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Coordinates: 33°57′21″N 83°22′28″W / 33.9558°N 83.3745°W / 33.9558; -83.3745
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The '''University of Georgia''' ('''UGA''') is a [[public university|public]] [[research university]] located in [[Athens, Georgia|Athens]], [[Georgia (U.S. State)|Georgia]], the oldest and largest of the state's institutions of higher learning. Founded in 1785, UGA claims to be the [[oldest public university in the United States]].
The '''University of Georgia''' ('''UGA''') is a [[public university|public]] [[research university]] located in [[Athens, Georgia|Athens]], [[Georgia (U.S. State)|Georgia]], the oldest and largest of the state's institutions of higher learning. Founded in 1785, UGA claims to be the [[oldest public university in the United States]].


The university regularly performs well in both [[undergraduate]] and [[graduate school|graduate]] program rankings in such publications as ''[[U.S. News & World Report]]'' and ''[[BusinessWeek]]'', as well as studies ranking top [[journalism schools]]. It has also been recognized as one of the South's three [[Public Ivy|Public Ivies]].<ref>[http://www.amazon.com/gp/reader/006093459X/ Greenes' Guides: The Public Ivies] (accessed on May 16, 2007); see also [http://www.jbhe.com/news_views/49_blackenrollment_publicivies.html].</ref>
The university regularly performs well in both [[undergraduate]] and [[graduate school|graduate]] program rankings in such publications as ''[[U.S. News & World Report]]'' and ''[[BusinessWeek]]'', as well as studies ranking top [[journalism schools]]. It has also been recognized as one of the South's three [[Public Ivy|Public Ivies]].<ref> However as of recently, UGA has caved to the current presidential administration's demands of only accepting left wing liberal students. The journalism department has come under fire for not accepting conservative students. Included in UGA's deal with the current White House, UGA's journalism students are guaranteed an intership with CNN and MSNBC. UGA has become a breeding ground for far left wing socialist that are attempting to overun our current government system. Luckily we have universities such as the University of Nebraska which produce "common sense" conservatives to take the country back from the left wing radicals in office currently. [http://www.amazon.com/gp/reader/006093459X/ Greenes' Guides: The Public Ivies] (accessed on May 16, 2007); see also [http://www.jbhe.com/news_views/49_blackenrollment_publicivies.html].</ref>

Even though UGA is the first public University, the Bulldog football program is not listed on the top 10 winningest programs. No UGA football team is included in the top 10 greatest college football team of all time. However the Cornhuskers are listed 1 and 3 including the 1971 and the 1995 teams.


As a college town, [[Athens, Georgia|Athens]] often ranks highly.<ref>[http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9593731/ Best College Town Rankings]</ref> On campus, students enjoy a successful [[Georgia Bulldogs|athletics program]], an acclaimed [[The Red and Black|student newspaper]], and a strong [[Greek life at the University of Georgia|Greek system]]. The university also hosts the prestigious [[Peabody Awards]].
As a college town, [[Athens, Georgia|Athens]] often ranks highly.<ref>[http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9593731/ Best College Town Rankings]</ref> On campus, students enjoy a successful [[Georgia Bulldogs|athletics program]], an acclaimed [[The Red and Black|student newspaper]], and a strong [[Greek life at the University of Georgia|Greek system]]. The university also hosts the prestigious [[Peabody Awards]].

Revision as of 12:32, 23 September 2009

University of Georgia
File:Ugaarch.svg
MottoEt docere et rerum exquirere causas (l)
Motto in English
To teach, to serve, and to inquire into the nature of things
TypePublic Land Grant and Sea Grant[1]
EstablishedJanuary 27, 1785
PresidentMichael F. Adams
Students34,180[2]
Location, ,
33°57′21″N 83°22′28″W / 33.9558°N 83.3745°W / 33.9558; -83.3745
Campus"College town"; 615 acres (2.489 km2)
EndowmentUS $618.8 million[3]
ColorsRed and Black    
NicknameBulldogs
MascotUga (live), Hairy Dawg (costumed)
Websitehttp://www.uga.edu
University of Georgia
UGA Main Library

The University of Georgia (UGA) is a public research university located in Athens, Georgia, the oldest and largest of the state's institutions of higher learning. Founded in 1785, UGA claims to be the oldest public university in the United States.

