University of North Texas

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University of North Texas
Image:Flying-worm.gif
Home of the Flying Worm
Motto Semper ubi, sub ubi
Established During Spanish rule in Texas?
Image:Nintendo_seal.gif
School type Public (invite a friend!)
President Raj from "What's Happenin?"
Location Denton, Texas, USA
Campus Steppe prairie
Enrollment 32,000 undergraduates, 6,000 overgraduates,
Billions and billions served
Endowment $42.38
Faculty 18 full-time, 3,000 part-time
Mascot Disputed

The University of North Texas (UNT) is a public four-year university located in Denton, Texas.

Contents

[edit] History

Students of the University of North Texas pose for a photo with "Vinnie," a short-lived mascot in 1995.
Students of the University of North Texas pose for a photo with "Vinnie," a short-lived mascot in 1995.

The University of North Texas, formerly North Texas State University, formerly North Texas State College, formerly North Texas State Teachers College, formerly North Texas Normal College, formerly Texas Normalcy College, formerly College-college Bo-bollege Banana-fana-fo-follege Fi-fi-fo-follege Coll-ege, formerly Collegia del San Jesus, has uncertain origins.

No documents exist from the time of its founding, but oral tradition states the university began as a training school for Monks during the period of Spanish rule of Texas. Its founder, Mario Lopez, gave 780,432,378 Spanish pesos (USD $416, adjusted for inflation in the year 2000) for the construction of a monastery and institution of higher learning for residents of the parched, grassy prairie the Cherokee called Ozi-ma Tuka-ha, loosely translated "The Land of Bad Air."

The student population stayed in the low teens, as the starving pupils -- after being financially exhausted from their first year at the college during a period when King Raul III deregulated tuition -- went in search of the mythical City of Gold, or "Ciudad de Oro." Others left due to severe allergic reaction to the pollen from the various grasses and nearby Cross Timbers. The wayward, cash-strapped monks-in-training found, instead of the City of Gold, a colony of Inuit igloos made of yellow snow in what is now far northern Canada in the extended panhandle territory of the Republic of Texas. Ironically, this became their cash cow.

That contact resulted in the first exchange program of the struggling college. By the time of the Mexican Revolution, the college was nearly 71 percent Eskimo. Students learned the ways of the Inuit and brought back skills and barrels of dried whale flesh which helped the college get by in the lean century to come.

A map, adopted from a much older map, highlighting where the Denton campus of Collegia del Jesus (now University of North Texas) is in relation to its former Far North Texas Extension Campus and Igloo Research Laboratory.
A map, adopted from a much older map, highlighting where the Denton campus of Collegia del Jesus (now University of North Texas) is in relation to its former Far North Texas Extension Campus and Igloo Research Laboratory.

The college came near disbandment in 1836 following the Texas Revolution. Untouched by the bloody and firey conflict to the south, the also cash-strapped Republic of Texas traded the college's pristine adobe mission-style facilities (including its Far North Texas extension campus and igloo research laboratory) for what later became Greer County, Texas. Texas President Sam Houston brokered the deal. Alamo survivor Aloyssious Ferdinand de San Luis Obispo Peluche continued to instruct pupils in his ranch house until his death circa 1890. It was then that students invented Jolly Ranchers candy to comfort mourners and to honor their longtime mentor.

Following the death of Peluche, the university was retconned by Joshua "Sparky" Chilton as a teacher training institute. Chilton, a noble woodsman who built the entire 1890 campus by hand with trees chopped down in what is now Rayzor Ranch, made the bold move to admit women. This move was wildly popular with the monks and the student population steadily grew in the years to come.

Since the college's re-inception, the institution has had its name modified several times to reflect its growth and change, and once in the '60s to attract students who were fans of a popular song titled "The Name Game."

[edit] General Information

With an enrollment of more than 32,000 students, UNT is the largest university in north Texas and the fourth largest in the formerly independent and sovereign nation of Texas -- that's half the size of Denton Bible Church.

