Ferris State University Requirements for Acceptance
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Guide to Manuscripts in the Michigan Historical Collections of The
L I B RAR.Y OF THE U N IVER.SITY OF 1LLI NOIS oi6.9q74- cop. 2 £ ILLINOIS HISTORY SURVEY LIBRARY Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign http://www.archive.org/details/guidetomanuscripOOmich GUIDE TO MANUSCRIPTS in the MICHIGAN HISTORICAL COLLECTIONS of THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN By Robert M. Warner and Ida C. Brown Ann Arbor 1963 Composition and Lithoprinted by BRAUN -BRUM FIELD, Inc. Ann Arbor, Michigan Oil.. Ill* H INTRODUCTION The Michigan Historical Collections are a special library of The University of Michigan, con- taining the archives of the University and papers of individuals and organizations throughout Michi- gan. In the beginning there were two different projects. One, begun by Professor Lewis G. Vander Velde in 1934, was a program of collecting manuscript and printed materials relating to Michigan history, primarily for the use of graduate students in his seminar. The other program concerned the collecting and preservation of records of the University. To accomplish this purpose, President Alexander G. Ruthven appointed The Committee on University Archives, of which Professor Vander Velde was the secretary. Firmly convinced that a comprehen- sive collection of manuscripts dealing with the history of the University and the State would be use- ful for students and scholars, he began a vigorous campaign of letter writing and personal visits. Housed for a time in a room in the Clements Library, in 1938, needing more space, the papers were moved into the newly opened Rackham Building. In the same year the Regents established the Michigan Historical Collections and appointed Professor Vander Velde the Director. -
Special Election on New Buildings County Infirmary Soil Conserving
BLl'K MARK NOTICE A blue mark around Ihis nolire Odd S and Ends will call your allrnliun lo your address labd. which shows thai Here and There it's time to renew. LOWELL L Brirf Paragraph* of News and Infornalion on Variety of Topics LEDGER FORTY-THIRD YEAR LOWELL, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY, AfRIL 2, 1936 NO. 46 for Michigan ENTRIES Keene-twp, Loses isi: \rerded Ol.- Skilled Craftsman Along Main St. ind r«1> nted St Special Election Dies at Age of 52 Soil Conserving Respected Citizen School Children the siatr" agri cultural Being a Collection of Various hair\ing B hard w<irk George Herald has a right l< Topics of Local and .ind cails for heavx inveslmenls t- i . •, , , j,r._..^1feel "j»uff<-d up" over his ability Keene township and the c<.ni- in cows and dairy equipmcni. General Interest ^ ""V for „ bSe delicious salt rising On New Buildings Meetings Called munit\ generalh lost one of its To Be Coached Milk f<«r fluid markets must be Burt, a- Umell ^ "jf bread. Ijst week Mrs. Matin past .i4 years, were held Sunda> „ „ k-., im'st vubsianlial <ilizens Friday produced under the most vini- RECOVERV FROM DISASTER r, Bouse, who is rx-siding with her larx conditionv Speaking in I»w- at ? p n> the residence. Ubbie Taplin in with the death <•! Jacob Bueg- Mrv segger. 7.r«. at his farm home ell recenlly. James F. Thomson. HE TERRIBLE FLOOD that Rev . S. B. Wenger < •ffici ati ng^I n - ^ hungrv fur County Infirmary Thursday,Friday following a six weeks" illness. -
Governors of Michgian William Hull - Territorial Governor
Governors Of Michgian William Hull - Territorial Governor Stevens T. Mason William Woodbridge James Wright Gordon John S. Barry - D Alpheus Felch William L. Greenly Epaphroditus Ransom John S. Barry - D Robert McCLelland Andrew Parsons Kinsley S. Bingham Moses Wisner Austin Blair Henry H. Crapo Henry P. Baldwin John J. Bagley Charles Croswell David Jerome Josiah Begole Russell A. Alger Cyrus G. Luce Edwin B. Winans John T. Rich Hazen Pingree Aaron T. Bliss Fred M. Warner Chase Osborn Woodbridge Nathan Ferris Albert Sleeper Alex J. Groesbeck Fred. W. Green Wilber M. Brucker Frank Fitzgerald Frank M. Murphy Frank Fitzgerald Luren Dickinson Murray Van Wagoner Harry Kelly Kim Sigler G. Mennen Williams John Swainson George W. Romney William Milliken James Blanchard John Engler Jennifer Granholm Rick Snyder Years Of Service Types Of Service March 22, 1805 - Oct. 29, 1813 MA Judge/State Senator 1835-1840 Territorial Secretary - 3 Years Jan. 7, 1840 - Feb. 23, 1841 State Representative 1 year (OH) State Senate 5 years (OH), Prosecutor 5 Years (OH) Territorial Secretary (5 Years), U.S. House 1 year, Territorial Supreme Court Justice -4 years; Delegate To Michigan's Constitutional Convention of 1835 Feb. 23, 1841 - Feb. 23, 1841 1 year state senate, one year Lt. Gov. under Woodbridge Jan. 3, 1842 Jan. 5, 1846 4 -years Justice of the Peace, 4 Years State Senate, Jan. 5, 1846-March 3, 1847 Military Aid, 2 years, State House, 2 years, 1 Year State Bank Commissioner, Two Weeks State Auditor, Supreme Court Justice 3 Years March 4, 1847-Jan. 3, 1848 Lt. Gov. 1 year, State Senate 2 years Jan. -