The university regularly performs well in both undergraduate and graduate program rankings in such publications as U.S. News & World Report and BusinessWeek, as well as studies ranking top journalism schools. It has also been recognized as one of the South's three Public Ivies.[4]

Even though UGA is the first public University, the Bulldog football program is not listed on the top 10 winningest programs. No UGA football team is included in the top 10 greatest college football team of all time. However the Cornhuskers are listed 1 and 3 including the 1971 and the 1995 teams.

As a college town, Athens often ranks highly.[5] On campus, students enjoy a successful athletics program, an acclaimed student newspaper, and a strong Greek system. The university also hosts the prestigious Peabody Awards.

It is the largest university of the University System of Georgia, with an enrollment of 34,180 as of Fall 2008.

Organization

The President of the University of Georgia (currently Michael F. Adams) is the head administrator and is appointed and overseen by the Georgia Board of Regents.

The University comprises sixteen schools and colleges:

History

Antebellum History

  • The University of Georgia was incorporated on January 27, 1785, by the Georgia General Assembly, which had given its trustees, the Senatus Academicus of the University of Georgia, 40,000 acres (160 km²) for the purposes of founding a “college or seminary of learning.” The Senatus Academicus was composed of the Board of Visitors and the Board of Trustees and the Georgia Senate governed both boards.
  • Portions of the original land grant were sold to raise $7,463.75 by 1798, and on July 2, 1799, the Senatus Academicus met in Louisville, Georgia and decided to officially begin the University.
  • The Senatus Academicus convened for the last time in Dothan, Georgia from November 3, 1859, through November 5, 1859, after which it was replaced with a Board of Trustees which reported to the entire General Assembly (both the House and the Senate).

The Civil War Era

  • During the American Civil War, the University closed in October 1863 and reopened in January 1866 with an enrollment of seventy-eight students including veterans utilizing an award of $300 granted by the General Assembly to injured soldiers younger than thirty. In that same year, the legislature appropriated $2,000 for the creation of a College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts to utilize a federal land grant available at that time for the creation of such schools. The agricultural department within the University opened on May 1, 1872.

20th Century

Recent Years

  • The University has seen its academic reputation rise markedly since Georgia's HOPE Scholarship program was started in 1993. The merit-based scholarship allows any resident of the state of Georgia to attend any public college in the state without paying tuition, provided they maintain a 3.0 GPA. The average SAT for incoming freshmen in 2008 was 1253, and national rankings for the school have risen consistently.
  • UGA is designated as both a land-grant and sea-grant university.[1] The university's motto is Et docere et rerum exquirere causas ("To teach and to inquire into the nature of things").
  • UGA's Henry W. Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication awards the prestigious George Foster Peabody Awards, which are presented annually for excellence in television and radio news, entertainment and children’s programming. The University also presents the annual Delta Prize for Global Understanding, which recognizes individuals or groups whose initiatives promote peace and cooperation among cultures and nations.
  • UGA has an extensive network of student activities that center around academic, religious, social and fraternal organizations. It maintains one of the South's oldest and most active Greek systems, and the fraternity and sororities maintain homes both on and off campus. Organizations include both Democrat and Republican student clubs, Order of Omega, Arch Society, student philanthropies such as UGA HEROs, ugaMIRACLE and Relay for Life, and secret societies such as Palladia and Gridiron. The university's National Alumni Association has over 50,000 members and operates a center in both Athens and Atlanta, Georgia which can be found in the Atlanta Financial Center.

Campus

Herty Field, in the center of North Campus, was UGA's first home football field

Though there have been many additions, changes, and augmentations, UGA’s campus maintains its historic character and southern charm. The historical practice has been to divide the 614-acre (2.5 km2) main campus into two sections, North Campus[8] and South Campus.[9] In the last decade, new facilities have added "East Campus" to the traditional map. This area includes new apartment-like dorms called East Campus Village. Adjacent is the newest and fourth dining hall on campus called The Village Summit at Joe Frank Harris Commons. Also on East campus is the Performing and Visual Arts Complex, the Ramsey Center for Physical Activity and the new Lamar Dodd School of Art. "West Campus" is a term used as an informal reference to the area where many of the freshman residence halls are located; most UGA freshman live in one of the high rise dorms in this area.

Modeled on Yale University’s Central/Old Campus,[10] UGA’s North Campus contains the picturesque historic buildings—such as the Chapel,[11] Old College, New College, Demosthenian[12] and the Phi Kappa[13] Halls, Park Hall,[14] Meigs Hall, and the President’s office[15]—as well as modern additions such as the Law School[16] and the Main Library.[17] The dominant architectural themes are Federal—the older buildings—and Greco-Roman Classical/Antebellum style. UGA’s North Campus has also been designated an arboretum by the State of Georgia.

