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University of Louisville

The University of Louisville (UofL) is a public research university in Louisville, Kentucky. It is part of the Kentucky state university system. When founded in 1798, it was the first city-owned public university in the United States and one of the first universities chartered west of the Allegheny Mountains. The university is mandated by the Kentucky General Assembly to be a "Preeminent Metropolitan Research University".[9] It enrolls students from 118 of 120 Kentucky counties,[10] all 50 U.S. states, and 116 countries around the world.[11]

University of Louisville
Former names
Jefferson Seminary
(1798–1829)
Louisville Medical Institute
(1837–1840)
Louisville College
(1840–1846)
TypePublic research university
EstablishedApril 3, 1798; 225 years ago (April 3, 1798)
AccreditationSACS
Academic affiliations
Endowment$883.6 million (2022)[1]
Budget$1.3 billion[2]
PresidentKim Schatzel[3]
ProvostLori Stewart Gonzalez[4]
Academic staff
1,776 full-time, 764 part-time[5]
Administrative staff
4,585
Students23,043 (Fall 2022)[6]
Undergraduates16,121 (Fall 2022)[6]
Postgraduates6,099 (Fall 2022)[6]
Location, ,
United States

38°12′54″N 85°45′37″W / 38.21500°N 85.76028°W / 38.21500; -85.76028
CampusLarge city[7], Belknap: 345 acres
HSC: 62 acres
Shelby: 233 acres
Total: 640 acres (2.6 km2)
Other campuses
NewspaperThe Louisville Cardinal
Colors  Cardinal red
  Black[8]
NicknameCardinals
Sporting affiliations
NCAA Division I FBSACC
MascotLouie the Cardinal
Websitewww.louisville.edu

Louisville is classified among "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very high research activity".[12] The University of Louisville School of Medicine is touted for the first fully self-contained artificial heart transplant surgery,[13] as well as the first successful hand transplantation in the United States.[14] The University Hospital is also credited with the first civilian ambulance, the nation's first accident services, now known as an emergency department (ED), and one of the first blood banks in the US.[15]

University of Louisville is known for the Louisville Cardinals athletics programs. Since 2005, the Cardinals have made appearances in the NCAA Division I men's basketball Final Four in 2005, 2012, and 2013 (vacated), football Bowl Championship Series Orange Bowl in 2007 (champions) and Sugar Bowl in 2013 (champions), the College Baseball World Series 2007, 2013, 2014, 2017 and 2019, the women's basketball Final Four in 2009 (runner-up), 2013 (runner-up), and 2018, and the men's soccer national championship game in 2010.[16] The Louisville Cardinals Women's Volleyball program has three-peated as champions of the Big East Tournament (2008, 2009, 2010), and were Atlantic Coast Conference Champions in 2015 and 2017. Women's track and field program has won Outdoor Big East titles in 2008, 2009 and 2010 and an Indoor Big East title in 2011.

History Edit

Founding and early years: 1798–1845 Edit

 
Criminal Justice Building

The University of Louisville traces its roots to a charter granted in 1798[17] by the Kentucky General Assembly to establish a school of higher learning in the newly founded town of Louisville. It ordered the sale of 6,000 acres (24 km2) of South Central Kentucky land to underwrite construction, joined on April 3, 1798, by eight community leaders who began local fund raising for what was then known as the Jefferson Seminary. It opened 15 years later and offered college and high school level courses in a variety of subjects. It was headed by Edward Mann Butler from 1813 to 1816, who later ran the first public school in Kentucky in 1829 and is considered Kentucky's first historian.[18]

Despite the Jefferson Seminary's early success, pressure from newly established public schools and media critiques of it as "elitist" would force its closure in 1829.[18]

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. As he had earlier at Lexington's Transylvania University, Caldwell rapidly led LMI into becoming one of the leading medical schools west of the Allegheny Mountains. In 1840, the Louisville Collegiate institute, a rival medical school, was established after an LMI faculty dispute. It opened in 1844 on land near the present day Health sciences campus.[citation needed]

 
The University of Louisville School of Medicine opened in 1837.

As a public municipal university: 1846–1969 Edit

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 experienced 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).[citation needed]

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 downtown. 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 a citywide tax increase to pay for it was voted down. The Belknap Campus was named after the family for their efforts. In 1926, the building that would later be dedicated as Grawemeyer Hall, was built.[19]

 
Grawemeyer Hall was built in 1926

In 1931, the university established the Louisville Municipal College for Negroes on the former campus of Simmons University (now Simmons College of Kentucky), as a compromise plan to desegregation. As a part of the university, the school had an equal standing with the school's other colleges. It was dissolved in 1951 when the university desegregated.[20]

During World War II, Louisville was one of 131 colleges and universities nationally that took part in the V-12 Navy College Training Program which offered students a path to a Navy commission.[21]

In the second half of the 20th century, schools were opened for business (1953), education (1968), and justice administration (1969).[citation needed]

As a public state university: 1970–present Edit

Talk of Louisville joining the public university system of Kentucky began in the 1960s. As a municipally-funded school (meaning funding only came from the city of Louisville), the movement of people to the suburbs of Louisville created budget shortfalls for the school and forced tuition prices to levels unaffordable for most students. At the same time, the school's well-established medicine and law schools were seen as potential assets for the state system. Still, there was opposition to the university becoming a state institution, both from faculty and alumni who feared losing the small, close-knit feel of the campus, and from universities already in the state system who feared funding cuts that would be necessitated to accommodate UofL. After several years of heated debate, the university joined the state system in 1970, a move largely orchestrated by then Kentucky governor and UofL alumnus Louie Nunn.[22]

The first years in the state 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.[citation needed]

John W. Shumaker was named the university's president in 1995. Shumaker was a very successful fund raiser, and quickly increased the school's endowment from $183 to $550 million. He developed the REACH program[23] to encourage retention. In 1997, he hired athletics director Tom Jurich, who restored the athletics program and raised over $100 million to raze abandoned factories and old parking lots next to campus and replace them with on-campus athletic facilities, which vastly improved the aesthetics of the Belknap Campus. Academically, Louisville moved closer to parity with the state's flagship University of Kentucky as retention rates and research funding increased, and average GPAs and ACT scores were much higher for incoming freshmen.[citation needed]

 
The Louis D. Brandeis School of Law opened in 1846 and was named for Louis D. Brandeis in 1997

James R. Ramsey, the university's 17th president, continued the endowment and fundraising growth started by Shumaker. However, Ramsey added more emphasis on improving the physical aspects 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 University of Louisville theme and planted over 500 trees along campus streets, and doubled the number of on-campus housing units. The university's federal research funding doubled under Ramsey, and three buildings were built for nanotechnology and medical research. The university's graduation rate increased from 30 percent in 1999 to 52 percent in 2012.[citation needed]

On June 17, 2016, Kentucky Governor Matt Bevin announced that the entire board of trustees of the university would be immediately disbanded and replaced, and that Ramsey would be stepping down.[24] This was confirmed in a statement issued by Ramsey on the same day.[25] Ramsey offered his resignation at a board of trustees meeting on July 27, 2016, which was accepted by the board. In December 2016, the university was placed on academic probation by its accrediting agency, the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, over concerns that Governor Bevin's actions had "violated rules that require that universities be independent".[26] The probation was lifted a year later.[27] The governor's actions were initially blocked by a judge but supported by new legislation passed by the Kentucky legislature in early 2017.[28] In a lawsuit, the university sought $80 million in damages from president Ramsey, but settled only for $800,000 in 2021.[29]

In the summer of 2017, the university again came into the national spotlight as a series of scandals became public. The university's foundation, the organization that manages its endowment and investments, reported "millions of dollars in unbudgeted spending, unapproved activities and endowment losses" in an audit. The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) suspended the head coach of the men's basketball team, Rick Pitino, for five games after an investigation revealed that a university employee paid escorts to strip and have sex with players and recruits.[30] Shortly after the NCAA announced its findings and penalties, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the office of the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York announced the arrest of 10 individuals connected with a "pay for play" scheme connected to sportswear manufacturer Adidas and many institutions, including Louisville. Pitino was subsequently fired.[citation needed]

From 1895 to 2016, the university's Belknap Campus featured a Confederate monument, built before the campus grew to surround the land on which it stood. Commemorating the sacrifices of Confederate veterans who died in the American Civil War, it was erected by the Muldoon Monument Company in 1895 with funds raised by the Kentucky Woman's Confederate Monument Association. Due to controversy in 2016, the statue was moved from its original location to Brandenburg, Kentucky. Relocation started in November and was completed in mid-December.[citation needed]

Neeli Bendapudi became the University of Louisville's 18th president on May 15, 2018.[citation needed]

 
The Belknap Research Building, completed in 2005

Campuses Edit

The university has three campuses in the Louisville area, the Belknap, the Health Science, and the Shelby. It also has an International Campus in Panama City, Panama, as well as various satellite facilities in the state of Kentucky and abroad:

Belknap Campus Edit

 
Completed in 2001, Cardinal Park is home to five Cardinal athletic teams.

