University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign !~he Quad s the :enter of :ampus ife 3 . H«H» H 1 i % UI 6 U= tiii L L,._ L-'IA-OHAMPAIGK The 1990 Illinois Football Media Guide • The University of Illinois . • A 100-year Tradition, continued ~> The University at a Glance 118 Chronology 4 President Stanley Ikenberrv • The Athletes . 4 Chancellor Morton Weir 122 Consensus All-American/ 5 UI Board of Trustees All-Big Ten 6 Academics 124 Football Captains/ " Life on Campus Most Valuable Players • The Division of 125 All-Stars Intercollegiate Athletics 127 Academic All-Americans/ 10 A Brief History Academic All-Big Ten 11 Football Facilities 128 Hall of Fame Winners 12 John Mackovic 129 Silver Football Award 10 Assistant Coaches 130 Fighting Illini in the 20 D.I.A. Staff Heisman Voting • 1990 Outlook... 131 Bruce Capel Award 28 Alpha/Numerical Outlook 132 Illini in the NFL 30 1990 Outlook • Statistical Highlights 34 1990 Fighting Illini 134 V early Statistical Leaders • 1990 Opponents at a Glance 136 Individual Records-Offense 64 Opponent Previews 143 Individual Records-Defense All-Time Record vs. Opponents 41 NCAA Records 75 UNIVERSITY LIBRARY 78 UI Travel Plans/ 145 Freshman /Single-Play/ ILLINOIS AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN Opponent Directory Regular Season UNIVERSITY OF responsible for its charging this material is • A Look back at the 1989 Season Team Records The person on or before theidue date. 146 Ail-Time Marks renewal or return to the library Sll 1989 Illinois Stats for is $125.00, $300.00 14, Top Performances minimum fee for a lost item 82 1989 Big Ten Stats The 149 Television Appearances journals. SU 1989 Football Season-In-Review bound of books are reasons Winners 150 Annual Team Records Theft mutilation, and underlining in? Football Award from 151 All-Time Letterwinners and may result in dismissal 104 1989 Final Polls and Standings for disciplinary action result in Coaches note: self-stick notes may • A 100-year Tradition 163 the University- Please 164 Scores Through the Years inks. 106 Memorial Stadium/ torn pages and lift some • Some Closing Facts . Center at 217-333-8400. Attendance Figures Renew via the Telephone 178 Press Information [email protected]. 111 Tradition/The First Season 846-262-1510 (toll-free) or 182 Football Centennial Account option at: 11? Big Ten Conference/ Renew online by choosing the My The Rose Bowl 184 Bowl Game Schedule http://www.library.uiuc.edu/catalog/ Trophies 185 1990 Composite I I Red Grange/Series Big Ten Schedules 114 Dick Butkus Future Schedules 116 Homecomming History/ 186 WlT Song Lyrics /Marching Band 1990 University of Illinois Football Schedule Sep. 8 at Arizona 7:00 p.m. Nov. 10 at Michigan p.m. Sep. 15 COLORADO 2:30 p.m. Nov. 17 at Indiana 1 00 p.m. (Honoring lettermen Nov. 24 NORTHWESTERN 1 00 p.m. of 1890-1939) (Honoring lettermen Sep. SO. ILLINOIS 2:30 of 1980-1989) Dad's Day/Tailgreat Local starting times (Honoring lettermen of 1940-1949) 1990 Fighting Illini Ticket Oct. 6 at Ohio State 1:30 p.m. Information 1:00 p.m. Oct. 13 PURDUE Season Tickets (Six Home Games) il lonoring lettermen Main Stands & Balconies $111 of 1950-1959) Horseshoe $ 87 2:30 p.m. Oct. 20 MICHIGAN STATE End Zone Bleacher/ First S 63 Homecoming Five Rows Main Stands (Honoring lettermen Single-Game Tickets S 20 of 1960-1969) For more information contact the 2' p.m. Oct. at Wisconsin 1:00 Athletic Ticket Office, 100 Assembly 1:00 . p.m. Nov 3 IOWA Hall, 1800 S. First Street, Champaign, Pork Day/Varsity "I" Day IL 61820. Phone (217) 333-3470. wince.) (Honoring lettermen ion of 1970-1979) » I L L I N ! J The University at a Glance Since its founding in 1867, the offering more than 4,000 courses in can access the Library's collections University of Illinois at Urbana- more than 150 fields of study. The from more than 200 computer Champaign has earned a reputation divisions include the College of terminals placed throughout the as an institution of international Agriculture, College of Applied Life campus. stature. Its distinguished faculty, Studies, College of Commerce and The University supports a long outstanding resources, breadth of Business Administration, College of tradition in computer-aided education. academic programs and research Communications, College of Education, PLATO, the largest computer-based disciplines, and large and diverse College of Engineering, College of Fine instructional system in the world, student body constitute an educational and Applied Arts, College of Liberal was developed at the University of communitv ideallv suited for Arts and Sciences, Institute of Aviation, Illinois nearly 30 years ago. Today, scholarship and research. and School of Social Work. more than 65,000 users worldwide Known internationally for its About 30 percent of the campus' take advantage of 22,000 instructional achievements in research and graduate graduates choose to continue their material files at 2,200 terminals each study, the University enrolls some education in graduate or professional day. NovaNET, the University's 