The UGA Arch

Perhaps the most notable North Campus fixture, though, is the cast-iron gateway that stands at its main entrance. Known as "The Arch" (but often erroneously pluralized to "The Arches"), the structure was patterned after the Seal of the State of Georgia, and has faced historic downtown Athens ever since it was erected in the 1850s.[18] Although the Seal's three pillars represent the state's three branches of government,[19] the pillars of The Arch are usually taken to represent the Georgia Constitution's three principles of wisdom, justice, and moderation, which are engraved over the pillars of the Seal. There is a superstition about walking through The Arch. It is said that if you walk under the arch before receiving your diploma, you will never graduate from UGA.[20] Another legend claims that should you walk through The Arch as a freshman, you will become sterile (as told in some freshman orientation tours).

Path on North Campus leading to the Arch and downtown Athens

Dividing North and South Campus is the "central campus" area, home of the University Bookstore, Tate Student Center, and Student Learning Center, as well as Sanford Stadium, home of the football team. Adjacent to the stadium is a bridge that crosses Tanyard Creek and is the traditional crossover into South Campus, home of most of the science and agricultural classroom buildings. Further south and east, across East Campus Road, is East Campus, home of the Ramsey Center, the East Campus Village (apartment-style dormitories), and several fine arts facilities, including the Georgia Museum of Art and School of Music. A new facility for the art school opened it doors in the Fall of 2008. This new state of the art facility replaced the elder that was placed on North Campus.

Adjacent to the campus is the "west campus" area. This extends from the corner of Britain Avenue and Lumpkin Street in the south to Waddell and Wray streets in the north. It is bordered along the east by Lumpkin Street and on the west by Church Street south of Baxter Street and Florida Avenue to the north. Located on the south end are several dormitories including the Hill Community, Oglethorpe Hall, Creswell Hall, Brumby Hall and Russell Hall. Also located here are Legion Field and Pool, which are recreational facilities. On the north end are several fraternity houses, a parking deck, and several university administration offices. Some of the fraternities were asked to relocate in early 2006 to make room for new University building projects. University property and private property are dispersed throughout West Campus, and at several points University buildings are adjacent to private residences and businesses.

Miller Learning Center

The Zell B. Miller Student Learning Center and the adjacent memorial garden

The $43.6 million dollar Zell B. Miller Learning Center (MLC) has been the largest academic building on the University of Georgia campus since its opening in the autumn of 2003 when it was originally called the Student Learning Center (Most students still refer to it as the SLC).[21] Located at the heart of the UGA campus, it houses both classroom space and library space in close proximity.

On the inside is a technological space that includes two dozen classrooms capable of seating 2,400 students and equipped with the latest technology, from computer connections to projection equipment to laptop connections. The building serves as an expansion of UGA library services, with a completely electronic library, 276,000 sq ft (25,600 m2). of actual floor space, 96 study rooms, 500 computer workstations, 2,000 computer connections, fully wired study carrel desks, a wireless environment and a Jittery Joe's coffee shop.

Ramsey Center

The Ramsey Center is the student recreational and athletic facility located on East Campus at the University of Georgia. The Ramsey Center is one of the largest student athletic/recreation facilities in the United States built in the memory of Tulsi Ramsey. The campus's eight-acre Ramsey Student Center for Physical Activities has 4 gyms, 3 pools(one Olympic-sized, a 17-foot (5.2 m) diving well, and a lap pool), a 1/8 mile indoor suspended rubberized track, a 44 feet (13 m)-high climbing wall, 14-foot (4.3 m) outdoor bouldering wall, 12 racquetball courts, 2 squash courts, 8 full-length basketball courts, and 11,500 square feet (1,070 m2) of weight-training space. Students make over 1.2 million trips to "Ramsey" each year.[22] This $40 million structure was named by Sports Illustrated as the best recreational sports facility in the country.[23]

Paul D. Coverdell Center for Biomedical and Health Sciences

Named after U.S. Senator Paul D. Coverdell, this $40 million dollar facility totals 140,000 square feet (13,000 m2), giving enough room for 25 research teams or roughly 275 scientists, staff and graduate students. The Center was designed mainly to maximize energy efficiency.[24] Laboratory intensive groups at the Coverdell Center include the Center for Tropical and Emerging Global Diseases (CTEGD), the Developmental Biology Group (DBG), and the Bio-Imaging Research Center (BIRC),the Health and Risk Communications Group (HRCG), the administrative homes of the College of Public Health (CPH) and the Biomedical Health Sciences Institute (BHSI), and the CPH’s Department of Health Administration, Biostatistics and Epidemiology.[25] Former President George H.W. Bush spoke at the Center's grand opening in 2006.

