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Professional football player with the Cincinnati Bengals and television sportscaster for NBC Sunday Night Football. Amos Foster: Head football coach at the University of Cincinnati, the University of Nebraska, and Miami University. John Holifield: 1996 Professional football player with the Cincinnati Bengals: Miller Huggins: 1902
Raoul Berger, professor at the UC Berkeley School of Law and Harvard Law School, early theorist of originalism; Thomas Berger, A&S graduate, author of Little Big Man; Matt Berninger, lead vocalist and founder of band The National; Theodore Berry, graduate, mayor of Cincinnati 1972–76; member of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity
William W. Fisher, intellectual property law professor at Harvard Law School and director of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society; Peter Junger (LL.B. 1958), Internet law activist and professor at Case Western Reserve University; Charles Nesson, professor at Harvard Law School and founder of the Berkman Center for Internet & Society
Pages in category "University of Cincinnati College of Law alumni" The following 190 pages are in this category, out of 190 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Getty. Sources: Harvard Gazette, Harvard Law Today Michelle Obama is also a Harvard Law School graduate, from the class of 1988. As the first-ever African-American First Lady, Obama has championed ...
The Bearcats have been participating in college football since the 1885 season and were one of the first schools currently in the FBS to sponsor a football program. [1] Scott Satterfield is the current head coach; [ 2 ] he replaced Luke Fickell (and Kerry Coombs - 1 game as interim), after Fickell took the head coaching job at Wisconsin after ...
Cincinnati is one of the four new members of the Big 12 this year. Here’s what some said about the football team at the conference’s media days.
The Bearcat football program is one of the nation's oldest, having fielded a team as early as 1885. [6] In 1888, Cincinnati played Miami in the first intercollegiate football game held within the state of Ohio. [7] That began a rivalry which today ranks as the eighth-oldest and 11th-longest running in NCAA Division I college football. [8]