9,000 graduate and professional schools. Typically, 90 percent of newest full-service computer students in more than 100 disciplines, graduates who apply to law school network, delivers computer-aided and attracts more than $184 million are accepted; 78 percent are accepted instruction via satellite. a year in private, state, and federal to medical school. In recent years, the University has grants and contract appropriations. Academic resources on the entered into cooperative agreements In recent vears, a significant amount campus are among the finest in the with such corporations as IBM, AT&T, of this support has been directed world. The University of Illinois Apple, and Zenith, placing 8,000 toward the creation and develop- Library at Urbana-Champaign is the computer terminals in classrooms, ment of major centers for advanced third largest academic collection in residence halls, and campus libraries research and study, including more the nation, housing more than 11 for use in classroom instruction, than $100 million for the National million items in the main library and study, and research. Project EXCEL Center for Supercomputing Applications 38 departmental libraries. Only (Excellence in Computer-aided and the Center for Supercomputing Harvard and Yale have larger Education and Learning), an IBM- Research and Development. Together, collections. The Library's computerized supported program initiated in 1984, these two centers have established cataloging system was the first in the encourages the development of the University as a recognized world world to serve as the primary access curriculum software packages in leader in the fields of supercomputing to a large academic library. Users undergraduate classrooms across the architecture, design, and applications. In 1989, the University inaugurated the Arnold O. and Mabel M. Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology. The most visible example of the University's commitment to i interdisciplinary study, the institute 1 brings ' together investigators from &"**' • several disciplines for the study of 11 human and artificial intelligence. * 1 tl iias .™ The University's research mission ..-, um, Mil Ml = IB ycamaaggi shares prominence with a fundamental commitment to undergraduate -^ education. Nearly 27,000 under- 1p graduate students are enrolled in 10 undergraduate divisions, together Krannert Center for the Performing Arts ampus. Among the University's most ignificant resources is its talented md highly respected faculty. More han 80 faculty members belong to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the National Academy of Sciences, or the National Academy )f Engineering. Nine scientists have eceived the National Medal of Science md 42 have received the Presidential Coring Investigators Award while m the faculty. Professor Emeritus ohn Bardeen won the Nobel Prize n physics twice—the only person •ver to do so. Another prime indicator of the Jniversity's excellence is the success >f its alumni. Eight graduates have von Nobel Prizes for the United States, md another 16 have won Pulitzer -"rizes. Nine chief executives of fortune 500 companies are alumni- >f the campus. A major center for the arts, the :ampus attracts dozens of nationally md internationally renowned artists ?ach year to its widely acclaimed Crannert Center for the Performing \rts. Designed by alumnus Max \bramovitz, an architect of New York Zity's Lincoln Center and of the Jniversity of Illinois Assembly Hall, he facility has four indoor theatres md an outdoor amphitheatre. [together, they host more than 275 performances each year, including hose by major symphony orchestras, :lassical and modern ballet companies, Altgeld Hall and the Alma Mater Statue md individual artists such as ^uciano Pavarotti, Jean-Pierre Rampal, md Issac Stern. Museum of Natural History. campus. in The University also supports Other major facilities include the Located in east-central Illinois hree major museums: the Krannert Assembly Hall (16,153 seats), the cities of Urbana and Champaign the University \rt Museum, second in size only to Memorial Stadium (69,200 seats), (population 100,000), at Urbana-Champaign is :he Art Institute of Chicago among and the Intramural-Physical Education of Illinois state of Illinois' flagship public Illinois public art museums; the Building, one of the largest recreational the university. i/Vorld Heritage Museum; and the facilities of its kind on a university President Stanley O. Ikenberry Stanley O. Ikenberry was appointed and Rush University. He is also an President of the University of Illinois Honorary Alumnus of Penn State. in 1979. Since then he has main- A holder of numerous corporate tained the University's triple mis- and civic board memberships, he is sion of teaching, research and public chairman of the American Council service in pursuit of the goal of on Education, co-chairman of the making the University of Illinois the Governor's (Illinois) Commission on best public university in America.
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