildings are the Soda Activeness Middle and the Lefevre Theatre, where various events are held. At that place is also St. Albert Hall Library and the Saint Mary'south Museum of Fine art. All buildings on campus except Assumption Hall are named after an important person in the Catholic faith or a person of import to the school.

There is a cross at the top of a hill on campus and a large concrete "SMC" on top of one of the surrounding hills, which gets painted frequently by educatee groups effectually campus.

Museum of Art [edit]

Interior of the Chapel of St. Mary.

The Museum of Art, originally named the Hearst Art Gallery, is the only accredited art museum in Contra Costa County.[22] The museum houses the largest collection of William Keith paintings.[23]

The Hearst Art Gallery, congenital with the aid of a grant from the William Randolph Hearst Foundation, opened in 1977 to supplant a smaller William Keith Gallery started by Blood brother Fidelis Cornelius. Brother Cornelius was an fine art professor and Keith biographer who had built the Keith Collection and established the original William Keith Gallery at Saint Mary'south in 1934.[24]

Educatee life [edit]

Oliver Hall, the dining hall.

As a Lasallian school, community service plays a big role on campus. The Catholic Institute for Lasallian Social Action coordinates most service work on campus, and each year students perform many hours of community service. On the first Saturday of every other month, they have the opportunity to participate in "Saturday of Service" where Saint Mary's students branch out all beyond the Bay Area and serve their community.

Considering Saint Mary's is located in the Bay Expanse, students have many options of off-campus activities. Pupil organizations such as the Campus Activities Board and the Residence Hall Association transport students to various sporting events, concerts, and activities effectually the Bay Area.

The campus has a chapel in which Mass is held daily on weekdays and twice on Sundays. The main student Mass is on Sundays at viii p.m. There are several priests who work on campus, many of whom also teach classes and there is also a clergyman who regularly officiates mass. It is not a requirement to be Catholic in social club to attend Saint Mary's, and students practise not have to take courses in Catholicism (two general Religious Studies classes are required, an introductory course of the Bible and Its Interpretation and an elective of the student's choosing). Nonetheless around 50% of Saint Mary's undergraduate students are Catholic. Many students are likewise involved in customs service. Most 10 percent of every graduating class goes on to join a major service organization: the Peace Corps, the Lasallian Volunteers, Teach for America, or the Jesuit Volunteer Corps.

The higher has a weekly paper called The Collegian and a radio station, KSMC 89.5. The campus also has access to the Saint Mary's Magazine and the weekly SMC Bulletin.

Athletics [edit]

Alioto Recreation Eye.

Saint Mary's has 17 Partition I teams, competing in the West Coast Conference. The nickname of Saint Mary's sports teams is the Gaels, which had been given to the school's football team in 1926 by Pat Frayne, a writer for the San Francisco Call- Bulletin. The school's previous nickname was the Saints although the baseball game team notwithstanding kept the nickname the Phoenix upwardly until the 1940s.

The men's basketball team is recognized nationally every bit ane of the top mid-major programs in the country; in 2010, information technology fabricated it to the NCAA Sweet Sixteen.

The Gaels are as well known for their strong pursuit of Australian talent, such as NBA players Patty Mills and Matthew Dellavedova. Chants such every bit "Aussie Aussie Aussie, Oi Oi Oi" are common amid students, and an Australian flag now hangs from the back wall of Saint Mary's basketball arena, McKeon Pavilion during games. This has too given the higher a big following in Commonwealth of australia, with nigh basketball game games shown on ESPN Australia/New Zealand. Recently, bespeak guard Matthew Dellavedova was named WCC Player of the Year in 2012 and became the first male athlete at Saint Mary'due south to earn kickoff-team Capital letter One Academic All-America honors. In 2013, he bankrupt schoolhouse records condign the all-time leader in scoring, assists, and three-pointers.

In 2011, the men's soccer squad won the West Declension Conference title, beating the University of San Diego, 1–0, giving Saint Mary's an automatic bid into the NCAA Tournament and their first-ever WCC title.[25] In the first round Saint Mary's defeated No. 25 CSU Bakersfield ane–0[26] to send them to the next round. The second round was played confronting UC Irvine. The Gaels defeated the No. 7 Anteaters, 2–1, in double overtime. The game-winning goal was headed in by Justin Howard in the 103rd minute, sending Saint Mary'southward into the "Sugariness Sixteen".[27] The third round of the NCAA Tournament saw the Gaels confronting Brownish University, beating the Bears in overtime 3–2, at Stevenson Field.[28] The win over the Bears sent the Gaels into the "Elite Eight," making it only the second squad in school history to make it to the Elite Eight along with the 1959 men'southward basketball team. Saint Mary'south lost to the Academy of North Carolina in the Quarter Finals, ii–0.[29] The participation of the men'southward soccer team in the 2011 NCAA Tournament was the most successful postseason run in Saint Mary's history.

