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| The University of Kansas | |
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| Motto | Videbo visionem manc magnam quare non comburatur rubus (I will see this great vision in which the bush does not burn) |
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| Established | 1865 |
| School type | Public |
| President | Robert Hemenway (chancellor) |
| Location | Lawrence, Kansas, USA |
| Campus | 1,000 acres (4 km²) |
| Enrollment | 20,887 undergraduate, 6,093 graduate |
| Faculty | 2,158 |
| Endowment | $1.1 billion |
| Colors | Crimson and Blue ![]() |
| Website | www.ku.edu |
The University of Kansas (often referred to as just KU or Kansas) is an institution of higher learning located in Lawrence, Kansas. The University was founded in 1865 by the citizens of Lawrence, under a charter from the Kansas Legislature, with the assistance of a donation of 40 acres (160,000 m²) of land on Mount Oread in Lawrence from former Kansas Governor Charles Robinson and his wife Sara and a monetary gift from philanthropist Amos Adams Lawrence. In the Fall 2003, the University enrolled 29,272 students. The total faculty head count was 2,158. The total staff and faculty count was 12,328 employees.
The University's Medical Center and hospital is located in Kansas City, Kansas. The KU Edwards Campus is located in Overland Park, Kansas in the Kansas City metro area. There are also educational/research sites in Parsons, Topeka and a branch of the University of Kansas School of Medicine in Wichita.
The university enjoys a fine national reputation. The most recent edition of Peterson's Guide to Competitive College reports that KU "has a long and distinguished tradition as one of America's premier universities." Another popular college guidebook, The Fiske Guide to Colleges, for more than a decade has awarded KU a four-star rating for academics, social life, and overall quality of university life.
KU is home to the Robert J. Dole Institute of Politics as well as Kansas Public Radio. Radio station KANU was one of the first public radio stations in the nation. The university is host to several notable museums including the Kansas Natural History Museum, the KU Museum of Anthropology, and the Spencer Museum of Art.
The chancellor of the University of Kansas is Robert Hemenway, who has been serving in that capacity since 1995 and has taken a very active approach toward improving academics.
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The University is a large state sponsored university. In addition to a large liberal arts college, it has schools of Allied Health, Architecture and Urban Design, Business, Education, Engineering, Fine Arts, Journalism and Mass Communication, Law, Medicine, Nursing, Pharmacy, and Social Welfare. The study of academic Sociology originated at this university, in 1890, for the first time in America .
KU's academic computing department was an active participant in setting up the Internet and is the developer of the seminal Lynx text based web browser. Lynx itself provided hypertext browsing and navigation prior to Tim Berners Lee's invention of HTTP and HTML.[1]
The school's sports teams wearing crimson and royal blue are called the Jayhawks. They participate in the NCAA's Division I (I-A for football) and in the Big 12 Conference.
KU football dates from 1890, and has played in the Orange Bowl twice: 1948 and 1968. They are currently coached by Mark Mangino, who was hired in 2002. The team plays at Memorial Stadium, the oldest NCAA football stadium west of the Mississippi River.
The men's basketball team, currently coached by Bill Self, is a perennial national contender whose last national championship was in 1988. The team plays at Allen Fieldhouse, one of the oldest current basketball facilities in the NCAA. Kansas has counted among its coaches Dr. James Naismith (the inventor of basketball), Basketball Hall of Fame inductee Phog Allen (sometimes dubbed "Father of basketball coaching"), and New York Knicks coach Larry Brown.
For athletes, see the relevant section in Kansas Jayhawks
The University of Kansas is repeatedly listed as one of the best buys in higher education by such publications as Kiplinger’s, the Fiske Guide to Colleges, Kaplan’s and the Princeton Review. Tuition at KU is 13 percent below the national average, according to the College Board, and the University remains a best buy in the region. Its 2004-05 in-state tuition and fees of $4,737 were lower than the University of Nebraska, Iowa, Missouri, and most other public universities.
| Big 12 Conference: North Division: Colorado | Iowa State | Kansas | Kansas State | Missouri | Nebraska South Division: Baylor | Oklahoma | Oklahoma State | Texas | Texas A&M | Texas Tech |
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