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The 1936 Western Reserve Red Cats football team represented Western Reserve University, now known as Case Western Reserve University, during the 1936 college football season. The team was led by second-year head coach Bill Edwards , assisted by Roy A. "Dugan" Miller and George Brown.
The 1939 Western Reserve Red Cats football team represented the Western Reserve University, now known as Case Western Reserve University, during the 1939 college football season. The team was led by fifth-year head coach Bill Edwards, assisted by Gene Myslenski and Roy A. "Dugan" Miller.
The Case Western Reserve Spartans football team is the varsity intercollegiate football team representing the Case Western Reserve University, located in Cleveland, Ohio. They compete in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) at the Division III level and hold dual membership in both the Presidents' Athletic Conference (PAC) and ...
Oct. 23—It's all on the table for three area college football programs heading into the home stretch of the regular season. John Carroll, Case Western Reserve and Notre Dame College do not need ...
The 1932 Case football team represented the Case School of Applied Science, now a part of Case Western Reserve University, during the 1932 college football season. The team's head coach was Ray A. Ride. [1]
Lena Beatrice Morton – literary scholar, head of the humanities division at Texas College; earned her PhD from Case Western in 1947; Regenia A. Perry – one of the first African American women to earn a Ph.D. in art history, alumni with M.A (1962) and Ph.D (1966) [5] Vivian Blanche Small - president, Lake Erie College
With roots of being located in the old Connecticut Western Reserve, the college held strong influences from Yale College, with four of its first five presidents—Pierce, Hitchcock, Cutler, and Hayden—being Yale alumni. Founded in 1880, Case School of Applied Science appointed its first president in 1886, Cady Staley.
The PAC was founded in 1955 by the presidents of Western Reserve University (1955–1967, operating athletically as Adelbert College from 1967 to 1970), Case Institute of Technology (1955–1970), John Carroll University (1955–1989) and Wayne State University (1955–1967). [1]