Acquired in 1923, the Belknap Campus is the school's main campus. It is located three miles (5 km) south of downtown Louisville in the Old Louisville neighborhood. It houses seven of the 12 academic colleges and features one of the casts of Auguste Rodin's The Thinker in front of the main administrative building, Grawemeyer Hall. The grounds of the campus were originally used as an orphanage, with several of the original buildings used.[31]

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 L&N Federal Credit Union 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 Cardinal Stadium, non-resident parking was moved there and the parking lots near campus were redeveloped with new dormitory buildings, including the Bettie Johnson Apartments,[32] Kurz Hall, Minardi Hall, and Community Park.[33]

 
The Quad on the Belknap Campus

Other points of interest on the Belknap Campus include the Rauch Planetarium;[34] the Covi Gallery of the Hite Art Institute, named for the painter Marcia Hite and her husband Allen;[35] and the final resting place for former U.S. Supreme Court Justice Louis D. Brandeis and his wife Alice, under the portico in the Brandeis Law School.[36] Surrounded by, but not part of the campus, is the Speed Art Museum, a private institution that is affiliated with the University of Louisville. The Kentucky State Data center, the state's official clearing house for census data and estimates, is located next to Bettie Johnson Hall.[citation needed]

Since 2008 the school has purchased three large tracts of land adjacent to the Belknap Campus, 55 acres (220,000 m2) to the school's northwest campus, 17 acres (69,000 m2) to the school's east campus – south of Hahn and 39 acres (160,000 m2) south of the Speed School of Engineering. New student housing has been completed on one of the northwest segments with student parking slated for the other. A new engineering and applied sciences research park is planned for the land south of the Speed School of Engineering. It serves as the centerpiece of a Signature Tax Increment Financing (TIF) district, designed to stimulate economic growth in an area around the university's Belknap campus. The TIF district covers more than 900 acres stretching from Belknap Campus south to the Watterson Expressway. The Kentucky Economic Development Finance Authority recently approved the TIF, paving the way for what could be an estimated $2.6 billion over 30 years.[citation needed]

Belknap Campus development projects Edit

 
Construction for 2,000 new student housing units on Shipp Avenue on July 16, 2008

In 2009, the university unveiled its new master plan for the next 20 years with efforts from the University of Louisville Foundation and other affiliate partners. Several important projects under construction or planned at that time included a new student recreation center, soccer stadium, new residence halls and academic buildings. Furthermore, 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. The Yum! Center (a men's basketball and volleyball practice facility) was completed in the fall of 2007. A 12,000-square-foot (1,100 m2) Olympic sports training/rehab center adjacent to Trager Stadium is under construction. Trager Plaza, a small plaza with a fountain, statue, and garden has been built with donations by the Trager Family on the south part of campus. The $37.5 million Student Recreation Center, located on the Fourth Street corridor along the western border of campus, opened in October 2013. The Province, The Bellamy and Cardinal Towne are three new student housing developments built to the southwest of campus, near the recreation center. All three were built by private developers, and The Province was built in tandem with Louisville's properties. In the short term, university provost Shirley Willihnganz expects the university to continue partnerships with private entities to build student housing.

 
Reconstruction of the Oval at 3rd Street on July 16, 2008

Several athletic facilities are being renovated, and the new $8 million academic center will be located beneath the Norton Terrace at the south end of Cardinal Stadium. It will be centrally located between two of the university's cornerstone buildings, the Swain Student Activities Center and Cardinal Stadium. It will have seating capacity for over 5,300 fans and will feature a 15,500 square foot training center that will include identical locker rooms for each team, coaches' offices and a sports medicine training room. This stadium will be the second largest project the athletic department has undertaken behind Cardinal Stadium. Furthermore, a $4 million expansion of Jim Patterson Stadium includes the addition of 1,500 chair back seats, two-tiered ground level terraces, a visiting team locker room, and a 6,400 square foot terrace atop the chair back seats connecting the first and third base sides. The new Jim Patterson Stadium will have a total capacity of 5,000. Along with the $2.75 million expansion of the university's softball stadium will feature a team clubhouse with a locker room, a video room, and a players' lounge. The Dan Ulmer Stadium will see the addition of 200 chair back seats, bringing the seating capacity to 1,000. The project will add a 2,380 square foot fan terrace wrapping around the back of the stadium, as well as a new press box that will more than double its current size.

Health Sciences Campus Edit

 
Preston Street on the university's Med Campus

The University Health Sciences Center, also called the med campus, is located just east of Downtown Louisville in the Louisville medical park which contains two 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 Norton Children's Hospital, as well as outreach programs throughout Kentucky, including in Paducah, Campbellsville, and Glasgow.[citation needed]

Health Sciences Campus development projects Edit

 
Clinical Translational Research Building at the University of Louisville Health Sciences Campus

The University of Louisville Health Sciences Campus has seen a large amount of new development in the past decade, include the completion of three new buildings: Baxter Research Complex, Cardiovascular Research Tower, and Jackson Street Medical Plaza.

In 2007 Louisville announced plans to create a nine-acre medical research park on the so-called Haymarket property roughly bounded by Market, Preston, Brook, and Jefferson Streets, along I-65 in Downtown Louisville, now called the Nucleus Research Park, with 1,000,000 square feet (93,000 m2) of research space. Nucleus, Kentucky's Life Science and Innovation Center, was established in 2008 by the University of Louisville Foundation. Nucleus is assisting in the development of Louisville's Health Science Campus downtown.

Nucleus' work is integral to the development of the research park currently underway at Louisville's Haymarket 30-block property in downtown Louisville. Nucleus Innovation Park will house multiple facilities. The project is expected to cost $300 million and was planned to be constructed from 2009 to 2017. A 200,000-square-foot, eight-story, $18 million building, is the first in a series of structures, broke ground in July 2011, and was expected to open in June 2013.[37][needs update]

An important project adjacent to the Downtown Health Sciences Campus was the conversion of the Clarksdale Housing Complex into a new mixed income development called Liberty Green.

Shelby Campus Edit

The 230-acre (0.93 km2) Shelby Campus is located on Shelbyville Road near Hurstbourne Parkway in Eastern Louisville. This campus was originally the home of Kentucky Southern College, a Kentucky Baptist liberal arts college that operated from 1961 to 1969.[38][39] After the college folded, it transferred all its assets and liabilities to the university. It currently only has three buildings which are used for night classes and seminars, although construction of a $34.6-million Center for Predictive Medicine, a Level 3 biosafety facility, is in the works.[40]

The Shelby Campus is also home to the building which houses the Information Technology Resource Center (ITRC) for homeland security. 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. When completed, the impressive ShelbyHurst Office Campus will have over 1.5 million square feet of modern office space managed, developed and leased by NTS Development Co., in partnership with the University of Louisville Foundation. The first three projects are in full swing.[41]

The Shelby Campus is undergoing a major renovation, with two new entrances to the campus off Hurstbourne Parkway. The overall goal is to develop 108 acres (0.44 km2) of the 230-acre (0.93 km2) campus for business, office, technology and research use, now known as the ShelbyHurst Research and Office Park. The university will spend $7.9 million on the road improvements on the campus. The roadway improvements began in August 2008, with work on a new four-lane boulevard through the campus, bordered by bike lanes and sidewalks, and heavily landscaped. The 600 North Hursbourne – Transformation is evident at the busy northeast corner of ShelbyHurst with the completion of 600 North. The LEED-certified, 125,000-square-foot office building is 80 percent leased and serves as corporate headquarters to Churchill Downs, NTS, Semonin Realtors and Stifel Nicolaus.

International Campus Edit

 
Campus in Panama City

The University of Louisville runs a sister campus[42] in Panama City, Panama, which has an MBA program.[43] The full-time program takes around 16 months to complete and enrolls about 200 students. It is currently ranked the 4th best MBA program in Latin America.[43]

The university also offers professional MBA programs in Athens, Hong Kong, Singapore and other parts of Asia. Their collaboration partner in Singapore is Aventis School of Management.

Other facilities Edit

Louisville operates the Moore Observatory in Oldham County, an astronomical observatory. There are plans to purchase several hundred acres in Oldham County for the school's equine program.

