xt759z909023 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt759z909023/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky 1980 Rupp Arena, Lexington (Ky.) athletic publications  English University of Kentucky Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. University of Kentucky Basketball Programs (Men) UKAW University of Kentucky Men's Basketball (1979-1980) programs coaches Hall, Joe B. players Rupp Arena NCAA Men's Basketball Mideast Regional (1980) Duke University Purdue University Indiana University statistics schedules rosters tickets NCAA Basketball: Mideast Regional, March 13-15, 1980 text NCAA Basketball: Mideast Regional, March 13-15, 1980 1980 2019 true xt759z909023 section xt759z909023  The Honda Prelude. Our idea of a sports car.
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official program  regionals Contents
2   College Athletics' Voice
The NCAA has a history dating back to the days of Theodore Roosevelt and now encompasses more than 800 members.
4   NCAA Basketball Committee
6   Bigger and Better
This year marks another expansion of the tournament. Will this one be as successful as previous expansions?
13 Photo Story
Take a look at some of the thrills and pageantry of the 1979 tournament.
14 Quiz
How much do you know about the NCAA tournament?
17   Facts and Figures
A special section with rosters and photos of the teams in the regional tournament.
39   The REAL Story
Spend a few minutes reading about the lighter side of college basketball.
41 Three Makes it Better
An experiment using three officials is proving very successful.
42 On Stage!
Television coverage of the NCAA tournament is better than ever.
48 'We'd Work for Free'
USBWA members enjoy tournament assignment.
49 Tournament Records
Credits
This is the official program of the 1980 National Collegiate Basketball Championship.
Editors
David P. SeifertNCAA Assistant Director of Public Relations and Promotion.
Walt JohnsonJim Host & Associates, Inc., Lexington, Kentucky
Publishers
David E. CawoodNCAA Director of Public Relations W. James HostPresident, Jim Host & Associates, Inc.
Advertising Sales
Kenneth AdamsGeneral Manager, Lexington Productions, Lexington, Kentucky
Printing
Thoroughbred PressLexington, Kentucky Art Assistance
Cover art by Phil Bloomfield, Lexington, Kentucky and by The Art Department, Lexington. Scenes depict the sites of the 1980 regional tournaments (clockwise from upper left): Philadelphia; Lexington; Tucson, Arizona; Houston. College Athletics' Voice
NCAA serves nation's colleges and universities
Progress and growth have become familiar companions for the National Collegiate Athletic Association during its first 74 years as the major governing organization for intercollegiate athletics in the United States.
A call for stricter control of college football by President Theodore Roosevelt because of the violence in the game brought together 13 institutions in 1905, formulating the original communications base for college athletics.
This initial body called itself the Intercollegiate Athletic Association and was officially constituted March 31, 1906. In 1910, the name was changed to the National Collegiate Athletic Association.
Seven progressive decades have molded this original 13-member body into a membership today of more than 860 colleges, universities, conferences and affiliated organizations.
Administration and rules interpretation occupied early efforts of the organization. Shortly after World War II, the NCAA adopted legislative and executive powers, changing its function into one dealing with virtually all issues concerned with intercollegiate athletics.
Many things have become associated with the NCAA during its colorful history. Highest priority goes to the service it provides to more than 860 members, acting as the true "voice" of college athletics today.
Each January, the NCAA membership comes together at the annual Convention to review, propose and
amend legislation. The Convention presents the opportunity for the nation's institutions of higher learning to speak and act on athletic matters at the national level.
Acting in the best interests of its membership, the NCAA strives to perform these specific functions among its many other responsibilities:
 Conducts 43 annual National Collegiate Championships in 19 sports for three separate divisions. Three championships (Division I, Division II and Division III) are held in baseball, basketball, cross country, golf, lacrosse, soccer, swimming, tennis, outdoor track and wrestling. Two championships (Division I and Divisions II-III) are staged in gymnastics and ice hockey. Fencing, rifle, skiing, indoor track, volleyball and water polo hold single National Collegiate Championships, while football is contested in Divisions I-AA, II and III. The National Collegiate Championship dates back to 1883 in tennis; and during this 76-year history, more than 85,000 student-athletes have competed in these events, with more than 11,000 earning the coveted title of "National Collegiate Champion."