Entrepreneurship Program

UGA's Terry College of Business is home to Terry Entrepreneurship. Terry Entrepreneurship focuses on launching successful student businesses with a social entrepreneurship element: launched businesses are designed to give back to the college, university and state. The entrepreneurship concentration courses prepare students for careers in entrepreneurial leadership. Students learn to start and invest in new businesses, manage small, high growth or family businesses and lead highly innovative organizations. Graduate students have the opportunity to earn a concentration in entrepreneurship after completion of a core set of courses. Program activities include UGA's Next Top Entrepreneur[26], Venture Eat[27] and UGA Startups[28]among others. Terry Entrepreneurship also collaborates with the Coverdell Center for Biomedical and Health Sciences (above) and UGA's Music Business Program[29].

Franklin Residential College

Franklin Residential College[30] is a residential college, based on the Oxford and Cambridge model. It is a collaboration of the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, the University Housing office, and the Vice President of Instruction. It was founded in 2000.[31] The home of the college is Rutherford Hall, which was built in the late 1930s as a women's dormitory.

Artificial Intelligence Center

The Artificial Intelligence Center is an interdepartmental research and instructional center within the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences of the University of Georgia.

Strengths include logic programming, expert systems, neural nets, genetic algorithms, natural language processing, and computational psycholinguistics.

The Artificial Intelligence (AI) Center houses two degree programs, the Master of Science program in Artificial Intelligence and the bachelor's degree program in Cognitive Science. Over the years the AI Center has received funding for research from the National Science Foundation, the Environmental Protection Agency, the Department of Energy, the Department of Agriculture, GlaxoSmithKline Research & Development Ltd., the Georgia Research Alliance, Centro Internacional por Agricultura Tropical, Clemson University, Medical College of Georgia, and the American Association for Artificial Intelligence. Currently AI center faculty and students are working with a variety of academic and industrial institutions on exciting research projects.

Affiliated with the Center are over 75 people hailing from over 10 different countries. The admission to the program is extremely competitive and only the very best students with tremendous research and management potential are admitted.

Tate 2 Expansion

On Thursday, April 19, 2007, ground was officially broken for the $52 million Tate Student Center Expansion and Renovation project.[32] A multi-level parking deck began the first phase of the construction on which the new Student Center was built. Tate II officially opened its doors on June 1, 2009.

Included in the new student center is: an 11,000-square-foot (1,000 m2) multi-purpose space on the fifth floor, a dining room, meeting rooms, and lounge seating on the fourth floor, a food court, retail space, Print & Copy Services, a large lounge area, gaming area, and open performance space on the third floor. The new food court is operated by UGA FOOD SERVICES. It includes Hotei's, a hibachi style grill, Larry's Giant Subs, and Barberitos. Some of the amenities, such as the Bulldog Cafe and the Tate Theatre, will remain in the old Tate Center. The total cost of the new expansion is approximately $58.2 million.

Construction on the $13.4 million, 500-space Tate Student Center parking deck was underway through May 2009. The site is at the intersection of Lumpkin and Baxter Streets.

College of Pharmacy

Construction on Pharmacy South, the $42.9 million, 93,288 sq ft (8,666.7 m2). addition to the College of Pharmacy, is underway through spring 2009. The site is immediately south of the existing College of Pharmacy on D. W. Brooks Mall.

Lamar Dodd School of Art

Construction on the $39.2 million, 171,000 sq ft (15,900 m2). Lamar Dodd School of Art is underway through spring 2008. The site is just south of the existing Performing and Visual Arts Complex on East Campus.

Georgia Museum of Natural History

The Georgia Museum of Natural History has one of the most extensive natural history collections in Georgia.

