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There's only one day until kickoff, but Longhorns are behind plenty of No. 1 rankings, first-ever discoveries and first-of-a-kind accomplishments.
When the iconic university Tower lights the Austin sky with an orange glow and the number “1” shines on its sides, Longhorns know we've claimed a national championship.
Four times, we've lit the Tower with a No. 1 to boast of a national title in football - in 1963, 1969 and 1970 under legendary coach Darrell K Royal and then again in 2005. In all, 51 Texas Athletics teams have claimed national titles, sending Longhorn pride beaming into the Texas night.
But UT isn't just top-ranked on the field and court.
Ranked among the biggest and best research universities in the country, UT Austin offers dozens of top-ranked programs with a proven record of success.
But you don't have to take our word for it: The university is one of the nation's top 20 public universities according to U.S. News & World Report, with the No. 1 accounting and Latin American history graduate programs in the country, plus more than 15 undergraduate programs and 40 graduate programs ranked in the top 10 nationally. No matter where you look, it's clear that academic excellence is an essential part of the UT Austin experience.
And at UT Austin, the core values of learning, freedom, responsibility, individual opportunity, leadership and discovery instilled in our students have propelled Longhorns to groundbreaking, innovative accomplishments that have changed the world.
These No. 1 rankings, first-ever discoveries and first-of-a-kind accomplishments are all just one more reason to love UT:
In 1957, UT Austin hired the first female professor of electrical engineering in the country.
When Lorene Rogers became the first female president of UT Austin 40 years ago, she also became the first woman to head a major research university and the first woman to lead a public university in the U.S.
UT engineering alumna Colonel Jeannie Leavitt became the Air Force's first mission-qualified female fighter pilot.
UT alumnus Dr. Denton A. Cooley, B.A. '41, participated in the first intracardiac operations in England, performed the first successful human heart transplant in the U.S. and became the first heart surgeon to implant an artificial heart in a man.
UT Austin is home of the Denius-Sams Gaming Academy, the first video game program in the United States led and taught by gaming industry executives.
The Freshman Research Initiative at UT Austin is a first-of-its-kind program for giving first-year students hands-on experience with research. Universities across the country are now imitating the model.
In addition to being home to the First Photograph, UT Austin students and researchers also created the first-ever living bacterial photographs.
In 2012, UT astronomers and NASA discovered the first multi-planet system around a binary star. Like something out of “Star Wars,” the Tatooine-like system proves planetary systems can form in a disk around a binary star.
UT engineers built the world's smallest, fastest nanomotor.
UT Austin is helping to construct the world's most powerful optical telescope.
UT researcher Todd Humphreys developed the first centimeter-accurate technology for use in mobile devices.
UT Austin houses “the most integrated and largest microgrid in the U.S., a model for saving money and energy.”
For nine consecutive years, the McCombs School of Business undergraduate program has been ranked No. 1 for accounting by U.S. News and World Report. And for the 11th time in 14 years, McCombs ranks No. 1 across all three of the 2014 rankings of the Public Accounting Reporter (PAR) for undergraduate, master's and Ph.D. programs.
The Cockrell School of Engineering is home of the No. 1 petroleum engineering graduate program, according to the most recent report from U.S. News and World Report.
The Latin American History graduate program in the College of Liberal Arts ranks No. 1 on U.S. News and World Report's list of the “Best Graduate Schools.”
USA Today College ranks UT Austin's College of Education the No. 1 place to study early childhood education.
The iconic Longhorn silhouette is the No. 1 logo in college football.
UT Austin is the most influential U.S. university on Twitter.
UT Austin and the Forty Acres are the No. 1 campus worth traveling for.
The Center for Sports Leadership is a first-of-its-kind program built on UT Austin's long-held philosophy of “winning with integrity.” The center helps student athletes succeed on and off the field as a responsible citizens.
Like the state it calls home, The University of Texas at Austin is a bold, ambitious leader. Tradition and innovation blend seamlessly to provide students with a robust learning experience.
UT Austin achieves excellence in the interrelated areas of education, research and public service while contributing to the advancement of society, preserving and promoting the arts, benefiting the state's economy and serving its citizens.
When looking at Longhorns' records both on and off the field, it's clear The University of Texas at Austin transforms lives for the benefit of society and that What Starts Here Changes the World.
