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University of Buffalo College of Arts and Science Enrollment and Graduation

Individual Jesuit college in Buffalo, New York

Canisius College
Canisius College seal.svg
Latin: Collegium Canisii
Type Private college
Established 1870 (1870)

Religious affiliation

Roman Catholic (Jesuit)

Academic affiliations

ACCU AJCU NAICU
Endowment $124.v 1000000 (2019)[1]
President John J. Hurley

Bookish staff

Total: 368
(174 total-time/194 part-time)[2]
Students two,630[three]
Undergraduates 1,866[3]
Postgraduates 764[3]
Location

Buffalo

,

New York

,

Us

Campus Urban, 72 acres (29.1 ha)
Colors Blue & gilded[4]
Nickname Gilt Griffins / Lady Griffins

Sporting affiliations

NCAA Division I - MAAC AH
Mascot Petey the Griffin
Website www.canisius.edu
Canisius College logo.svg

Canisius College is a private Jesuit higher in Buffalo, New York. Information technology was founded in 1870 by Jesuits from Deutschland and is named after St. Peter Canisius. Canisius offers more than than 100 undergraduate majors and minors, and around 34 master'south and certificate programs.

History [edit]

"Canisius" has its roots in the Jesuit community that arose from disputed ownership of St. Louis Church in Buffalo in 1851.[5] [6] Rev. Lucas Caveng, a High german Jesuit, along with 19 families from St. Louis Church, founded St. Michael's Church building on Washington St.[6] The college followed, primarily for serving sons of German immigrants, along with the high school in 1870, first at 434 Ellicott St. and next to St. Michael's.[seven] In 1913 construction of the Old Master edifice at 2001 Main St. was completed.[8] The early presidents of the college were German Jesuits.[9]

Campus [edit]

Christ the King Chapel [edit]

Christ the King Chapel, designed by Buffalo builder Duane Lyman,[x] is centrally located to "symbolize its importance".[xi] It was completed in 1951 and has seating for 492.[10]

Science Hall [edit]

Science Hall was built equally a Sears and Roebuck shop in 1929.[12] The college has allocated $68 million for its renovation, over $35 million of which has been raised[thirteen] with aid from the John R. Oishei Foundation.[14]

Scientific discipline Hall Parking Ramp [edit]

The parking ramp originally served the Sears and Roebuck edifice at 1901 Master St. However, throughout the history of ramp, Canisius students accept used information technology for parking, with Sears advertizement in The Griffin that parking was free.[15] [16] Conquering of the property has eliminated parking problems.[17]

Churchill Academic Tower [edit]

The xi-story Churchill Academic Tower was built in 1971, designed by Leroy H. Welch.[18] It is named for its chief benefactor, Rev. Clinton H. Churchill and his wife Francis.[19] The Tower is routinely derided but serves every bit a highly functional space.[xviii]

Andrew L. Bouwhuis Library [edit]

Built in 1957 and upgraded in 1988[twenty] and from 2013 through 2015,[21] Andrew L. Bouwhuis Library, named for Andrew L. Bouwhuis, S.J., college librarian from 1935 to 1955, furnishes extensive area for study and inquiry.[22] It seats 500 people[23] and includes grouping study rooms, an sound-visual listening/viewing surface area, a rare book room, an teaching room, a Curriculum Materials Center, and a lounge,[24] forth with individual study rooms accommodating ane to viii people.

The Koessler Able-bodied Eye [edit]

Located at 1833 Principal Street in Buffalo, the Koessler Athletic Center (KAC) is named afterward J. Walter Koessler, class of 1922.[25] The facility has a swimming puddle, two weight rooms, two gymnasiums, and locker rooms and offices for athletic coaches and back up staff.[26]

Academics [edit]

Canisius offers more than 100 majors, minors, and special programs. The college is accredited by the Middle States Clan Commission on Higher Education, the National Quango for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE), and the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB). In fall 2009, Canisius College introduced a new major in Animal Behavior, Ecology, and Conservation.[27] Other new majors include Creative Writing,[28] Health and Wellness, and Journalism.[29] With the George East. Schreiner '43, Dr., Pre-Medical Centre as an asset,[30] the higher caters strongly to the biological and health science fields and holds close relationships with both the University at Buffalo Schoolhouse of Medicine and the Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine (LECOM).

