College/University Visit Clusters

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

College/University Visit Clusters COLLEGE/UNIVERSITY VISIT CLUSTERS The groupings of colleges and universities below are by no means exhaustive; these ideas are meant to serve as good starting points when beginning a college search. Happy travels! BOSTON/RHODE ISLAND AREA CENTRAL/WESTERN MASSACHUSETTS Large Large Boston University University of Massachusetts at Amherst University of Massachusetts at Boston Medium Northeastern University College of the Holy Cross Medium Worcester Polytechnic Institute Bentley University (business focus) Small Boston College Amherst College Brandeis University Clark University Bridgewater State University Hampshire College Brown University Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts Bryant University (business focus) Mount Holyoke College (women’s college) Harvard College Smith College (women’s college) Massachusetts Institute of Technology Springfield College University of Massachusetts at Lowell Westfield State University Providence College Williams College University of Rhode Island Suffolk University Small CONNECTICUT Babson College (business focus) Large Emerson College University of Connecticut Olin College of Engineering Medium Rhode Island School of Design (art school) Fairfield University Roger Williams College University of New Haven Salve Regina University Quinnipiac University Simmons College (women’s college) Sacred Heart University Tufts University Yale College Wellesley College (women’s college) Small Wheaton College Connecticut College Trinity College Wesleyan University NORTHERN NEW ENGLAND Large University of Maine NEW YORK CITY AREA University of New Hampshire Large University of Vermont New York University Medium Pace University Dartmouth College Stony Brook University (SUNY) Small Medium Bates College Columbia University Bennington College Fordham University Bowdoin College Hofstra University Colby College Small College of the Atlantic Barnard College (women’s college) Middlebury College Eugene Lang College – The New School Saint Anselm College Sarah Lawrence College Saint Michael’s College 1 UPSTATE NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA AND SURROUNDING AREA/ NEW JERSEY/PENNSYLVANIA Large Binghamton University (SUNY) Large Cornell University University of Delaware Rochester Institute of Technology Drexel University Syracuse University Pennsylvania State University Medium University of Pennsylvania Colgate University University of Pittsburgh Ithaca College Rutgers University Marist College Temple University Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Medium University of Rochester Carnegie Mellon University Small Lehigh University Bard College Princeton University Clarkson University Villanova University Hamilton College Small Hobart and Williams Smith Colleges Allegheny College Skidmore College Bryn Mawr College (women’s college) St. Lawrence University Bucknell University Union College Dickinson College Vassar College Drew University Franklin & Marshall College Gettysburg College WASHINGTON, DC/BALTIMORE AREA Haverford College Large Juniata College George Washington University Lafayette College University of Maryland (College Park) Muhlenberg College Medium Stevens Institute of Technology American University Swarthmore College The Catholic University of America Ursinus College Georgetown University Howard University (Historically Black University) Johns Hopkins University OHIO Loyola University Maryland Large Small Miami University of Ohio Goucher College The Ohio State University St. John’s College (Annapolis) Medium Case Western Reserve University Small Denison University Kenyon College Oberlin College Ohio Wesleyan University College of Wooster 2 VIRGINIA/NORTH CAROLINA/ FLORIDA/GEORGIA/LOUISIANA/ SOUTH CAROLINA/TENNESSEE ALABAMA/ARKANSAS Large Large Clemson University Florida State University George Mason University University of Florida University of North Carolina Georgia Institute of Technology University of South Carolina University of Georgia Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Louisiana State University University of Virginia Medium Medium Emory University College of Charleston University of Miami Duke University University of Tampa Elon University Tulane University Hampton University Small (Historically Black University) Agnes Scott College (women’s college) High Point University Eckerd College University of Richmond Florida Southern College Vanderbilt University Hendrix