History of the Tredway Family
HISTORY OF THE TREDWAY FAMILY WILLIAM T. TREDW.AY Editor and Compiler COPYRIGHT 1930, W. T. TREDWAY, PITTSBURGH, PA. <1'i¢a"bway 'liibwa,.9 «rnnt nf .Arms For Complete Description, See Page 32 This work is dedicated to the memory of REVEREND SILAS BALDWIN TREDWAY. A Methodist Protestant Minister, of Maryland, in honor of his untiring efforts in gathering most of the data herein contained, and who inspired the final publication thereof. Also to the memory of those patriarchs by the name of Tredway who have passed to the Great Beyond, down through the centuries, who have done so much to smooth out the roitgh places in the pathway of human Zif e; who have made "human labor lighter and the human countenance brighter" by their having lived; and Al.so to those now living and generations yef 1m born who shall add to the lustre of the name and keep it unsullied down through the ages. CONTENTS CHAPTER r Page History of the Tredway Family I Pedigree of the Family of Tredway 32 CHAPTER II American Ancestors of Frank Stillman Treadway 33 CHAPTER III Christian Fraternity-Sermon by Dr. S. B. Tredway - 47 . CHAPTER IV History of the Tredway Family in the State of Mary- land and Other States 61 CHAPTER V Re-Written by William T. 'Tredway, Editor and Pub- lisher of the Tredway Genealogy 69 CHAPTER VI Daughters of the Tredway Family who Changed Their Name by Inter-marrying into Other Families 87 CHAPTER VII Sketch of John Norris Tredway, Sr., (1769-1853) 91 CHAPTER VIII Sketch of Crispin Tredway (1767-1855) by Rev. -
Michigan Biographies, Including Members of Congress, Elective State Officers, Justices of the Supreme Court, Members of the Mich
Library of Congress Michigan biographies, including Members of Congress, elective state officers, Justices of the Supreme Court, Members of the Michigan Legislature, Board of Regents of the University of Michigan, State Board of Agriculture and State Board of Education ... 24-27004 Michigan Biographies INCLUDING MEMBERS OF CONGRESS, ELECTIVE STATE OFFICERS, JUSTICES OF THE SUPREME COURT, MEMBERS OF THE MICHIGAN LEGISLATURE, BOARD OF REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN, STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE AND STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION THE GREAT SEAL OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN A. D. MDCCCXXXV. VOL. III. L-Z Published by The Michigan Historical Commission Lansing, 1924 F535 .M62 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS RECEIVED JUN 10 1924 DOCUMENTS DIVISION PREFACE. The sketches in this second volume, as in Volume I, end with the date of the last appearance of their respective subjects as public officers in Michigan. Since the material in the previous and present volumes is inaccessible except in the largest libraries, it is believed that the immediate publication of the material at hand in an edition large enough to supply all libraries in the state, will be appreciated by the general public and will take care of their immediate needs. Material is being gathered for a supplementary work which will bring the sketches forward. The gathering of this material is a considerable task and involves research in newspaper files, public records, and the carrying on of voluminous correspondence. To assist in gathering material for the supplementary work that will bring the sketches as near up-to-date as possible, the Commission has appointed a “Council of Michigan biographies, including Members of Congress, elective state officers, Justices of the Supreme Court, Members of the Michigan Legislature, Board of Regents of the University of Michigan, State Board of Agriculture and State Board of Education .. -
Entire Chapter As a Single Document
