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Pages in category "Columbia University student organizations" The following 15 pages are in this category, out of 15 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B.
The Columbia University Club was founded in 1901 by recent graduates of Columbia University. [4] The Club had 1,000 members in 1910. By the early 1970s, in need of capital, and down to less than 500 members, it sold the building to the Unification Church of the Rev. Sun Myung Moon. [5]
The Penn Club of New York City (1901) and clubs in-residence Columbia University Club of New York (lost clubhouse in 1973) [345] NYU Club (lost clubhouse in 1989) [346] The Williams Club (lost clubhouse in 2010) The Yale Club of New York City (1897), the largest private club in the world, [5] which awarded the Heisman Trophy in 2002 and 2003 ...
This page includes all university clubs which is a club that restricts membership to members of a certain university or group of universities. Some are also listed as "gentlemen's clubs" and while there historically has been a fair amount of overlap, in many cases they do function somewhat differently today.
Colonial Club at Princeton University. Princeton's eating clubs are not fraternities, nor are they secret societies by any standard measure, but they are often seen as being tenuously analogous. The 21 Club, an all-male drinking society, is a notorious Princeton secret society. [67] Princeton also has a long tradition of underground societies.
Columbia University Club of New York; CORE Club; Cornell Club of New York; Cosmopolitan Club (New York City) D. Down Town Association; E. The Explorers Club; G ...
The Columbia Lions men's ice hockey is an ice hockey team club in New York City, associated with Columbia University since its establishment in 1896. It went dormant following its 1937 season, but was eventually revived as a club team. It remains active in the 2020s.
The Columbia football team won the Rose Bowl in 1934, upsetting Stanford University 7–0. Columbia also hosted the first televised sporting event: on May 17, 1939, the fledgling NBC network filmed the baseball double-header of the Light Blue versus the Princeton University Tigers at Columbia's Baker Field at the northernmost point in Manhattan ...