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Boston State College alumni (29 P) Pages in category "University of Massachusetts Boston alumni" The following 122 pages are in this category, out of 122 total.
Frederick D. Griggs 1913, former member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives (1925–1928) Christopher Hodgkins, former member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives (1983–2003) Kate Hogan, member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives (2009–present) Philip W. Johnston, former Massachusetts Secretary of Human Services
University of Massachusetts Boston alumni (2 C, 122 P) D. ... University of Massachusetts Lowell alumni (2 C, 69 P) U. UMass Chan Medical School alumni (12 P)
Boston University alumni (16 C, 960 P) Brandeis University alumni (3 C, 755 P) ... University of Massachusetts Lowell alumni (2 C, 69 P) W. Wellesley College alumni ...
The University of Massachusetts is the five-campus public university system in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.The university system includes six campuses (Amherst, Boston, Dartmouth, Lowell, a medical school in Worcester and a law school in Dartmouth), a satellite campus in Springfield [5] [6] and 25 smaller campuses throughout California and Washington with the University of Massachusetts ...
Business courses were first offered at the Massachusetts Agricultural College in the early years of the 20th century, expanding rapidly during the 1930s and 1940s in response to student demand. [11] The college's board of trustees established the School of Business Administration in 1947, and within seven years, it was conferring graduate ...
State representative and current mayor of Lynn, Massachusetts: Marty Meehan: Former congressman (served 1993 – 2007), UMass Lowell chancellor (2007–2015), and current University of Massachusetts System president (2015–present) [23] Tolu Obdebiyi: Nigerian politician [24] Alan Solomont: 1977
In June 1964, with a $200,000 appropriation, [17] the legislation establishing the University of Massachusetts Boston was signed into law. [15] UMass President John W. Lederle began recruiting freshmen students, faculty, and administrative staff for the fall semester of 1965 (with goals of 1,000 students and 80 faculty members), and appointed his assistant at the Amherst campus, John W. Ryan ...