Points of Pride
At Hofstra University, pride is not just a feeling, it's about being part of a community that celebrates the contributions of each member. Taken together, these Points of Pride tell the story of Hofstra, from its founding in a single building in 1935 to the world-class institution that it is today.
Hofstra has more than 136,000 alumni, who are spread throughout all 50 states and more than 100 countries.
Hofstra has about 20 research centers through which students can work with professors on scholarly projects in their fields of study.
Hofstra's annual Shakespeare Festival is performed on the most historically accurate replica of Shakespeare's Globe Stage in the US. The Globe replica is erected each year by students in the Toni and Martin Sosnoff Theater at Hofstra's John Cranford Adams Playhouse. The Playhouse is named for the University's second president, who was a Shakespearean scholar and founder of the Festival.
Law clinics at Hofstra's Maurice A. Deane School of Law, which provide high-quality legal representation to clients in need, were among the first of their kind in the nation.
Hofstra's John Cranford Adams Playhouse – built to house the University's annual Shakespeare festival – was named after the University's second president, who was a Shakespearean scholar and founder of the Shakespeare Festival.
Dr. Sabrina G. Sobel, PhD, chair of the chemistry department, collaborated with her chemist father to develop Cold-Eeze, the zinc lozenge cold remedy.
Hofstra has had two Rhodes Scholar finalists: Joe Burg '13, a math and physics major and star pitcher on the baseball team, and Dr. Hilarie Cranmer '89, a physician and professor at Harvard University.
Hofstra University alumnus Bob Rozakis '73 is the author of more than 400 DC Comics books, including one that depicted a fight between Robin and the Joker's daughter atop the "Hudson University" Unispan.
Hofstra has a tulip named for it. The Hofstra University Tulip was designated and presented to Hofstra by Dr. Cornelius Boertien, commissioner for the Queen of the Netherlands to the Province of Zeeland, in 1985.
Six presidents have visited Hofstra: Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, George Bush, Bill Clinton, Barack Obama and Donald Trump.
Hofstra has an observatory on the roof of Berliner Hall with Celestron telescopes and computerized CCD cameras.
Hofstra is among only a few universities in the country that feature two mascots: Kate and Willie Pride, a lioness and lion who are named after University benefactors Kate and William Hofstra.
More than 75 percent of the class of 2015-16 completed at least one internship before they graduated.
Hofstra's libraries contain over 1 million volumes and provide 24/7 online access to more than 100,000 full-text journals and 200,000 electronic books.
Bestselling thriller author Nelson DeMille, whose works include Word of Honor and The General's Daughter, is a graduate of Hofstra's political science and history programs.
Dr. Robert Leonard, PhD, director of Hofstra's graduate programs in forensic linguistics, is one of the world's foremost experts in the field and was also a founding member of the doo-wop music group Sha Na Na. The graduate forensic linguistics program is the first of its kind in the Western Hemisphere.
The interactive off-Broadway show Tony n' Tina's Wedding began as a gag among Hofstra students who, upon graduation, took their playful improv to off-Broadway, launching a new theatrical genre that remains popular to this day.
Hofstra students come from all over the world: 50 states and territories and 82 countries.
New York State's 54th comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli '76 – a former New York assemblyman – is a magna cum laude graduate who majored in history.
Hofstra was one of the first private universities in the country to achieve 100 percent program accessibility for people with disabilities.
Hofstra is the only private college on Long Island that grants the Phi Beta Kappa – the nation's oldest honor society – distinction.
The average undergraduate class at Hofstra is 21 students per class, and our student:faculty ratio is 14:1.
Hofstra became Long Island's first private university, on March 1, 1963.
Hofstra University was founded as an extension of New York University in 1935, and was housed in single building – Hofstra Hall - that still stands today on the south campus.
The first African-American governor of New York, Honorable David A. Paterson, is an alumnus of Hofstra's Maurice A. Deane School of Law.
Ninety-three percent of Hofstra faculty members hold the highest degree attainable in their field.
In 2015, Hofstra created the Peter S. Kalikow School of Government, Public Policy and International Affairs, a new school devoted to training the next generation of public policy leaders.
Civil rights leader Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was commencement speaker in 1965 and received an honorary degree.
The Peter S. Kalikow Center for the Study of the American Presidency at Hofstra University is one of a very few institutions in the country with a unique focus on the presidency.