 Maintains 13 rules committees to formulate, copyright and publish rules of play for the government of collegiate sports. Members of these and many other committees are elected by representatives of member institutions at the annual Convention.
 Publishes "official guides" annually for nine sports through the NCAA publishing department.
2
 Collects, compiles and distributes the official statistics of college football, basketball and baseball through its NCAA statistics service.
 Conducts studies as a means of developing solutions to athletic programs.
 Represents the membership in legislative and regulatory matters on the state and Federal levels.
 Annually selects the College Athletics Top Ten and the Theodore Roosevelt ("Teddy") Awardthe Association's highest honor.
 Administers an honors program which annually awards 80 postgraduate scholarships to recognize outstanding senior student-athletes who have excelled in the classroom as well as athletics. This scholarship is for $2,000. The program has provided $1,264,000 to 1,104 recipients since its inception in the 1964-65 academic year.
 Promotes and participates in international sports planning and competition through membership in the United States Olympic Committee, Amateur Basketball Association of the USA, Track and Field Association of the USA, and the United States Baseball, Gymnastics and Wrestling Federations, as well as through NCAA-sponsored competition with Japan.
 Maintains more than 70 full-time staff members at its national headquarters in Mission, Kansas, under the supervision of Executive Director Walter Byers. migi'.....mi
1. President Theodore Roosevelt, whose urging for stricter control of college football led to the formation of the NCAA; 2. NCAA Executive Director Walter Byers; 3. NCAA President William J. Flynn; 4. NCAA Secretary-Treasurer James Frank. Other pictures on this page show action from some of the NCAA's 43 national championships. The Association's championship program encompasses 19 sports, with more than 12,000 student-athletes competing annually.
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73 NCAA Division I Basketball Committee
Wayne Duke
Big 10 Conference
Larry Albus
Metro Conference
Ladell Andersen
Utah State
Vic Bubas
Sun Belt Conference
Willis Casey
North Carolina State
ft
Dave Gavitt
Providence
Andy Geiger
Stanford
Ken Karr
San Diego State
The National Collegiate Basketball Championship is administered and supervised by the nine-person NCAA Division I Basketball Committee. This committee is nominated by the NCAA Committee on Committees and elected by the NCAA membership at the Association's annual Convention.
Current chairman of the committee is Wayne Duke, commissioner of the Big Ten Conference. Duke became a member of the committee in 1975. In 1977, he succeeded Stan Watts, retired director of athletics and head basketball coach at Brigham Young University, as committee chairman.
The committee's newest members are Vic Bubas, commissioner of the Sun Belt Conference; Dave Gavitt, director of athletics at Providence College, and Russ Potts, director of athletics at Southern Methodist University. Bubas, Gavitt and Potts were elected from six to nine members.
Andy Geiger, director of athletics at Stanford University, and Ladell Andersen, director of athletics at Utah State University, joined the committee in 1977.
Other committee members include Larry Albus, commissioner of the Metro Conference (since 1974); Willis Casey, director of athletics at North Carolina State University (since 1974), and Ken Karr of San Diego State University (since 1975).
Each committee member is elected for a three-year term and may be reelected for a second term.
Administrative assistance is provided to the committee by Thomas W. Jemstedt, NCAA assistant executive director. Media arrangements are coordinated by David E. Cawood, NCAA public relations director.
Future Championship Dates and Sites
1981 (43rd championship)
First and Second Rounds March 12-15, 1981
East____Providence Civic Center
Providence, Rhode Island
Charlotte Coliseum Charlotte, North Carolina
Mideast- University of Dayton Dayton, Ohio
University of Alabama Tuscaloosa, Alabama
Midwest-University of Texas Austin, Texas
Wichita State University Wichita, Kansas
West----University of California (UCLA)
Los Angeles, California
Regionals March 19-22, 1981
East----The Omni
Atlanta, Georgia
Mideast- Indiana University
Bloomingion, Indiana
Midwest-Louisiana Superdome New Orleans, Louisiana
West____University of Utah
Salt Lake City, Utah
Finals
1981----The Spectrum
Temple University Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Marcn 28 & 30)
Russ Potts
Southern Methodist
Tom Jernstedt
NCAA
Dave Cawood
NCAA
1982----Louisiana Superdome
Tulane University
New Orleans, Louisiana (March 27 & 29)
1983----University of New Mexico
Albuquerque, New Mexico (April 2 & 4)
1984.
