University of Louisville
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| University of Louisville | |
| Image:Logo-ul.gif | |
| Motto | Dare to be great |
|---|---|
| Established | 1798 |
| School type | Public |
| President | Dr. James R. Ramsey |
| Location | Louisville, KY, USA |
| Campus | Urban |
| Enrollment | 14,707 undergraduate, 5,898 graduate |
| Faculty | |
| Athletics | Cardinals |
| Colors | Red █, and Black █ |
| Homepage | www.louisville.edu |
The University of Louisville (UofL) is a public, state-supported university located in Louisville, Kentucky.
Contents |
History
The University of Louisville traces its roots back to April 3, 1798 when eight men set out to establish the Jefferson Seminary and began fundraising. Their idea came to fruition slowly, the Seminary finally being established in 1813, and left just as quickly, being closed in 1829.
In 1837 the Louisville Medical Institute (LMI) opened and the Louisville Collegiate Institute (LCI) was chartered. In 1840 the LCI opened and in 1844 it gained control of the land previously belonging to the Jefferson Seminary. In 1846 the Kentucky legislature combined the LMI, the LCI, and a newly created law school into the University of Louisville. The LCI would fold soon afterwards, leaving just medicine and law as the studies.
In the first half of the 20th century many new schools and colleges were added to the university that still exist to this day including a new liberal arts school (1907), a graduate school (1915), as well as colleges for programs in dentistry (1918), engineering (1925), music (1932) and social work (1936).
A college for black students, the Louisville Municipal College for Negroes, was established in 1931, but it was dissolved in 1951 when the university was desegregated.
In the second half of the 20th century, schools were opened for business (1953), education (1968), justice administration (1969), nursing (1979), and urban & public affairs (1983).
In 1970 the university joined the state system because of financial difficulties caused by people deciding to leave the municipality and live in suburbs. In 1998 the university celebrated its bicentennial.
Facts and figures
The 274 acre (1.1 km²) Belknap Campus, located three miles (5 km) from downtown Louisville near Old Louisville, is the University's primary campus. There are two other local campuses: Shelby Campus located in eastern Louisville and Fort Knox Campus located in Fort Knox, Kentucky. Classes are offered in many remote locations, including Panama, Hong Kong, Cairo, Egypt, and Athens, Greece.
The university now consists of 12 different schools and colleges:
- Brandeis School of Law
- College of Arts and Sciences [1]
- College of Business and Public Administration
- College of Education and Human Development
- Graduate School
- J. B. Speed School of Engineering
- Kent School of Social Work
- School of Dentistry
- School of Medicine
- School of Music
- School of Nursing
- School of Public Health and Information Sciences
Nationally, the University of Louisville is known for its strong programs in engineering, law, business and medicine.
There are six libraries at the university, with a combined total of over 1,900,000 volumes of work:
- William F. Ekstrom Library (the main library)[2]
- The Art Library [3]
- Dwight Anderson Memorial Music Library
- Kornhauser Health Sciences Library
- Laura Kersey Library of Engineering[4]
- Law School Library
- Margaret M. Bridwell Art Library
The Kersey library is being converted to an academic building that will be part of the J. B. Speed School of Engineering. Plans are to move the entire collection of the Kersey engineering library to the main library on campus, Ekstrom Library, before 2007.
As of 2004, the current president is Dr. James R. Ramsey, former director of the budget for Kentucky. He is the 17th president of the University of Louisville. Enrollment for 2003 was 21,464 students, and there are over 100,000 living alumni in the world. The student newspaper is The Louisville Cardinal. The school's mascot is the cardinal, and the school colors are red, black, and white.
Famous alumni
Famous people who graduated from U of L include:
- David Akers, football player
- Harriette Simpson Arnow, author
- James Gilbert Baker, astronomer and optician
- Terry Bisson, author
- Ray Buchanan, football player
- Paul Cameron, controversial researcher
- Mark Clayton, football player
- Christopher Dodd, U.S. Senator
- Bob Edwards, NPR correspondent
- Pervis Ellison, basketball player
- Sue Grafton, author
- Henry D. Hatfield, politician
- Stefan LeFors, football player, Quarterback: Carolina Panthers
- John A. Logan, politician and Civil War soldier
- Mitch McConnell, U.S. Senator, Republican, Kentucky
- Marsha Norman, Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award winning author
- Adam Smith, Kentucky politician
- Johnny Unitas, football player, former Quarterback: Baltimore Colts
- Wes Unseld, basketball player and coach
- Erik Watts, professional wrestler
Sports
The University of Louisville is part of the NCAA's Division I, and became a member of the Big East Conference in July 2005. UofL had previously been a member of Conference USA.
The school is most well known for its basketball program which gained prominence under Denny Crum who led the team to the NCAA Division I basketball championship in 1980 and 1986. Perennial rivals include the University of Cincinnati and the University of Kentucky (UK). Adding fuel to the rivalry with UK was the Cardinals' hiring of Rick Pitino, the former UK head coach, as head coach in 2001.
Louisville football is a emerging program under head coach Bobby Petrino. In the 2004-05 season, the Cardinals went 11-1, missing out on a potential BCS berth by failing to hold a late lead against Miami in a midseason game. They were widely tipped as favorites to win the Big East football title in their first year in the conference, but an early season loss to South Florida has cooled some of those hopes.
External links
| Big East Conference Football: Cincinnati | Connecticut | Louisville | Pittsburgh Rutgers | South Florida | Syracuse | West Virginia Non-football: DePaul | Georgetown | Marquette | Notre Dame Providence | St. John's | Seton Hall | Villanova | Image:Big East new.gif | |
Categories: University of Louisville | Louisville education | Schools of Medicine in the United States