View down St. Mary's Parkway.

In 2012, the Gaels' golf team took the program's first-always WCC title, and inferior Ben Geyer became only the 4th Saint Mary's player to accept home medalist honors in the tournament's 41-twelvemonth history. Head motorcoach Scott Hardy earned his seventh WCC Coach of the Twelvemonth honor after leading the team to the 2013 title – the offset dorsum-to-dorsum championship in plan history. He earned his eight WCC Omnibus of the Year honors in 2015.

In 2001, the women's basketball and soccer teams competed in their respective NCAA tournaments, with both teams advancing to the 2nd circular. The women'southward volleyball squad advanced to the "Sweet Sixteen" in 2004. Women's lawn tennis, softball and volleyball won the WCC Briefing championships and went on to play in NCAA postseason tournaments. The 2010 and 2013 women's tennis teams won WCC championships and the program has advanced to 4-direct NCAA tournaments, the virtually consecutive invitations to NCAA tournament play of any Saint Mary'due south athletic program.

Saint Mary's Higher was one time known for its American football squad led past Edward "Slip" Madigan, which dominated west declension football, indeed beating USC and California during the thirties, and with several wins against eastern powerhouses during the 20s, 30s, and 40s including winning the 1939 Cotton wool Basin past narrowly defeating favored Texas Tech xx to 13. The Gaels were known for their flashy style that reflected the personality of their flamboyant autobus. Madigan traveled to New York for the Fordham game with 150 fans on a train that was labelled "the world'southward longest bar." To stir upward publicity for the game, he threw a party the dark before and invited not just sportswriters, but such celebrities as Babe Ruth and New York mayor Jimmy Walker. They dropped the sport in 2004.

Currently, sixty% of the students who attend Saint Mary's are involved with organized athletics. There are 13 gild sports teams that they have the opportunity to participate in as well every bit Intramural teams and NCAA. Student-athletes from Saint Mary's graduate at the second-highest success rate amidst all California Sectionalization 1 Institutions, according to data released by NCAA.[30]

Some other successful sports programme at Saint Mary's is rugby, which, though not well known in the The states generally, is the oldest athletic club at Saint Mary'due south. The men's rugby squad enjoyed a ascension in the by few years and won the schoolhouse's beginning national championship on May 10, 2014, beating Life University 21–6 to win the The states Rugby D1A championship at Stanford University. The squad ofttimes is ranked amongst the top teams in the country, competing with large loftier-profile schools such equally California, Ohio Country, and the military academies. In 2008, it reached the Last Four of the United states Rugby Division 1 National Championship tournament, losing to California 41–31 in the semi-finals, and was as well ranked at #2 in the nation for Division 1 Collegiate Rugby at the flavour's terminate. In 2011, it competed in the National 7s and in 2012, after chirapsia No.1 ranked California twenty –18 in Moraga, the team finished the regular season undefeated in the Pacific Coast Conference and ranked No. 2 in the country. It defeated Utah 25–15 in the D1-A quarterfinals before falling to Arkansas Land in the semifinals. In 2015, the Saint Mary's Men's Rugby team clinched the national D1-A title for the second year in a row when it beat Life University xxx-24 at Kennesaw State Academy in Georgia.

Notable alumni [edit]

Some of Saint Mary's notable alumni include:[31]