The university is a member of the Federation of North Texas Area Universities, offering various graduate and overgraduate degrees in coordination with Texas Woman's University and Texas A&M University-Commerce; and the United Federation of Planets. It may also be accredited.

A ficus tree was admitted to the university in the Fall semester of 1998 -- the first Chlorophyl-American to enter a U.S. public university or college. The tree never finished its first semester, making its leave later that fall.

It has a dead albino squirrel zombie[1].

[edit] Robocop

Aside from its top-notch music program, noted athletics department, and over-whelming sense of school pride, The University of North Texas is also noted for its most prestigious alumni, Robocop. Robocop played Peter Weller in the film Some Jackass' Life and was totally badass. There's a scene where Peter Weller has to kill some guy, but there's this weird thing in his programming that prevents him to, but then this other guy fires the guy he wants to kill, and then Peter Weller kills the first guy. Its a weird/good film.

But if you, the reader, were curious, Robocop majored in Women's Studies with a minor in Hot Titties. His GPA was 1.69, but he spent a lot of time partying so its kind of excused. He still managed to graduate summa cum laude, but he made sure cum was pronounced come, because he thought that would be sexier. Damn.

[edit] Legends and Myths

[edit] Indian Burial Ground

The original site for the University of North Texas was thought to have been built on an Indian burial ground. After Indians and the ACLU protested, the university was forced to say it was built on a Native American burial ground. Academicians became involved in the dispute, and the original site was ultimately determined to be built over a Western-Hemispheric/Native Peoples of America (Amerindian) burial ground.

Shortly after the name change of the burial site, what was left of the original adobe building and its environs was destroyed by a fire, presumably started by "dead injun spirits," according to the Denton Record-Chronicle.

[edit] Ship Wreckage

After sonar discovered debris of a possible shipwreck at the bottom of Lake Lewisville, researchers triangulated its position directly beneath the fraternity house of Alpha Phalfa. Upon excavation, the "shipwreck" was determined to be a large beer keg, cracked in half due to misuse and submerged in its own suds in the house's backyard.

[edit] The Ghost of Don Henley

After the university built the residential Bruce Hall in 1947, the ghost of Don Henley, avid musician and stamp collector, was seen roaming the empty hallways by the local residents. Legend has it that Henley, with the ghosts of Marvin Lee "Meatloaf" Aday and Norah Jones, haunts the hallways to feed on the souls of freshmen. This legend is complicated by the fact that Henley is not quite dead and did not even attend the university until the late '60s (and then it was on a dare). Some historians argue that when Henley dies (along with any other famous musical alumni), his ghost will be sent back in time to haunt Bruce Hall as punishment for the university stifling academic freedom because it's foundations were poured over the dead bodies of Republican Party-affiliated music professors.

[edit] The Curse of the Mean Green

Bruce Banner, the university's first athletic director, ran over a gypsy coming home from the football team's first away game (against Texas University in the Soviet Republic of Austin) after losing the the TU Fightin' Cows 572-0. The gypsy cursed Banner with her dying breath to turn into a giant green monster causing wanton destruction whenever the university loses a sporting event. This monster was originally called the Incredible Hulk, but was uncreatively renamed to the "Mean Green" by the university's marketing department after Stan Lee stole parts of Banner's life story to create the comic book character of the same name.

This curse passes on from athletic director to athletic director, but the process of how this works is unknown.

The current bearer of the curse, Rick Villarreal, pseudo-successfully attempted to change the mascot from the eagle to himself (in "Mean Green" form). Under the pretext of there being hundreds of universities with an eagle mascot but only two with mascots based on cursed administrators, he threatened to consume a live squirrel a day for three days unless the university crowned him as "mascot for life" and commissioners a gold statue to be built by the Union of him mauling children. He would also refuse to be chained up during sporting games (a tradition based in pragmatism). The university compromised by keeping the eagle as a token mascot while putting "Mean Green" on all merchandise that matters and suppressing all other potential mascots, including the albino squirrel, the fightin' jack rabbit, the dragon, Gary Coleman, Robocop, the Flying Worm, and "Vinnie."

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