#UTcountdown is celebrating the best of UT off the field in anticipation of football season. To recap UT stories from the countdown to kickoff, visit utcountdown.tumblr.com and follow #UTCountdown on Tumblr, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
The football season begins tomorrow when the Longhorns kick off against Notre Dame in South Bend, Ind.
Researchers in the College of Liberal Arts discovered two new pieces of work by William Shakespeare and proved the writing belonged to The Bard.
Using software to evaluate three playwrights' use of function and categorical words and examining Shakespeare's trademark misspellings and bad handwriting helped the researchers determine the work was Shakespeare's writing.
Questioning the authorship of the works of famous writers has always been a form of blood sport in the humanities. A pair of Psychology Department researchers identified Shakespeare as the author of the long-contested play Double Falsehood, and English professor Douglas Bruster found evidence confirming 325 additional lines in five passages of Thomas Kyd's The Spanish Tragedy were written by The Bard.
In the College of Liberal Arts, more than 10,000 students and 500 faculty members are dedicated to teaching, research and service in the humanities and social sciences. Along with learning, freedom, leadership, individual opportunity and responsibility, discovery is one of UT Austin's core values. The university is committed discovery by expanding knowledge and human understanding.
[Summer with Shakespeare: See why these UT students spend two months - and 18 hours a day - studying The Bard's work, and watch them bring Shakespeare's work to life.]
#UTcountdown is counting the days until the Longhorns kick off football season by celebrating the best of UT off the field.
The football season begins Saturday, Sept. 5, against Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana.
Three Longhorns have won a Nobel Prize, one of the most prestigious awards given in the fields of physics, chemistry, physiology, medicine, literature and peace.
Proving that What Starts Here Changes The World, the three Longhorns who have won a Nobel Prize are:
Steven Weinberg, the Nobel Prize in Physics, 1979, for his “contributions to the theory of the unified weak and electromagnetic interaction between elementary particles, including, inter alia, the prediction of the weak neutral current.”
Ilya Prigogine, the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, 1977, for his “contributions to non-equilibrium thermodynamics, particularly the theory of dissipative structures.”
Hermann J. Muller, the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, 1946, “for the discovery of the production of mutations by means of X-ray irradiation.”
#UTcountdown is counting the days until the Longhorns kick off football season by celebrating the best of UT off the field.
The football season begins Saturday, Sept. 5, against Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana.
Four U.S. Presidents visited the Forty Acres during the Civil Rights Summit at the LBJ Presidential Library.
President Barack Obama and three former Presidents delivered remarks at the Civil Rights Summit on campus last year: Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush.
To commemorate the anniversary of one of LBJ's crowning achievements, the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the four U.S. presidents, civil rights leaders, scholars, activists and media came to the Forty Acres to discuss the future of civil rights advocacy in the United States.
Held in April 2014 and hosted by the LBJ Presidential Library, the summit marked the 50th anniversary of the landmark legislation and was a lead story for major media outlets, with The New York Times publishing an article about the summit: "Remembering L.B.J. for More Than Vietnam."
#UTcountdown is counting the days until the Longhorns kick off football season by celebrating the best of UT off the field.
The football season begins Saturday, Sept. 5, against Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana.
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Anya is LIVE right now
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The Texas Memorial Museum has more than 5 million specimens, from dinosaurs and fossils to gems, shark teeth and Texas wildlife.
The temporary and permanent exhibits in the Texas Memorial Museum are created from holdings of more than 5 million specimens from geological and paleontological fieldwork conducted by UT Austin scientists and also from public donations.
The Texas Memorial Museum's exhibits focus on dinosaurs and fossils, Texas wildlife, gems and minerals. TMM also features a working Paleontology Lab where visitors can interact with scientists as they prepare fossil finds.
[Plan your visit to the Texas Memorial Museum.]
Spotlighted in the exhibits are spectacular specimens found in Texas, including the largest flying creature ever found - the Texas Pterosaur, with a wingspan of 52 feet - and the 30-foot Onion Creek mosasaur that swam the shallow sea once covering most of the state 80 million years ago.
If the dinosaurs don't pique your interest, then check out the giant 1,778-carat- blue topaz gemstone that weighs more than a full can of a soda or the 140 mineral and gem specimens collected across the world by a former Texas legislator who served under Gen. Douglas MacArthur during World War II.
