University of Tennessee System |
The University of Tennessee System is the land-grant
academic institution within the U.S. state of Tennessee, established by the Morrill Act of
1890. The system consists of comprehensive universities located in
Knoxville, Chattanooga, and Martin,
plus a medical education facility in Memphis and an aerospace research facility in Tullahoma. By far the largest and most well-known of these campuses is the one in Knoxville, which outside the state
of Tennessee is held to be synonymous with the University of Tennessee.
The total system enrolls 42,000 students, 28,000 of which attend the Knoxville campus. The university system is well-known for its nuclear engineering and logistics programs, and operates the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in conjunction with Battelle. It also runs, with ORNL, the National Transportation Research
Center. The athletic programs of the Knoxville campus (nickname: 'Volunteers') are also very well recognized, as the
football team won a NCAA
Division I championship in 1998, and the women's basketball team has won numerous NCAA championships during the tenure of
head coach Pat Summitt.
Universities
Knoxville (UTK)
Founded in 1794, it now has an enrollment of 28,000 students, with 11,000 faculty and
staff. It is known for its women's basketball team, the Lady Volunteers, which
won six national championships between 1987 and 1998, as well as the men's football team,
which beat Florida State for the 1998-99 national championship.
The SNMP , the Simple Network Management Protocol was
invented here.
The Body Farm, which is located at UTK has a number of bodies laid out in
various situations in a fenced in plot near the medical center. Scientests at the University study how the human body decays in
various circumstances to gain a better understanding into decomposition. The Body Farm has proved a valuable resource to law
enforcement officers and medical examiners.
In 1998, the university changed the name of a portion of Yale Street, which runs through
the campus property, to Peyton Manning Pass, in honor of former Volunteer (and now Indianapolis Colts) quarterback Peyton Manning. According to the United States Postal Service, this is the only throughfare designated by "Pass" (as
opposed to "Avenue," "Street," etc.) in the entire United States.
The university operates two radio stations: student-run WUTK-FM 90.3MHz
and National Public Radio affiliate WUOT-FM
91.9MHz.
Chattanooga (UTC)
The university operates one radio station, NPR affiliate WUTC-FM 88.1MHz.
For athletics purposes, the Chattanooga campus prefers to be known solely as Chattanooga. The school, known as the
Mocs, is a member of the Southern Conference, competing in
Division I-AA in football and Division I in all other sports.
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