The president's mansion, Amelia Place, is located at 2515 Longest Avenue.[44] It is the former residence of railroad executive Whitefoord Russell Cole.[45]

Academics Edit

The University of Louisville offers bachelor's degrees in 70 fields of study, master's degrees in 78, and doctorate degrees in 22.[citation needed] According to the National Science Foundation, Louisville spent $176 million on research and development in 2018, ranking it 125th in the nation.[46]

Through its School of Medicine and University Hospital Louisville is known for its innovations in the field of medicine, including world's first self-contained artificial heart transplant (2001),[13] world's first successful hand transplant (1999),[14] development of autotransfusion (1935),[15] and first emergency department (1911).[15]

Rankings Edit

U.S. News & World Report's 2021 edition ranked University of Louisville's undergraduate program tied for 176 among all national universities and tied for 87th among public ones.[53] Forbes Magazine ranks the University 431st among 650 universities, colleges, and service academies; 147th for public colleges, 87th for colleges in the American South and 182nd best U.S. research university in 2019.[54]

Admissions Edit

Admission to Louisville is considered "selective" by U.S. News & World Report.[55] A total of 9,430 applications were received for the freshmen class entering Fall 2015; 6,758 applicants were accepted (71.7%), and 2,797 enrolled.[56] Men constituted 50.9% of the incoming class; women 49.1%.[56]

Among freshman students who enrolled in Fall 2015, SAT scores for the middle 50% ranged from 490 to 620 for critical reading, and from 510 to 620 for math.[56] ACT composite scores for the middle 50% ranged from 22 to 29.[56] The average high school GPA for incoming freshmen was 3.60.[56]

Fall freshman statistics[56][57][58][59][60]
2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011
Applicants N/A 9,430 9,711 9,142 8,441 7,892
Admits N/A 6,758 6,979 6,496 6,440 5,738
% admitted N/A 71.7 71.9 71.1 76.3 72.7
Enrolled N/A 2,797 2,887 2,855 2,705 2,569
Average GPA N/A 3.60 3.55 3.53 3.49 3.46
SAT range * N/A 1000–1240 1010–1250 1010–1260 1010–1260 990–1250
ACT range * N/A 22–29 22–28 22–28 22–28 21–28
* middle 50%
SAT out of 1600

Schools and colleges Edit

The university consists of 12 schools and colleges:

UPS tuition reimbursement and Metropolitan College Edit

In addition to their nationwide partial tuition reimbursement programs, UPS (United Parcel Service) offers Louisville (along with Jefferson Community and Technical College) students who work overnight at Worldport, the company's worldwide air hub at Louisville International Airport, full tuition reimbursement through a program called Metropolitan College. This program offers reimbursement for $65 of book costs for each class, and awards bonus checks to students in good standing at the end of each semester and upon reaching certain credit hour milestones. Employees are eligible for full health insurance coverage.[70] Currently over 75 percent of the workers at the air hub are students.[71]

Honors program Edit

The university's honors program is under the direction of Joy Hart. Incoming freshmen can apply to be in the program if they meet the following requirements: a 3.5 cumulative high school GPA and a 29 on their ACT. Current students can apply for the honors program if they are able to maintain a cumulative GPA of 3.35 or higher. Courses through the program focus on reading, writing and discussion. Students in the honors program benefit from priority registration for classes, smaller class sizes, and unique study abroad opportunities.[72]

Libraries Edit

 
The Belknap Campus' Ekstrom Library
 
The Health Science Campus' Kornhauser Library

The University of Louisville library system is a member of the Association of Research Libraries.[73] Louisville's main library branch is the William F. Ekstrom Library, which opened in 1981. The four-story building finished an expansion in March 2006, which increased its total size to 290,000 square feet (27,000 m2) and shelving capacity to over 1.3 million books. It is one of only five universities in the U.S. to have a robotic retrieval system,[74] which robotically places books in humidity-free bins. The University of Louisville libraries were the seventh academic institution in North America to have such a facility.[citation needed]

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

  • Archives and Special Collections[75]
  • The Margaret M. Bridwell Art Library[76]
  • Dwight Anderson Memorial Music Library[77]
  • Kornhauser Health Sciences Library[78]
  • Brandeis Law School Library[79]

In 2009, the Kersey Library at the J. B. Speed School of Engineering was converted to an academic building named the Duthie Center for Engineering.[80] The library's collection was fully integrated into Ekstrom Library on January 15, 2007.

Enrollment statistics Edit

Undergraduate student body Edit

  • Total enrollment is 22,293 as of Fall 2012.
  • 76.2% of students are Kentucky residents.
  • 44.0% of students are from Jefferson County (down from 64% in 1995)
  • Average ACT score: 25.2 as of Fall 2013 (up from 20.7 in 1995)
  • 6-year graduation rate: 53.5% (2012) (up from 33% in 2004)[81]
 
2010 enrollment map
 
1986 enrollment map
Rank county County 2015 enrollment[82]
1 Jefferson (Louisville) 9,733
2 Oldham (La Grange) 842
3 Hardin (Elizabethtown) 654
4 Bullitt (Shepherdsville) 601
5 Kenton (Covington) 569
6 Fayette (Lexington) 436
7 Boone (Florence) 441
8 Shelby (Shelbyville) 272
9 Daviess (Owensboro) 267
10 Campbell (Newport) 251

Student life Edit

Student body composition as of May 2, 2022
Race and ethnicity[83] Total
White 68% 68
 
Black 13% 13
 
Hispanic 6% 6
 
Other[a] 6% 6
 
Asian 5% 5
 
Foreign national 1% 1
 
Economic diversity
Low-income[b] 35% 35
 
Affluent[c] 65% 65
 

Residence halls Edit

 
Community Park Greek residence hall on 4th Street

The university has 12 housing options on its campuses:[84]

  • Belknap Village North
  • Belknap Village South
  • Bettie Johnson Hall
  • Billy Minardi Hall
  • Cardinal Towne – It has an assortment of restaurants on the 1st floor.
  • Community Park
  • Denny Crum Hall – Named after Denny Crum former basketball coach from 1971 to 2001.
  • Herman & Heddy Kurz Hall
  • Louisville Hall
  • Unitas Tower – Named after footballer Johnny Unitas who attended the school from 1950 to 1954, the tower is easily visible from many parts of campus and is located by the School of Music.
  • University Pointe
  • University Tower Apartments

Media Edit

The university's student maintained online radio station, WLCV,[85] was shut down at the beginning of the fall 2012 semester due to lack of funding.[86] Louisville holds a prominent role in the city of Louisville's "Public Radio Partnership" which features three NPR stations under one roof, including the school's namesake WUOL-FM which broadcasts classical music. The school also holds one-third of the seats on the Partnership's board of directors.

There is also an independent student-run weekly newspaper, The Louisville Cardinal. The newspaper was founded in 1926, and has maintained financial and editorial independence since 1980. The newspaper is overseen by a board of local media professionals and run by a student editor-in-chief.

Inside the university's Student Activities Center is the Floyd Theatre, a 228-seat movie theater operated by the Student Activities Board. It is capable of running both 35 mm prints and DVD projection.

Greek life Edit

Approximately 18% of undergraduate men and 14% of undergraduate women are active in UL's Greek system.[87]

Notable people Edit

Alumni Edit

 
Gina Haspel, first female director of the CIA (BA 1978)

The university has more than 144,000 alumni residing in the United States and around the world.[88]

The university claims as alumni a winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Theatre (Marsha Norman, BFA 1969), a 10-time NFL pro-bowler (Johnny Unitas), the 2016 Heisman Trophy winner (Lamar Jackson), the Minority Leader of the United States Senate (Mitch McConnell, BA 1964), the first female director of the CIA (Gina Haspel, BA 1978), the former Chancellor of the University of California, Berkeley (Chang-Lin Tien, MEng 1983) and many others including governors, senators, mayors, US Attorneys and CEOs.

 
Louisville Alumni, Johnny Unitas was three-time NFL MVP, four-time champion, and elected to its Hall of Fame.

Athletics Edit

The Louisville (UofL) athletic teams are called the Cardinals. The university is a member of the NCAA Division I ranks, primarily competing in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) since the 2014–15 academic year. The Cardinals previously competed in the American Athletic Conference (The American; formerly known as the original Big East Conference until after the 2012–13 school year) from 2005–06 to 2013–14, and in Conference USA (C-USA) from 1995–96 to 2004–05.

