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A
commitment to serving the people was Purdue's founding
principle when the University was forged amid the promise
of a bold new vision for American public higher education
more than 130 years ago.
Purdue
traces its roots to the Morrill Act of 1862, which assisted
states in promoting the establishment of schools to
teach agriculture and the "mechanic arts."
Purdue became Indiana's land-grant university by decree
of the state legislature in 1869 with the donation of
100 acres of land from Tippecanoe County citizens and
funds primarily from Lafayette businessman and civic
leader John Purdue. Five years later, the young institution
opened its doors to 39 students and six instructors.
Today,
Purdue is one of the nation's largest universities and
a vital Indiana resource, renowned worldwide for the
excellence of its teaching and research. More than 66,000
students pursue degrees on five campuses and 11 School
of Technology Statewide Delivery System sites, taught
by 3,600 dedicated faculty. Some 38,000 students study
on the West Lafayette campus, choosing from more than
6,100 courses in more than 200 fields of study.
Every
year, well over 100,000 people gain new knowledge and
enhance their professional skills via nearly 1,000 Purdue
workshops and conferences. Thousands more have embraced
pace-setting distance-education efforts to gain insight
and solve problems, ranging from the Internet to televised
courses by satellite.
Whether
mapping the common-cold virus, on the front lines in
the battle against AIDS, improving crop yields, or helping
businesses sharpen their economic edge, Purdue researchers
and specialists confront the problems and promises of
today's world as partners with local, state, and federal
agencies. Expenditures for research programs now top
$255 million annually.
Purdue
also is a responsive citizen of Indiana. Academic and
research programs and services reach all corners of
the state from the West Lafayette and regional campuses.
Eight agricultural research centers located throughout
Indiana focus on area-specific soil, crop, and climatic
issues. Purdue's Cooperative Extension Service is at
home in all 92 Hoosier counties, assisting families,
youth, and communities to meet their own challenges
and reach new goals. The University's partnerships with
factories, farms, businesses, and schools have a profound
fiscal effect, and the sheer size of the Purdue enterprise
makes it an economic dynamo.
Purdue
alumni, too, have an impact on the world and
beyond. More than 315,000 living alumni make a difference
in myriad fields, and 22 alumni have explored the frontiers
of space or soon will, including the first and last
men to set foot on the moon. Where a modest cluster
of four buildings once rose out of an Indiana meadow
more than a century ago, the West Lafayette campus now
encompasses 147 principal buildings on approximately
650 acres. Recreation areas, two golf courses, and the
Purdue Airport add more than 900 acres to the West Lafayette
total. The campus is a regional cultural and recreational
hub, annually attracting hundreds of thousands of people
to Ross-Ade Stadium and Mackey Arena for Boilermaker
sports; and to Elliott Hall of Music, Loeb Playhouse,
and Slayter Center of Performing Arts for a wide spectrum
of cultural and entertainment events.
Purdue
is a birthplace of ideas, and a place of accomplishments;
a place whose people and programs enhance virtually
every aspect of contemporary life; a simple idea born
of a noble mission, nurtured by knowledge, and steeped
in service, while always taking aim at the future.
Source:
University
Relations
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