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Collegiate and University yearbooks, also called annuals, have been published by the student bodies or administration of most such schools in the United States.Because of rising costs and limited interest, many have been discontinued: From 1995 to 2013, the number of U.S. college yearbooks dropped from roughly 2,400 to 1,000. [1]
This is a list of archived caches of American university and college yearbooks. It was developed by WikiProject College football and WikiProject College Basketball as a resource for finding references, fact-checking, and image-pulling.
Earlier digital yearbooks have been PDF copies based on a print yearbook. YearBoxx preserves all the features that have made print yearbooks a 160-year-old tradition and introduced features specific to digital. Yearbooks can now have unlimited pages, embedded videos, updatability, and no deadlines to name a few features.
The Michiganensian, also known as the Ensian, is the official yearbook of the University of Michigan. [1] Its first issue was published in April 1896, as a consolidation of three campus publications, The Res Gestae, the Palladium, and the Castalian. [2]
Classmates.com has an archive of over 470,000 yearbooks from the US, some dating back to the 1880s. This represents the world’s largest (and continually growing) digital yearbook collection. Classmates.com acquires these yearbooks and then scans them, creating digital copies that can be viewed online.
Jostens is the primary supplier of Super Bowl rings, and having made 37 of the 57 championship rings as of 2024. [18] [19]In April 2015, Jostens launched the world's first Adobe InDesign streaming partnership with Adobe Inc., called "Monarch," at the Journalism Education Association spring convention in Denver.
1894 Naval Academy Lucky Bag. The Lucky Bag is the term for the United States Naval Academy yearbook dedicated to the graduating classes. A traditional Lucky Bag has a collection of photos taken around the academy and photographs of each graduating officer along with a single paragraph describing the individual written by a friend.
Betty Jane Belanus (Ph.D., Folklore), employee of and curator of several Smithsonian Folklife Festival programs; Daniel Bourne, poet; Todd Brewster, journalist and historian; Jan Harold Brunvand, American folklorist, one of the best-known researchers and anthologists of urban legends; earned PhD in folklore; Joe Buck, sportscaster, multiple ...