-The Kingdome University of Washington Seattle, Washington (March 31 & April 2)  Bigger and Better
NCAA tournament expands to 48 teams
by Dave Dorr
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Each year you believe the tournament has achieved the millennium. Quite obviously it has not.
Wayne Duke, 1979
Absolutely no one who has experienced the NCAA basketball championship in even the most remote sense of the word, whether it be just a brush as a spectator from the edges or those who have felt intimately the throb of excitement on the floor as players, would dispute that statement.
This athletic event, which matured mightily in the decade of the 1970s, has forced itself into the American sports consciousness with the drama and grandeur seldom before known in basketball. Anytime. Anywhere.
It has been shaped by the feelings, emotions and ideas of a few men, becoming an impelling challenge for them to keep the tournament at a high level. Their opinions, not always acceptable to all, have meant changes that they believe to be for the best. Too, the changes have not always been met with acceptance.
Nonetheless, the tournament continues to progress; an event that can be measured both by the ingenuity and the frailties of those who steer it on a course that certainly has not wavered much in the last few years. They are human traits; they are to be expected.
Consider this observation of Wayne Duke, commissioner of the Big Ten Conference and one of the men who sit in judgment of the teams that await imitations each March from the NCAA Division I Basketball Committee:
"There are other sports events that have earned the support and attention of large numbers of people, but no event has captured the emotion and excitement of the entire nation as has the National Collegiate basketball championship. It is the single greatest collegiate sports event of the year. . ."
Duke is chairman of the committee that administers the tournament. As one might surmise, the job of the current committee is a far cry from that of the men who doggedly pursued the idea of a national championship way back there in 1938.
The embryonic years vividly are portrayed in a marvelous book, "The Classic" (NCAA, the Lowell Press), superbly researched by writer Ken Rappoport. Rappoport describes the dominant role of Harold Olsen, the Ohio State basketball coach, who proposed the idea for such a tournament in a letter to the National Association of Basketball Coaches. It was not an idle daydream.
Eight teams, representing each of the NCAA's eight geographical districts, played in the first tournament in 1939 at Northwestern University. The eight-team format was used until 1951, when it was doubled.
From that start, the field has grown to the 48 that began competition this year en route to the Final Four at Market Square Arena. The tournament has expanded three times since 1974: From 25 to 32 in 1975, from 32 to 40 in 1979 and from 40 to 48 for the 1980 tournament.
Besides increasing the size of the 1980 tournament, the rule limiting the number of teams that can be selected from a conference to two was rescinded. A major factor in the change was a three-way title tie last season
among Michigan State, Purdue and Iowa in the Big Ten, which does not decide its NCAA tournament representative in a postseason tourney.
The limitations placed the tournament committee in an uncomfortable position. The Big Ten was considered by almost everyone to be the nation's strongest league. But, a rule was a rule. Purdue was left out.
"I don't want to sound provincial, but there is no question that Purdue should have been in the tournament last year," said Duke. "It was an unusual situation."
It also demonstrated the harsh realities the committee faces in maintaining the delicate balance between conference-affiliated schools and the independents.
"Many conference schools argue that they play round-robin schedules," said Duke, "and they say, 'We don't have the won-lost records the independents have because we beat up on each other (in conference play).'
"The independents take the view that since they aren't in a conference the committee must protect places for them in the tournament."
The increase to 48 teamsand the correspondent rule that now permits selection of an unlimited number of teams from one conferencewas welcome news to the perennially powerful Atlantic Coast Conference. It, like the Big Ten, has suffered in the past because of too many good teams.
It turns out that further expansion was not a mandate on which the tournament committee stood in unanimity.
(continued on page 9)
Opposite: Michigan State's Greg Kelser scores during the 1979 tournament, the only 40-team event ever.