College Wake Forest University Loyola University New Orleans College of William and Mary Millsaps College Small Morehouse College Belmont University (men’s college; Historically Black College) Davidson College Rollins College Furman University Savannah College of Art and Design Guilford College Spelman College Rhodes College (women’s college; Historically Black College) Warren Wilson College Xavier University of Louisiana (Historically Black University) TEXAS COLORADO Large Baylor University Large University of Houston University of Colorado – Boulder Texas A&M University Colorado State University Texas Christian University Medium University of Denver University of Texas, Austin Medium Small Rice University Colorado College Southern Methodist University Small University of Dallas Southwestern University Trinity University 3 CHICAGO/SOUTHERN WISCONSIN PACIFIC NORTHWEST AREA/INDIANA/IOWA Large Large University of Oregon DePaul University University of Washington University of Illinois Western Washington University University of Indiana Medium University of Notre Dame Evergreen State College Purdue University Gonzaga University University of Wisconsin Small Medium Lewis and Clark College Butler University Reed College University of Chicago University of Puget Sound Columbia College Whitman College Loyola University Chicago Willamette University Marquette University Northwestern University Small SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Beloit College Large DePauw University University of California – Los Angeles Earlham College University of California – San Diego Grinnell College University of Southern California Lake Forest College Medium Lawrence University Loyola Marymount University School of the Art Institute of Chicago Pepperdine University University of San Diego Small SAN FRANCISCO AND California Institute of the Arts SURROUNDING AREA Chapman University Large Claremont Colleges: University of California – Berkeley Claremont McKenna University of California – Santa Cruz Harvey Mudd Medium Pitzer University of San Francisco Pomona Santa Clara University Scripps (women’s college) Stanford University Occidental College Small Whittier College Mills College (women’s college) 4 CANADA UNITED KINGDOM Large QUEBEC/ONTARIO The University of Aberdeen Large University of Cambridge Concordia University University College London Dalhousie University The University of Edinburgh McGill University University of Glasgow Queen’s University King’s College London University of Toronto London School Economics Small University of Oxford University of King’s College Trinity College Dublin Medium VANCOUVER University of St Andrews Large Small The University of British Columbia Exeter College Simon Fraser University Small Quest University Updated 2.21 5 .
Recommended publications
  • The History of Bryn Mawr, 1683-1900
    Bryn Mawr College Scholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn Mawr College Bryn Mawr College Publications, Special Books, pamphlets, catalogues, and scrapbooks Collections, Digitized Books 1962 The History of Bryn Mawr, 1683-1900 Barbara Alyce Farrow Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.brynmawr.edu/bmc_books Part of the Liberal Studies Commons, and the Women's History Commons No evidence was found that the copyright was renewed in the 28th year from the date of publication, as required for books published between 1923 and 1963 (see Library of Congress Copyright Office, How To Investigate the Copyright Status of a Work [Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress, Copyright Office, 2004]). The book is therefore believed to be in the public domain. Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Custom Citation Farrow, Barbara Alyce. The History of Bryn Mawr, 1683-1900. Bryn Mawr, PA: Committee of Residents and Bryn Mawr Civic Association, 1962. This paper is posted at Scholarship, Research, and Creative Work at Bryn Mawr College. https://repository.brynmawr.edu/bmc_books/14 For more information, please contact [email protected]. The HISTORY OF BRYN MAWR 1683-1900 Barbara Alyce Farrow THE HISTORY OF BRYN MAWR 1683 - 1900 Barbara Alyce Farrow Foreword by Catherine Drinker Bowen Pub lished by A Committee of Residents and The Bryn Mawr Civic Association Bryn M.:lw r, Pe nn sylvania 1962 This work is based on a thesis submitted in 1957 to Westminster College New Wilmington, Pennsylvania. Copyright © Barbara Alyce Farrow 1962 library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 62-13436 II To my grandmother, Mrs.
