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Information About

University Of Louisville




  motto Dare to be great
  established 1798
  type Public
  president Dr James R Ramsey
  city Louisville
  state KY
  country USA
  undergrad 15,103
  postgrad 6,738
  faculty 2,074
  staff 3,875
  campus Urban
  mascot Cardinals
  colors Red <font color="#D42E12">█</font> and Black <font color="#000000">█</font>
  endowment $6803 million, FY 2006http://phplouisvilleedu/news/newsphpnews=660
  affiliations Big East Conference
  website wwwlouisvilleedu


The University of Louisville (also known as '''U of L''') is a public, state-supported 2006

The University of Louisville Hospital is one of the most prestigious 2006
in the world, and in 1999 performed the first successful 2006 U of L is also credited with developing the Pap Smear test, the first civilian Ambulance , the nation's first accident services, now known as an Emergency Room (ER), and the first Blood Bank in Louisville.http://www.louisville.edu/ur/ucomm/mags/summer2000/cover_story.html

Since 1999, U of L has made the largest gains of any university in 2006 As of 2006 among public U.S. Universities , the Melanoma clinic ranks third, the Neurology research program fourth, and the Spinal Cord research program 10th in NIH funding.

The school's main campus, known locally as the Belknap Campus, is located in the historic 2007

U of L is also known for its successful athletics program. The Louisville Cardinals are the only men's basketball program in the history of the game to win an NCAA championship (1980 and 1986), an NIT championship (1956) and an NAIB championship (1948). Since 2000, U of L has won a BCS Bowl Game , appeared in the men's basketball Final Four and the College Baseball World Series , and won a national championship in Track And Field .


ACADEMICS AND INNOVATIONS


University of Louisville faculty and alumni have been a part of several notable firsts and innovations, including:


The University of Louisville offers bachelor's degrees in 70 fields of study, masters' degrees in 78 fields of study, and doctorate degrees in 22 fields of study. The school's admission standards are considered "more selective" by '' 2006

]]
Academically, U of L boasts a School of Business that is ranked among the top 7 percent in the nation, a dental school ranked in the top 10 regularly according to board scores, 2006 among only 21 schools in the U.S. to offer a Graduate Degree in Pan-African Studies , and among the first five to require public service in its Law School curriculum.

The Brandeis Medal is awarded by the law school's Louis D. Brandeis Society, and is given in tribute to Brandeis, a former U.S. Supreme Court justice from Louisville and the namesake of the university's law school.

U of L has historically had many such outreach programs in Western Kentucky, but without controversy since the school has traditionally had a strong alumni and Fan Base there.

In 1998, the university celebrated its Bicentennial .


HISTORY


Founding and early years: 1798-1845

on the Belknap Campus]]

The University of Louisville traces its roots back to 1798http://www.louisville.edu/about/history.html URL accessed on 2006 UofL is among the first municipally supported colleges in the U.S.

Eight years later, in 1837, the Louisville City Council established the Louisville Medical Institute at the urging of renowned physician and medical author Charles Caldwell . After his dismissal from Lexington's Transylvania University , Caldwell would lead the LMI into becoming one of the best Medical School s west of the Allegheny Mountains . In 1840, the Louisville Collegiate Institute , a rival medical school, was established after a LMI faculty dispute. It opened in 1844 on land near the present day Health Sciences campus.


History as a private municipal university: 1846-1969

In 1846 the Kentucky legislature combined the Louisville Medical Institute, the Louisville Collegiate Institution, and a newly created law school into the University of Louisville, on a campus just east of Downtown Louisville . The LCI folded soon afterwards. The university would experience rapid growth in the 20th century, adding new schools in the liberal arts (1907), Graduate Studies (1915), Dentistry (1918), Engineering (1925), Music (1932) and Social Work (1936).

In 1923, the school purchased what is today the Belknap Campus, where it moved its liberal arts programs and law school, with the medical school remaining at the downtown campus. The school had attempted to purchase a campus donated by the Belknap family in The Highlands area in 1917 (where Bellarmine University is currently located), but the plan was rebuffed after a tax increase to pay for it was voted down. However, the school chose to name the new Eastern Parkway campus after the Belknaps for their efforts.

In 1931, U of L purchased the Louisville Municipal College for Negroes (est. 1879 and now Simmons College Of Kentucky ), as a compromise plan to desegregation. As a part of U of L, the school had an equal standing with the school's other colleges. It was dissolved in 1951 when U of L Desegregated .