  • Rose Aguilar, journalist[32]
  • Mahershala Ali, (1996), onetime Gaels men's basketball player, thespian, two-time Academy Honor winner for Best Supporting Player for his roles in Moonlight and Green Book
  • Joseph Alioto (1937), (december.) former mayor of San Francisco
  • María Elena Durazo, a politician serving in the California State Senate
  • Brother Alfred Brousseau (1928), (december.) mathematician, wrote on the Fibonacci numbers. The recently built scientific discipline edifice is named after him.
  • Corbin Burnes, Major League Baseball game (MLB) pitcher for the Milwaukee Brewers
  • Tom Candiotti (1980), MLB knuckleball pitcher for five teams
  • Adam Caporn, sometime Gaels men's basketball game actor, onetime Australian National Squad member, and electric current[ equally of? ] men's basketball assistant motorbus (left after sophomore twelvemonth to play professionally in Australia)
  • Pete Constant M.A., Councilman for the First Commune, City of San Jose, California
  • Mark Curtis (Doctorate of Education, 2012), news anchor, reporter, author and political analyst at WLNE-TV ABC 6 Providence, Rhode Island. Formerly of KTVU-TV2 Oakland.
  • Bob Delaney M.A., former NBA referee
  • Matthew Dellavedova (2013), 2022 NBA Champion and point guard for the Melbourne United of the NBL and for the Australian National Team
  • Brian Doyle-Murray, American comedian, screenwriter, actor and voice actor
  • Don Ferrarese, professional baseball actor, 1955 to 1962
  • Jim Garrett, NFL passenger vehicle and lookout
  • Tony Gonsolin, MLB pitcher for the Los Angeles Dodgers
  • LaDonna Harris Chiliad.A., Primary Probation Officer, Alameda County, California[33]
  • Robert Hass (1963), Poet Laureate of the United States, 1995–97
  • Von Hayes (1981), MLB All-Star outfielder and minor league director
  • John F. Henning (1938) Executive Secretary-Treasurer of the California Labor Federation and U.S. Ambassador to New Zealand
  • Ken Hofmann (1945), former owner, Oakland Athletics; programmer
  • Harry Hooper (1907), (dec.) Hall of Fame MLB player
  • Bill Howerton, professional baseball player in MLB[34]
  • J. J. Jelincic, CalPERS Board Fellow member (elected), one-time President of the California Land Employees Association
  • John Henry Johnson (1953), Pro Football Hall of Fame
  • Frank Kudelka, (1948), old NBA player[35]
  • Richard E. Ladner (1965), known for Ladner's theorem, Beau of the IEEE and Association for Computing Machinery
  • Bob Ladouceur (1989), head football coach, De La Salle High School in Hold, California, holder of longest loftier schoolhouse winning streak (151 games)
  • Mickey McConnell (2011), WCC Player of the Year, Mid Major All-American, professional basketball game player, 31st round pick in 2011 MLB draft
  • Tony Martin (1935), entertainer; member, Hollywood Walk of Fame
  • John McLiam, Canadian-American player
  • Tom Meschery (1961), professional basketball game role player; teacher and poet
  • George P. Miller (1912), (dec.) Fellow member of Congress from California, 1945–1973
  • Patty Mills, 2022 NBA Champion and point guard for the Brooklyn Nets of the NBA and for the Australian National Squad
  • Pete Morelli, NFL referee and president of St. Mary'due south High School in Stockton, California[36]
  • Troy L. Nunley B.A., Us District Judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California
  • Kaya Oakes (1997), writer, poet, and professor
  • Don Perata (1967), President Pro Tempore and Senator, California State Senate, 1998–2008 (President Pro Tempore 2004–2008)
  • Tami Reller Yard.B.A., Primary Marketing Officeholder and Main Financial Officer, Microsoft Windows
  • Greg Reyes (1984), former Chairman & CEO, Brocade Communication; ownership group, San Jose Sharks
  • Jason Shellen (1996), Internet entrepreneur and founding Google Reader project manager; sits on Saint Mary'due south College Board of Regents
  • Diamon Simpson (2009), basketball role player in the State of israel Basketball game Premier League
  • Melanie Stansbury (2002), scientist and New Mexico state representative
  • Tracee Talavera (1990), gymnastics national champion, Olympic medalist, and USA Gymnastics Hall of Fame member
  • Mark Teahen (2002) MLB third baseman
  • Louella Tomlinson (2011) Australian professional person basketball role player
  • Patrick Wisdom, MLB infielder for the Chicago Cubs
  • Carl Wu (1974), Bloomberg Distinguished Professorship at the Johns Hopkins University[37]

See also [edit]

  • List of World War II military service football teams
  • Association for Core Texts and Courses, headquartered at Saint Mary's
  • Lasallian educational institutions

References [edit]