Two Hofstra alumni have played James Bond villains. Academy Award winner Christopher Walken, who was an English major at Hofstra, appeared in A View to a Kill, and Robert Davi, a drama major, was in Licence to Kill.
Hofstra law professor Alafair Burke is a bestselling author of 16 crime novels, several of which she collaborated with "Queen of Suspense" Mary Higgins Clark.
The Hofstra women's lacrosse program has seen four student-athletes named to the USA National Team (Stephanie Clarke '97, Kim Hillier '07, Corrine Gandolfi '10 and Katie Hertsch '11) and one to Team Wales (Maisie Osteen ‘08).
The Lawrence Herbert School of Communication is named for alumnus Lawrence Herbert, the inventor of the Pantone Matching System.
Billy Joel delivered the commencement speech to Hofstra's Class of 1997, and was awarded an honorary degree.
Phil Rosenthal, creator, writer and executive producer of the Emmy-winning sitcom "Everybody Loves Raymond," and his wife, Monica Horan, who played Ray's sister-in-law, are both Hofstra alums.
New York Yankees President Randy Levine is a graduate of the Maurice A. Deane School of Law, and a member of Hofstra's Board of Trustees.
Physics professor Dr. Stephen Lawrence, PhD, was part of the research team that discovered a new, more accurate way to measure the distance of novae, the nuclear explosion of a star system, from earth.
In 1939, the Dutch ambassador to the U.S. left his country's flag with Hofstra for safekeeping during World War II, and the insignia inspired Hofstra's school colors, the university seal and coat of arms.
Hofstra is the host university for the ROTC Program on Long Island.
American anti-war activist Ron Kovic, who was portrayed by Tom Cruise in the Academy Award-winning film Born on the Fourth of July, is a Hofstra alum.
Hofstra has been named to the President's Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll (2008-2015).
Hofstra is among only three schools in the New York metropolitan area with colleges of law, medicine and engineering.
The Hofstra men's basketball program has produced six NBA draft selections: Bill Thieben '56, Fort Wayne Pistons; Rich Laurel '77, Portland Trailblazers; John Irving '77, Detroit Pistons; Craig "Speedy" Claxton '00, Philadelphia 76ers; Charles Jenkins '11, Golden State Warriors, and Justin Wright-Foreman '19, Utah Jazz.
WRHU-88.7 FM has been the flagship station of the NHL's New York Islanders since 2010.
Hofstra wrestling alum Nick Gallo won the 126 lb. weight class at the 1977 NCAA National Championship and went on to become a member of the 1976 and 1980 U.S. Olympic Freestyle Wrestling teams.
Hofstra has 270 clubs and organizations that offer myriad student leadership opportunities.
Emmy Award-winning actor and drama alum Joe Morton, best known for his role as the sinister Eli Pope in the hit ABC series Scandal, returned to campus for Hofstra's 68th Annual Shakespeare Festival in 2017.
Hofstra's Frank. G. Zarb School of Business was the first Long Island business school to receive accreditation from AACSB International, a rigorous certification that attests to how well Hofstra prepares its graduates for today's global business environment.
The Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell is the first medical school in New York state to establish a chapter of the Osler Society, a worldwide organization for health professionals that offers programming in music, art and other creative outlets.
Dennis W. Mazzocco, PhD, professor of radio, television and film, is a nine-time Emmy Award winner, a board member of the Directors Guild of America (DGA) and received the guild's 2012 Franklin J. Schaffner Achievement Award for career achievement.
Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Stephen Dunn is an alum of Hofstra's history program.
Dr. Oskar Pineño, assistant professor of psychology at Hofstra, made it more affordable to study animal behavior by creating a low-cost Skinner box that uses an iPod Touch.
Twenty-eight percent of incoming first-year students in Fall 2017 were in the top 10 percent of their high school class.
Former NASDAQ chairman Frank G. Zarb, for whom Hofstra's business school is named, was CEO of the NASDAQ stock exchange during the dot-com boom of the late 1990's. He served five presidents – Nixon, Ford, Reagan, Bush and Clinton, most notably as "energy czar" for President Ford.
Hofstra offers more than 180 undergraduate program options, more than 190 graduate program options and more than 100 dual-degree programs.
NY1 News anchor/reporter Kristen Shaughnessy '90 graduated from Hofstra's journalism program.
Hofstra holds 27 academic and 30 total accreditations.
The Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell is housed in the former training facility for the New York Jets, located on the north campus.