Photo: Malcolm Emmons
6  Supplier to the U.S. Olympic Committee
All NBA teams available at leading sporting goods stores everywhere Or
Please send me__________...cap(s) at $9.00 each
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Sizes: O Men's ? Women's ?Children's
Enclosed is a check or money order for_ I wish to use my ? Visa/BankAmericard ? Master Charge The schools available:
Akron, U. ot Alabama. U. of Arizona. U. of Arizona State U. Arkansas. U. of Arkansas State U. Army Auburn U. Ball State U. Baylor U. Boise State U. Boston College Bowling Green State U. Brigham Young U. Brown U.
California State U.
(Long Beach) California U. of
(Berkeley) Central Michigan U. Cincinnati. U. of Citadel. The Clemson U. Colgate U Colorado State U. Colorado. U. of Columbia U. Connecticut. U. of Dartmouth College Dayton, u. of Delaware, U, of Duke U. Duquesne U. East Carolina U. Eastern Kentucky U. Eastern Michigan U. East Texas State U. Emory & Henry College Florida, U. of Florida State U. Fresno Pacific College Furman U. Georgetown U. Georgia. U. of Georgia Tech Grambllng State U. Hampden Sydney Harvard U. Hawaii. U, of
(Honolulu) Hoiy Cross College Houston. U. of Illinois. U. of Illinois State U. Indiana U. Indiana State U. Iowa. U. of Iowa State U. Kansas, u. of Kansas State U. Kent State U. Kentucky, U. of Louisiana St. U. Louisiana Tech u Louisville, U. of McNeeseSt. U. Marquette U. Maryland. U. of Memphis St. U. Miami. U, ot
(Ohio) Miami. U. of
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(Minneapolis) Mississippi, U. ot Mississippi St. U. Missouri. U. of Montana St. U. Montana. U. of Morgan St. U. Navy
Nebraska. U. of Nevada. U. of
(Los Vegas) Nevada U. ot (at Reno) N. Mexico St. U. N. Mexico. U. of New York u.
(New York)
N. Carolina, U. of N. Carolina St. U. N. Dakota. U. of N.Texas St. U. Northern Illinois U. Northeast Louisiana U. Northeastern U. N. Michigan U. N.W. La. Northwestern U. Notre Dame, U. of Old Dominion U Ohio State U. Ohio U.
Oklahoma, U. of Oklahoma St. U. Oregon. U. of Oregon State U. Pacific. U. of Penn State U. Penn., U of Pittsburgh. U. of Portland State U. Princeton U. Providence Puerto Rico. U. of Purdue U. Rice U.
Richmond. U. of
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St. John's U.
St. Louis U.
San Diego St. U.
San Frans.. U. of
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Slippery Rock St College
S. Carolina, U. of
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S. Methodist U.
South Fla.. U. of
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S. Illinois U.
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(Baton Rouge) S.W. Texas St. U. S.W. La.. U. of Stanford U. Syracuse U. Temple U. Tennessee, U. of Texas. U. of Texas A&M U. Texas A&l
Texas, U. of (at Arlington) Texas at El Paso
Won Texas Christian U. Texas Southern Texas Tech U. Toledo. U. of Towson state College Troy State Tufts College Tuiane U. Tulsa. U. of UCLA
U.S. Air Force Utah. U. of Utah State U. Va. Comm. U. VanderbiltU. vlllanova U. Va.. U. of VMI VPt
Wake Forest U. Washington St. U. Washington. U. of Wayne St. U. W. Texas State W. Virginia U. Western Caro. Western Kentucky U. Western Mich. U. William & Mary. College ot Windsor. U. of Wisconsin. U. of Wyoming, U. ot Yale U.
Duke, at first, was hesitant; it was for him a dilemma: "In the final assessment, though, I felt because college basketball competition has improved so much over the years we had to provide flexibility for conference teams; to accomodate the Purdues or, for example, the ACC where, on a couple of occasions teams weren't in the tournament and should have been," he said.
"To accomodate you've got to increase the size of the field. My view is we'll be at 48 for a while."
Metro Conference Commissioner Larry Albus, who will relinquish his spot on the committee following the finals at Indianapolis, concurred, then gave another reason why the committee voted for expansion.
"I would have been willing to wait a year to go to 48," said Albus. "But we felt we should get the format to the place where it would be for a while.