During the COVID-19 pandemic in July 2020, President John Hurley and the board of trustees made a decision to lay off a number of tenured faculty, including Classics, Chemistry, English, History, Management, Religious Studies, and Philosophy. Several majors were eliminated, including Classics, Entrepreneurship, European studies, Fine Arts, Man Services, International Business, Physics, Religious Studies, and Urban Studies.[31] [32] Some college faculty, students and members of the customs have contested the decision, including two formal votes of no conviction by the college's faculty senate.[33] [34] [35] The move also attracted criticism from numerous academic organizations, including the American Historical Association (AHA) and the Clan for Slavic, East European and Eurasian Studies (ASEEES).[36] [37] Later an almost yearlong investigation, the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) released a report on eight institutions (Canisius College, Illinois Wesleyan University, Keuka College, Marian University, Medaille College, National University, University of Akron, Wittenberg University) that found that "some institutional leaders seem to accept taken the COVID-19 crisis as an opportunity to turbocharge the corporate model that has been spreading in higher education over the past few decades, allowing them to close programs and lay off faculty members as expeditiously as if colleges and universities were businesses whose CEOs of a sudden decided to stop making widgets or close downwards the steelworks".[38] [39] The AAUP recommended that Canisius College be added to its listing of sanctioned institutions due to "substantial noncompliance with standards of academic government".[xl] Several affected tenured faculty members too sued the college for violation of contract.[41] The full bear on of these decisions on the time to come of Canisius Higher remains uncertain.

Rankings [edit]

Canisius earned the 21st spot in the summit tier of U.S. News & World Study's 2022 rankings of America'due south All-time Regional Universities – North.[42] U.Due south. News also ranked Canisius thirteenth in the 2022 "Slap-up Schools, Not bad Prices" listing among regional universities in the North.[43] Canisius earned the 8th spot amongst 49 regional universities in the North in U.S. News' Best Colleges for Veterans Ranking, as well as #4 in All-time Value Schools and #26 in Top Performers on Social Mobility, for 2022.[42] Canisius College alumni ranked first (1st), overall, in New York Land on the 2022 CPA exam cycle, with a 75 pct laissez passer charge per unit, in the category of medium programs.[44]

Educatee life [edit]

Canisius has on campus about xc clubs and organizations, vetted by the Undergraduate Student Association and its Senators. Program offerings include the All-time of Buffalo series, Fusion game nights, the Fall Semi-Formal, the Canisius Royals competition, the Mass of the Holy Spirit with Fall BBQ and Bonfire, Griffin Week, and Griff Fest (formerly "Quad Political party" & "Springfest").[45] [46] With a growing student population in its colleges, Buffalo has begun offering complimentary Culvert-side concerts, along with "Shakespeare in the Park", the Smoothen Broadway Market, Silo Urban center "Boom Days" (on Buffalo'due south industrial history), and Dyngus Day.

Athletics [edit]

The higher sponsors 20 NCAA Division 1 Athletic teams and is a member of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Briefing (MAAC) also as the Atlantic Hockey Conference.[47] Men'south sports include baseball, ice hockey, and golf. Women's sports include volleyball and softball. The Gilt Griffins compete in the NCAA Division I and are members of the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC) for about sports, except for men's water ice hockey which competes in the Atlantic Hockey Association. In 2013, the men'due south ice hockey team won its first Atlantic Hockey Championship, earning a bid to the NCAA Tournament.[ citation needed ] In 2008, Canisius men's lacrosse won the MAAC tournament and earned its first bid to the NCAA Men'south Lacrosse Championship tournament.[48]

The Women'due south Lacrosse team won MAAC Championships 4 years in a row (2010-2014). The 2008 Baseball game team won its showtime regular season MAAC championship, with a 41–13 season, and the following year fabricated its first appearance in the MAAC Championship game.[49] In 2013, the team won the MAAC Title and received its offset bid to the NCAA tournament. The Canisius College softball team won the 2009 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference tournament for its 3rd sequent championship, marking the squad'southward 11th trip to the NCAA tournament in 15 years.[50] In its rivalry with Niagara University Canisius won the Canal Cup two of the first three years (2008 and 2009).[51] Intramural sports are too offered for students, kinesthesia, and staff.