UofL competes in 21 intercollegiate varsity sports. Men's sports include baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, soccer, swimming & diving, tennis and track & field; women's sports include basketball, cross country, field hockey, golf, lacrosse, rowing, soccer, softball, swimming & diving, tennis, track & field and volleyball.

Overview Edit

 
Pre-game ceremonies at Cardinal Stadium
 
The KFC Yum! Center was completed in 2011 and is home to men's and women's basketball.

The Cardinals (commonly referred to as "the Cards") are the student athletes representing the university. There are 12 women's and 9 men's teams, all of which participate in the Atlantic Coast Conference. Louisville was invited to the ACC on November 28, 2012, and began play in 2014. The Cardinals are well known nationally in men's basketball with two national championships (2013 vacated) and 9 Final Four appearances (2013 vacated), ranking 5th in NCAA Tournament wins, 9th in winning percentage, and from 2nd to 5th in annual attendance every year since 1984. For the 2015–16 season, the men's basketball team held a self-imposed postseason ban due to a sex scandal involving recruits and former players.[89] The NCAA put the Louisville men's basketball program on four years probation in June 2017 and imposed a number of penalties including a suspension of head coach Rick Pitino, a reduction of scholarships and 123 vacated games as a result of its investigation into the program's stripper scandal.[90]

In recent years other Cardinal teams have gained national prominence. The women's basketball team, coached by Jeff Walz and led by first team All-American Shoni Schimmel, has been to two straight Sweet 16s and have been ranked in the top 10. In December 2008 the Cardinals broke the Big East paid attendance record when 17,000 fans filled Freedom Hall to watch the Cards defeat rival Kentucky, and later that season advanced to the NCAA championship game, losing to Connecticut. The Cardinals returned to the NCAA final behind Native American star Shoni Schimmel in 2013, losing again to Connecticut, The following season, the Cardinals filled the KFC Yum! Center with over 22,000 fans, including an estimated 1,500 Native Americans from 40 states, for the final scheduled home game of the graduating Schimmel. Other Louisville teams with recent post season success includes track and field (two individual national championships), volleyball (consecutive Sweet 16 appearances and a three-peat as Big East Tournament Champions from 2008 to 2010, and Atlantic Coast Conference Champions in 2015) and baseball (two College World Series appearances and consecutive Big East conference titles). The volleyball team has also accomplished achievements such as Head Coach Anne Kordes being named Coach of the Year in 2015, Senior Setter for Louisville, Katie George being named Atlantic Coast Conference Player of the Year, and Freshman Libero, Molly Sauer being named Freshman of the Year and Defensive Player of the Year.

All Louisville locally broadcast games airing on the school's flagship affiliate WHAS-TV Louisville are televised on every cable provider in Kentucky.

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Other consists of Multiracial Americans & those who prefer to not say.
  2. ^ The percentage of students who received an income-based federal Pell grant intended for low-income students.
  3. ^ The percentage of students who are a part of the American middle class at the bare minimum.

