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Saturday, April 25, 2026
UofL gets discount to unique Impressionists exhibit at Speed Museum
The Speed Art Museum鈥檚 new exhibit, 鈥淚mpressionist Landscapes: Monet to Sargent,鈥 opens Feb. 4. University of Louisville students, faculty and staff can attend at the membership rate of $5.
UofL receives $9.56 million from NIH to head multicenter cardiovascular research network
The University of Louisville will head a new research consortium that will revolutionize how scientists explore ways to protect the heart from damage during a heart attack.
PEACC to stage benefit production of ‘The Vagina Monologues’
The University of Louisville production of "The Vagina Monologues," an award-winning play by Eve Ensler about women's experiences, will benefit Haitian women and UofL's Prevention, 成人直播 and Advocacy on Campus and in the Community (PEACC) program.
This Week at UofL: Feb. 7-13
Each week during the academic year, UofL Today staff will highlight a few on-campus events that might be of interest to faculty and staff.
UofL prof in Egypt returns home safely
A University of Louisville researcher who was in Egypt when trouble erupted there a little over a week ago has arrived back in Louisville after a five-day ordeal of trying to return home.
Music event will feature freedom songs from the Underground Railroad
A Feb. 7 concert at the University of Louisville will feature freedom songs in a multimedia format and a history lesson during the 2011 African American Music Heritage Institute.
Vice President for Student Affairs Tom Jackson – In Person
President. Provost, vice president, dean, professor, manager, director.
Trees bring both green and gold to Belknap Campus
(Editor's Note: This UofL Green Scene is part of a monthly series on sustainable activities written by the faculty, staff or students involved with them.)
UofL AHEC faculty, students make $6.8 million economic impact
The University of Louisville's efforts to help address a shortage of health care professionals and improve the quality of health care in Western Kentucky has had a $6.8 million economic impact on that part of the commonwealth.
KPPC uses stimulus money to be greener; help schools, businesses cut energy costs
The Kentucky Pollution Prevention Center is putting its money where its mouth is.