"We had problems in previous years with the distribution of teams in the regionals with early malch-ups of strong teams that you shouldn't have. But the structure forcpd us to go by that. The tournament has evolved now to a magnificent thing. The exhilaration and enthusiasm that there is in March with college basketball . . . well, there's nothing else like it."
Probably it was the year 1973 that more than anything else is responsible for the inexorable growth and popularity of the tournament as we know it today. Tom Scott was the committee chairman then; and it was during his tenure that he initiated the enlargement of the tournament to 32 teams and conference runner-ups were added as at-large entries, a significant change.
In 1973, for the first time, the semifinals were played on Saturday and the finals on Monday night. It was in this prime time that a television audience of 40 million watched with awe as Bill Walton sank 21 of 22 shots in a magnificent performance at St. Louis and led UCLA to its seventh straight national championship.
Tournament income exceeded $2 million for the first time. Obviously, the nation noticed. Tickets to the 1974 finals at Greensboro were sold out a year in advance. That was another first. This tournament that once was little more than a daydream of Harold Olsen was suddenly embraced by a hungry sports public that, through TV, had been enraptured and fascinated by the pulsating beat of the national championship and by John Wooden's incredible Walton Gang.
La Salle's victory over Bradley in 1954 at Kansas City was the first championship game to be televised nationally. To those who were a part of this initial TV effort, there is disbelief at the manner in which the tournament surged in massive acceptance. Its growth was unprecedented.
From an undistinguished beginning in 1939 that produced a deficit, the tournament has swept forward. In 1973 the Final Four teams each received $81,961. At Salt Lake City a year ago that total rose t o$235,000 (Penn received $274,000 because it played an additional game), and it undoubtedly will go even higher in the future because of a new two-year contract between NBC and the NCAA for $18.5 million.
An amalgam of forces have combined to keep the records tumbling. Nine of the 10 highest-rated basketball telecasts in history are of college games. Last year's final between Michigan State and Indiana State was seen by 50 million, a record. Badio and TV income of the 1979 tournament reached $5,218,888. Attendance last year for college basketball in America was more than 30 million, also a record.
Who owns the secret formula for this scintillating progress? Is it little more than a run of luck? Quite frankly, some of it may have been a fortuitous blend of events.
Freshmen began playing at a varsity level in 1973. The limitation on scholarship grants has contributed to a proliferation of the abundant high school talent in this country, creating a competitive balance that is unique.
Beinstatement of the spine-tingling slam-dunk and the construction of many new arenas are parts of the boom of the 1970s. So too was the domination of UCLA and the suffocating zone press that was a trademark of the Wooden teams.
UCLA won five of its 10 national championships in the golden decade of the 1970s; while there were those who thought the brilliant Bruins stifled the college game, the fact is that the nation was following college basketball as never beforewaiting and wondering when the Wooden Soldiers would prove to be mere mortals.
No, the millennium has not arrived. Each year seems to be better than the last. Bemember these highlights?
1974: UCLA's 88-game streak was shattered at Notre Dame on a jump shot from the corner by Irish guard Dwight Clay. In the NCAA semifinals at Greensboro, North Caro- Earvin "Magic" Johnson helped put passing back into basketball with his 1979 NCAA finals play.
Tournament Expansion (Continued)
lina State snapped the Bruins' amazing string of 38 successive tournament victories by winning in two pressure-cooker overtimes.
1975: In the last game of Wood-en's masterful career, the Bruins outfought Kentucky in a furious game at San Diego to win another NCAA crown. It was a fitting ending for the man they called coach.
1976: Indiana pounded Big Ten rival Michigan at Philadelphia and completed a 32-0 season.
1977: North Carolina-Charlotte and its star, Cedric "Cornbread" Maxwell, was the Cinderella team of the Final Four at Atlanta. The irrepressible Al McGuire, later to misidentify Maxwell as "Cheesecake", closed out his career with tears of happiness as his Marquette Warriors defeated North Carolina in the NCAA final.
1978: Another Cinderella team, Fullerton State, hung on for as long as it could before bowing to Arkansas in the championship game of the West Regional. In the finals at St. Louis, robust Kentucky got 41 points from Jack "Goose" Givens and dumped Duke for the title.