References Edit

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External links Edit

university, louisville, uofl, public, research, university, louisville, kentucky, part, kentucky, state, university, system, when, founded, 1798, first, city, owned, public, university, united, states, first, universities, chartered, west, allegheny, mountains. The University of Louisville UofL is a public research university in Louisville Kentucky It is part of the Kentucky state university system When founded in 1798 it was the first city owned public university in the United States and one of the first universities chartered west of the Allegheny Mountains The university is mandated by the Kentucky General Assembly to be a Preeminent Metropolitan Research University 9 It enrolls students from 118 of 120 Kentucky counties 10 all 50 U S states and 116 countries around the world 11 University of LouisvilleFormer namesJefferson Seminary 1798 1829 Louisville Medical Institute 1837 1840 Louisville College 1840 1846 TypePublic research universityEstablishedApril 3 1798 225 years ago April 3 1798 AccreditationSACSAcademic affiliationsCUMUORAUUSUSpace grantEndowment 883 6 million 2022 1 Budget 1 3 billion 2 PresidentKim Schatzel 3 ProvostLori Stewart Gonzalez 4 Academic staff1 776 full time 764 part time 5 Administrative staff4 585Students23 043 Fall 2022 6 Undergraduates16 121 Fall 2022 6 Postgraduates6 099 Fall 2022 6 LocationLouisville Kentucky United States38 12 54 N 85 45 37 W 38 21500 N 85 76028 W 38 21500 85 76028CampusLarge city 7 Belknap 345 acresHSC 62 acresShelby 233 acresTotal 640 acres 2 6 km2 Other campusesFort KnoxMadisonvillePanama CityNewspaperThe Louisville CardinalColors Cardinal red Black 8 NicknameCardinalsSporting affiliationsNCAA Division I FBS ACCMascotLouie the CardinalWebsitewww wbr louisville wbr eduLouisville is classified among R1 Doctoral Universities Very high research activity 12 The University of Louisville School of Medicine is touted for the first fully self contained artificial heart transplant surgery 13 as well as the first successful hand transplantation in the United States 14 The University Hospital is also credited with the first civilian ambulance the nation s first accident services now known as an emergency department ED and one of the first blood banks in the US 15 University of Louisville is known for the Louisville Cardinals athletics programs Since 2005 the Cardinals have made appearances in the NCAA Division I men s basketball Final Four in 2005 2012 and 2013 vacated football Bowl Championship Series Orange Bowl in 2007 champions and Sugar Bowl in 2013 champions the College Baseball World Series 2007 2013 2014 2017 and 2019 the women s basketball Final Four in 2009 runner up 2013 runner up and 2018 and the men s soccer national championship game in 2010 16 The Louisville Cardinals Women s Volleyball program has three peated as champions of the Big East Tournament 2008 2009 2010 and were Atlantic Coast Conference Champions in 2015 and 2017 Women s track and field program has won Outdoor Big East titles in 2008 2009 and 2010 and an Indoor Big East title in 2011 Contents 1 History 1 1 Founding and early years 1798 1845 1 2 As a public municipal university 1846 1969 1 3 As a public state university 1970 present 2 Campuses 2 1 Belknap Campus 2 1 1 Belknap Campus development projects 2 2 Health Sciences Campus 2 2 1 Health Sciences Campus development projects 2 3 Shelby Campus 2 4 International Campus 2 5 Other facilities 3 Academics 3 1 Rankings 3 2 Admissions 3 3 Schools and colleges 3 4 UPS tuition reimbursement and Metropolitan College 3 5 Honors program 4 Libraries 5 Enrollment statistics 5 1 Undergraduate student body 6 Student life 6 1 Residence halls 6 2 Media 6 3 Greek life 7 Notable people 7 1 Alumni 8 Athletics 8 1 Overview 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksHistory EditFounding and early years 1798 1845 Edit nbsp Criminal Justice BuildingThe University of Louisville traces its roots to a charter granted in 1798 17 by the Kentucky General Assembly to establish a school of higher learning in the newly founded town of Louisville It ordered the sale of 6 000 acres 24 km2 of South Central Kentucky land to underwrite construction joined on April 3 1798 by eight community leaders who began local fund raising for what was then known as the Jefferson Seminary It opened 15 years later and offered college and high school level courses in a variety of subjects It was headed by Edward Mann Butler from 1813 to 1816 who later ran the first public school in Kentucky in 1829 and is considered Kentucky s first historian 18 Despite the Jefferson Seminary s early success pressure from newly established public schools and media critiques of it as elitist would force its closure in 1829 18 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 As he had earlier at Lexington s Transylvania University Caldwell rapidly led LMI into becoming one of the leading medical schools west of the Allegheny Mountains In 1840 the Louisville Collegiate institute a rival medical school was established after an LMI faculty dispute It opened in 1844 on land near the present day Health sciences campus citation needed nbsp The University of Louisville School of Medicine opened in 1837 As a public municipal university 1846 1969 Edit 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 experienced 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 citation needed 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 downtown 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 a citywide tax increase to pay for it was voted down The Belknap Campus was named after the family for their efforts In 1926 the building that would later be dedicated as Grawemeyer Hall was built 19 nbsp Grawemeyer Hall was built in 1926In 1931 the university established the Louisville Municipal College for Negroes on the former campus of Simmons University now Simmons College of Kentucky as a compromise plan to desegregation As a part of the university the school had an equal standing with the school s other colleges It was dissolved in 1951 when the university desegregated 20 During World War II Louisville was one of 131 colleges and universities nationally that took part in the V 12 Navy College Training Program which offered students a path to a Navy commission 21 In the second half of the 20th century schools were opened for business 1953 education 1968 and justice administration 1969 citation needed As a public state university 1970 present Edit Talk of Louisville joining the public university system of Kentucky began in the 1960s As a municipally funded school meaning funding only came from the city of Louisville the movement of people to the suburbs of Louisville created budget shortfalls for the school and forced tuition prices to levels unaffordable for most students At the same time the school s well established medicine and law schools were seen as potential assets for the state system Still there was opposition to the university becoming a state institution both from faculty and alumni who feared losing the small close knit feel of the campus and from universities already in the state system who feared funding cuts that would be necessitated to accommodate UofL After several years of heated debate the university joined the state system in 1970 a move largely orchestrated by then Kentucky governor and UofL alumnus Louie Nunn 22 The first years in the state 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 amp public affairs 1983 were added citation needed John W Shumaker was named the university s president in 1995 Shumaker was a very successful fund raiser and quickly increased the school s endowment from 183 to 550 million He developed the REACH program 23 to encourage retention In 1997 he hired athletics director Tom Jurich who restored the athletics program and raised over 100 million to raze abandoned factories and old parking lots next to campus and replace them with on campus athletic facilities which vastly improved the aesthetics of the Belknap Campus Academically Louisville moved closer to parity with the state s flagship University of Kentucky as retention rates and research funding increased and average GPAs and ACT scores were much higher for incoming freshmen citation needed nbsp The Louis D Brandeis School of Law opened in 1846 and was named for Louis D Brandeis in 1997James R Ramsey the university s 17th president continued the endowment and fundraising growth started by Shumaker However Ramsey added more emphasis on improving the physical aspects 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 University of Louisville theme and planted over 500 trees along campus streets and doubled the number of on campus housing units The university s federal research funding doubled under Ramsey and three buildings were built for nanotechnology and medical research The university s graduation rate increased from 30 percent in 1999 to 52 percent in 2012 citation needed On June 17 2016 Kentucky Governor Matt Bevin announced that the entire board of trustees of the university would be immediately disbanded and replaced and that Ramsey would be stepping down 24 This was confirmed in a statement issued by Ramsey on the same day 25 Ramsey offered his resignation at a board of trustees meeting on July 27 2016 which was accepted by the board In December 2016 the university was placed on academic probation by its accrediting agency the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools over concerns that Governor Bevin s actions had violated rules that require that universities be independent 26 The probation was lifted a year later 27 The governor s actions were initially blocked by a judge but supported by new legislation passed by the Kentucky legislature in early 2017 28 In a lawsuit the university sought 80 million in damages from president Ramsey but settled only for 800 000 in 2021 29 In the summer of 2017 the university again came into the national spotlight as a series of scandals became public The university s foundation the organization that manages its endowment and investments reported millions of dollars in unbudgeted spending unapproved activities and endowment losses in an audit The National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA suspended the head coach of the men s basketball team Rick Pitino for five games after an investigation revealed that a university employee paid escorts to strip and have sex with players and recruits 30 Shortly after the NCAA announced its findings and penalties the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the office of the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York announced the arrest of 10 individuals connected with a pay for play scheme connected to sportswear manufacturer Adidas and many institutions including Louisville Pitino was subsequently fired citation needed From 1895 to 2016 the university s Belknap Campus featured a Confederate monument built before the campus grew to surround the land on which it stood Commemorating the sacrifices of Confederate veterans who died in the American Civil War it was erected by the Muldoon Monument Company in 1895 with funds raised by the Kentucky Woman s Confederate Monument Association Due to controversy in 2016 the statue was moved from its original location to Brandenburg Kentucky Relocation started in November and was completed in mid