Canisius' mascot is the Golden Griffin. The college adopted the griffin every bit a mascot in 1932, after Charles A. Brady ('33) wrote a story in a Canisius publication honoring Buffalo'due south centennial year as a city. Brady wrote well-nigh Jesuit-educated explorer Rene-Robert LaSalle'southward Le Griffon, which was congenital in Buffalo. The griffin was first used on the La Salle medal in 1932 and from there spread to the college newspaper and sports teams.[52] [53] [54] [55] According to GoGriffs.com, the griffin is a "legendary creature with the body, tail, and back legs of a lion; the head and wings of an eagle; and an eagle's talons as its front feet." It represents values such equally courage, boldness, intelligence, and strength conforming students and athletes akin.

The college was as well the first home field of the Buffalo All-Americans of the early National Football game League. Around 1917 Buffalo manager Barney Lepper signed a charter for the team to play their home games at Canisius College. The All-Americans played games at Canisius before relocating to Bison Stadium in 1924.[ citation needed ]

In 2022 Canisius College was one of more than 90 colleges investigated by the Department of Education's Office of Civil Rights for its handling of sexual assault and harassment complaints.[56] In 2021, three former female student athletes filed a federal lawsuit in the Western District of New York alleging a hostile surround and that the college "failed to take appropriate activeness in response to these reports and complaints of sexual harassment, abuse and sexual assail".[57] [58]

Greek life [edit]

Canisius College's fraternities and sororities are overseen by the Canisius College Office of Student Life. The three college-approved Greek organizations on campus are the Lambda affiliate of the fraternity Sigma Phi Epsilon (SigEp), the sorority Phi Sigma Sigma, and the professional person system Alpha Kappa Psi (AK Psi).[59] Also there is a Classics Club which fosters interest in the study of ancient Greek and Roman history, linguistic communication, and culture; it hosts events like readings and discussions of ancient texts, Saturnalia, and alcohol-free toga parties. The society fosters the Jesuit value of a Classical instruction, equally well as cura personalis.[sixty]

Media [edit]

The pupil weekly paper is The Griffin, which replaced The Canisian in 1933 and went online in 2013.[61] [62] The almanac Quadrangle mag contains student writings, artwork, and photographs. The Azuwur is the college yearbook. Public-access tv cable Television broadcasts to Canisius Higher from its fourth flooring studio at Lyons Hall. The WIRE, replacing WCCG, is the college's radio station, which broadcasts over the campus television system and is online through the college website.[63] The Courier is a magazine-mode opinion-orientated publication, begun in 2006. It allows students to freely express their opinions, nevertheless controversial.[64]

ROTC [edit]

Canisius College is the Reserve Officer Training Corps hub for Western New York. The Golden Griffin Battalion is composed of students from Canisius, Academy at Buffalo (UB), Hilbert Higher, D'Youville College, Daemen College, Medaille College, Buffalo Country College, and Erie Customs Higher.

Public safety [edit]

Canisius College Public Safety[65] Officers are sworn Peace Officers pursuant to New York Country Criminal Procedure Law section 2.10-72[66] and perform many of the aforementioned duties every bit whatsoever traditional Police force Section. Each Officer receives law enforcement training which meets or exceeds the New York State Segmentation of Criminal Justice Services requirements for Peace Officers and they are authorized to comport firearms. Officers are authorized to enforce all Federal, State, and Local laws, equally well equally the rules and regulations of the college, and they do brand arrests. Officers also perform a broad range of other duties which include: vehicular and foot patrol, criminal investigation, dispatch, welfare checks, start-aid and CPR, motorist assistance, and escorts.

Notable alumni [edit]

Canisius has approximately 40,000 living alumni worldwide who are working in the fields of business, journalism, government, law, medicine, and sports.

Academia [edit]

  • James Demske, Southward.J. (Class of 1947), President of Canisius College (1966–1993)[67]
  • Steven Seegel, Ph.D. (Class of 1999) - Professor of Slavic and Eurasian Studies at University of Texas at Austin[68]

Business concern [edit]

  • John Rowe (Class of 1966), sometime chairman and CEO of Aetna
  • Dennis F. Strigl (Class of 1974), President and CEO of Verizon Wireless
  • Mary Wittenberg, (Form of 1984), President and CEO of the New York Road Runners

Journalism and television [edit]