The Lawrence Herbert School of Communication has state-of-the-art production and post-production facilities, including the News Hub, which is a converged multimedia classroom. And in 2015, the school became the first university worldwide to use Hitachi's innovative 4K-technology cameras in its broadcast curriculum.
The Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell is among just a few medical schools in the country that trains first-year students to become emergency medical technicians.
Hofstra's cheerleading and dance teams are among the best in the nation, capturing a combined 16 national championships since 2003.
Hofstra's Fred DeMatteis School of Engineering and Applied Science launched a co-operative educational program in 2015, giving qualified students real work experience at engineering and technology firms.
Ninety-nine percent of the 2015-16 graduating class is employed or pursuing graduate studies.
Hofstra became Long Island's first private university, on March 1, 1963.
Dr. Donna Mendes earned a degree in biology from Hofstra in 1973 and went on to become the first female African American vascular surgeon in the United States.
Hofstra alum Charles Dryden '55 was one of the first African American military pilots in the U.S. Armed Forces during WWII.
Professor Emerita of English Ruth Prigozy is considered one of the world's leading experts on the life and work of F. Scott Fitzgerald and helped found the F. Scott Fitzgerald Society.
Law professor Monroe Freedman was a legal ethics and civil rights scholar who is credited with establishing legal ethics as an academic field.
The School of HHealth Sciences (originally the School of Health Professions and Human Services, founded in 2012, brought renewed energy and an interdisciplinary focus to the University's health professions curriculum. It has internship and networking affiliations with more than 300 off-campus healthcare and educational facilities in Long Island and New York City.
At least 29 members of Hofstra's faculty have been Fulbright Scholars.
Actress Madeline Kahn ‘64, twice nominated for an Academy Award, attended Hofstra on a drama scholarship.
Yonia Fain, Hofstra Fine Arts History Professor Yonia Fain was an internationally acclaimed artist, poet, author, and educator known for using powerful imagery to pay tribute to the memories of those lost in the Holocaust.
Hofstra and China's Dongbei University of Finance and Economics in 2016 launched a program that offers students bachelor's degrees from both institutions and a summer internship in China. It is one of the only programs of its kind in the US.
Since 1991, the Joan and Arnold Saltzman Community Services Center has provided cutting-edge therapies to the public, and unique research and training opportunities to students.
Maureen Murphy, professor emerita of Teaching and Curriculum and former director of the Irish Studies program, is a premier scholar of Irish history who led the development of the New York State Great Famine Curriculum and is the historian of the Irish Hunger Memorial in Lower Manhattan.
Novelist Oscar Hijuelos was a Hofstra faculty member in 1990, when he won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction for his book, The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love. It was later made into the movie The Mambo Kings, starring Antonio Banderas.
Unispan Highlights
Hofstra's Unispan connects the north and south campus, and features a high-profile display of people and events from throughout the University's history, which represent Points of Pride for Hofstra. Though they will be rotated on the walls of the Unispan, they will be available on this page for posterity.
- 75th anniversary in 2010 with Ace of Cakes replica of Unispan and Library
- Center for Civic Engagement
- Craig “Speedy” Claxton
- Dorothy Cohen
- Norman Coleman ‘71
- Community Service
- Francis Ford Coppola ‘60
- DeMatteis School of Engineering and Applied Science
- Herbert Deutsch ’58
- Thomas P. DiNapoli ’76
- Charles Dryden ‘55
- Yonia Fain
- Fall Festival
- Focus on the U.S. presidency
- Monroe Freedman
- Fulbright Scholars
- Global Education
- Bob Greene
- Eleanor “Ellie” Greenwich ‘62
- Guru Nanak
- Lawrence Herbert ‘51
- Honors College
- Maurice A. Deane School of Law
- Dr. Donna Mendes ‘73
- Meeting the Need for Health Professionals
- Joe Morton
- Robert O. “Bobby” Muller ’68, ’74
- Maureen Murphy
- Network of Success
- Partnering with Northwell Health
- Ruth Prigozy
- The Pride Network
- Irwin Redlener ‘64
- Phil Rosenthal ‘81
- Debra Sandler ‘82
- Shakespeare Festival History and Globe Theater
- Spirit Support
- Tony n’ Tina’s Wedding
- George H. Williams ‘39, ‘69
- WRHU
- Frank G. Zarb ‘57, ‘62