Jesuit Ivy
The "Jesuit Ivy" is a nickname given to Boston College in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. The term was coined in a 1956 commencement address by then-Massachusetts Senator John F. Kennedy. Speaking at the Jesuit university, he was likely making reference to the Ivy League which had been formally established two years prior, in 1954. The term "Jesuit Ivy" was somewhat of a paradox. The Ivy League's members were generally Protestant-founded institutions; Boston College had itself been founded in part because Catholics were being denied admission to Harvard University in the nineteenth century. The nickname suggested both Boston College's rising stature and the declining prevalence of discrimination at elite American universities. Himself a Catholic whose family were longtime Boston College benefactors, Kennedy graduated from Harvard in 1940.
There are other notable Jesuit schools which have a reputation for excellence. Georgetown, Notre Dame and College of the Holy Cross all have a long history of academic accomplishment.