    [Show full text]
  • Mellon CBB Abstracts 2010-2011
    Appendix A: CBB Mellon Collaborative Faculty Enhancement Grants: Abstracts OCTOBER 2010 AWARDS Second Annual Colby-Bates-Bowdoin Economics Conference Collaborators: Bowdoin, Bates, Colby Principle: Stephen Meardon (Economics, Bowdoin) This project continued the Annual Colby-Bates-Bowdoin Economics Conference. The conference was a full-day annual event open to faculty, students and the community. Goals of the conference are cross- sub-disciplinary scholarly exchanges and research networking among faculty, presentation of honors work by students, and exposure of less senior students to questions and standards of economic research. The larger purpose is to bring the economics departments at Colby, Bates, and Bowdoin closer together, thereby encouraging collaborative faculty research and advancing the quality of student research. Participants expressed clearly their wish to repeat the event. A successful first conference was held at Bates on April 10, 2010. The conference in 2011 was held at Bowdoin; the aim is to continue the conference at Colby in 2012. Fostering Communication and Collaboration among Algebraists, Number Theorists and Topologists Collaborators: Bowdoin, Bates, and Colby Principle: Thomas Pietraho (Mathematics, Bowdoin) This collaboration brought together researchers who specialize in the fields of number theory, algebra and topology from Bowdoin, Bates and Colby Colleges for a three-part program: a research seminar with prestigious invited speakers, a “local collaboration conference” once per semester to stimulate collaborative research, and the appointment of six student-scholars committed to attending all lectures with faculty members. Goals are to facilitate the creation of joint research projects between faculty members (and possibly students) by highlighting problems which lie at the intersection of these three important disciplines within mathematics.
    [Show full text]
  • Planning for the Fall Is Like 'Driving Through a Dense Fog'
    Planning for the Fall Is Like ‘Driving Through a Dense Fog’ How the presidents of two small liberal-arts colleges are navigating the coronavirus crisis By Len Gutkin and Maximillian Alvarez April 29, 2020 Pete Mauney Bard College In the last two months, the coronavirus crisis has forced colleges to shutter their classrooms and dormitories and move instruction online. What will happen next semester? The Chronicle Review talked (via Zoom, of course) with G. Gabrielle Starr and Leon Botstein, the presidents, respectively, of Pomona College and Bard College, to get a sense of how the leaders at smaller, undergraduate-focused liberal-arts schools are handling this critical period. Starr and Botstein discussed when and how to reopen, the advantages and risks of education technology, the importance of the arts and public culture, disaster preparedness, and the virtues of horror movies. Len Gutkin: The president of Brown University, Christina Paxson, wrote an op- ed in The New York Times arguing that Brown and colleges like it need to be able to reopen in the fall. Is Bard going to open? Is Pomona? If so, what kind of opening will it be? Leon Botstein: Yes. I think that we are going to open, and we’re going to open on schedule. The question of what kind of opening it will be is really dependent on federal, local, and state regulations. That’s hard to tell from here. Places like Pomona and ourselves are in a terrifically privileged position because they’re small. We’re not giant tankers trying to move around. We have an obligation to be in the leadership of restoring public culture, and education is part of that public culture.
    [Show full text]
  • Lawrence University (1-1, 0-0 MWC North) at Beloit College (1-1, 0-0
    Lawrence University (1-1, 0-0 MWC North) at Beloit College (1-1, 0-0 MWC North) Saturday, September 19, 2015, 1 p.m., Strong Stadium, Beloit, Wisconsin Webcast making his first start, was 23-for-36 ing possession and moved 75 yards A free video webcast is available for 274 yards and three touchdowns. in 12 plays for the game’s first touch- at: http://portal.stretchinternet.com/ Mandich, a senior receiver from Green down. Byrd hit freshman receiver and lawrence/. Bay, had a career-high eight catches Appleton native Cole Erickson with an for 130 yards and a touchdown for the eight-yard touchdown pass to com- The Series Vikings. plete the drive and give Lawrence a Lawrence holds a 58-36-5 edge in The Lawrence defense limited 7-3 lead. a series that dates all the way back to Beloit to 266 yards and made a key The Vikings then put together 1899. This year marks the 100th game stop late in the game to preserve the another long scoring drive early in in the series, which is the second- victory. Linebacker Brandon Taylor the second quarter. Lawrence went longest rivalry for Lawrence. The Vi- paced the Lawrence defense with 14 80 yards in eight plays and Byrd found kings have played 114 games against tackles and two pass breakups. Trevor Spina with a 24-yard touch- Ripon, and that series dates to 1893. Beloit was down by eight but got down pass for a 14-3 Lawrence lead Lawrence has won three of the last an interception on a tipped ball and with 11:53 left in the first half.