December citation needed Neeli Bendapudi became the University of Louisville s 18th president on May 15 2018 citation needed nbsp The Belknap Research Building completed in 2005Campuses EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message The university has three campuses in the Louisville area the Belknap the Health Science and the Shelby It also has an International Campus in Panama City Panama as well as various satellite facilities in the state of Kentucky and abroad Belknap Campus Edit nbsp Completed in 2001 Cardinal Park is home to five Cardinal athletic teams Acquired in 1923 the Belknap Campus is the school s main campus It is located three miles 5 km south of downtown Louisville in the Old Louisville neighborhood It houses seven of the 12 academic colleges and features one of the casts of Auguste Rodin s The Thinker in front of the main administrative building Grawemeyer Hall The grounds of the campus were originally used as an orphanage with several of the original buildings used 31 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 L amp N Federal Credit Union 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 Cardinal Stadium non resident parking was moved there and the parking lots near campus were redeveloped with new dormitory buildings including the Bettie Johnson Apartments 32 Kurz Hall Minardi Hall and Community Park 33 nbsp The Quad on the Belknap CampusOther points of interest on the Belknap Campus include the Rauch Planetarium 34 the Covi Gallery of the Hite Art Institute named for the painter Marcia Hite and her husband Allen 35 and the final resting place for former U S Supreme Court Justice Louis D Brandeis and his wife Alice under the portico in the Brandeis Law School 36 Surrounded by but not part of the campus is the Speed Art Museum a private institution that is affiliated with the University of Louisville The Kentucky State Data center the state s official clearing house for census data and estimates is located next to Bettie Johnson Hall citation needed Since 2008 the school has purchased three large tracts of land adjacent to the Belknap Campus 55 acres 220 000 m2 to the school s northwest campus 17 acres 69 000 m2 to the school s east campus south of Hahn and 39 acres 160 000 m2 south of the Speed School of Engineering New student housing has been completed on one of the northwest segments with student parking slated for the other A new engineering and applied sciences research park is planned for the land south of the Speed School of Engineering It serves as the centerpiece of a Signature Tax Increment Financing TIF district designed to stimulate economic growth in an area around the university s Belknap campus The TIF district covers more than 900 acres stretching from Belknap Campus south to the Watterson Expressway The Kentucky Economic Development Finance Authority recently approved the TIF paving the way for what could be an estimated 2 6 billion over 30 years citation needed nbsp Student Activities Center and Clock Tower nbsp Belknap Campus from the Eastern Parkway overpass nbsp Rauch Planetarium nbsp Lutz Hall is home to the departments of Sociology Art History Geography Anthropology and Engineering Belknap Campus development projects Edit nbsp Construction for 2 000 new student housing units on Shipp Avenue on July 16 2008In 2009 the university unveiled its new master plan for the next 20 years with efforts from the University of Louisville Foundation and other affiliate partners Several important projects under construction or planned at that time included a new student recreation center soccer stadium new residence halls and academic buildings Furthermore 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 The Yum Center a men s basketball and volleyball practice facility was completed in the fall of 2007 A 12 000 square foot 1 100 m2 Olympic sports training rehab center adjacent to Trager Stadium is under construction Trager Plaza a small plaza with a fountain statue and garden has been built with donations by the Trager Family on the south part of campus The 37 5 million Student Recreation Center located on the Fourth Street corridor along the western border of campus opened in October 2013 The Province The Bellamy and Cardinal Towne are three new student housing developments built to the southwest of campus near the recreation center All three were built by private developers and The Province was built in tandem with Louisville s properties In the short term university provost Shirley Willihnganz expects the university to continue partnerships with private entities to build student housing nbsp Reconstruction of the Oval at 3rd Street on July 16 2008Several athletic facilities are being renovated and the new 8 million academic center will be located beneath the Norton Terrace at the south end of Cardinal Stadium It will be centrally located between two of the university s cornerstone buildings the Swain Student Activities Center and Cardinal Stadium It will have seating capacity for over 5 300 fans and will feature a 15 500 square foot training center that will include identical locker rooms for each team coaches offices and a sports medicine training room This stadium will be the second largest project the athletic department has undertaken behind Cardinal Stadium Furthermore a 4 million expansion of Jim Patterson Stadium includes the addition of 1 500 chair back seats two tiered ground level terraces a visiting team locker room and a 6 400 square foot terrace atop the chair back seats connecting the first and third base sides The new Jim Patterson Stadium will have a total capacity of 5 000 Along with the 2 75 million expansion of the university s softball stadium will feature a team clubhouse with a locker room a video room and a players lounge The Dan Ulmer Stadium will see the addition of 200 chair back seats bringing the seating capacity to 1 000 The project will add a 2 380 square foot fan terrace wrapping around the back of the stadium as well as a new press box that will more than double its current size Health Sciences Campus Edit nbsp Preston Street on the university s Med CampusThe University Health Sciences Center also called the med campus is located just east of Downtown Louisville in the Louisville medical park which contains two 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 Norton Children s Hospital as well as outreach programs throughout Kentucky including in Paducah Campbellsville and Glasgow citation needed nbsp Cardiovascular Innovation Institute nbsp The university s Medical Research Tower nbsp Baxter Research Building on the Louisville Health Sciences Campus nbsp University Hospital Medical Plaza completed in June 2008Health Sciences Campus development projects Edit nbsp Clinical Translational Research Building at the University of Louisville Health Sciences CampusThe University of Louisville Health Sciences Campus has seen a large amount of new development in the past decade include the completion of three new buildings Baxter Research Complex Cardiovascular Research Tower and Jackson Street Medical Plaza In 2007 Louisville announced plans to create a nine acre medical research park on the so called Haymarket property roughly bounded by Market Preston Brook and Jefferson Streets along I 65 in Downtown Louisville now called the Nucleus Research Park with 1 000 000 square feet 93 000 m2 of research space Nucleus Kentucky s Life Science and Innovation Center was established in 2008 by the University of Louisville Foundation Nucleus is assisting in the development of Louisville s Health Science Campus downtown Nucleus work is integral to the development of the research park currently underway at Louisville s Haymarket 30 block property in downtown Louisville Nucleus Innovation Park will house multiple facilities The project is expected to cost 300 million and was planned to be constructed from 2009 to 2017 A 200 000 square foot eight story 18 million building is the first in a series of structures broke ground in July 2011 and was expected to open in June 2013 37 needs update An important project adjacent to the Downtown Health Sciences Campus was the conversion of the Clarksdale Housing Complex into a new mixed income development called Liberty Green Shelby Campus Edit The 230 acre 0 93 km2 Shelby Campus is located on Shelbyville Road near Hurstbourne Parkway in Eastern Louisville This campus was originally the home of Kentucky Southern College a Kentucky Baptist liberal arts college that operated from 1961 to 1969 38 39 After the college folded it transferred all its assets and liabilities to the university It currently only has three buildings which are used for night classes and seminars although construction of a 34 6 million Center for Predictive Medicine a Level 3 biosafety facility is in the works 40 The Shelby Campus is also home to the building which houses the Information Technology Resource Center ITRC for homeland security 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 When completed the impressive ShelbyHurst Office Campus will have over 1 5 million square feet of modern office space managed developed and leased by NTS Development Co in partnership with the University of Louisville Foundation The first three projects are in full swing 41 The Shelby Campus is undergoing a major renovation with two new entrances to the campus off Hurstbourne Parkway The overall goal is to develop 108 acres 0 44 km2 of the 230 acre 0 93 km2 campus for business office technology and research use now known as the ShelbyHurst Research and Office Park The university will spend 7 9 million on the road improvements on the campus The roadway improvements began in August 2008 with work on a new four lane boulevard through the campus bordered by bike lanes and sidewalks and heavily landscaped The 600 North Hursbourne Transformation is evident at the busy northeast corner of ShelbyHurst with the completion of 600 North The LEED certified 125 000 square foot office building is 80 percent leased and serves as corporate headquarters to Churchill Downs NTS Semonin Realtors and Stifel Nicolaus International Campus Edit nbsp Campus in Panama CityThe University of Louisville runs a sister campus 42 in Panama City Panama which has an MBA program 43 The full time program takes around 16 months to complete and enrolls about 200 students It is currently ranked the 4th best MBA program in Latin America 43 The university also offers professional MBA programs in Athens Hong Kong Singapore and other parts of Asia Their collaboration partner in Singapore is Aventis School of Management Other facilities Edit Louisville operates the Moore Observatory in Oldham County an astronomical observatory There are plans to purchase several hundred acres in Oldham County for the school s equine program The president s mansion Amelia Place is located at 2515 Longest Avenue 44 It is the former residence of railroad executive Whitefoord Russell Cole 45 Academics EditThe University of Louisville offers bachelor s degrees in 70 fields of study master s degrees in 78 and doctorate degrees in 22 citation needed According to the National Science Foundation Louisville spent 176 million on research and development in 2018 ranking it 125th in the nation 46 Through its School of Medicine and University Hospital Louisville is known for its innovations in the field of medicine including world s first self contained artificial heart transplant 2001 