The museum store is a perfect place to find gifts for the naturalist in your life, and the exhibits are a great way for the family to learn about Texas biodiversity past and present.
[Make a gift to support the Texas Memorial Museum.]
#UTcountdown is counting the days until the Longhorns kick off football season by celebrating the best of UT off the field.
The football season begins Saturday, Sept. 5, against Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana.
UT researchers collected 6 million seeds of native Texas plants for the international Millennium Seed Bank project to make them available should they disappear.
Storing seeds from native plants is a priority the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center embraced when it collected 6 million seeds for a global seed-saving project.
The Millennium Seed Bank project, led by the United Kingdom's Royal Botanic Garden in Kew, gathered seeds from 10 percent of flowering plants that form the backbone of critically important native landscapes.
Two center botanists crisscrossed the state to gather seeds from 600 native Texas species. The stash - now stored in freezers in three cities - includes everything from the Texas bluebonnet to angels' trumpets to wild buckwheat. Those seeds could be planted to restore damaged landscapes, and some are already being used for research projects.
[Watch a video about a West Texas seed collection for the Millennium Seed Bank.]
The conservationists collected thousands of seeds from each species after climbing rocky cliffs in West Texas, trekking in the El Paso desert, wading through East Texas bogs and more to find healthy populations.
"You really have to love plants a lot - love the reason you're doing this, or you'd never keep going," says plant conservationist Minnette Marr.
More than 100 volunteers and botanists helped collect and process each collection for a cold storage that could last as long as 200 years.
For more than 30 years, the Wildflower Center has demonstrated the beauty and value of North America's native plants. The Wildflower Center conducts innovative native plant research, develops comprehensive educational materials and consults on landscape development projects of all sizes to capitalize on the ability of native landscapes to improve communities.
#UTcountdown is counting the days until the Longhorns kick off football season by celebrating the best of UT off the field.
The football season begins Saturday, Sept. 5, against Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana.
Seven Longhorns have been awarded the National Medal of Science, the nation's highest honor for scientists and engineers, for outstanding contributions in the sciences.
These seven Longhorns have changed the world by developing new ways to treat disease, revolutionizing consumer electronics and breaking ground in fields from mathematical physics to electroanalytical chemistry.
Established by Congress in 1959, the National Medal of Science is a Presidential award is given to individuals "deserving of special recognition by reason of their outstanding contributions to knowledge in the physical, biological, mathematical, or engineering sciences."
In 1980 Congress expanded this recognition to include the social and behavioral sciences. A committee of 12 distinguished scientists and engineers appointed by the President, who presents the award annually, evaluates nominees for the award.
The seven Longhorns awarded the National Medal of Science, and the brief descriptions of the their accomplishments included with the award, are:
Allen J. Bard (Chemistry, 2011)
"For contributions in electrochemistry, including electroluminescence, semiconductor photoelectrochemistry, electroanalytical chemistry, and the invention of the scanning electrochemical microscope."
Karl Folkers (Chemistry, 1990)
"For his discoveries and leadership in combining basic chemical research and clinical medicine to achieve new treatments of diseases which have enhanced the quality of life and extended survival rates for countless people."
John B. Goodenough (Engineering, 2011)
"For groundbreaking cathode research that led to the first commercial lithium ion battery, which has since revolutionized consumer electronics with technical applications for portable and stationary power."
Norman Hackerman (Chemistry, 1993)
"For contributions in electrochemistry, including electroluminescence, semiconductor photoelectrochemistry, electroanalytical chemistry, and the invention of the scanning electrochemical microscope."
Karen K. Uhlenbeck (Mathematics and computer science, 2000)
"For her many pioneering contributions to global geometry that resulted in advances in mathematical physics and the theory of partial differential equations. Her research accomplishments are matched by her leadership and passionate involvement in mathematics training and education."
Steven Weinberg (Physical sciences, 1991)
"For his contributions to the discovery of the structure of the fundamental forces of nature; the development of the standard model, and the unification of the weak and electromagnetic forces."
John A. Wheeler (Physical sciences, 1970)
"For his basic contributions to our understanding of the nuclei of atoms, exemplified by his theory of nuclear fission, and his own work and stimulus to others on basic questions of gravitational and electromagnetic phenomena."
#UTcountdown is counting the days until the Longhorns kick off football season by celebrating the best of UT off the field.
The football season begins Saturday, Sept. 5, against Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana.