BARRON S PROFILES OF AMERICAN COLLEGES (UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY)
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Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
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K
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9
Document Creation Date:
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date:
July 10, 2009
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UNCLASSIFIEDT- IDENTIAL SECRET
EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAT
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ACTION INFO DATE I INITIAL
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T c rve ecre ary
3637 (5-77)
Date
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Approved For Release 2009/07/10: CIA-RDP05SO062OR000601480015-7 1976.
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work part-time. Tuition may be paid on the installment
for
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_ on is sent after
~,ne for financial aid applications is open. The PCS is ref
ire~accepted, and 235 freshmen were admitted. About
1-0:13 j the freshmen ranked in the top fifth of their high school
,:J ? .
f them scored between 16 and 20 on the English
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g
lasses, ar.u v , ,.,...,.6 - o
results of the entrance examinations, to the school record, tecture (B.Arch.), the College of Arts and Sciences (B.A., B.A. in
to the guidance counselor's recommendation. Fifteen,. Journalism, B.Mus., B.S.), the College of Business and Economics
;zrgie units are also required, including 4 years of English, (B.B.A., B.S. in Accounting, B.S. in Business and Economics), the
.. 1;mathematics, 2 of social studies, and 1 of science. The Col- College of Education (B.A.Ed.), the College of Engineering (B.S.
4. nsiders the reputation and accreditation of the high in Agricultural Engineering, Chemical Engineering, Civil Engi-
}oy and looks for advanced placement or honor courses and neering, Electrical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, or
dip potential. If the SAT is taken, scores should be above Metallurgical Engineering), the College of Home Economics
the College of Nursing (B.S.N.), the College of Phar-
t be above 400 on each part to be (B
E
)
S
H
.
,
.
.
.
each part; scores mus
on
,,dered for admission. The College seeks a national distribu- macy (B.S.Pharm.), and the College of Social Professions (B.A.
in Social Work). A student may select an area of concentration
.40 of its student body. c
i.L__ h
uired; the ACT is From 133 major fields.
er--r or SAT : re
E
e
q
,.a:nterview is recuuuuc...,cu. ,..., ~~gg ............... -rr-_- ,.,,........_-- - ---- ,.
sled by September 1, and, definitely, by June 1 if dormitory divisons or components: general studies, premajor or preprofes-
, .,, _ __ ___L?__~__ L... \t..NRnnlinn ;e cent ...,.-,.,1 -.-c main or professional studies, and free elec-
-
;r=s+.r ------ - -
to an informal acceptance program. Early Decision, Early Ad-
.,auon, and Deferred Admissions are available. CLEP general
i subject exams are accepted.
..onsfer. About 75 transfer students were enrolled. Fresh-
en and transfer students are admitted to all terms.
UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY
-rx complex housing 2700 men and women in twin 23-story
pers. The University farms and experimental stations through- Freshmen are admitted to all sessions. The University uses the
at the state contain more than 24,000 acres for agricultural rolling admissions plan. A personal interview is recommended
-search. but not required. There is no application fee. There is an Early
Approximately 80% of the 1495 faculty members hold doctor- : Admission plan. AP and CLEP credit is available.
'.el. Transfer: About half of the transfer applications are ap-
summmee-r proved, with 1600 students enrolling annually. A 2.00 GPA is
system etiona anld offers average. 2 The
salar ofor perates professors
the f the semester a er the
,':scions. oAAccreditation ed by th y the Southern required. D grades transfer. Students must study one year in
,ational Council il for r Accreditation of e Teacher Education. rand the residence. The deadlines are June 1 (fall) and October 15
Student Life: The majority of students (86%) are from Ken-, (spring).
Lexington, Kentucky 40506
Undergraduate: 8221 Men, 6712 Women (f/t)
1052 Men, 1094 Women (p/t)
Graduate: 1743 Men, 1486 Women (total)
Admissions: Competitive ACT: 21
Fall Deadline: June 1 Tel: (606) 257-1606
Me University of Kentucky, a land-grant institution founded
a,S65, offers many services, including lower divison courses,
dergraduate and graduate instruction, and research. Sixteen
=deges and schools of this state-controlled University grant de-
,:.^M
One hundred major buildings are located on the main campus
i 130 acres in Lexington, a city of more than 150,000 people.
.e Medical Center includes the Colleges of Allied Health
^^.fessions, Dentistry, Medicine, and Nursing, and the Univer-
- Health Service and Hospital. The Agricultural Science Cen-
is a 84 million conlplex of laboratories, greenhouses, and
-=ces, and the home of the National Tobacco Research Labora-
'.)n'. The library contains over 1.5 million volumes, 33,000 peri-
cicals, and 1,059,000 microfilm items. The University has its
`+n FM radio station and closed-circuit television center, post
ace, theater, and printing plant. Residence facilities include a
,.iCky; about one-third reside on campus.
There are religious organizations on campus for the 3 major
iiths. Social fraternities and sororities offer dining, residence,
i.dlor recreation facilities. Intercollegiate sports offered are
4seball, basketball, football, gymnastics, soccer, swimming, ten-
nis, track, and wrestling. The Unis;ty sponsors uuuleruu., e..-
tracurricular activities and groups, both social and cultural.
There are student representatives (nonvoting) on the major
administration-faculty committees.
Drinking on campus is forbidden. Women resident students
follow a sign-out procedure. Only juniors and seniors may have
cars on campus. Intervisitation hours in dorms are determined
by the administration. The University offers placement, health
care, career and psychological counseling, and tutoring services
to all students.
4 Programs of Study: Undergraduate degrees are granted by
the University through the College of Agriculture (B.S.Ag.), the
e of Allied Health Professions (B.S. in Dental Hygiene,
Colle
tives.
Special: A University Honors Program is available to quali-
fied students. There is a 3-2 Engineering program with Thomas
More College, Eastern Kentucky University, and Georgetown
College. The University also offers a work-study, 5-year program
which is on a voluntary basis. The Donovan Fellowship program
offers courses to adults over 65 free of cost. There is a General
Studies major, and students may design their own areas of con-
centration.
4 Expenses: The annual tuition for residents is $480; nonresi-
dents $1210. Room and board costs in University dormitories
average $1410. Books and supplies come to $150. Personal.ex-
penses are estimated at $420.
Approximately 25% of the students receive some form of fi-
nancial aid through scholarships, jobs, or loans. There is available
about $120,000 in scholarships in Engineering. The University
administers NDSL, EOG, CWS, and University programs. The
FAF or PCS is required and applications must be in by February
15. The FAF is preferred for Kentucky residents.
4 Admissions: Recently, the University received 6642 applica-
tions, accepted 5167, and enrolled 3318 freshmen.
Standards: Applicants must be graduates of accredited high
schools and have at least a 2.00 average. The high school tran-
script is not required. The University requires that the candidate
score in the upper 50 percentile of the ACT. Advanced place-
ment or honor courses are a factor in the admissions decision.
Procedure: The ACT is required and should be taken by April
of the senior year. Results from the junior year test are also
acceptable. The deadline for application to the fall session is June
1. There is a simplified admission procedure whereby high
school seniors who list the University of Kentucky as their first
UNIVERSITY OF LOUISVILLE
2211 South Brook Street
Louisville, Kentucky 40208
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KENTUCKY STATE UNIVERSITY
Plicants: rank in top half of class and composite ACT score
of 20. Nonacademicfactor considered of major importance
in admissions: geographical distribution; special talents of
moderate importance. Entrance programs; early decision,
early admission, midyear admission, advanced placement,
deferred admission. Apply by September 1. Transfers wel-
come; 804 M, 748 W accepted 1976-77.