  • Anne Burrell (Course of 1991), Nutrient Network chef
  • Norm Hitzges (Course of 1965), Texas Radio Hall of Fame, SportsRadio 1310 The Ticket, Power Versatile - Dallas, TX
  • Elizabeth MacDonald (Class of 1984), Gerald Loeb Award and multiple other awards winning financial journalist with The Wall Street Journal, anchorwoman on Play a joke on Business, appeared on NBC'south The Today Show, ABC's World News This night, Outnumbered, Your World with Neil Cavuto, CBS This Morning, C-Bridge, Court TV, ABC News Radio, NPR, and others
  • Todd McDermott, (Course of 1983), Emmy Honor-winning news anchor at WPIX-Television receiver, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
  • Michael Scheuer (Form of 1974), CBS News terrorism analyst, former CIA Chief of the Bin Laden Effect Station and author of Imperial Hubris

Regime and law [edit]

  • John Thomas Curtin (Class of 1946), erstwhile US Chaser and Federal Judge for the Western Commune of New York
  • Charles Southward. Desmond (Form of 1917), former Chief Judge of the New York Court of Appeals*
  • John J. LaFalce (Class of 1961), former US Representative for New York
  • Walter J. Mahoney (Class of 1930), former Majority Leader of the New York State Senate and New York Supreme Court Judge*
  • Salvatore R. Martoche (Class of 1962), New York Country Supreme Court Justice and former Banana Secretary of the United States Treasury and Labor Departments
  • Anthony M. Masiello (Form of 1969), former Mayor of Buffalo, New York
  • Richard D. McCarthy (Course of 1950), former US Representative for New York*
  • James T. Molloy (Class of 1958), sometime Doorkeeper, US House of Representatives*
  • Henry J. Nowak (Course of 1957), quondam Usa Representative for New York
  • Denise O'Donnell (Form of 1968), one-time US Attorney for the Western Commune of New York
  • William Paxon (Class of 1977), former United states Representative for New York
  • William M. Skretny (Class of 1966), Federal Judge for the Western Commune of New York
  • Lawrence J. Vilardo (Class of 1977), Federal Judge for the Western District of New York
  • Frank A. Sedita (Class of 1930), sometime Mayor of Buffalo, New York*

Medicine and science [edit]

  • Donald Pinkel (Class of 1947), pediatric cancer researcher; former Managing director of the St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

Psychology [edit]

  • Paula Caligiuri, Distinguished Professor of International Business and Strategy at D'Amore-McKim School of Business, Northeastern University

Sports [edit]

  • Cory Conacher, NHL player for the Tampa Bay Lightning, Ottawa Senators, Buffalo Sabres and New York Islanders
  • Bob MacKinnon (Class of 1950), former NBA Head Autobus and Full general Director of the New Jersey Nets
  • Chris Manhertz (Class of 2015) NFL tight end for Jacksonville Jaguars
  • Johnny McCarthy (Class of 1956), member of the 1963–64 NBA Champion Boston Celtics
  • Gerry Meehan, former NHL role player and Full general Manager of the Buffalo Sabres
  • Dick Poillon, fellow member of the 1942 NFL Champion Washington Redskins and Pro Bowl choice
  • Michael Smrek (Grade of 1985), member of the 1986–87 and 1987-88 NBA Champion Los Angeles Lakers
  • Beth Phoenix, professional wrestler, Class of 2022 WWE Hall of Famer, onetime WWE Divas Champion & three-fourth dimension WWE Women's Champion
  • Matt Vinc, iii-fourth dimension NLL Champion 2012, 2013, 2022 for the Rochester Knighthawks
  • Eyal Yaffe (Course of 1986), basketball player in the Israeli Basketball Premier League

See also [edit]

  • List of Jesuit sites

References [edit]