Academics

Rhodes Scholars

As of 2008, twenty-one UGA students have been named Rhodes Scholars including Eugene T. Booth and Hervey M. Cleckley. UGA student Deep Shah and alumnae Kate Vyborny were elected in 2008 with the University being the only public institution with two scholars and one of only six schools with multiple scholars.[33]

Study abroad program

The University of Georgia began its first year-round residential study-abroad program at Oxford University in England, where students and faculty live in a three-story Victorian house located in the heart of the city of Oxford and owned by UGA.

Founded in 1989, the Oxford study-abroad program began as a summer option and expanded to include spring in 1994. With the purchase of the house in 1999 – evidence of UGA's strong commitment to study abroad – the program became available throughout the academic year.

UGA now ranks among the top five American universities for the number of students studying abroad, with more than 100 programs in over 50 countries. [34] UGA has faculty study abroad programs on every continent, including Antarctica. Currently, just over 2,000 students, or 6% of the entire campus enrollment (graduate and undergraduate) study abroad in a given year. During the past five years, the number of students participating in study abroad programs has nearly doubled. Approximately 30 percent of the members of recent graduating classes had a study abroad experience.

Athletics

File:Georgia Hairy Dawg.jpg
University of Georgia Mascot Hairy Dawg
The UGA athletics logo

The University of Georgia varsity athletic teams participate in the NCAA's Division I-A as a member of the Southeastern Conference. Since the 1997-1998 season, UGA has seven top ten rankings in the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA) Director's Cup, a numerical ranking based on the success of universities in all varsity sports.[35] The University has won national championships in football, women's gymnastics, baseball, tennis (men's and women's), golf (men's and women's), women's swimming and diving, and women's equestrian. The Gym Dogs, the University's women's gymnastics team, are the current defending NCAA champions (having placed first in the 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 and 2009) They have a NCAA leading 10 National Championships in Gymnastics.

The Bulldogs' most historic rivalry is with Auburn, referred to as the "Deep South's Oldest Rivalry" in reference to the first football game played between the two teams in 1892 and the more than one hundred meetings since. For the vast majority of the 20th century, the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets were unquestionably UGA's biggest rival (the two schools are a mere 70 miles (113 km) apart). However, the 1970s, '80s and '90s witnessed a growing rivalry with the Florida Gators as well as the University of Tennessee. Students: UGA has a female to male ratio of 66:34, and an ethnic population comrising 8% of the entire population.

The University also boasts several non-varsity sports, including men's and women's soccer, wrestling,[36] men's and women's crew,[37] women[38] and men's[39] ultimate frisbee, rugby, lacrosse, and ice hockey. Georgia's men's soccer team received a bid to play in the NIRSA Club National Championship for the first time in 2007. The Georgia ice hockey team has won the Thrasher Cup five times in the previous ten years as of 2009, defeating teams such as the Florida Gators and Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets. Several Varsity sports are duplicated with non-varsity teams, such as women's tennis. Georgia's men's lacrosse team has won the South Eastern Lacrosse Conference three times, in 1998, 2007, and 2008, and received an automatic bid to the MCLA national tournament; while the women's team earned an at-large bid to the WDIA National Tournament in 2007.

Most recently, many have acclaimed UGA's athletic program for implementing a program that fines student-athletes for unexcused absences in class. And, for the first time in school history, more than 50% of student-athlete GPAs were over 3.0. In addition, many other universities are looking to UGA's plan as a model.

Greek Life

The first Greek letter fraternity to charter at the university was Sigma Alpha Epsilon in 1865, and the first sorority was Phi Mu in 1921. There are 17 sororities from the Panhellenic Council and 26 IFC fraternities. Students with Greek affiliation made up 23 percent of the undergraduate student body as of 2007, including 21% of the males and 24% of the females.[40] Perhaps the most prominent features of Greek Life at the University are the large, mostly Greek Revival, mansions maintained by the national fraternities and sororities as chapter houses lining South Milledge Avenue and South Lumpkin Street and the ubiquitous t-shirts worn by students on campus commemorating Greek social events.

In 2005 the University announced that five of the fraternities on Lumpkin Street would need to be relocated by June 2008. The school plans to build academic buildings on the house sites, which the University owns and the fraternities lease. UGA offered to relocate the Lumpkin fraternities and two others to River Road, located on east campus. Kappa Alpha and Chi Phi did not take up the offer and have decided to move off campus. Sigma Chi has opted to keep their location next to the Student Learning Center (now the Zell B. Miller Learning Center). In October 2008, Pi Kappa Alpha, Phi Delta Theta, Tau Epsilon Phi and Sigma Nu broke ground for the new Greek Park located on River Road. The four new houses will be complete August 2009 for fall rush. All groups have signed 30 year leases with an option to renew for an additional 30 years.