ACADEMIC ENVIRONMENT. Hbnors and Experimental
College offers 4-year program of innovative experiences for
selected students concurrently enrolled in undergraduate
college. Undergraduate studies offered by 4 colleges and 2
schools listed above. Majors offered in Arts and Sciences in
addition to usual studies include anthropology, geography,
government service, law enforcement administration, nurs-
ing, social work. About 50% of general education require-
ments for graduation are elective; distribution requirements
fairly numerous. New terminal professional/vocational pro-
grams added in past 2 or 3 years include business adminis-
tration, interior design. Undergraduate degrees conferred
(4,166): 35% were in education, 15% in business and man-
agement, 14% in social sciences, 6% in English, 5% in fine
and applied arts, remainder in 18 other fields.
Class attendance expected. Pass/fail option in some
courses. About 70% of students entering as freshmen grad-
uate eventually; 25% of freshmen do not return for sopho-
more year. Special programs.. CLEP, independent study,
study abroad, honors, undergraduate research, individual.
ized majors, credit by examination, area studies, Washing-
ton Semester, combined programs (with Duke School of
Forestry, Michigan's School of Natural Resources). Doc-
toral degrees- biological sciences 3, business and manage.
ment 8, education *27, English 14, letters 5, mathematics I,
physical sciences 7, psychology 10, social sciences 12. Li-
brary. 1million vol
umes, open-stack privileges; open about
108 hours per. week. Calendar.- quarter, summer school.
Miscellaneous' Sigma Xi, A, AF ROTC.
STUDENT BODY. University seeks a national student
body; 88% of students from.North Central, 10% Middle
Atlantic. An estimated 3.7% of students reported as black.
Minority group students, minority or disadvantaged student
scholarships, reading and developmental services.
RELIGIOUS ORIENTATION. Kent State makes no religious
demands on students. Religious clubs on campus include
Newman, Lutheran, United Christian Ministries (represent.
ing 7 Protestant denominations), Hillel, Christian Science,
Orthodox Christian Fellowship.
CAMPUS LIFE. All nonresident, single students entering
as freshmen must live in on-campus housing for first six
quarters. "The only alcoholic beverage permitted at group
functions is 3.2 beer." No curfews for women.
About 45% of men, 54% of women live in traditional
dormitories; 15% each in coed dormitories; 38% of men,,
40% of women live in off
-campus housing; 32% of men,
27% of women commute. Intervisitation in men's and
women's dormitory rooms limited. Sexes segregated in coed
dormitories by wing. There are 15 fraternities, 9 sororities
on campus which about 4% each of men, women join; less
than 1% each live in fraternities and sororities. About 10%
of students leave campus on weekends.
ANNUAL COSTS. Tuition and fees, $855 (out-of-state,
$2,055); room and board, $1,470; estimated $500 other,
0
[ 300
exclusive of travel. About 37% of students receive financial
aid; average amount of assistance
$750
,
.
KENTUCKY STATE UNIVERSITY
Frankfort, Kentucky 40601
776 M, 616 W (full-tim
)
e
288 M, 487 W (part-time) State, 1886
2,389 total graduate and undergraduate
A state-supported university, located in the state capital
of 34,000; founded as a college for Negroes, but now fully
integrated.
ADMISSION. Kentucky graduates of accredited high
schools with 17 units admitted; 88% of applicants accepted;
54% of these actually enroll. About 19% of freshmen grad-
uate in top fifth of high school class, 53% in top two-fifths.
Average freshman ACT scores: 13.5 M, 13.5 W composite,
14.2 M, 13.8 W mathematical. Required.- ACT. Out-of-state
freshman applicants: university seeks students from out of
state. State limits out-of-state enrollment to 20-25% of en-
tering class. Requirement for out-of-state applicants: C av-
erage or ACT composite score of 15 or better. Entrance
programs' early decision, early admission, midyear admis-
sion, advanced placement, deferred admission. Apply: roll-
ing admissions. Transfers welcome; 139 accepted 1976-77.
ACADEMIC ENVIRONMENT. Degrees- AB, BS. About
2-4% of general education requirements for graduation are
elective; distribution requirements fairly numerous. Class
attendance required. About 37% of students entering as
freshmen graduate eventually; 20% of freshmen do not re-
turn for sophomore year. Undergraduate degrees conferred
(187): 41% were in education, 38% in social sciences, 13%
in business and management, remainder in 4 other fields.
Special programs: CLEP, independent study, honors. Full-
time graduate or professional study pursued by 11% of stu-
dents immediately after graduation. Calendar.- semester,
summer school. Miscellaneous: AF ROTC (cross-town
agreement with U. of Kentucky).
CAMPUS LIFE. University seeks a national student body;
93% of students from South
3% N
,
orth Central, 2% Mid-
dle Atlantic. Kentucky State makes no religious demands
on students. About 46% of students live in traditional dor-
mitories; no coed dormitories; rest commute. Intervisitation
in men's and women's dormitory rooms limited. There are
3 fraternities, 3 sororities on campus which about 1% each
of meh, women join; they provide no residence facilities.
ANNUAL Costs. Tuition and fees, $460 (out-of-state,
$990); room and board, $1,024; estimated $550 other, exclu-
sive of travel. About 63% of students receive financial aid;
average amount of assistance, $1,300.
UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY
Lexington, Kentucky 40506
10,176 M, 7,426 W (full-time)
864 M, 1,007 W (part-time)
22,154 total graduate and undergraduate
Kentucky's land-grant college and state university, the
University of Kentucky offers instruction through 15 under-
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graduate and professional colleges, the Graduate School, 13
2.year community colleges, and the Lexington Technical
Institute. The 350-acre central campus is located in a city
of 108,100, 75 miles south of Cincinnati.
ADMISSION. All Kentucky residents who are graduates of
accredited high schools eligible; 75% of applicants ac-
opted, 67% of these actually enroll. Average freshman
ACT scores: 21.1 M, 21.1 W composite, 21 M, 21 W mathe-
matical. Required: ACT. Out-of-state freshman applicants:
university seeks students from out of state. State limits out-
of-state enrollment to 15% of entering class. Requirements
for out-of-state applicants: C average, ACT English and
composite scores 50% above national norms. Nonacademic
factors considered of moderate importance in admissions:
diverse student body, special talents. Entrance programs
early decision, early admission, midyear admission, ad-
vanced placement. Apply by June 1. Transfers welcome.
ACADEMIC ENVIRONMENT. Honors program offers 4-
year special academic track for superior students. Adminis-
tration reports general education requirements for.gradua-
tion "vary depending upon individual college"; distribution
requirements fairly numerous: include 2 courses in 5 of 8
broad areas as well as proficiency in English composition.
