Word: michigan
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Thirteen colleges have contributed 848 names to the I. C. A. A. A. A. entry lists. Cornell has entered 203 men, Princeton 109, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 102, and Pennsylvania 100. Other entries are from Columbia, 93; Penn. State, 70; Michigan, the sole entrant from the middle west, 50; Yale, 45; Brown, 12; New York University, 11; Syracuse, 9; and Amherst...
Since then the movement has spread rapidly. The universities of Wisconsin, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, Georgia, Texas, Missouri, Ohio, Washington, and Tulane all now maintain departments of business. It is fair to say, however, that not all of these schools teach their subjects in the large and intellectual manner which is required for the professionalizing of business, the proper task of the business school. Yale has recently added a business school which gives a graduate year to follow the three years at Sheffield, the courses being modelled directly on those of the University. And Columbia now announces a graduate business course...
...University track team will compete, at these games, with the teams of Yale, Princeton, Cornell, Columbia, the University of Pennsylvania, the University of Michigan, and several others. The events to be contested include relay races, dashes, hurdle races, the pole vault, and the high-jump...
...which are to be held by the Amateur Athletic Union of the United States, at the 22nd Regiment Armory, New York, on Saturday evening, March 18, have been sent to every large club and prominent athlete throughout the United States as well as to Yale, Harvard, Princeton, Pennsylvania, Cornell, Michigan, Dartmouth, Syracuse, M. I. T., and Johns Hopkins. It's is expected that on account of these championships coming as they do only two weeks after the Indoor Intercollegiates, many of the prominent college athletes will keep in training and compete in these games with the hope of annexing...
...Independent" publishes some interesting figures in regard to the colleges from which have come the present United States Congressmen. Though 28 per cent of the members of the Senate and House are not graduates of any college, nearly 200 institutions are represented by the remaining 380. The University of Michigan, with 27 alumni in Congress, holds the lead, which it has maintained for several years. Virginia is second with 20, and Harvard a close third with 19. The other eight institutions which have more than five representatives are: Yale 13, Wisconsin 10, Alabama 7, Mississippi 7, Missouri 7, Minnesota...