Fight Songs

The University of Georgia fight song, Glory, Glory is sung to the tune of "The Battle Hymn of the Republic," the familiar song that traditionally begins with the words "Glory, glory hallelujah."

"Glory, glory to old Georgia!
Glory, glory to old Georgia!
Glory, glory to old Georgia!
G-E-O-R-G-I-A! (Unofficially: And to hell with Georgia Tech/the current opponent)!"
Glory, glory to old Georgia!
Glory, glory to old Georgia!
Glory, glory to old Georgia!
G-E-O-R-G-I-A! (Unofficially: And to hell with Georgia Tech/the current opponent)!"

And also "Hail to Georgia"

Hail to Georgia down in Dixie!
A college honor'd fair and true
The red and black is her standard, proudly it waves,
Streaming today and the ages through.
She's the fairest in the southland!
We'll pledge our love to her for aye;
To that college dear, we'll ring a cheer.
All hail to dear old U-G-A!

Noted people

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b University of Georgia: Role/Mission
  2. ^ "Semester Enrollment Report" (PDF). Office of Research and Policy Analysis. University System of Georgia. 2007-11-12. Retrieved 2007-12-23.
  3. ^ "College and University Endowments Over $250-Million, 2007". Chronicle of Higher Education. 2008-08-29. p. 28. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  4. ^ However as of recently, UGA has caved to the current presidential administration's demands of only accepting left wing liberal students. The journalism department has come under fire for not accepting conservative students. Included in UGA's deal with the current White House, UGA's journalism students are guaranteed an intership with CNN and MSNBC. UGA has become a breeding ground for far left wing socialist that are attempting to overun our current government system. Luckily we have universities such as the University of Nebraska which produce "common sense" conservatives to take the country back from the left wing radicals in office currently. Greenes' Guides: The Public Ivies (accessed on May 16, 2007); see also [1].
  5. ^ Best College Town Rankings
  6. ^ Dendy, Larry B. (November 27, 2000). "Registering historic steps: Academic Building to be named for Holmes and Hunter". Columns Faculty/Staff News. University of Georgia. Retrieved 2008-01-31.
  7. ^ "Campus News:Sibley lecturer Chester Davenport says Horace Ward was his inspiration". Georgia Magazine. 83 (3). University of Georgia. 2004. Retrieved 2008-05-25. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  8. ^ [2][dead link]
  9. ^ [3][dead link]
  10. ^ Campus map - Yale University
  11. ^ [4][dead link]
  12. ^ Demosthenian Literary Society: About Demosthenian Hall
  13. ^ Phi Kappa Hall
  14. ^ http://www.classics.uga.edu/documents/PARK%20HALL%20PRINT.pdf
  15. ^ UGA President's Office | Home
  16. ^ University of Georgia School of Law
  17. ^ University of Georgia Libraries
  18. ^ UGA Arch
  19. ^ "State Seal". Retrieved 2008-01-25.
  20. ^ University of Georgia: History
  21. ^ Georgia Magazine | Features
  22. ^ [5][dead link]
  23. ^ Refreshing to
  24. ^ University of Georgia: News & Information
  25. ^ [6]
  26. ^ http://www.terry.uga.edu/entrepreneurship/programs.html#ugatop
  27. ^ http://www.terry.uga.edu/entrepreneurship/programs.html#ugatop
  28. ^ http://www.terry.uga.edu/entrepreneurship/programs.html#ugatop
  29. ^ http://www.terry.uga.edu/entrepreneurship/programs.html#startmeup
  30. ^ Franklin Residential College :: Welcome
  31. ^ The University of Georgia. "Franklin Residential College". University of Georgia website. Retrieved 2007-02-11.
  32. ^ Tate 2
  33. ^ Shearer, Lee (December 16, 2007). "UGA pair headed to Oxford in coup for public university". Athens Banner-Herald. Morris Communications. Retrieved 2008-03-28.
  34. ^ http://www.uga.edu/oie/studyabroad.htm
  35. ^ National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics - Directors Cup
  36. ^ UGA Wrestling
  37. ^ The University of Georgia Rowing Club
  38. ^ UGA Hodawgs
  39. ^ Intro
  40. ^ Panhellenic Council | Welcome

References