  1. ^ https://apps.irs.gov/pub/epostcard/cor/160743942_202005_990_2021041417943415.pdf[ bare URL PDF ]
  2. ^ "2017-xviii Common Information Set" (PDF). Canisius.edu . Retrieved July nine, 2018.
  3. ^ a b c "Enrollment at a Glance" (PDF). Canisius.edu . Retrieved November 19, 2021.
  4. ^ "Canisius Higher Style Guide 2014". Retrieved August 18, 2017.
  5. ^ "St. Michaels' RC Church". buffaloah.com . Retrieved August 18, 2017.
  6. ^ a b "ST. MICHAEL'Due south Church building, JESUITS' ORIGINAL Base of operations; IN Expanse, TO Marker 150TH Year WITH MASS." Buffalo News (New York). (September 29, 2001 Saturday, Final EDITION ): 863 words. LexisNexis Bookish. Web. Date Accessed: 2016/05/03.
  7. ^ "MASS TO Mark 125TH YEAR OF CANISIUS Higher, HIGH." Buffalo News (New York). (September 16, 1994, Friday, City Edition ): 240 words. LexisNexis Academic. Web. Date Accessed: 2016/05/03.
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  10. ^ a b "Canisius College - Christ the King Chapel". Archived from the original on September 4, 2012. Retrieved November five, 2015.
  11. ^ "Christ the King Chapel | Canisius College". Canisius.edu . Retrieved November 5, 2015.
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  13. ^ "Canisius Higher president donates $250,000 toward Science Hall." The Buffalo News (New York). (December 17, 2022 Wed ): 359 words. LexisNexis Academic. Web. Date Accessed: 2016/05/03.
  14. ^ "Science Hall". Canisius.edu. Archived from the original on December 2, 2015. Retrieved Nov two, 2015.
  15. ^ The Griffin: volume 15, effect 04 - Nov. 7, 1947 pg. 5
  16. ^ The Griffin: volume 16, issue 04 - Nov. five, 1948 pg. 5
  17. ^ "Canisius' purchase expands campus." Buffalo News (New York). (November 22, 2008 Saturday ): 329 words. LexisNexis Academic. Web. Date Accessed: 2016/05/03.
  18. ^ a b "Unloved, perchance, but standing tall; Canisius College Amherst 50 Delaware Ave. 200 Niagara St. Downtown Buffalo 701-705 Maple Road, Amherst 1425 Main St. 153 Franklin St. 1300 Elmwood Ave.." The Buffalo News (New York). (March 8, 2022 Sunday ): 1999 words. LexisNexis Academic. Spider web. Appointment Accessed: 2016/05/03.
  19. ^ "FRANCES G. CHURCHILL, PHILANTHROPIST, SUPPORTER OF ARTS; EDUCATION, DIES AT 82." Buffalo News (New York). (January 23, 1999, Sat, FINAL EDITION ): 687 words. LexisNexis Academic. Web. Date Accessed: 2016/05/03.
  20. ^ "FATHER DEMSKE HONORED FOR SERVICE TO CANISIUS COLLEGE AT GRADUATION." Buffalo News (New York). (May 22, 1993, Saturday, Final Edition ): 734 words. LexisNexis Bookish. Web. Appointment Accessed: 2016/05/03.
  21. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on August 6, 2016. Retrieved May 3, 2016. {{cite spider web}}: CS1 maint: archived re-create as title (link)
  22. ^ "Who IS Andrew 50. Bouwhuis, S. J.? - Andrew 50. Bouwhuis Library". library.canisius.edu . Retrieved August 18, 2017.
  23. ^ "Near the Library". Canisius Andrew L. Bouwhuis Library. Archived from the original on Nov xiii, 2015. Retrieved November 3, 2015.
  24. ^ "Nigh the Library". Canisius Andrew L. Bouwhuis Library. Archived from the original on November 13, 2015. Retrieved November 4, 2015.
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  26. ^ "Sports & Athletic Facilities". April 29, 2016. Retrieved August 18, 2017.
  27. ^ "Creature Behavior Ecology and Conservation - Canisius College". canisius.edu . Retrieved April 5, 2015.
  28. ^ "Creative Writing". canisius.edu . Retrieved Apr 5, 2015.
  29. ^ "Journalism". canisius.edu . Retrieved April v, 2015.
  30. ^ "Pre-Medical and Pre-Health Professions". Canisius College. September twenty, 2016.
  31. ^ "COVID roundup: Colleges revert to virtual fall, Canisius and Carthage programme faculty layoffs". world wide web.insidehighered.com . Retrieved July 23, 2020.
  32. ^ Reporter, Thomas J. Prohaska News Staff. "Canisius College, citing $xx million deficit, lays off 96 employees". The Buffalo News.
  33. ^ Anstey, Evan (July 23, 2020). "Canisius College President, Board of Trustees receive "no confidence" vote". WIVB. Retrieved July 25, 2020.
  34. ^ https://twitter.com/canisiusgriffin/condition/1365335829862899715 [Retrieved June 18, 2021]
  35. ^ "Opposition mounting against planned layoffs & cuts at Canisius College". WKBW. July 23, 2020.
  36. ^ https://www.historians.org/news-and-advocacy/aha-condemns-tenured-kinesthesia-layoffs-at-canisius-(july-2020) [Retrieved June 18, 2021]