13 world s first successful hand transplant 1999 14 development of autotransfusion 1935 15 and first emergency department 1911 15 Rankings Edit Academic rankingsNationalForbes 47 431THE WSJ 48 373U S News amp World Report 49 176Washington Monthly 50 220GlobalARWU 51 601 700U S News amp World Report 52 544U S News amp World Report s 2021 edition ranked University of Louisville s undergraduate program tied for 176 among all national universities and tied for 87th among public ones 53 Forbes Magazine ranks the University 431st among 650 universities colleges and service academies 147th for public colleges 87th for colleges in the American South and 182nd best U S research university in 2019 54 Admissions Edit Admission to Louisville is considered selective by U S News amp World Report 55 A total of 9 430 applications were received for the freshmen class entering Fall 2015 6 758 applicants were accepted 71 7 and 2 797 enrolled 56 Men constituted 50 9 of the incoming class women 49 1 56 Among freshman students who enrolled in Fall 2015 SAT scores for the middle 50 ranged from 490 to 620 for critical reading and from 510 to 620 for math 56 ACT composite scores for the middle 50 ranged from 22 to 29 56 The average high school GPA for incoming freshmen was 3 60 56 Fall freshman statistics 56 57 58 59 60 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011Applicants N A 9 430 9 711 9 142 8 441 7 892Admits N A 6 758 6 979 6 496 6 440 5 738 admitted N A 71 7 71 9 71 1 76 3 72 7Enrolled N A 2 797 2 887 2 855 2 705 2 569Average GPA N A 3 60 3 55 3 53 3 49 3 46SAT range N A 1000 1240 1010 1250 1010 1260 1010 1260 990 1250ACT range N A 22 29 22 28 22 28 22 28 21 28 middle 50 SAT out of 1600Schools and colleges Edit The university consists of 12 schools and colleges College of Arts and Sciences 61 1907 College of Business 62 1953 College of Education and Human Development 63 1968 Graduate School 64 1918 J B Speed School of Engineering 1925 Kent School of Social Work 65 1936 Louis D Brandeis School of Law 1846 School of Dentistry 66 1887 University of Louisville School of Medicine 1837 School of Music 67 1932 School of Nursing 68 1979 School of Public Health and Information Sciences 69 1919 1924 re established in 2002 UPS tuition reimbursement and Metropolitan College Edit In addition to their nationwide partial tuition reimbursement programs UPS United Parcel Service offers Louisville along with Jefferson Community and Technical College students who work overnight at Worldport the company s worldwide air hub at Louisville International Airport full tuition reimbursement through a program called Metropolitan College This program offers reimbursement for 65 of book costs for each class and awards bonus checks to students in good standing at the end of each semester and upon reaching certain credit hour milestones Employees are eligible for full health insurance coverage 70 Currently over 75 percent of the workers at the air hub are students 71 Honors program Edit The university s honors program is under the direction of Joy Hart Incoming freshmen can apply to be in the program if they meet the following requirements a 3 5 cumulative high school GPA and a 29 on their ACT Current students can apply for the honors program if they are able to maintain a cumulative GPA of 3 35 or higher Courses through the program focus on reading writing and discussion Students in the honors program benefit from priority registration for classes smaller class sizes and unique study abroad opportunities 72 Libraries Edit nbsp The Belknap Campus Ekstrom Library nbsp The Health Science Campus Kornhauser LibraryThe University of Louisville library system is a member of the Association of Research Libraries 73 Louisville s main library branch is the William F Ekstrom Library which opened in 1981 The four story building finished an expansion in March 2006 which increased its total size to 290 000 square feet 27 000 m2 and shelving capacity to over 1 3 million books It is one of only five universities in the U S to have a robotic retrieval system 74 which robotically places books in humidity free bins The University of Louisville libraries were the seventh academic institution in North America to have such a facility citation needed There are five other libraries at the university with a combined total of more than 400 000 volumes of work Archives and Special Collections 75 The Margaret M Bridwell Art Library 76 Dwight Anderson Memorial Music Library 77 Kornhauser Health Sciences Library 78 Brandeis Law School Library 79 In 2009 the Kersey Library at the J B Speed School of Engineering was converted to an academic building named the Duthie Center for Engineering 80 The library s collection was fully integrated into Ekstrom Library on January 15 2007 Enrollment statistics EditUndergraduate student body Edit Total enrollment is 22 293 as of Fall 2012 76 2 of students are Kentucky residents 44 0 of students are from Jefferson County down from 64 in 1995 Average ACT score 25 2 as of Fall 2013 up from 20 7 in 1995 6 year graduation rate 53 5 2012 up from 33 in 2004 81 nbsp 2010 enrollment map nbsp 1986 enrollment mapRank county County 2015 enrollment 82 1 Jefferson Louisville 9 7332 Oldham La Grange 8423 Hardin Elizabethtown 6544 Bullitt Shepherdsville 6015 Kenton Covington 5696 Fayette Lexington 4367 Boone Florence 4418 Shelby Shelbyville 2729 Daviess Owensboro 26710 Campbell Newport 251Student life EditStudent body composition as of May 2 2022 Race and ethnicity 83 TotalWhite 68 68 Black 13 13 Hispanic 6 6 Other a 6 6 Asian 5 5 Foreign national 1 1 Economic diversityLow income b 35 35 Affluent c 65 65 Residence halls Edit nbsp Community Park Greek residence hall on 4th StreetThe university has 12 housing options on its campuses 84 Belknap Village North Belknap Village South Bettie Johnson Hall Billy Minardi Hall Cardinal Towne It has an assortment of restaurants on the 1st floor Community Park Denny Crum Hall Named after Denny Crum former basketball coach from 1971 to 2001 Herman amp Heddy Kurz Hall Louisville Hall Unitas Tower Named after footballer Johnny Unitas who attended the school from 1950 to 1954 the tower is easily visible from many parts of campus and is located by the School of Music University Pointe University Tower ApartmentsMedia Edit The university s student maintained online radio station WLCV 85 was shut down at the beginning of the fall 2012 semester due to lack of funding 86 Louisville holds a prominent role in the city of Louisville s Public Radio Partnership which features three NPR stations under one roof including the school s namesake WUOL FM which broadcasts classical music The school also holds one third of the seats on the Partnership s board of directors There is also an independent student run weekly newspaper The Louisville Cardinal The newspaper was founded in 1926 and has maintained financial and editorial independence since 1980 The newspaper is overseen by a board of local media professionals and run by a student editor in chief Inside the university s Student Activities Center is the Floyd Theatre a 228 seat movie theater operated by the Student Activities Board It is capable of running both 35 mm prints and DVD projection Greek life Edit Approximately 18 of undergraduate men and 14 of undergraduate women are active in UL s Greek system 87 Sororities Alpha Kappa Alpha Chapter Beta Epsilon Alpha Omicron Pi 1983 Chapter Pi Alpha Alpha Sigma Kappa 2000 Chapter Gamma Chi Omega 1929 Chapter Beta Gamma Delta Phi Epsilon 1927 closed since 1951 Delta Sigma Theta 1922 Chapter Xi Delta Zeta 1928 Chapter Beta Gamma Kappa Alpha Theta 2014 Chapter Theta Kappa Kappa Delta 1928 Chapter Alpha Xi Pi Beta Phi 1925 Chapter Kentucky Alpha Sigma Kappa 1922 Chapter Alpha Theta Sigma Gamma Rho Chapter Eta Omega Zeta Phi Beta Chapter Delta Theta Phi Sigma Rho Chapter Alpha Gamma Zeta Tau Alpha 1927 closed since 1977 reopened in 2011 Fraternities Alpha Phi Omega 1946 Chapter Delta Theta Alpha Tau Omega Colonized February 2011 Kappa Omicron Chapter founded 2014 Beta Beta Beta 2019 Chapter Mu Kappa Chi Beta Theta Pi 1971 Chapter Delta Pi Delta Tau Delta Colonized February 2014 Delta Upsilon 1921 Chapter Sigma Chi Sigma Iota Phi Theta 2001 Chapter Epsilon Iota Kappa Alpha Psi 1933 Chapter Alpha Omicron Kappa Sigma 1983 Chapter Mu Eta Lambda Chi Alpha 1948 Chapter Zeta Sigma Zeta Omega Psi Phi 1976 Chapter Phi Eta Pi Kappa Alpha 1993 Chapter Kappa Zeta Pi Kappa Phi 1949 Chapter Beta Gamma Phi Delta Epsilon 2003 Chapter Kentucky Beta Phi Delta Theta 2007 Chapter Kentucky Iota Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia 1995 Chapter Zeta Kappa Phi Kappa Tau 1947 Chapter Beta Beta Sigma Alpha Epsilon 1999 Chapter Kentucky Sigma Sigma Chi 1989 Chapter Iota Lambda Sigma Pi 2012 Chapter Iota Omicron Sigma Phi Epsilon 1947 Chapter Kentucky Beta Tau Kappa Epsilon 1942 Chapter Alpha Chi Triangle 1941 Chapter LouisvilleNotable people EditMain article List of University of Louisville people Alumni Edit nbsp Gina Haspel first female director of the CIA BA 1978 The university has more than 144 000 alumni residing in the United States and around the world 88 The university claims as alumni a winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Theatre Marsha Norman BFA 1969 a 10 time NFL pro bowler Johnny Unitas the 2016 Heisman Trophy winner Lamar Jackson the Minority Leader of the United States Senate Mitch McConnell BA 1964 the first female director of the CIA Gina Haspel BA 1978 the former Chancellor of the University of California Berkeley Chang Lin Tien MEng 1983 and many others including governors senators mayors US Attorneys and CEOs nbsp Louisville Alumni Johnny Unitas was three time NFL MVP four time champion and elected to its Hall of Fame Athletics EditMain article Louisville Cardinals This section should include a better summary of Louisville Cardinals See Wikipedia Summary style for information on how to properly incorporate it into this article s main text October 2016 The Louisville UofL athletic teams are called the Cardinals The university is a member of the NCAA Division I ranks primarily competing in the Atlantic Coast Conference ACC since the 2014 15 academic year The Cardinals previously competed in the American Athletic Conference The American formerly known as the original Big East Conference until after the 2012 13 school year from 2005 06 to 2013 14 and in Conference USA C USA from 1995 96 to 2004 05 UofL competes in 21 intercollegiate varsity sports Men s sports include baseball basketball cross country football golf soccer swimming amp diving tennis and track amp field women s sports include basketball cross country field hockey golf lacrosse rowing soccer softball swimming amp diving tennis track amp field and volleyball Overview Edit nbsp Pre game ceremonies at Cardinal Stadium nbsp The KFC Yum Center was completed in 2011 and is home to men s and women s basketball The Cardinals commonly referred to as the Cards are the student athletes representing the university There are 12 women s and 9 men s teams all of which participate in the Atlantic Coast Conference Louisville was invited to the ACC on November 28 2012 and began play in 2014 The Cardinals are well known nationally in men s basketball with two national championships 2013 vacated and 9 Final Four appearances 2013 vacated ranking 5th in NCAA Tournament wins 9th in winning percentage and from 2nd to 5th in annual attendance every