    [Show full text]
  • BIRGIT TAUTZ DEPARTMENT of GERMAN Bowdoin College 7700 College Station, Brunswick, ME, 04011-8477, Tel.: (207) 798 7079 [email protected]
    BIRGIT TAUTZ DEPARTMENT OF GERMAN Bowdoin College 7700 College Station, Brunswick, ME, 04011-8477, Tel.: (207) 798 7079 [email protected] POSITIONS Bowdoin College George Taylor Files Professor of Modern Languages, 07/2017 – present Assistant (2002), Associate (2007), Full Professor (2016) in the Department of German, 2002 – present Affiliate Professor, Program in Cinema Studies, 2012 – present Chair of German, 2008 – 2011, fall 2012, 2014 – 2017, 2019 – Acting Chair of Film Studies, 2010 – 2011 Lawrence University Assistant Professor of German, 1998 – 2002 St. Olaf College Visiting Instructor/Assistant Professor, 1997 – 1998 EDUCATION Ph.D. German, Comparative Literature, University of MN, Minneapolis, 1998 M.A. German, University of WI, Madison, 1992 Diplomgermanistik University of Leipzig, Germany, 1991 RESEARCH Books (*peer-review; +editorial board review) 1. Translating the World: Toward a New History of German Literature around 1800, University Park: Penn State UP, 2018; paperback December 2018, also as e-book.* Winner of the SAMLA Studies Book Award – Monograph, 2019 Shortlisted for the Kenshur Prize for the Best Book in Eighteenth-Century Studies, 2019 [reviewed in Choice Jan. 2018; German Quarterly 91.3 (2018) 337-339; The Modern Language Review 113.4 (2018): 297-299; German Studies Review 42.1(2-19): 151-153; Comparative Literary Studies 56.1 (2019): e25-e27, online; Eighteenth Century Studies 52.3 (2019) 371-373; MLQ (2019)80.2: 227-229.; Seminar (2019) 3: 298-301; Lessing Yearbook XLVI (2019): 208-210] 2. Reading and Seeing Ethnic Differences in the Enlightenment: From China to Africa New York: Palgrave, 2007; available as e-book, including by chapter, and paperback.* unofficial Finalist DAAD/GSA Book Prize 2008 [reviewed in Choice Nov.