  37. ^ https://academeblog.org/2020/09/28/aseees-argument-of-concern-regarding-firing-of-faculty-without-due-procedure-and-loss-of-programs/ [Retrieved June 18, 2021]
  38. ^ AAUP Report 'COVID-xix and Academic Governance' https://www.aaup.org/report/covid-19-and-academic-governance [Retrieved June 18, 2021]
  39. ^ 'AAUP Finds Major Erosion in Shared Governance During COVID-nineteen' https://world wide web.insidehighered.com/news/2021/05/26/aaup-finds-major-erosion-shared-governance-during-covid-xix. [Retrieved June 18, 2021]
  40. ^ 'Canisius Among Half-dozen Other Colleges to Join the AAUP List of Sanctioned Institutions'. https://www.griffinnewspaper.com/post/canisius-amidst-six-other-colleges-to-bring together-the-aaup-southward-list-of-sanctioned-institutions. [Retrieved June 18, 2021]
  41. ^ 'Not Going Quietly' https://world wide web.insidehighered.com/news/2021/02/23/canisius-professors-fight-keep-tenure [Retrieved June eighteen, 2021]
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  43. ^ "Ranking". colleges.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com . Retrieved Oct 21, 2019.
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  45. ^ "Events". Archived from the original on September 14, 2009. Retrieved December 27, 2009.
  46. ^ http://www.canisius.edu/images/userImages/danieu1/Page_12311/utd_102309.pdf Archived July nineteen, 2010, at the Wayback Auto
  47. ^ "Division 1 Sports". Canisius.edu. April 29, 2016.
  48. ^ "Canisius routs VMI, earns MAAC championship and NCAA bid". InsideLacrosse.com. May 4, 2008. Archived from the original on May 17, 2008. Retrieved May v, 2008.
  49. ^ "Baseball History & Records - The Official Spider web Site of Canisius Higher Athletics". gogriffs.com . Retrieved Apr 5, 2015.
  50. ^ "Softball History & Records - The Official Web Site of Canisius College Athletics". gogriffs.com . Retrieved April 5, 2015.
  51. ^ "Boxing of the Bridge - The Official Web Site of Canisius College Athletics". gogriffs.com . Retrieved Apr 5, 2015.
  52. ^ "THE Proper name GAME; NICKNAMES FOR LOCAL TEAMS Pass THE TEST." Buffalo News (New York). (May 20, 1996, Monday, City EDITION ): 1397 words. LexisNexis Academic. Web. Date Accessed: 2016/05/03.
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  55. ^ "LaSalle-Griffon.org". greatlakesexploration.org. Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved August 18, 2017.
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  57. ^ 'Lawsuit Accuses Canisius College of Assuasive Rape Culture on Running Teams' https://www.wkbw.com/news/local-news/lawsuit-accuses-canisius-higher-of-allowing-rape-civilisation-on-running-teams [Retrieved xix June 2021]
  58. ^ 'Lawsuit Claims Canisius College Discriminated Against Female Athletes' https://world wide web.insidehighered.com/quicktakes/2021/04/22/lawsuit-claims-canisius-college-discriminated-against-female-athletes [Retrieved 19 June 2021]
  59. ^ "Canisius College Greek Life". Archived from the original on May 3, 2016.
  60. ^ "Classics Guild: CanisiusCollege". Canisius Higher. Archived from the original on April 11, 2015. Retrieved May 3, 2013.
  61. ^ http://world wide web.canisius.edu/archives/about_griffin.asp Archived June 19, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  62. ^ "Effect-filled day gets passing grade". Canisiusgriffin.com . Retrieved February six, 2013.
  63. ^ "The Wire - Canisius College Radio". Comdma.com. Archived from the original on Apr ten, 2015. Retrieved April 5, 2015.
  64. ^ http://www.canisius.edu/campus_leader/faq.asp#newspaper Archived February 25, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  65. ^ "Public Condom | Campus Life | Canisius College". Canisius.edu . Retrieved February 25, 2016.
  66. ^ "Commodity 2 - Criminal Procedure Law - Peace Officers". ypdcrime.com . Retrieved August 18, 2017.
  67. ^ Step, Eric (June 17, 1994). "James Demske, 72, A Jesuit Priest Who Led Canisius College". The New York Times . Retrieved July 28, 2017.
  68. ^ https://liberalarts.utexas.edu/slavic/faculty/ss98865

External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • Canisius Athletics website

Coordinates: 42°55′31″N 78°51′10″W  /  42.92528°North 78.85278°Westward  / 42.92528; -78.85278

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canisius_College

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