In the second half of the 20th century, schools were opened for Business (1953), Education (1968), and Justice and administration (1969).


History as a public university: 1970-present


Talk of U of L joining the public 2006

The first years in the public system were difficult, as enrollment skyrocketed while funding was often insufficient. Several programs were threatened with losing accreditation due to a lack of funding, although schools of Nursing (1979) and urban & Public Affairs (1983) were added.


Shumaker era 1995-2002

'' statue by Auguste Rodin ]]
John Shumaker was named U of L's president in 1995. Shumaker was a very successful Tom Jurich, who restored an athletics program facing NCAA violations and Title IX lawsuits. Jurich raised over $100 million to raze abandoned factories and old parking lots adjacent to campus and replace them with state-of-the-art on-campus athletic facilities with beautiful landscaping, which vastly improved the aesthetics of the Belknap Campus. Cardinal Park is now admired by thousands who pass daily on nearby Interstate 65.

An important development during the Shumaker years was the state mandate change in 1997. Previously, the school was legally bound to have a large percent of non-traditional students. The new mandate was more vague, and simply stated the school should be "a preeminent urban research university." With the new mandate and a much improved campus, U of L began enrolling more traditional students from outside Jefferson County. In 1990, 73 percent of students were from Jefferson County, by 2005 that number had fallen to 50 percent. In 1995, the school's endowment became the largest in the public system, and in 2000 UofL joined the University Of Kentucky as the only public universities to enroll students from every Kentucky county.


Ramsey era 2002-present

The school's current and 27th president is James R. Ramsey , the former state budget director. Ramsey has continued the endowment and fund raising growth started by Shumaker, but added more emphasis on improving the aesthetics of the Belknap Campus. To this end, he started a million dollar "campus beautification project" which painted six overpasses on the Belknap Campus with a 'U of L theme' and planted over 500 trees along campus streets, doubled the number of on-campus housing units, brokered a deal with the state to get the outdated I-65 ramps redone, and oversaw the ongoing conversion of several abandoned factories into condominiums. The school's federal Research Funding has also doubled under Ramsey, and three buildings have been built for nanotechnology and medical research. He is also recognized for being able to keep Tom Jurich as athletic director, with speculation that Jurich would go elsewhere. UofL's Retention Rate s have also increased from 30 percent in 1999 to 40 percent in 2006.

UofL's growth has created strained relations with the other public schools, especially the University of Kentucky. In 2005, UK officials accused U of L of "mission creep" after president Ramsey met with a 2006 However, public opinion and the media in the rest of state supported the idea of a cooperative research center, which caused UK to soften its stance. Today, a center between the two schools in Pikeville is in the talking stages. Several months later, Somerset U.S. Congressman Hal Rogers requested that a federal disease laboratory be located in Somerset with UofL and UK as its caretakers.


UPS tuition reimbursement and Metropolitan College

In addition to their nationwide partial tuition reimbursement programs, 2006 of the workers at the air hub are students.


Schools and colleges


The university now consists of 12 different schools and colleges (year founded):


THE CAMPUSES

The university has three campuses:


Belknap Campus

is a frequent attraction at the University]]
Acquired in 1923, the Belknap Campus (pronounced "Bel-nap" with the K silent) is considered the school's main campus. It is located three miles south of downtown Louisville in the Old Louisville neighborhood. It houses seven of the 12 academic colleges and contains one of Auguste Rodin 's few remaining "The Thinker" statues in front of the main administrative building, Grawemeyer Hall. The tallest buildings on the Belknap Campus are University Tower and Unitas Tower, both 11 stories.

The Belknap Campus has expanded greatly in recent years, with land housing abandoned factories in the area being purchased and redeveloped. Projects built since 1998 include Papa John's Cardinal Stadium and adjacent Trager Center fieldhouse, Owsley B. Frazier Cardinal Park (which includes Ulmer Stadium for softball, Trager Stadium for field hockey, Cardinal Track and Soccer Stadium, Bass-Rudd Tennis Center, locker rooms, a playground and a cushioned walking path), Jim Patterson Stadium for baseball, Ralph R. Wright Natatorium, Owsley Brown Frazier Sports Medicine Center, and a lacrosse stadium. With new parking at Papa John's Cardinal Stadium, non-resident parking was moved there and the Parking Lot s near campus were redeveloped with new dormitory buildings, including the Bettie Johnson Apartments , Kurz Hall (commonly called Phase 2), Minardi Hall, and Community Park . U of L has developed the campus almost entirely with private funding and by using private companies to build and run the new residential halls since the state has offered little financial help for the projects.