1979: The long-awaited matchup of Indiana State's Larry Bird and the Magic Man, Michigan State's Earvin Johnson, came about at Salt Lake City in the national championship game. These two- wizards put the pass back into basketball. DePaul's Ray Meyer, a gentle grandfather, became the sentimental favorite to win it all.
A record number of 261 Division I teams started the 1979-80 season. Is a 48-team tournament bracket large enough? The NABC didn't think so and made its wishes known to the tournament committee. The request? Enlarge to 64 teams. To this, Albus said:
". .. I'd rather be more conservative and have the tournament grow gradually than make one big jump and have everything else catch up.
"We thought it (64 teams) was too much. We think selectivity is important. Some will say, 'Why don't you throw out automatic qualifying if you're going to take that many teams?' Without automatic qualifying, a Lamar might not have gotten in the tournament as it did last year."
Twenty-three of the 48 spots in the 10
1980 tournament went to automatic conference qualifiers. The remaining 25 were filled by independents and other conference teams.
As the tournament grows both in prosperity and popularity, ominous clouds are forming on the horizon. Outside influences, inherent in an event the size of this tournament that measures the breadth of the land and involves thousands of players, can reach their tentacles into a lot of shadowy corners. Ignominious temptations are many, an irrefutable fact. College basketball has been stained before by point-shaving scandals.
Warns Duke: "The increased emphasis on gambling changes the very nature of how a fan reacts to the game, the player, the coach. It creates a changed atmospherea dangerous atmospherefor an athletic contest."
Duke was a member of the NCAA national office staff for 11 years as assistant to the executive director. He has seen first-hand how the basketball championship has burgeoned.
The balance that has left its imprint on this tournament in the last half of the decade of the 1970s is the best thing that could have happened to it. It is wide-open now. Balance? The Final Four fields in the last six yearsfrom Greensboro to Salt Lake Cityhave included 20 different teams and just three repeaters: UCLA, Marquette and Kentucky. There have been six different champions.
On the surface, the tournament would appear to be free of most damaging deficiencies. So where does it go from here?
"Interest will be heightened by the overall competitiveness of college basketball," said Duke. "Hopefully, we're beyond the days when one team can dominate."
Had there been any reason for disquiet, the legendary Hank Iba could have put it to rest. "I knew the tournament was going to be a great one," he said of the nation's passion for a college basketball event of this magnitude. "You knew good and well the NCAA was going to draw. You could see it coming."
And coming, still. Iba doesn't miss much and he didn't miss on this prediction. As the decade of the 1980s is ushered in at Market Square Arena, the tournament is indeed everything everyone says it is: A classic. The Best Game In Town    The Best Coverage
College Basketball offers a blend of action, color, drama and excitement that can't be marched! And nobody covers it better than NBC Sports!
The Best Action
1979-80 has proven to be one of the most exciting seasons in recent years! More reams rhan ever have been in contention for the Notional Title. You saw the top teams and top stars each week, including one of the most highly-regarded Freshman crops in history. And many of the players who'll be starring on the USA's 1980 Olympic Team!
NBC Sports in association with TVS has provided weekly Saturday afternoon regional telecasts. Thirteen outstanding nationally-televised matchups. And now an eleven-game postseason schedule which climaxes with prime-time coverage of the NCAA Championship Game on Monday, March 24!
The Best Talent
Dick Enberg, Billy Packer and Al McGuire are rhe besr in the business. Enberg's professional play-by-play. Packer's expert analysis. McGuire's outspoken commentary. It's an announce team that's second to none!
Nerwork of rhe 1960 Olympics
KDC Sports >3f Jf
1*7* JJIuMyUrn Camp, Inc.., iniiiuimptilk, liuhwiia 4E7DS
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______~_____________-_
Provudmg educational opportunities for Commonwealth
_________________________.___.

Truly one of the leading land grant 7,500 permanent, full-time employees The current annual budget for the
institutions in the nation, the Univer- 0n the payroll. There are another University is about $240 million,
sity of Kentucky has a national and 2,000 employees who work for UK about half which comes from state ap-
intemational reputation in such di- throughout the state in its community propriations, and the rest from tuition
verse fields as medicine, business, en- colleges and in its agricultural pro- and fees, federal funding, income from
gineering, law