    [Show full text]
  • Alumnae Colleges and Universities
    Alumnae Colleges and Universities Alaska: Florida: • University of Alaska • Eckerd College • Florida Atlantic University Alabama: Georgia: • Auburn University • Augusta University Arizona: Iowa: • Northern Arizona University • Prescott College • Grinnell College • University of Iowa California: Idaho: • American Music and Dramatic Academy • University of Idaho • California Polytechnic State Illinois: University • City College of San Francisco • Northwestern University • Loyola Marymount University • Mills College Kansas: • Pitzer College • San Francisco State University • University of Kansas • Scripps College • Stanford University Kentucky: • University of California – Berkeley • Frontier Nursing University Colorado: Louisiana: • Art Institute of Colorado • Colorado College • Tulane University • Colorado State University • Colorado University Boulder Massachusetts: • Denver School of Nursing • Naropa University • Assumption College • University of Colorado • Boston College • University of Denver • Boston University • Hampshire College Connecticut: • Harvard University • Mount Holyoke College • Wesleyan University • Tufts University • Yale University Maryland: • University of New Mexico • St. John’s College New York: Maine: • Barnard College • Colgate University • Bates College • Columbia University • Bowdoin College • Cornell University • College of the Atlantic • Global College of Long Island University Michigan: • Hamilton College • New York School of Interior Design • Kalamazoo College • New York University • Michigan State University
    [Show full text]
  • Visitor's Guide
    AREA VISITOR GUIDE 2009-2010 AMHERST AND HADLEY ANNIVERSARY EDITION AMHERST AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE 28 AMITY STREET • AMHERST, MA 01002 413-253-0700 www.amherstarea.com Rich in history, natural beauty, cultural attractions, and fine shopping and dining, the Amherst area is perfect for a day...a weekend getaway...a six-month sabbatical...or the rest of your life! Take in an exhibit at one of our world-renowned museums. Hike an extensive trail network through beautiful meadows and mountains. And finish your day with a gourmet meal featuring cuisine from almost any corner of the world. Spend the night at a charming Victorian Inn, a comfortable bed-and-breakfast, or a gleaming new hotel with all the amenities—the choice is yours, and all within a 10-minute drive of our vibrant downtown, with its elegant boutiques, bookstores, cafes and specialty shops. We hope that you enjoy your stay in the Amherst area. Please tell your host that the Chamber sent you! Into our Rich History....................... 3 Amherst 250th Anniversary, Hadley 350th Anniversary Into a Living Past.......................... 5 Museums, historic sites, literary heritage A Vibrant Present.......................... 8 Art museums, galleries, art events Stepping Out for Fun...................... 10 Live performance, seasonal entertainment, family attractions, health and fitness, fun on the farm Educational Resources .................... 16 Area colleges and resources Calendar of Events........................ 17 Maps ................................... 18 Town of Amherst, regional highways, interstate highways Downtown Amherst ...................... 20 Directions ............................... 22 Driving directions, transportation Get Closer to Nature ...................... 23 State- and town-sponsored parks, Table of Contents Table outdoor recreation Shopping................................... 26 Restaurants ............................. 29 Accommodations........................
    [Show full text]
  • Below Is a Sampling of the Nearly 500 Colleges, Universities, and Service Academies to Which Our Students Have Been Accepted Over the Past Four Years
    Below is a sampling of the nearly 500 colleges, universities, and service academies to which our students have been accepted over the past four years. Allegheny College Connecticut College King’s College London American University Cornell University Lafayette College American University of Paris Dartmouth College Lehigh University Amherst College Davidson College Loyola Marymount University Arizona State University Denison University Loyola University Maryland Auburn University DePaul University Macalester College Babson College Dickinson College Marist College Bard College Drew University Marquette University Barnard College Drexel University Maryland Institute College of Art Bates College Duke University McDaniel College Baylor University Eckerd College McGill University Bentley University Elon University Miami University, Oxford Binghamton University Emerson College Michigan State University Boston College Emory University Middlebury College Boston University Fairfield University Morehouse College Bowdoin College Florida State University Mount Holyoke College Brandeis University Fordham University Mount St. Mary’s University Brown University Franklin & Marshall College Muhlenberg College Bucknell University Furman University New School, The California Institute of Technology George Mason University New York University California Polytechnic State University George Washington University North Carolina State University Carleton College Georgetown University Northeastern University Carnegie Mellon University Georgia Institute of Technology
