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The Collegiate Network (CN) is a program that provides financial and technical assistance to student editors and writers of roughly 100 independent, conservative and libertarian publications at colleges and universities around the United States.
Current Name Former Name(s) Year of Change Adams State University: Adams State College 2012 [1] University of Advancing Technology: CAD Institute; University of Advancing Computer Technology 1996, 2002 Adventist University of Health Sciences: Florida Hospital College of Health Sciences 2012 [2] Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical University
Connecticut State Community College Manchester – Live Wire; Connecticut State Community College Middlesex – The Flying Horse; Connecticut State Community College Naugatuck Valley – The Tamarack; Connecticut State Community College Norwalk – The Voice; Connecticut State Community College Quinebaug Valley – Quinebaug Inquirer
This list of colloquial names for universities and colleges in the United States provides a lexicon of such names. It includes only alternative names for institutions, not nicknames for their campuses, athletic teams, or personalities. Thus it specifically excludes mascots and athletic team names. To see those lists, please go to:
Colleges That Change Lives began as a college educational guide first published by Loren Pope in 1996, that went through three editions prior to his death in 2008. The fourth and final edition, revised by Hilary Masell Oswald, was released in 2012.
This List of Haverford College people includes alumni and faculty of Haverford College.As of 2010, Haverford alumni include 5 Nobel Prize laureates, 4 MacArthur Fellows, 20 Rhodes Scholarship recipients, 10 Marshall Scholarship recipients, 9 Henry Luce Fellows, [1] 56 Watson Fellows, [1] 2 George Mitchell Scholarship, 2 Churchill Scholars, 1 Gates Cambridge Scholar, [1] 13 All Americans, and ...
The defunct Henry Cogswell College also bore his name. Coker College, South Carolina, US James Lide Coker: Coker College began in 1894 as Welsh Neck High School founded by James Lide Coker. In 1908, Coker provided leadership for the conversion of the school to Coker College for Women. Men have attended since World War II.
Name Class Major Notability References Jean Broadhurst: 1892 Botanist, bacteriologist, and professor at Teachers College, Columbia University: Craige B. Champion: 1984 BA Historian, classical scholar, and professor of ancient history at Syracuse University: Archibald Gamble: MA Professor of oratory and English language at,the University of ...