Undergraduate studies offered to freshmen by colleges of
Arts and Sciences, Agriculture, Allied Health Professions,
Business and Economics, Education, Engineering, Home
Economics, Nursing, Social Professions; Architecture and
Pharmacy, both offering 5-year degree programs, require 2
years of college work. Majors offered in Arts and Sciences
in addition to wide range of studies include anthropology,
astronomy, communications, computer science, diplomacy
and international science, geography, journalism, microbi-
ology, statistics, telecommunications, theater arts. Under-
graduate degrees conferred (main campus, 2,534): 19%
were in education (majority in elementary education), 18%
in social sciences, 13% in business and management, 8% in
engineering, 7% each in health professions, English, 4%
each in agriculture, biological sciences (majority in
zoology), remainder in 13 other fields.
Class attendance required. Pass/fail option in some
courses. About 39% of students entering as freshmen grad-
uate eventually. Special programs: CLEP, independent
study, study abroad, honors, individualized majors, com-
bined programs (arts with medicine or dentistry). Doctoral
degrees: agriculture 16, biological sciences 13, education 35,
engineering 4, English 5, fine arts 2, foreign languages 6,
mathematics 14, physical sciences 15, psychology 9, social
sciences 28. Library: 1,187,617 volumes, open-stack privi-
leges; hours until midnight. Calendar: semester, 4-week
spring intersession, summer school. Average .faculty com-
pensation above national average. Miscellaneous: Phi Beta
Kappa, Sig,na Xi, A, AF ROTC.
STUDENT BODY. University does not seek a national stu-
dent body; high percentage of students from the South; 432
foreign students 1976-77.
RELIGIOUS ORIENTATION. Kentucky is a state institu-
tion, makes no religious demands on students. Religious
clubs on campus include Bahai, Baptist, Campus Crusade,
Campus Religious Liberals, Canterbury, Newman, Chris-
tian Science, Christian Student Fellowship, Hillel, Intervar-
sity, Muslim, Navigators, Student Charismatic Fellowship,
0
United Campus Christian Fellowship, Lutheran. Places of
worshipavailableinimmediatecommunityformajorfaiths.
CAMPUS LIFE. About 21% of men, 33% of women live
in traditional dormitories; 1% each in coed dormitory. In-
tervisitation in men's and women's dormitory rooms lim-
ited. Sexes segregated in coed dormitory by floor. There are
21 fraternities, 14 sororities on campus which about 10% of
men, 12% of women join; 5% of men, 4% of women live
in fraternities and sororities. About 10% of students leave
campus on weekends.
ANNUAL Costs. Tuition and fees, $480 (out-of-state,
$1,210); room and board, $1,410; estimated $550 other,
exclusive of travel. About 25% of students receive financial
aid; average amount of assistance, $1,000.
KENTUCKY WESLEYAN COLLEGE
Owensboro, Kentucky 42301
267 M, 249 W (full-time) United Methodist, 1858
73 M, 129 W (part-time)
A church-related college, located in a city of 60,000, 110
miles west of Louisville.
ADMISSION. Graduates of accredited high schools with
15 units and C average eligible; those with less than C
average may be accepted on probation; 65% of applicants
accepted. About 25% of freshmen graduate in top fifth of
high school class, 55% in top two-fifths. Average freshman
scores: SAT, 450 verbal and mathematical; ACT, 18 com-
posite. Required: SAT or ACT; interview for marginal stu-
dents. Entrance program: midyear admission. Apply by Au-
gust 1. Transfers welcome; 75 accepted 1976-77.
ACADEMIC ENVIRONMENT. Degrees: AB, BS, BM,
BMEd. About 35-40% of general education credits for
graduation are required; distribution requirements fairly
.numerous. Class attendance expected. Undergraduate de-
grees conferred (177): 33% were in education (substantial
majority in elementary education), 24% in social sciences,
23% in business and management, remainder in 7 other
fields. Special program: honors. Full-time graduate or pro-
fessional study pursued by 20% of students immediately
after graduation. Calendar: semester, January minisemes-
'ter, summer school.
CAMPUS LIFE. College seeks a national student body;
50% of students from South, 35% Middle Atlantic, 10%
North Central, 5% New England.
Kentucky Wesleyan is a church-related institution; 2
courses in religion required of all students; attendance at
chapel services voluntary. Religious clubs on campus in-
clude Baptist, Canterbury, Kappa Chi, Methodist.
About 50% of men, 50% of women live in traditional
dormitories; no coed dormitories; 45% of men, 50% of
women live in off-campus housing or commute. Intervisita-
tion in men's and women's dormitory rooms limited. There
are 3 fraternities, 3 sororities on campus; 5% of men live in
fraternities; sororities provide no residence facilities. About
20% of students leave campus on weekends.
ANNUAL COSTS. Tuition and fees, $1,554; room and
board, $1,240; estimated $500 other, exclusive of travel.
About 80% of students receive financial aid; average
amount of assistance, $1,400.
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H.D. 2). ? J. Honorary 4 (D.D., LL.D.,
Fees, 1971-72, Full-time tuition $793 a term. Part-time and summer
session tuition for undergraduates $30 a credit hour, graduate students
$35 a credit hour. Application $15; graduation for bachelor's $25, mas-
ter's $30. Room $290 a year; board $500. Average rent for institutional
married-student housing $65 a month.
Student Financial Aid, x970-71. 371 undergraduates received
Scholarships and grants 167, from $100 to $1,000, t aid.
otal $75,327; applied
tions close May 1. Loans 236, from $100 to $1,000, total $126,592.
College-assigned jobs 203, from $200 to $500, total $75,304.
9 graduate students received aid. Teaching assistantships 3, from
$1,545 to $1,635, total $4,695. Loans 6, from $90 to $800 total $2,8'
Departments and Teaching Ste', 1970-71. Education professors 2,
languagassociatees p 4,1,1,5,1; Professors 3, natural , , sciences 1,6,5,0,0; religion and philosophy
1,1,0,0,0; social studies 2,3,8,1,4. Total: 64. Men full time 39, part time 4;
women full time 18, part time 3. Degrees held: 20 doctorates, 43 master's,
I Professional.
Enrollment. Fall 1970: 924. Undergraduate 772: lower division in
full time 288, part time 1; lower division women full time 158, part time full t full time 188, part time 6; upper division women
,me 103, part time 16. 50% of undergraduates came from within
state. Unclassified 12: men full time 1, part time 4; women full time 2,
pan time 5. Graduate 140: men full time 7, part time 59; women full time
2, Part time 72. Summer 1970: 722.
Foreign Students, 1970-71. Undergraduate 6: men 3, women 3. East
Asia 1, Europe 1, Latin America 1, South Asia 1, Southeast Asia 2. 2
scholarships totaling $1,072 held by foreign students. College offers no
scholarships specifically designated for foreign students.
Student Life. College's 5 residence halls (capacity 509) house 70% of
students, including 75% of undergraduate men and 72% of undergradu-
ate women. 4 fraternities; 3 sororities. 29 college apartments provide
g
Admission. Rolling admissions plan. For men fall actcept nce, from within state.
may be submitted as early as October 1 of previous year but
than September i of year of p not later
accredited enrollment. Requirements: Graduation from
secondary school with 16 units (10 academic units) which
must include 3 English, 2 mathematics, 2 social studies, 2 science. Units
in a foreign language recommended. CEEB SAT (minimum score 400 on
each part) or ACT program (nvnimum composite score 16). Applicants
age 21 may be admitted on basis of GED. For transfer students: GPA
2.0. Maximum credit toward baccalaureate 67 semester hours.
College credit and advanced placement given for college-level work
completed in secondary school on basis of CEEB Advanced Placement
Examinations. Secondary school students m
given. may enroll in courses at
Union. Remedial courses in English offered in regular session; credit
Degree Requirements, For all bachelor's degrees: 128 semester hours;
GPA 2.0; 30 of final 36 hours in residence.
fail option in 2 courses each semester. Grading system: A-F; pass-
Special Academic
in environmental Programs. Interdisciplinary undergraduate program
concentration in cooperation with Environmental Edu-
cation Center. Undergraduate independent research available in all fieldsl
during January interterm and during Appalachia Semester for re
work-experience programs in study. Cooperative and n social work. Dual-
degree programs in engineering, medicine, and science. Space science
workshop; environmental workshop; remedial reading workshop; educa-
tional media workshop. Junior year abroad programs in Germany and
France; summer at University of Graz, Austria, through Association of
Colleges and Universities for International and Intercultural Studies, Inc.
Member of Mid-Appalachia College Council, Inc.
Graduate Work. M.A. degree programs in education, with concentra-
tions in elementary education, reading, school librarianship, secondary
school education in English and social studies.
Degrees Conferred, Year ending June 30, 1971: bachelor's 150 (B.A.
20, B.S. 127, B.M. 3); master's 121 (V A
L
fourth of seconda r rscsume 0-71. All students: 22% ranked in
ry school
t
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o
30% i
P
n second fourth, 30% in housing A*arried students. Additional housing includes Tve Hou
rth, I8% in bottom fourth. Average combined SAT score 831. 80% third of ho g
home economics majors. intercolle iate athl
plicants accepted. 50% of enterin
fr
i
a
h
u
fo ap
es
mming, tennis, cross-country
permitted; cs: basketball, traces F,
(pop. 3,549) is 100 miles from Lexingt n (me opolitan pop. 174.,-I`''-
Publications, College catalog, October. The Alumnus quaner}v.
Library. 58,394 volumes; 376 current periodicals; 1,070
books mir-=
reels; 462 other units of microtext; 10,1970932 volumes added, $84.313.s_
on
and periodicals 1967-68-_71 Holdings include
Civil War collection (550 volumes).
Finances, 1970-71. Total revenues $2,217,591: educational and ge
$1,557,028 (student tuition and fees $1,192,343, endowment in o
$105,110, gifts $228,711, other sources $30,864); student aid $l62.9e,_
auxiliary enterprises $497,574. Total expenditures $2,082,963: edu
tional and general $1,425,773; student aid $19't xon. _-:__
nrnorn- v- -
-
5 reserve $1795 '"et
ti on to ope a
s,2. Net addition
RnnL- -1_ - to plant a-;__
scat
sets $2
Buildings and Grounds.,308,120, market value $2,388,608 -
equipment $4,780,897. 100 acres. Total value buildings, gro
Administration. President,
admission
toinquiries to Director of Admissions; graduat
D
e
ean
of Gd studentsdd
rauate School. ar
University of Kentucky
South Limestone Street
Lexington, Kentucky 40506
Tel.: (606) 258-9000
-------------
University of Kentucky is a coeducational state
universi
grant college offering bachelor's de and ~=d-
gree
programs through the Colleges c
Agriculture, Allied Health
Business and professions, Architecture, Arts and Sciences.
Economics, Education, Engineering, Home Economics.
Nursing, Pharmacy, and Social Professions. First-professional deg ee
programs are offered by the Colleges of Dentistry, Law, pharmacy and
Medicine. Graduate programs are offered by all colleges except the
Colleges of Architecture, Home Econoics, and Law and, with the ex-
ception of graduate programs of the m
are ad Colleges of Dentistry and Medicine-
ministered by the Graduate School. The university has genera:
administrative responsibility for a commu
of 12 nity college system consistin;
community colleges and the Lexington Technical Institute; whit::
offer 2-year degree-credit programs and extensive programs in
programs adult and
continuing education. 34 A.A.S. degree programs are available, including
in business , communications, data
forestry and wood processing, recreation, health care, sssing,
eore engineering
social work. The community colleges in Elizabethtown and Lehi
offer programs in zinrtot:
.
Accreditation: technical nursing.
architecture, business, chemistry, dental hygiene
dental laboratory
civil technology, dentistry, engineering (agricultural, chemi-
, electrical, mechanical metallurgical) journalism (news and
public affairs), law, librarianship, medical technology, medicine. music.
mtttrsin pharmacy, physical there-
cation (elemen PY. psychology (clinical), teacher edu-
tary, secondary, school service personnel), technical nurs-
'dory. Chartered as Agricultural and Mechanical College of Kea-
t'ky University 1865; first instruction 1866; first baccalaureate 1865.
? me changed to Agricultural and Mechanical College of Kentuck'
1878, State University of Kentucky 1908; present name adopted 1916.
Governing Board. 18 trustees; 15 voting members, 3 nonvoting:
appointed by governor, 3 nominated by alumni and appointed by ?ove'-
nor. 2 elected by faculty from among themselves; 4-year terms: presider.:
of student government, governor, superintendent of public instructioc.
commissioner of agriculture ex officio.
'calendar. Semester s
ystem Rl
.eguar session late August to early MaY
Fre$hmen admitted August, January, June. Degrees conferred Mss
August, December. 4-week intersession followed by 8-week summer St -1,
mid-May to early August.
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Characteristics of Freshmen, 1970-71. Mean ACT scores: 22 compos-
ite. 20 English. 23 mathematics, 23 natural sciences, 22 social sciences. 77
Vational Merit Scholars. All in-state applicants meeting requirements
accepted. 85% of entering freshmen came from within state.
Admission. Rolling admissions plan. For fall acceptance, applications
may be submitted as early as end of junior year but not later than mid-
`lay for state residents, April I for out-of-state students. For early
decision, apply by end of junior year; need not limit application to
University of Kentucky. Requirements: Graduation from accredited sec-
ondary school. ACT program. For out-of-state students, GPA 2.0, rank
in 50th percentile on ACT. For transfer students: GPA 2.0. Maximum
credit toward baccalaureate from correspondence or extension % of de-
eree requirements; community or junior college or 4-year accredited
institution equivalent of 3 years work.
College credit and advanced placement given for college-level work
completed in secondary school on basis of CEEB Advanced Placement
Examinations. Secondary school students may enroll in courses at Uni-
versity of Kentucky.
Degree Requirements. For all bachelor's degrees: GPA 2.0; final 30
semester hours in residence. See specific college for additional degree
requirements. Grading system: A-E; pass-fail option available in
electives to all but freshmen.
ROTC. Army, Air Force optional for 2 or 4 years. 65 commissions
awarded 1970-71.
Graduate Work. See specific college and Graduate School.
Degrees Conferred Year ending June 30, 1971: bachelor's 2,262; first-
professional 250 (D.M.D. 48, J.D. 121, M.D. 75, Pharm.D. 6); master's
558; doctorates 255 (Ph.D. 233, Ed.D. 22). Honorary 5 (LL.D. 3, D.Sc.
2).
Fees, 1971-72. Full-time tuition for state residents $330 a year, out-of-
state students $1,030. Part-time tuition for state residents $14 a credit
hour, out-of-state students $46. Summer session tuition for state residents
396, out-of-state students $275. Health $14; graduation for bachelor's
$11.50, master's, $25, doctoral $75. Room $515 a year; board $515.
Average rent for institutional married-student housing $100 a month. See
specific college for additional fees.