Chapter VII INSTITUTIONS OF HIGHER EDUCATION Introduction ........................... 495 University Profiles ...................... 496 Community Colleges ................... 539 Independent Colleges and Universities ..... 540 Former Members of University Governing Boards ...................... 541 2017–2018 INTRODUCTION PUBLIC UNIVERSITIES Michigan has 15 public 4-year universities located throughout the state. These institutions range from those having large undergraduate, graduate, and professional student populations to one with a student population of just under 3,000. Michigan universities participate in complex academic and research activities, provide undergraduate programs in the liberal arts, and offer specialized areas of studies such as engineering and vocational-technical programs. Together these institutions of higher education offer comprehensive and diverse programs. Higher education enjoys a relatively autonomous structure in Michigan. The Constitution of 1963, which created the current State Board of Education, authorizes the boards of control of the individual public universities to supervise their respective institutions and to control expenditure of institutional funds. Three of the public 4-year universities are supervised by individual boards of control elected by the voters of Michigan while each remaining public university is governed by a board of control appointed by the governor. COMMUNITY COLLEGES Michigan’s 28 community colleges provide: 1) higher education opportunities to citizens for whom the cost, location -
Michigan Historical Commission Centennial Review
THE MICHIGAN HISTORICAL COMMISSION A CENTENNIAL REVIEW MAY 2013 THE MICHIGAN HISTORICAL COMMISSION A CENTENNIAL REVIEW MAY 2013 On the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the creation of the Michigan Historical Commission, this booklet is presented to the people of Michigan to commemorate one hundred years of public investment in our state’s matchless heritage. © Michigan Historical Commission 2013 In October 1913, the commission met in Kalamazoo at the home of the Rev. Monsignor O’Brien, a fellow commissioner, and journeyed from there to visit the archives at Notre Dame University as the guests of the Rev. John Cavanaugh. All photographs courtesy Archives of Michigan THE MICHIGAN HISTORICAL COMMISSION On Thursday, May 8, 1913, the average high temperature in Lansing was 66 degrees. The day would become more than seasonable, though, with a landmark action of Governor Woodbridge Nathan Ferris. With the stroke of a pen, he signed into law Public Act 271, a measure creating the Michigan Historical Commission. It was, in several ways, a historic event. The impetus for the law arose two years earlier, when Governor Chase S. Osborn vetoed the annual appropriation for the Michigan Pioneer and Historical Society. Osborn’s January 1911 State of the State Address called for “exercise of the closest economy in the management of the business of the State” because a “large deficit . probably amounting to at least a million dollars” required the elimination of earmarks (to use an equivalent modern term). He proposed that the State Librarian assume the society’s role of collecting historical documentation, publishing the Michigan Pioneer and Historical Collections (http://libguides.lib.msu.edu/MPHC), and maintaining the history museum in the Capitol. -
Sennholz,Mary
LEONARD E. READ Philosopher of Freedom by Mary Sennholz The Foundation for Economic Education, Inc. Irvington-on-Hudson, New York 10533 Published May 1993 ISBN 0-910614-85-7 Copyright © 1993 by The Foundation for Economic Education, Inc. TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface v I The Boy from Hubbardston 1 II Leonard Goes to War 12 III Looking Across the Country 26 IV Time of Seasoning 33 V With the Chamber of Commerce 43 VI Against the Stream 66 VII If It Takes My Whole Life 74 VIII Faith and Conduct 97 IX Mind in the Making 111 X Anything Peaceful 125 XI The Shadow of Politics 142 XII Learning from History 156 XIII The Gentleman 169 XIV In Memoriam 185 Index 195 Books by Leonard E. Read 202 iii Leonard E. Read Preface In 1946, when Leonard E. Read set out to launch the Foundation for Economic Education, the eyes of the economics profession were on the federal government. Members of Congress were discussing the Full Employment Act, and the International Monetary Fund and the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development were preparing to go into operation. Both developments greatly influenced the economic discussion. Officials of other government agencies were busily releasing their studies on economic issues. The Governors of the Federal Reserve System were leading the discussion on the relations of prices, wages, employment, housing, Social Security, and public works. U.S. Treasury authorities were holding forth on corporate income taxation, their colleagues in the Department of Agriculture on land use, and officials of several other agencies on spending and saving, wages and working conditions, etc.