  1. ^ As of June 30, 2020. U.S. and Canadian Institutions Listed by Fiscal Year 2022 Endowment Market Value and Alter in Endowment Market place Value from FY19 to FY20 (Report). National Association of Higher and Academy Business organization Officers and TIAA. February xix, 2021. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
  2. ^ "SMC President". Saint Mary'south Higher of California. Retrieved August 24, 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d "Nearly SMC – Facts & Figures". Saint Mary's College of California. Retrieved July xi, 2019.
  4. ^ Saint Mary'south College of California Style Guide (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on Baronial 4, 2016. Retrieved April six, 2016.
  5. ^ Branch, Edward. "Blackness Catholic Voices: Church building in the Black Catholic Tradition". Saint Mary'south Higher . Retrieved July 15, 2021. {{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. ^ "St. Mary'southward College Incorporated". San Francisco Chronicle. May 21, 1892. p. 5. Retrieved July xv, 2021.
  7. ^ "Our History". Stmarys-ca.edu . Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  8. ^ a b "Site of Saint Mary'south College". Office of Historic Preservation, California Land Parks. Retrieved March 30, 2012.
  9. ^ "Gael Lore :: Mission and History". Archived from the original on March 9, 2007. Retrieved April ii, 2007.
  10. ^ "2011-2012 Catalog" (PDF). Saint Mary'southward College of California. p. 6. 1970 saint mary's college became coeducational.
  11. ^ a b "SECTION I : FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS" (PDF). Stmarys-ca.edu . Retrieved November xv, 2017.
  12. ^ Saint Mary'southward College Mathematics Contest Problems For Junior and Senior Loftier Schoolhouse. January 1, 1972 – via Amazon.
  13. ^ Getting Kids Excited About Mathematics, I Festival at a Fourth dimension By Colm Mulcahy, Huffington Mail service Blog, July 11, 2013
  14. ^ "Best Colleges 2021: Regional Universities Rankings". U.Due south. News & Globe Written report . Retrieved September 24, 2020.
  15. ^ "2020 Rankings -- Masters Universities". Washington Monthly . Retrieved August 31, 2020.
  16. ^ "America's Top Colleges 2021". Forbes . Retrieved September nine, 2021.
  17. ^ "Wall Street Journal/Times Higher Education Higher Rankings 2021". The Wall Street Journal/Times Higher Education . Retrieved October 20, 2020.
  18. ^ Anderson, Br. Mel, F.South.C, Years of Yearning, 2012, p.65
  19. ^ Isetti, Ronald, On These Promising Shores of the Pacific The History Printing, 2013. ISBN 978-ane-62619-276-8, p. 127
  20. ^ "Home". integralprogram.org . Retrieved July nineteen, 2015.
  21. ^ "Saint Mary's College Announces Construction on New Recreation Corridor". Saint Mary's College of California. May 8, 2011. Retrieved Jan 26, 2012.
  22. ^ "Saint Mary's College Museum of Fine art". Saint Mary'due south College.
  23. ^ "William Keith Collection". Saint Mary'south College.
  24. ^ https://www.stmarys-ca.edu/sites/default/files/attachments/files/Alfred%20Harrison%27s%20Willaim%20Keith%20Article.pdf[ bare URL PDF ]
  25. ^ "MSOC | Gaels Merits WCC Title; Headed To NCAA Tournament - Saint Mary Gaels". Smcgaels.com. November 13, 2011. Archived from the original on November 5, 2013. Retrieved July 19, 2015.
  26. ^ "MSOC | Gaels Defeat No. 25 CSUB In NCAA 1st Round Action - Saint Mary Gaels". Smcgaels.com. November 17, 2011. Archived from the original on November 5, 2013. Retrieved July 19, 2015.
  27. ^ "MSOC | Sugariness Sixteen Bound! Gaels Defeat No. 7 UCI In 2OT - Saint Mary Gaels". Smcgaels.com. November 20, 2011. Archived from the original on November v, 2013. Retrieved July xix, 2015.
  28. ^ "MSOC | Gaels Dancing To The Aristocracy 8! - Saint Mary Gaels". Smcgaels.com. Nov 27, 2011. Archived from the original on November 5, 2013. Retrieved July 19, 2015.
  29. ^ "MSOC: NCAA Tournament Run Ends In N Carolina - Saint Mary Gaels". Smcgaels.com. Archived from the original on Nov five, 2013. Retrieved July nineteen, 2015.
  30. ^ "Division I Graduation Success Rates Search | NCAA.org - The Official Site of the NCAA". Oct 27, 2015. Archived from the original on Oct 27, 2015.
  31. ^ "Notable Alumni of Saint Mary's College of California". Archived from the original on November sixteen, 2007. Retrieved March nineteen, 2007.
  32. ^ "Rose Aguilar". Western Knight Middle for Specialized Journalism. Retrieved June 23, 2012.
  33. ^ "LADONNA HARRIS APPOINTED ALAMEDA COUNTY Main PROBATION Officer" (PDF). Acgov.org . Retrieved November fifteen, 2017.
  34. ^ "Pecker Howerton Stats". Baseball game Almanac. Retrieved December 21, 2012.
  35. ^ "Frank Kudelka NBA statistics". basketball game-reference.com . Retrieved August 10, 2012.
  36. ^ "2014 NFL Fact and Record Book" (PDF). National Football game League. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 5, 2015. Retrieved February 22, 2015.
  37. ^ "Renowned scientist Carl Wu named Bloomberg Distinguished Professor at Johns Hopkins". The Hub. August 3, 2016. Retrieved July 16, 2018.

External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • SMC Athletics website

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Mary%27s_College_of_California

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