Word: michigan
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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President Hall is famous as an Educator, but more especially as an authority on psychology. He has received the degrees of A.B., A.M. and LL.D. from Williams, where he was graduated in 1867, Ph.D. from Harvard, and LL.D. from the University of Michigan and Johns Hopkins. Dr. Hall was at one time instructor of English and at another lecturer in psychology in the University. He has studied many years abroad, principally in Germany. He is the founder as well as the author of the "American Journal of Psychology" and is, in addition, an editor on several other philosophical journals...
...Florida, 0 1 0 1 Georgia, 1 1 0 0 Maryland, 0 0 1 4 North Carolina, 0 0 0 2 Virginia, 1 0 0 1 Total, 5 7 1 8 North Central Division. Illinois, 2 4 8 20 Indiana, 0 2 0 2 Iowa, 0 1 0 1 Michigan, 1 1 3 4 Minnesota, 1 4 2 1 Missouri, 2 2 2 3 Nebraska, 1 1 0 0 Ohio, 3 10 8 9 Wisconsin, 1 0 1 2 Total, 11 25 24 43 South Central Division. Alabama, 1 0 0 0 Arkansas, 0 0 0 1 Kentucky...
...business. At the University of Pennsylvania one-fourth of the graduates used to go into the ministry; now about one-fiftieth do so. Oberlin College, founded with strong denominational tendencies, shows the same story of the decline in numbers of men going into the ministry. At the University of Michigan, out of an army of over 15,000 graduates, only 188 have become ministers...
Aside from their contributions to the clergy, most of the universities and colleges have had favorite professions. At Columbia, Dartmouth and Michigan for instance, it is law; at Pennsylvania it is medicine; at Oberlin, Wisconsin, and many others, particularly the co-educational institutions, it is teaching; while a few of the universities, Brown, for ex- ample, have shown an impartial spirit, dividing up their strength almost equally among four leading professions...
...Charles D. Williams, Detroit, Michigan...