Other points of interest on the Belknap Campus include the Rauch Planetarium , the Covi Gallery of the Hite Art Institute, and the final resting place for former U.S. Supreme Court Justice Louis D. Brandeis under the portico in the Brandeis Law School. Surrounded by, but not part of the campus, are the Speed Art Museum , a private institution not affiliated with the University of Louisville, and the Confederate Civil War Monument , located at the juncture of 2nd and 3rd streets, which honors Confederate Civil War dead; this was built there before the school grew to surround the land it stands on, which is owned by Louisville Metro . The Kentucky State Data Center , the state's official Clearing House for census data and estimates, is located next to Bettie Johnson Hall.




Development projects


Several important projects are under construction or planned in the near future, including the reconstruction of the I-65 ramps to the Belknap Campus, converting the four lanes of Eastern Parkway into a two-lane road with bike lanes and a landscaped median to improve pedestrian access to the Speed School , the moving of several university offices to allow the existing facilities at Arthur Street and Brandeis Avenue to be converted to Commercial Property and restaurants, and the conversion of the old macaroni factory on Floyd Street into a condominium complex which will include five acres of commercial property. Nearly completion is the Yum! Center (a men's basketball and volleyball practice facility). A 12,000 square-foot Olympic Sports training/rehab center adjacent to Trager Stadium is also under construction.

Long-term plans include reconstruction of the 3rd Street railway tunnel between Winkler Avenue and Eastern Parkway, purchase of the Standard Oil Building at 450 West Cardinal Boulevard to provide more on-campus parking, improvement of Stansbury Park, and conversion of the former Reynolds Building on 4th Street into a mixed-use commercial and residential project. Planned improvements to athletic facilities include revamping the rowing facilities at Phase II of Waterfront Park and expansion of Papa John's Cardinal Stadium to 63,600 seats.


Health Sciences Center


The U of L Health Sciences Center, also called the med campus, is located just east of Downtown Louisville in the Louisville medical park which contains three other major hospitals and several specialty hospitals, and it houses the remaining five colleges. This is the school's original campus, being continuously used since 1846, although none of the original buildings remain. Buildings of note on the HSC include the fourteen story Medical Research Tower and the ten-story University Hospital . Construction is finished for a recently-opened, downtown Louisville Cardiovascular Research Innovation Institute building to be directed by a researcher, Stuart Williams from the University Of Arizona ; and an eight story, $70 million Biomedical Research building. Faculty and students also work with neighboring hospitals including Jewish Hospital and Kosair Children's Hospital, as well as outreach programs throughout Kentucky, including in Paducah , Campbellsville , and Glasgow .


Shelby Campus

The Shelby Campus is located on Shelbyville Road near Hurstbourne Parkway in Eastern Louisville. This campus was originally the home of Kentucky Southern College, a . The ITRC conducts communications and IT research for the U.S. Department Of Homeland Security as well as seminars and training in Emergency Preparedness and response.http://www.TheiTRC.com


Panama campus and other facilities

The University of Louisville also runs a sister campushttp://www.louisville.edu/a-s/cml/las/channing/ in 2006
U of L recently opened another MBA program in Athens , Greece .

The school also operates the Moore Observatory in Oldham County , which is used for space viewing. There are also plans to purchase several hundred acres in Oldham County for the school's Equine program.


Libraries


The University of Louisville library system is a member of the 2006 which robotically places books in humidity-free bins.

There are five other libraries at the university, with a combined total of more than 400,000 volumes of work:

The old Kersey Library Building will be converted to an academic building for the J. B. Speed School Of Engineering . The Kersey Library collection was fully integrated into Ekstrom Library on January 15, 2007.


MEDIA

One main criticism of the university is that, despite being in a large city, it has no university-controlled television station and no student-operated Radio Station . However, U of L does hold a prominent role in the city of Louisville's "Public Radio Partnership" which features three NPR stations under one roof. The school holds one-third of the seats on the Partnership's Board Of Directors .

The school formerly controlled its namesake station, WUOL, but that station is now the Classical Music part of the Partnership.

There is also an independent student-run Weekly Newspaper , '' The Louisville Cardinal ''. The newspaper was originally founded in 1926, and has maintained financial and editorial independence since 1980. The newspaper, which is overseen by a board of local media professionals and run by a student Editor In Chief , is one of the few truly independent college/university newspapers in the country.


GREEK LIFE


''Coming soon a complete list of all organizations on campus.''

;Sororities

;Fraternities


ENROLLMENT STATISTICSHTTP://WWW.LOUISVILLE.EDU/ABOUT/PROFILE.HTML URL ACCESSED ON JUNE 8 2006


Undergraduate student body

  • Total enrollment is 21,841 as of Fall 2006.

  • 79.7% of students are Kentucky residents.

  • 48.8% of students are from Jefferson County (down from 64% in 1995)

  • Average ACT Score: 24.2 (up from 20.7 in 1995)http://php.louisville.edu/news/news.php?news=660

  • 6 year graduation rate: 40.6% (up from 33% in 2004)http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061006/NEWS0104/610060359

  • 15,804 Full Time

  • 6,037 Part Time

  • 46.8% Male

  • 53.2% Female



Demographics

  • 77.4% White

  • 10.9% African American

  • 5.2% Other Minorities

  • 5.4% Non Resident Aliens

  • 1.1% Unknown



Top 15 counties for enrollment, Fall 2006 (Largest city in county)

#
#
#
#


Top five non-U.S. countries for enrollment, Fall 2006



# India 148
# Egypt 69
# Canada 41


Top five non-Kentucky states for enrollment, Fall 2006


# Florida 132
# Tennessee 121
# Georgia 114

  • ---Panama enrollment due mostly to UofL's Panama City campus, which offers a full time MBA program.http://europe.vault.com/graddegree/school/school_main.jsp?program_id=13707&co_page=2&ch_id=255&tlist=&pt=3


  • --Beginning in 1998, UofL began offering in-state tuition to residents of Clark, Floyd, Harrison, Washington, and Crawford counties in Indiana http://louisville.edu/ur/ucomm/mags/winter99/journal.html



NOTABLE ALUMNI AND FACULTY, ATHLETIC ALUMNI, AND LIST OF PRESIDENTS

See Also: List of University of Louisville people




ATHLETICS

See Also: Louisville Cardinals



The title and the 2007 Orange Bowl , U of L's first-ever BCS bowl game.

In addition to U of L's traditionally strong fan base in Louisville, Southern Indiana , and Western Kentucky (particularly in the cities of Bowling Green , Paducah , and Owensboro ), UofL's fans are now coming from other parts of the state, especially in the Northern Kentucky and the Lexington / Frankfort areas. U of L currently has radio affiliates throughout the state. Since 2004, all U of L games and coaches' shows on WHAS-TV Louisville have been televised on every cable provider in Kentucky.

The total sales of U of L merchandise has tripled since 2001, now ranking 27th nationally in sales, second highest in the Big East Conference and the third highest among all urban universities (Southern California and Miami). Since 1997, the school has spent more than $150 million (all from private funding) in upgrading its sports facilities. Since 2004, U of L has won conference titles in eight sports. U of L currently fields 13 women's teams and 10 men's teams.





TRIVIA


  • U of L Marching Band Trumpet Player Patrick Henry Hughes has made international headlines because he is blind and Wheel Chair bound. His father has to push his wheel chair to do the band routines. Hughes has been featured on NPR, ABC, and BBC World News, which has produced a tremendous emotional response from their viewers and listeners.

  • The U of L marching band has performed " My Old Kentucky Home " at nearly every Kentucky Derby since 1936.

  • U of L has more registered college License Plates than the University of Kentucky (18,300 to 17,000); a fourfold increase since 2004.http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061021/NEWS01/610210358



SEE ALSO



REFERENCES


  • Kleber, John "The Encyclopedia of Louisville" pp 902-903 History of the University of Louisville



EXTERNAL LINKS




  place University of Louisville Belknap Campus
  north Old Louisville
  south South Louisville
  east St Joseph
  southeast Bradley
  west South Louisville
  hide-neighborhoods yes


  place University of Louisville Health Sciences Campus
  north Ohio River
  south Smoketown
  east Phoenix Hill
  west Downtown Louisville