year since 1984 For the 2015 16 season the men s basketball team held a self imposed postseason ban due to a sex scandal involving recruits and former players 89 The NCAA put the Louisville men s basketball program on four years probation in June 2017 and imposed a number of penalties including a suspension of head coach Rick Pitino a reduction of scholarships and 123 vacated games as a result of its investigation into the program s stripper scandal 90 In recent years other Cardinal teams have gained national prominence The women s basketball team coached by Jeff Walz and led by first team All American Shoni Schimmel has been to two straight Sweet 16s and have been ranked in the top 10 In December 2008 the Cardinals broke the Big East paid attendance record when 17 000 fans filled Freedom Hall to watch the Cards defeat rival Kentucky and later that season advanced to the NCAA championship game losing to Connecticut The Cardinals returned to the NCAA final behind Native American star Shoni Schimmel in 2013 losing again to Connecticut The following season the Cardinals filled the KFC Yum Center with over 22 000 fans including an estimated 1 500 Native Americans from 40 states for the final scheduled home game of the graduating Schimmel Other Louisville teams with recent post season success includes track and field two individual national championships volleyball consecutive Sweet 16 appearances and a three peat as Big East Tournament Champions from 2008 to 2010 and Atlantic Coast Conference Champions in 2015 and baseball two College World Series appearances and consecutive Big East conference titles The volleyball team has also accomplished achievements such as Head Coach Anne Kordes being named Coach of the Year in 2015 Senior Setter for Louisville Katie George being named Atlantic Coast Conference Player of the Year and Freshman Libero Molly Sauer being named Freshman of the Year and Defensive Player of the Year All Louisville locally broadcast games airing on the school s flagship affiliate WHAS TV Louisville are televised on every cable provider in Kentucky See also EditMcConnell Center Metro CollegeNotes Edit Other consists of Multiracial Americans amp those who prefer to not say The percentage of students who received an income based federal Pell grant intended for low income students The percentage of students who are a part of the American middle class at the bare minimum References Edit As of June 30 2022 U S and Canadian Institutions Listed by Fiscal Year FY 2022 Endowment Market Value and Change in Endowment Market Value from FY21 to FY22 Report National Association of College and University Business Officers and TIAA June 30 2022 Retrieved June 20 2023 About UofL University of Louisville Watkins Morgan February 6 2023 A Q amp A with University of Louisville President Kim Schatzel Courier Journal Who We Are Office of the Executive Vice President and University Provost louisville edu College Navigator University of Louisville nces ed gov a b c CPE Interactive Data Center Retrieved June 20 2023 College Navigator University of Louisville nces ed gov Primary Color Palette University of Louisville Retrieved April 16 2017 UofL Mission statement Archived from the original on July 10 2006 Retrieved June 8 2006 UofL Fall 05 Enrollment by County PDF Archived from the original PDF on December 1 2007 Retrieved June 8 2006 UofL Fall 05 Enrollment by State PDF Archived from the original PDF on December 1 2007 Retrieved July 7 2006 Carnegie Classifications Institution Lookup carnegieclassifications iu edu Center for Postsecondary Education Retrieved July 25 2020 a b Altman Lawrence K July 4 2001 Self Contained Mechanical Heart Throbs for First Time in a Human The New York Times Retrieved August 8 2015 a b Altman Lawrence K January 26 1999 Doctors in Louisville Perform Nation s First Hand Transplant The New York Times Retrieved August 8 2015 a b c Brown Russ Summer 2000 30 Ways We ve Changed the World U of L Magazine Retrieved August 8 2015 Akron wins first NCAA soccer title espn com December 12 2010 Retrieved December 17 2016 UofL History Archived from the original on July 10 2006 Retrieved June 8 2006 a b Botkins Shirley 2001 Public Schools In Kleber John E ed The Encyclopedia of Louisville Lexington Kentucky University Press of Kentucky pp 735 737 ISBN 0 8131 2100 0 OCLC 247857447 Retrieved September 7 2016 Grawemeyer Hall Campus Tours louisville edu Cox Dwayne Morison William 2000 The University of Louisville Lexington KY University Press of Kentucky p 89 ISBN 0813121426 Retrieved October 12 2017 Alumni Association Scholarships Louisville Kentucky University of Louisville 2011 Retrieved September 25 2011 Going State Retrieved June 8 2006 About REACH Reach louisville edu Retrieved August 5 2009 Barton Ryland June 17 2016 U of L President James Ramsey To Step Down WFPL Retrieved June 17 2016 Statement to the campus community University of Louisville June 17 2016 Retrieved June 17 2016 Wolfson Andrew December 7 2016 Accrediting agency puts U of L on probation The Courier Journal Retrieved December 17 2016 Seltzer Rick December 6 2017 Accreditor Lifts Louisville Probation Inside Higher Ed Retrieved November 12 2019 Seltzer Rick January 6 2017 Kentucky Legislature Moves to Revamp Louisville Board Inside Higher Ed Retrieved November 12 2019 Whitford Emma August 4 2021 University of Louisville Settles Lawsuit With Former President Inside Higher Ed Retrieved August 5 2021 Seltzer Rick June 28 2017 Battling for Basketball Inside Higher Ed Retrieved November 12 2019 University of Louisville Buildings Once Housed Homeless Children Archived from the original on September 4 2006 Retrieved January 16 2008 Bettie Johnson Apartments Allen amp O Hara Development LLC Archived from the original on April 15 2007 Retrieved August 8 2015 Welcome to Community Park at UofL University of Louisville Archived from the original on June 24 2007 Retrieved August 8 2015 Gheens Science Hall amp Rauch Planetarium University of Louisville Retrieved August 4 2016 Hite Art Institute UofL Libraries Retrieved March 22 2017 Christensen George A 1983 Here Lies the Supreme Court Gravesites of the Justices Yearbook Archived from the original on September 3 2005 Retrieved November 24 2013 Supreme Court Historical Society at Internet Archive Green Ed August 3 2007 Making hay Haymarket project would represent nearly 300 million investment on East Jefferson Business First of Louisville Retrieved March 2 2009 Carter John 2010 The Rise and Fall of Kentucky Southern College A Cautionary Case Study of Baptist Support for Higher Education Thesis Wake Forest University OCLC 830006943 UofL Kentucky Southern College records Special library louisville edu Archived from the original on June 30 2010 Retrieved October 22 2010 Center for Predictive Medicine gt University of Louisville louisville edu theitrc com Retrieved August 5 2009 Annual Study Abroad Program in Panama University of Louisville Retrieved August 26 2012 a b U of L Business School earns new rankings October 24 2005 Retrieved June 8 2006 Event Calendar Amelia Place University of Louisville Retrieved October 25 2017 Whitefoord Cole Will Be Buried in Nashville Today Special Train to Bring Body for Service The Tennessean November 19 1934 pp 1 3 Retrieved October 25 2017 via Newspapers com Table 20 Higher education R amp D expenditures ranked by FY 2018 R amp D expenditures FYs 2009 18 ncsesdata nsf gov National Science Foundation Retrieved July 25 2020 Forbes America s Top Colleges List 2022 Forbes Retrieved September 13 2022 Wall Street Journal Times Higher Education College Rankings 2022 The Wall Street Journal Times Higher Education Retrieved July 26 2022 2022 2023 Best National Universities U S News amp World Report Retrieved September 13 2022 2022 National University Rankings Washington Monthly Retrieved September 13 2022 ShanghaiRanking s Academic Ranking of World Universities Shanghai Ranking Consultancy Retrieved February 25 2023 2022 23 Best Global Universities Rankings U S News amp World Report Retrieved February 25 2023 University of Louisville Overall Rankings U S News amp World Report 2021 Retrieved October 10 2020 University of Louisville Forbes 2019 Retrieved September 19 2019 U S News Best College Rankings 2017 U S News amp World Report Retrieved February 24 2017 a b c d e f University of Louisville Common Data Set 2015 2016 Part C PDF University of Louisville University of Louisville Common Data Set 2014 2015 Part C University of Louisville University of Louisville Common Data Set 2013 2014 Part C University of Louisville University of Louisville Common Data Set 2012 2013 Part C University of Louisville University of Louisville Common Data Set 2011 2012 Part C University of Louisville Home The College of Arts and Sciences louisville edu Retrieved August 8 2015 UofL College of Business louisville edu Retrieved August 8 2015 College of Education and Human Development louisville edu Retrieved August 8 2015 Home School of Interdisciplinary and Graduate Studies louisville edu Retrieved August 8 2015 My Folder Kent School of Social Work louisville edu Retrieved August 8 2015 School of Dentistry louisville edu Retrieved August 8 2015 School of Music louisville edu Retrieved August 8 2015 School of Nursing louisville edu Retrieved August 8 2015 Home School of Public Health and Information Sciences louisville edu Retrieved August 8 2015 Metropolitan College Retrieved June 8 2006 UPS fuels economic gains Courier May 18 2006 Retrieved June 8 2006 About Honors University Honors Program louisville edu Retrieved September 29 2015 Member Libraries Retrieved March 2 2009 Robotic Retrieval System Archived from the original on January 8 2008 Retrieved June 8 2006 Archives amp Special Collections UofL Libraries Retrieved October 11 2017 Art Library UofL Libraries Retrieved October 11 2017 Dwight Anderson Music Library UofL Libraries Retrieved October 11 2017 Kornhauser Health Sciences Library UofL Libraries Retrieved October 11 2017 Law Library Home Page Louis D Brandeis School of Law Library Retrieved September 7 2016 UofL officials dedicate Duthie Center for Engineering University of Louisville November 13 2009 Retrieved September 7 2016 permanent dead link U of L Profile Archived from the original on March 26 2013 Retrieved August 26 2012 UofL Just the Facts 2014 15 PDF Archived from the original PDF on October 5 2015 Retrieved October 3 2015 College Scorecard University of Louisville United States Department of Education Retrieved May 8 2022 Residence Halls louisville edu Retrieved October 7 2022 WLCV Student Radio University of Louisville Archived from the original on March 2 2012 Retrieved August 4 2016 Crenshaw Caitlyn October 16 2012 U of L radio station shuts down The Louisville Cardinal Retrieved January 12 2021 https www usnews com best colleges university of louisville 1999 student life bare URL Faculty Handbook louisville edu Retrieved June 25 2018 Louisville self imposes postseason ban for men s hoops in 2016 ESPN February 5 2016 Retrieved August 12 2016 Coach suspension Retrieved June 15 2017 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to University of Louisville Official website nbsp Official athletics website nbsp Kentucky portal nbsp Medicine portal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title University of Louisville amp oldid 1170927038, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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