    [Show full text]
  • Montgomery County: College Wellness Survey Infographic
    MONTGOMERY COUNTY 2021 College Wellness Survey SURVEY DATA COLLECTED FROM: 10/10 SURVEY DATA COLLECTED FROM MONTGOMERY Arcadia University, Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Athyn College, Gwynedd Mercy University, COUNTY Haverford College, Manor College, Montgomery County Community College, Penn State Abington, Rosemont College, Ursinus College COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES MONTGOMERY COUNTY COLLEGE STUDENT 56.3% STUDENT (MCCS) PAST 30 DAY USE COMPARED TO THE 2019 MONITORING THE ALCOHOL FUTURE SURVEY (MTF) USE IN THE LAST 30 ALCOHOL DAYS 19.3% 56.3% MCCS 62.0% MTF MARIJUANA MARAJUANA Substance use among Montgomery County 19.3% MCCS 26.0% MTF College Students is slightly NICOTINE* below national college 21.8% student use trends NICOTINE 21.8% MCCS 29.6% MTF *AGGREGATE VAPING AND CIGARETTE NICOTINE USE 4.2 % OF of students reported being prescribed STUDENTS 46% an opioid in their lifetime REPORT of students reported filling an opioid USING 38% prescription in their lifetime OPIOIDS IN of students reported taking an opioid THE LAST medication that was prescribed to 12 MONTHS 33% them in their lifetime STUDENTS YET ONLY PERCEPTION BELIEVED THAT VS. 59.7% 19.3% 80.7% REALITY OF THEIR PEERS OF STUDENTS DID NOT USE HAD USED HAD USED MARIJUANA MARIJUANA IN MARIJUANA IN IN THE PAST THE PAST 30 THE PAST 30 30 DAYS DAYS DAYS MONTGOMERY COUNTY 2021 College Wellness Survey TOP BARRIERS TO TOP COPING MECHANISMS ACCESSING SUPPORT REPORTED BY STUDENTS SERVICES Good Good Proper Nutrition 38% TIME support support (eating a variety system system of healthy foods 26% COST 1of friends 2 of family 3daily) 16% STIGMA CONCERNS 66% OF STUDENTS REPORT THAT THEIR EMOTIONAL HEALTH IS WORSE THAN COMPARED TO BEFORE THE PANDEMIC IN STUDENTS IN STUDENTS REPORTING REPORTING SYMPTOMS OF SYMPTOMS OF DEPRESSION ANXIETY 41% 38% Reported using alcohol to cope Reported using alcohol to cope 16% 19% Reported using marijuana to cope Reported using marijuana to cope 20% 20% Reported using nicotine to cope Reported using nicotine to cope PO Box 311 Norristown, PA 19404 - 0311 [email protected] MONTCOPA.ORG.
    [Show full text]
  • Erica V. Harris, Ph. D
    Erica V. Harris, Ph. D. PROFESSIONAL APPOINTMENTS 2020-present Spelman College, Atlanta, GA Postdoctoral Research Associate, Biology PI: Jennifer Kovacs EDUCATION 2013 – 2020 Emory University, Atlanta, GA PhD in Population Biology, Ecology and Evolution Advisors: Jacobus de Roode and Nicole Gerardo 2009-2013 Rice University, Houston, TX BA in Biochemistry & Cellular Biology Advisors: Volker Rudolf and Joan Strassmann FELLOWSHIPS & GRANTS National 2017-2018 Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship Dissertation Grant. $20,000 2014-2017 National Science Foundation (NSF) Graduate Research Fellowship (3 yrs). $32,000 stipend + $12,000 tuition 2015 Mellon Mays Graduate Initiatives-Social Science Research Council Graduate Studies Enhancement Grant. $1,500 2014 Mellon Mays Graduate Initiatives-Social Science Research Council Predoctoral Research Development Grant. $2,845 2011-2013 Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship (MMUF) Research Program. $26,000 Internal 2016 Atlanta Science Festival Exploration Expo Educational Outreach Grant. $823.19 2015 Atlanta Science Festival Exploration Expo Educational Outreach Grant. $803.56 2014 Eugene Gangarosa Laboratory Research Mentoring Fellowship, Infectious Diseases Institute at Emory University Summer Fellowships 2012 Howard Hughes Medical Institute Summer Undergraduate Research Experience, Emory University. $3,500 2010 National Science Foundation Research Experience for Undergraduates, Rice University. $3,000 Erica Harris CV Page 1 AWARDS 2020 Travel Award, Ecological Society of America Student Section, Real/Brown Travel Grant Recipient. $190 2020 Workshop Scholarship, Biology and Mathematics Educators (BIOME) Institute: Culivating Scientific Curiosity, Quantitative Undergraduate Biology Education and Synthesis (QUBES). $1,125 2020 Eleanor Main Graduate Mentor [Commencement Ceremony] Award, Laney Graduate School at Emory University. $2,500 2019 Student Mentor Award, Graduate Division of Biological and Biomedical Sciences at Emory University.
