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The University of Delaware is the largest university in Delaware. The main campus is in Newark, with satellite campuses in Dover, Wilmington, Lewes, and Georgetown. It is medium-sized – approximately 18,500 undergraduate and 4,500 graduate students. UD is a privately governed university which receives public funding for being a land-grant, sea-grant, and space-grant and urban-grant state-supported research institution. UD is classified as a research university with very high research activity by the Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education. The universitys programs in engineering, science, business, hospitality management, education, urban affairs and public policy, public administration, agriculture, history, chemical and bimolecular engineering, chemistry and biochemistry have been highly ranked with some drawing from the historically strong presence of the nations chemical and pharmaceutical industries in the state of Delaware, such as DuPont and W. L. Gore and Associates. It is one of only four schools in North America with a major in art conservation. In 1923, UD was the first American university to offer a study abroad program. The school from which the university grew was founded in 1743, making it one of the oldest in the nation. However, UD was not chartered as an institution of higher learning until 1833. Its original class of ten students included George Read, Thomas McKean, and James Smith, all three of whom would go on to sign the Declaration of Independence. The University of Delaware traces its founding to 1743, when Presbyterian minister Francis Alison opened up his "Free School" in his home in New London, Pennsylvania.[8] The school changed its name and location several times, ending up as the Academy of Newark in 1769 (chartered by the colonial government). Since Delaware was part of the Pennsylvania colony until 1776, the academy was denied charter as a college in order to prevent its competing with the University of Pennsylvania (then known as the College of Philadelphia). In 1833, the Delaware General Assembly passed "An Act to Establish a College at Newark", and the next year, Newark College opened. It changed its name in 1843 to Delaware College and it merged with the Academy of Newark. The school closed from 1859 until 1870 (Newark Academy separated from the college in 1869). It reopened in 1870 due to the support of the Morrill Land-Grant Acts. In 1921, Delaware College was renamed the University of Delaware, and it officially became a coeducational institution in 1945 when it merged with the nearby Womens College of Delaware. On October 23, 2009 the University of Delaware signed an agreement with Chrysler to purchase a 272-acre (1.10 km2) closed vehicle assembly plant adjacent to the university for expansion for $24.25 million as part of Chryslers bankruptcy restructuring plan. Plans call for this facility to be repurposed into a "world-class research facility".Initial plans include the new home of the College of Health Science and the east coast headquarters of Bloom Energy. In 2010–2011, the university conducted a feasibility study in support of plans to add a law school focused on corporate and patent law. At its completion, the study suggested that the planned addition was not within the universitys funding capability given the nations economic climate at the time. Capital expenses were projected at $100 million, and the operating deficit in the first ten years would be $165 million. The study assumed an initial class of two hundred students entering in the fall of 2015. Widener University has Delawares only law school as of 2011.
The following is the list of scholars from University of Delaware who contributed and/or serves as editors for one or more OMICS International journals and conferences
The following is the list of articles by scholars from University of Delaware that are published in OMICS International journals.
The following is the list of proceedings by scholars from University of Delaware that are published in OMICS International journals and conferences.
The following is the list of scholars from University of Delaware who contributed and/or serves as editors for one or more OMICS International journals and conferences