Student Financial Aid, 1970-71. 4,620 undergraduates received aid.
Scholarships and grants 1,003, from $200 to $1,500, total $517,931;
applications close April 15. Loans 1,580, from $100 to $2,500, total
$867,175. College-assigned jobs 2,293, from $250 to $1,500, total
$1,530,000.
140 graduate students received aid. Fellowships 200, from $2,500 to
S5.400, total $552,727; 2-month summer fellowships 60, from $510 to
$680, total $34,310; teaching and research assistantships, total
$1,613,000; dissertation travel and dissertation research, total $115,000.
Teaching Staff, 1970-71. Total: 1,456. Men full time 1,146, part time
116; women full time 144, part time 50. Degrees held: 829 doctorates,
281 master's, 34 bachelor's, 242 professional.
Enrollment. Fall 1970: 17,752. Undergraduate 13,856: lower division
men full time 3,995, part time 148; lower division women full time 2,870,
part time 145; upper division men full time 3,731, part time 189; upper
division women full time 2,614, part time 164. 85% of undergraduates
came from within state. Transfer students: 809. Upper division men 455,
women 354. In-state men 341, women 235; out-of-state men 104, women
119. Unclassified 428: men full time 68, part time 106; women full time
97, part time 157. First-professional 991: men full time 910, part time 7;
women full. time 67, part time 7. Graduate 2,477: men full time 1,037,
part time 510; women full time 515, part time 415. Summer 1970: 5,000.
Extension division, 1970-71: 1,684 in classes; 1,400 in degree-credit
courses, 284 in non-degree-credit courses. Correspondence: 300. Out-of- -
state enrollment is limited to 15% of student body.
Foreign Students, 1970-71. 250. Undergraduate 65: men 50, women
15. First-professional 2 men. Graduate 183: men 150, women 33. Africa
(sub-Sahara) 6, Australia 1, Canada 7, East Asia 50, Europe 26, Latin
America 29, Middle East and North Africa 27, South Asia 54, Southeast
Asia 50. 19 scholarships totaling $39,780 held by foreign students. Uni-
versity, offers scholarships specifically designated for foreign graduate
students.
Student Life. University's 18 residence halls (capacity 4,688) house
29?ro of students, including 27% of undergraduate men and 39% of under-
0
U. of Kentucky 625
graduate women. 1 coed dorm houses 122 men and 25 women. All
freshmen except those who are married, live with parents, are veterans,
or are age 21 must live on campus. 13% of men join and 10% live in 22
fraternities; 19% of women join and 10% live in 14 sororities. 384 univer-
sity apartments provide housing for married students. Additional hous-
ing includes 2 cooperatives. Intercollegiate athletics: basketball, football,
track, tennis, swimming, golf (Southeastern Conference). Cars permitted:
all but freshmen and sophomores; $20 fee. University sponsors concert
and lecture series, Blazer lectures, theater arts. Several student religious
organizations. University is located in Lexington (metropolitan pop.
174,323).
Publications. University catalogs, annually. The Kentucky Alumnus,
quarterly. The Kentucky Law Journal, Bulletin of the University of
Kentucky Bureau of School Services, quarterly. University press pub-
lished 28 titles in 1970.
Library. 1,153,774 volumes; 10,000 current periodicals; 60,265 micro-
film reels; 760,710 other units of microtext. 244,435 volumes added,
$2,991,248 spent on books and periodicals 1967-68-1970-71. Special
collections: Kentucky and Ohio Valley history; early Western travel;
book arts; dime novels; broadside and chapbooks (mainly English and
Irish); French, German, and Spanish drama (1600-1900); Cortot collec-
tion of musicology; microscopy; emblem books; sports (to 1910); 19th-
century. French Romantic literature; 19th-century British novelists; rail-
road literature; Kentucky maps; women in politics; manuscripts and
personal papers of John W. Hunt (38 boxes), Shelby family (7,500
pieces), Jouett Shouse (3,000 pieces), A. O. Stanley (10,000 pieces), Thru-
ston Morton (296,000 pieces).
Finances, 1970-71. Total revenues $119,277,508: educational and gen-
eral $90,892,293 (student tuition and fees $8,391,546, government appro-
priations $64,435,005, endowment income $217,895, gifts $127,802, spon-
sored research $13,257,789, other sponsored programs $307,534, recovery
of indirect costs $1,658,125, sales and services of educational depart-
ments $538,882, organized activities relating to educational departments
$1,957,715); student aid $930,921; major service programs $16,258,256;
auxiliary enterprises $11,196,038. Total expenditures $109,153,742: edu-
cational and general $83,294,945; student aid $1,538,969; major public
service programs $13,656,687; auxiliary enterprises $10,663,141. Net ad-
dition to operating reserves $436,066. Net addition to plant during fiscal
year $5,216,920. Book value of endowment assets $1,466,778, market
value $1,405,242.
Buildings and Grounds. 21,000 acres. Total value buildings, grounds,
equipment $190 million. New construction: Laboratories completed
1971; agricultural sciences building and health, physical education, and
recreation building completed 1972; library addition scheduled to be
completed 1974; biological sciences building scheduled to be completed
1975.
Administration. President, Otis A. Singletary. Undergraduates address
admission inquiries to Dean of Admissions; graduate students address
inquiries to Dean of Graduate School.
College of Arts and Sciences
Degree Requirements. See general requirements. Offers programs lead-
ing to B.A., B.S., B.M., and B.M.Ed. For all bachelor's degrees: 128
semester hours.
Departments and Teaching Staff, 1970-71. Art professors 3, associate
professors 5, assistant professors 8, instructors 3, additional part-time 1;
botany 3,2,5,0,0; chemistry 10,7,5,0,0; classics 1,2,0,1,1; computer science
0,3,0,0,1; English 9,7,19,7,4; French 4,6,1,0,0; geography 3,1,4,0,1; geol-
ogy 6,5,2,0,0; German 4,2,1,0,1; history 9,11,8,1,0; journalism 4,3,1,0,0;
mathematics 9,13,27,0,0; microbiology 6,2,6,0,0; music 9,13,7,3,2; philos-
ophy 1,4,2,2,0; physics 10,5,9,0,2; political science 2,6,10,1,0; psychology
7,5,4,0,1; Slavic 2,1,0,1,1; sociology 8,1,7,0,2; Spanish 4,4,1,1,1; speech
2,1,1,1,2; statistics 4,2,5,1,1; telecommunications 1,0,3,0,0; theater arts
0,2,2,1,0; zoology 5,3,5,0,Q Total: 429. Men full time 390, part time 12;
women full time 18, part time 9. Degrees held: 333 doctorates, 95 mas-
ter's, l bachelor's.
Special Academic Programs. Topical major allows student to develop
interdisciplinary degree programs. Student exchange program with Hei-
delburg University, Germany: graduate exchange program with Univer-
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sity of Montpellier, France; exchange program with the Instituto Tecno-
logico de Monterrey, Mexico. Dual-degree program with College of
Engineering.
Graduate Work. M.A. or M.S. degree programs in most departments.
Doctoral programs are offered leading to Ph.D. in most departments.
Enrollment. Fall 1970: 5,712. Undergraduate 5,333: lower division men
full time 1,940, part time 58; lower division women full time 1,164, part
time 60; upper division men full time 1,190, part time 70; upper division
women full time 819, part time 32. Unclassified 379: men full time 63,
part time 90; women full time 86, part time 140. Summer 1970: 1,196.
College of Agriculture
Degree Requirements. See general requirements. For B.S.: 132 semes-
ter hours.
Departments and Teaching Staff, 1970-71. Agricultural economics
professors 7, associate professors 8, assistant professors 10, instructors 0;
agricultural engineering 3,6,2,0; agronomy 16,12,15,0; animal sciences
15,12,11,1; entomology 5,3,3,0; forestry 3,1,2,0; horticulture 3,5,5,2; plant
pathology 4,7,2,0; sociology 8,0,2,0; veterinary science 3,2,5,0. Total: 183
men full time. Degrees held: 161 doctorates, 15 master's, 1 bachelor's, 6?
professional.
Special Academic Programs. Interdisciplinary Ph.D. program in plant
physiology.
Graduate Work. M.S. and Ph.D. degree programs are offered in most
departments and in plant physiology and soil sciences.
Enrollment. Fall 1970: Undergraduate 669: lower division men full
time 311, part time 2; lower division women full time 69, part time 1;
upper division men full time 245, part time 1; upper division women full
time 40. Summer 1970: 99.
College of Allied Health Professions
Degree Requirements. See general requirements. For B.S.: 128 semes-
ter hours.
Departments and Teaching Staff, 1970-71. Community health profes-
sors 1, associate professors 2, assistant professors 0, instructors 0, addi-
tional part-time 0; dental hygiene 0,1,1,2,1; dental laboratory technology
0,0,1,1,0; electroencephalographic technology 0,0,1,1,0; medical technol-
ogy 0,1,2,1,8; physical therapy 0,3,1,1,0; radiologic technology 0,0,2,2,0;
respiratory therapy 0,1,1,2,0. Total: 37. Men full time.15, part time 5;
women full time 13, part time 6. Degrees held: 4 doctorates, 7 master's,
22 bachelor's, 3 professional.
Special Academic Programs. Center for Learning Resources for in-
structional and administrative personnel and for development of pro-
grams and learning experiences for allied health educators.
Graduate Work. M.S. degree programs in clinical nutrition, radiation
medicine.
Enrollment. Fall 1970: Undergraduate 420: lower division men full
time 46, part time 4; lower division women full time 223, part time 4;
upper division men full time 20; upper division women full time 119, part
time 4.
College of Architecture
Degree Requirements. See general requirements. For B.Arch.: 166
semester hours; 5-year program.
Teaching Staff, 1970-71. Professors 5, associate professors 7, assistant
professors 8, instructors 3, additional part-time 8. Total: 31. Men full
time 22, part time 7; women full time 1, part time 1. Degrees held: 2
doctorates, 16 master's, 3 bachelor's, 10 professional.
Special Academic Programs. Institute for environmental studies.
Mountain studies program. Summer study-abroad program in Europe.
Building systems conference sponsored jointly with College of Engineer-
ing.
Enrollment. Fall 1970: Undergraduate 396 full time: lower division
men 209, women 9; upper division men 170, women 8. Summer 1970:44.
College of Business and Economics
Degree Requirements. See general requirements. Offers programs lead.
ing to B.B.A., B.S. in Acct., B.S. in Business and Economics. For all
bachelor's degrees: 130 semester hours.
Departments and Teaching Staff, 1970-71. Accounting professors 4,
associate professors 3, assistant professors 2, instructors 0, additional
part-time 1; business administration 3,8,10,1,2; economics 10,9,7,0,2.
Total: 62. Men full time 57, part time 4; women part time 1. Degrees
held: 47 doctorates, 12 master's, 3 professional.
Special Academic Programs. Consultation program with small business
managers in slow-growth areas of the state.
Graduate Work. M.A. degree programs; M.S.; M.S. in Acct.; M.B.A.
Doctoral programs are offered leading to Ph.D. in economics; D.B.A.
Enrollment. Fall 1970: 1,722. Undergraduate 1,716: lower division men
full time 680, part time 20; lower division women full time 61, part time
3; upper division men full time 860, part time 17; upper division women
full time 70, part time 5. Unclassified 6: men full time 1, part time 4;
women full time 1. Summer 1970:409.
College of Education
Degree Requirements. See general requirements. For B.A.: 128 semes-
ter hours.
Departments and Teaching Staff, 1970-71. Administration and supervi-
sion professors 6, associate professors 0, assistant professors 0, instructors
0, additional part-time 0; curriculum and instruction 3,5,23,1,17; educa-
tional psychology and counseling 2,4,7,1,1; health, physical education.
and recreation 5,2,11,3,6; higher and adult education 5,0,1,0,0; social and
philosophical studies in education 1,3,5,0,1; special education 1,4,8,0,3:
vocational education 3,3,14,14,1. Total: 164. Men full time 97, part time
10; women full time 38, part time 19. Degrees held: 91 doctorates, 40
master's, 3 bachelor's, I professional.
Special Academic Programs. Ed.D. program in which students take
work outside the college. Joint doctoral program with regional universi-
ties in Kentucky.
Graduate Work. M.A., M.S., Ph.D., Ed.D. degree programs are offered
in all departments.
Enrollment. Fall 1970: 2,797. Undergraduate 2,757: lower division men
full time 226, part time 7; lower division women full time 784, part time
37; upper division men full time 516, part time 32; upper division women
full time 1,121, part time 34. Unclassified 40: men full time 4, part time
11; women full time 10, part time 15. Summer 1970: 2,813.
College of Engineering
Degree Requirements. See general requirements. For B.S.: 128 semes-
ter hours.
Departments and Teaching Staff, 1970-71. Agricultural engineering
professors 3, associate professors 3, assistant professors 3, instructors 0.
additional part-time 0; chemical engineering 2,4,3,0,0; civil engineering
6,4,7,0,5; electrical engineering 6,5,6,0,0; engineering mechanics
1,5,3,0,1; mechanical engineering 7,6,7,2,3; metallurgical engineering and
materials science 3,5,2,0,0. Total: 102 men; full time 93, part time 9?
Degrees held: 78 doctorates, 21 master's, 3 bachelor's.
Special Academic Programs. Interdisciplinary graduate study in bio?
medical engineering. Dual-degree program in engineering with Thom
More College, Ft. Mitchell, and the College of Arts and Sciences. Land
surveyors', coal, Kentucky highway, concrete, and electronic crime coun-
termeasures conferences; building systems conference sponsored jointly
with College of Architecture.
Graduate Work. M.S. and Ph.D. degree programs are offered in all
departments.
Enrollment. Fall 1970: Undergraduate 1,267: lower division men full
time 552, part time 57; lower division women full time 8; upper division
men full time 586, part time 60; upper division women full time 4.
Summer 1970: 302.
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College of Home Economics
Degree Requirements. See general requirements. For B.S.: 128 semes-
ter hours.
Departments and Teaching Staff, 1970-71. Housing and interior design
professors 0, associate professors 0, assistant professors 0, instructors I,
additional part-time 2; human development and family relations
0.1.2,1,2; management and family economics 0,0,0,1,2; nutrition and
food science 1,2,4,1,1; textiles, clothing, and merchandising 0,0,3,0,1.
Total: 25. Men full time 5, part time 2; women full time 12, part time 6.
Degrees held: 9 doctorates, 15 master's.
Special Academic Programs. Interdisciplinary home economics pro-
gram. Study-abroad programs in textiles, clothing, merchandising.
Enrollment. Fall 1970: 377. Undergraduate 374: lower division men
full time l; lower division women full time 172, part time 14; upper
division men full time I; upper division women full time 186. Unclassi-
fied 3 part time: men I, women 2. Summer 1970: 97.
College of Nursing
Degree Requirements. See general requirements. For B.S.N.: 135 se-
mester hours.
Teaching Staff, 1970-71. Professors 4, associate professors 5, assistant
professors 6, instructors 8. Total: 23 full time; men 2, women 21. Degrees
held: 4 doctorates, 19 master's.
Graduate Work. M.S.N. degree programs.
Enrollment. Fall 1970: Undergraduate 385: lower division men full
time 3; lower division women full time 255, part time 14; upper division
women full time 113.
College of Pharmacy
Admission. For B.S. program, requires 66 semester hours college work
in liberal arts and basic sciences. For Pliarm.D., requires completion of
the 66-hour prepharmacy curriculum and 2 years professional training.
Degree Requirements. See general requirements. For B.S.: 169 semes-
ter hours; 5-year program. For Pharm.D.: 199 semester hours; 6-year
program.
Departments and Teaching Staff, 1970-71. Clinical pharmacy profes-
sors I, associate professors I, assistant professors 10, instructors 0, addi-
tional part-time 0; materia medica 0,2,3,1,0; pharmaceutical chemistry
0,2,0,0,0; pharmacy 7,3,0,0,2. Total: 32 men; full time 30, part time 2.
Degrees held: 18 doctorates, 8 master's, 1 bachelor's, 5 professional.
Graduate Work. M.S. and Ph.D. degree programs are offered in phar-
maceutical sciences.
Enrollment. Fall 1970: 176 full time. Undergraduate 168 upper divi-
sion: men 124, women 44. First-professional 8: men 4, women 4.
College of Social Professions
Degree Requirements. See general requirements. For B.A.S.W.: 128
semester hours.
Teaching Staff, 1970-71. Professors 3, associate professors 4, assistant
professors 4, instructors 9, lecturers 2, additional part-time 10. Total: 32.
Men full time 8, part time 6; women full time 14, part time 4. Degrees
held: 6 doctorates, 15 master's, I professional.
Special Academic Programs. Social Welfare Research Institute for joint
research projects; the institute plans to develop intercollege research
programs in planning, housing, and public administration.
Graduate Work. M.S.W. degree programs in family and children's
services, health, mental health, state government. -
Enrollment. Fall 1970: Undergraduate 278: lower division men full
time 27; lower division women full time 125, part time 12; upper division
men full time 19, part time 1; upper division women full time 90, part
time 4. Summer 1970: 44.
College of Dentistry
Admission. Requires 60 semester hours from accredited college; 3-4
years predental curriculum preferred.
?
U. of Kentucky 627
Degree Requirements. For D.M.D.: 160 semester hours.
Fees, 1971-72. Full-time tuition for state residents $710 a year, out-of-
state students $1,575. See general description.
Departments and Teaching Staff, 1970-71. Community dentistry pro-
fessors 1, associate professors 0, assistant professors 3. instructors 0.
additional part-time 0; dental auxiliary utilities 0,0,2,0,0; dental physical
science 0,1,0,0,0: endodontics 0,1,1,0,4; occlusion 1,0,0,0,0; oral biology
0,1,5,0,1; oral diagnosis 1,0,4,0,3; oral surgery 0,1,2,0,4; oral pathology
1,1,1,0,0; orthodontics 1,1,2,0,6; pedodontics 1,2,2,0,1; periodontics
0,2,4,0,3; prosthodontics 1,1,3,1,2; restorative dentistry 0,3,4,1,8. Total:
88. Men full time 54, part time 32; women full time 2. Degrees held: 2
doctorates, 84 professional.
Special Academic Programs. Interdisciplinary courses in basic and
applied sciences.
Graduate Work. M.S. degree programs in orthodontics.
Enrollment. Fall 1970: 230 full time. First-professional 206: men 203,
women 3. Graduate 24 men.
College of Law
Admission. Requires bachelor's degree; LSAT.
Degree Requirements. For J.D.: 87 semester hours; GPA 2.0; 3-year
residence.
Teaching Staff, 1970-71. Professors 10, associate professors 3, assistant
professors 7, instructors 0, additional part-time 7. Total: 27 men; full
time 20, part time 7. Degrees held: 2 doctorates, 13 master's, 12 profes-
sional.
Enrollment. Fall 1970: First-professional 438: men full time 405, part
time 7; women full time 19, part time 7. Summer 1970: 114.
College of Medicine
Admission. Requires 2-3 years college experience or bachelor's degree;
MCAT; for in-state students, 2 personal interviews; for out-of-state
students, 3 personal interviews.
Fees, 1971-72. Full-time tuition for state residents $710 a year, out-of-
state students $1,575. See general description.
Degree Requirements. For M.D.: 189 semester hours; 4-year program.
Departments and Teaching Staff, 1970-71. Anatomy professors 2, asso-
ciate professors 7, assistant professors 3, instructors 0, additional part-
time 0; anesthesiology 2,5,4,1,0; behavioral science 3,1,6,1,0; biochemis-
try 4,3,1,0,0; cell biology 1,1,6,1,0; community medicine 3,5,8,0,4; diag-
nostic radiology 3,4,12,0,3; medicine 10,9,6,2,8; neurology 1,1,1,0,0; ob-
stetrics-gynecology. 2,1,2,0,0; pathology 2,1,3,0,2; pediatrics 4,4,3,2,3;
pharmacology 2,2,1,0,0; physiology and biophysics 4,5,2,1,0; psychiatry
4,1,4,2,6; radiation medicine 1,2,2,0,0; surgery 3,4,12,0,3. Total: 210.
Men full time 161, part time 25; women full time 22, part time 2. Degrees
held: 66 doctorates, 117 professional.
Special Academic Programs. Increased opportunity for elective
courses; the fourth year has become entirely elective. Section on Educa-
tional Resources to improve educational methods. Department of Family
Practice has been established and will be activated soon. Continuing
education for physicians through medical center courses, circuit-riding
community-based programs, family practice nights, short-term fellow-
ships, telephone conferences, PANMED educational television. Tobacco
and Health Institute conducts research to produce a product with mini-
mal health implications. Combined M.S.-M.D. programs in advanced
bioassay, human pharmacology.
Graduate Work. M.S. and Ph.D. degree programs are offered in anat-
omy, behavioral science, biochemistry, biophysics, cell biology, pharma-
cology, physiology.
Enrollment. Fall 1970: First-professional 339 full time: men 298,
women 41.
Degree Information. Offers programs leading to M.A., M.S., M.A. in
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Econ., M.B.A.. M.S. in Acc., M.S. in Eco1.S.L.S., M.S.N., M.S.W.
For specific fields of study, see individual colleges. For fields in which
doctorates have been awarded, see Tables 1-8 of Appendix IV.
Fees, 1971-72. Part-time tuition for state residents $19 a credit hour,
out-of-state students $58. See general description.
Teaching Staff, 1970-71. Faculty are drawn from the colleges of the
university.
Enrollment. Fall 1970: Graduate 2,477: men full time 1,037, part time
510; women full time 515, part time 415. Summer 1970: 1,784.
College of Library Science
Degree Information. Offers programs leading to M.A. and M.S.L.S. .
Teaching Staff, 1970-71. Professors 1, associate professors 2, assistant
professors 6, additional part-time 2. Total: 11. Men full time 6; women
full time 3, part time 2. Degrees held: 6 doctorates, 5 master's.
Special Academic Programs. Independent research programs offered in
medical center library, law library, and libraries of National Institute of
Mental Health Clinical Research Center.
Graduate Work. M.A., M.S.L.S. degree programs in academic, public,
special, school librarianship.
University of Louisville
Belknap Campus
Louisville, Kentucky 40208
Tel.: (502) 636-6556
University of Louisville, a coeducational university formerly municipally
controlled and privately supported, officially became a member of the
Kentucky state system on July 1, 1970. The university offers undergradu-
ate and graduate programs in the College of Arts and Sciences, in the
Schools of Business, Dentistry, Education, Music, and Police Adminis-
tration, and in the Speed Scientific School; graduate programs are ad-
ministered by the Graduate School. The School of Social Work also
offers graduate programs leading to the M.S.S.W. degree. First-profes-
sional degree programs are offered by the Schools of Dentistry, Law, and
Medicine. Associate degree programs are offered by the College of Arts
and Sciences through all departments and through a cooperative pro-
gram in secretarial science and by the Speed Scientific School. Certifi-
cates are conferred by the School of Dentistry, Speed Scientific School,
and the School of Medicine in dental hygiene, engineering technology,
and medical technology, respectively. University College offers after-
noon, evening, and Saturday courses leading to bachelor's and associate
degrees and a program leading to a certificate in contemporary commu-
nity affairs.
Accreditation: SA; chemistry, dental hygiene, dentistry, engineering
(chemical, civil, electrical, mechanical), law, medical technology, medi-
cine, music, social work, teacher education (elementary, secondary,
school service personnel).
History. Established as Jefferson Seminary 1798; name changed to
Collegiate Institute of Louisville and first instruction at college level
offered 1837; first baccalaureate 1838; chartered as President and Trus-
tees of the University of Louisville 1846; present name adopted 1926;
merged with Kentucky Southern College 1969; became part of state
system 1970.
Governing Board. 12 trustees; 10 voting members appointed by gover-
nor for 4-year terms; nonvoting chairman of university senate and presi-
dent of student senate ex officio.
Calendar. Semester system. Regular session late August to early May.
Freshmen admitted August, January, June. Degrees conferred May,
August. December. Summer session of two 5-week day terms and one 10-
week evening term, early June to mid-August.
Characteristics of Freshmen, 1970-71. Men: 31% ranked in top fifth of
secondary school class, 42% in second fifth, 20% in third fifth, 6% in
fourth fifth, 1% in bottom fifth. Women: 48% ranked in top fifth of
secondary school class, 33% in second fifth, 14% in third fifth, 5% in
fourth fifth. Average scores: 515 verbal, 525 mathematical. 4 Na.
tional Merit Scholars. 80% of applicants accepted. 87% of entering fresh.
men came from within state.
Admission. Rolling admissions plan. For fall acceptance, applications
may be submitted as early as September 1 of previous year but not later
than July 15 of year of enrollment. For early decision, apply by October
1; need not limit application to University of Louisville. Requirements:
Graduation from accredited secondary school with 12 academic units. 3-
4 units English, 2-4 in a foreign language, 3-4 mathematics, 2-4 sciences,
2-4 social studies recommended. For engineering, physics, and chemistry
majors, 3% units mathematics recommended. CEEB SAT or ACT pro-
gram. See specific school for additional requirements. For transfer stu.
dents: GPA 2.0. Maximum credit toward baccalaureate from correspon.
dence or extension 24 semester hours; community or junior college 62
hours; 4-year accredited institution 92 hours.
College credit and advanced placement given for college-level work
completed in secondary school on basis of CEEB Advanced Placement
Examinations. Secondary school students may enroll in courses at Uni-
versity of Louisville.
Degree Requirements. For all bachelor's degrees: GPA 2.0; final 30
semester hours in residence. Degree credit allowed toward baccalaureate
from CLEP. See specific school for additional degree requirements.
Grading system: A-F; pass-fail option in I course a semester for juniors
and seniors.
Special Universitywide Academic Programs. International Center, in
cooperation with Institute of International Education, International As.
sociation for the Exchange of Students for Technical Experience, and
other educational institutions, brings students from approximately 35
countries to study and do research and graduate work; invites ambassa-
dors and members of diplomatic corps from Washington, D.C., to speak
at convocations; sponsors 9-week exchange program in which students
from all over U.S. go to Europe for 6 weeks of work or study in Paris,
Madrid, Singen, or Montpellier and 3 weeks of travel. New Advanced
Certificate in Contemporary Community Affairs program, open to any-
one who has reached senior college status and requiring 24 hours of
work, is administered by University College. Urban Studies Center con-
ducts interdisciplinary research and provides consulting and training
services to governmental and private community organizations in con-
temporary urban problems; offers courses for credit through regular
schools and departments of university. Water Resources Laboratory and
Archeological Survey are both affiliated with the Graduate School. Office
of Black Affairs, established 1969, has coordinator and full-time staff to
recruit black students and professors, establish courses in black affairs.
and create variety of programs centered around black experience in
America. Member of Kentuckiana Metroversity, Inc.
ROTC. Navy, Air Force optional for 2 or 4 years. 49 commissions
awarded 1970-71.
Graduate Work. See specific school and Graduate School.
Degrees Conferred. Year ending June 30, 1971: bachelor's 1,011 (B.A.
419, B.S. 93, B.A. in EI.Ed. 47, B.C.E. 22, B.Ch.E. 25, B.E.E. 36, B.M. 6.
B.M.-B.M.Ed. 1, B.M.E. 38, B.M.Ed. 9, B.S.C. 239, B.S. in El.Ed. 75.
B.S.PIc.Ad. 1); first-professional 249 (D.M.D. 57, J.D. 102, M.D. 90):
master's 493 (M.A. 61, M.S. 63, M.A.T. 39, M.B.A. 61, M.Ed. 94, M.Eng.
28, M.M. 5, M.M.Ed. 2, M.S.-M.Eng. 12, M.S.S.W. 64); doctorates 25
(Ph.D.). Associates and certificates 226. Honorary 5 (D.H.Ltr., D.Hum..
D.S.Sc., D.Lit., LL.D.).
Fees, 1971-72. Full-time tuition for state residents $1,050 a year for
day session, $875 evening; out-of-state students $1,950 day, $1,625 eve-
ning. Part-time tuition for state residents $44 a credit hour for day
session, $36.50 evening; out-of-state students $82 day, $68 evening. Sum-
mer session tuition for state residents $396 day, $328 evening; out-of-
state students $738 day, $612 evening. Laboratory $3-$35; graduation
$20. Room and board $940 a year. Average rent for institutional mar-
ried-student housing $115 a month. See specific school for additional
fees.
Student Financial Aid, 1970-71. 1,335 undergraduates received aid.
Scholarships and grants 780, from $100 to $1,950, total $367,874; appli-
cations close April 15. Loans 810, from $100 to $1,000, total $366.157.
College-assigned jobs 260, from $100 to $700, total $69,915.
778 graduate students received aid. Fellowships 320, from $100 to
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