    [Show full text]
  • Class of 2018 Successes
    High School Success 2017-18 A U S T I N W A L D O R F S C H O O L C L A S S O F 2 0 1 8 C O L L E G E S O F A C C E P T A N C E A N D M A T R I C U L A T I O N Agnes Scott College Eckerd College Oklahoma State University University of Arizona American University Fordham University Okl ahoma University University of Denver Austin Community College Goucher College Rider University University of Georgia Barnard College Hendrix College Sarah Lawrence College University of North Texas Bates College High Point University Seattle University University of Portland Baylor University Hobart & William Smith College Smith College University of Redlands Centre College Illinois Wesleyan University Southwestern University University of San Fransisco Colorado State University Kansas State University St. Edward's University University of Texas at Austin Connecticut College Lewis and Clark College Stephen F. Austin University University of Texas at Dallas Denison University Loyola University Chicago Texas A&M University University of Texas at San Antonio Depaul University Marymount Manhattan College Texas State University University of Wyoming Drew University Middlebury College Texas Tech University Washington University in St. Louis Drexel University Mount Holyoke College Trinity University Wesleyan College Earlham College Nova Southeastern Univeristy University of Alabama Whitman College Whittier College The Class of 2018 In tota l , e l e v e n g raduates All 1 6 graduates of the class of 2018 applied of the Class of 2018 earned to 7 4 , were accepted to 5 7 , and will $ 2 .
    [Show full text]
  • Report of the President, Bowdoin College 1904-1905
    Bowdoin College Bowdoin Digital Commons Annual Report of the President Special Collections and Archives 1-1-1905 Report of the President, Bowdoin College 1904-1905 Bowdoin College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.bowdoin.edu/presidents-reports Recommended Citation Bowdoin College, "Report of the President, Bowdoin College 1904-1905" (1905). Annual Report of the President. 14. https://digitalcommons.bowdoin.edu/presidents-reports/14 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Special Collections and Archives at Bowdoin Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Annual Report of the President by an authorized administrator of Bowdoin Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. REPORT OF THE PRESIDENT OF BOWDOIN COLLEGE FOR THE ACADEMIC YEAR, 1904-190^ TOGETHER WITH THE REPORTS OF THE REGISTRAR, THE LIBRARIAN, AND THE CURATOR OF THE ART COLLECTIONS I9O4 I905 BRUNSWICK, MAINE PRINTED FOR THE COLLEGE, MDCCCCV PRESS OF JOURNAL COMPANY, LEWISTON, ME. — : REPORT OF THE PRESIDENT OF BOWDOIN COLLEGE. To the Trustees and Overseers of Bowdoin College I have the honor to submit the following report for the academic year 1904-1905: Eev. Edwin Beaman Palmer, D.D., a member of the Overseers since 1878, died Friday, September 2, 1904, in the seventy-first year of his age. Dr. Palmer was born in Belfast, Me., September 25, 1833, and graduated from Bowdoin College in the Class of 1856. He served for one year as Principal of the high and grammar schools in Brunswick. After graduation from Bangor Seminary he was pastor of churches in Newcastle and Lewiston, Me.; Ipswich, Chicopee, and Southbridge, Massachusetts.
    [Show full text]