History of Higher Education in Michigan |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 18
Page 5
... AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE , by President O. Clute .. MICHIGAN MINING SCHOOL , by M. E. Wadsworth , director .. HILLSDALE COLLEGE , by Prof. S. W. Norton ... KALAMAZOO COLLEGE . by Rev. Samuel Haskell .... OLIVET COLLEGE , by Prof. J. S. ...
... AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE , by President O. Clute .. MICHIGAN MINING SCHOOL , by M. E. Wadsworth , director .. HILLSDALE COLLEGE , by Prof. S. W. Norton ... KALAMAZOO COLLEGE . by Rev. Samuel Haskell .... OLIVET COLLEGE , by Prof. J. S. ...
Page 37
... agriculture and a female seminary as soon as practicable . It is apparent that had it been possible to carry out this scheme there would have been a college in each county in the State , its affairs presided over by a central university ...
... agriculture and a female seminary as soon as practicable . It is apparent that had it been possible to carry out this scheme there would have been a college in each county in the State , its affairs presided over by a central university ...
Page 52
... , Semicentennial , p . 173 , plication of chemistry to agriculture and the industrial arts generally 52 HIGHER EDUCATION IN MICHIGAN . Dormitories Abolished, Students not a Distinct and Privileged Order Scientific Course.
... , Semicentennial , p . 173 , plication of chemistry to agriculture and the industrial arts generally 52 HIGHER EDUCATION IN MICHIGAN . Dormitories Abolished, Students not a Distinct and Privileged Order Scientific Course.
Page 53
Andrew Cunningham McLaughlin. plication of chemistry to agriculture and the industrial arts generally . The entire course will run through four years , in which the students will be distributed into four classes , similar the to ...
Andrew Cunningham McLaughlin. plication of chemistry to agriculture and the industrial arts generally . The entire course will run through four years , in which the students will be distributed into four classes , similar the to ...
Page 93
... agricultural college , which had concluded to establish a similar department , the sum asked for was cut down to $ 15,000 for building and equipment and $ 1,000 for instructors ' salary . With this sum a suitable building , with two ...
... agricultural college , which had concluded to establish a similar department , the sum asked for was cut down to $ 15,000 for building and equipment and $ 1,000 for instructors ' salary . With this sum a suitable building , with two ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
acres administration agricultural Albion College Alexander Winchell amount Ann Arbor appointed board of regents branches Brown University building Catholepistemiad Charles Kendall Adams chemistry classical course coeducation collection committee complete connection constitution course of study degree Detroit didaxia duties elected endowment engineering English erected establishment faculty Frieze fund give given Governor graduate granted Greek hall Haven high schools higher education Hillsdale College homeopathy increased institution instructor interest June June 30 laboratory languages Latin Latin language lectures legislation legislature literary department literature mathematics ment normal school number of students offered Olivet Olivet College organized physics practical preparatory present President Angell's President Tappan principal professor professorship received requirements for admission scholarship scientific Semicentennial seminary sketch success superintendent of public Territory Territory of Michigan tion trustees university lands University of Michigan various versity women
Popular passages
Page 41 - Regents, and be the principal executive officer of the University. The Board of Regents shall have the general supervision of the University, and the direction and control of all expenditures from the University interest fund.
Page 31 - State for the use of a University; and the funds accruing from the rents or sale of such lands, or from any other source, for the purpose aforesaid, shall be and remain a permanent fund...
Page 32 - ... to regulate the course of instruction, and prescribe, under the advice of the professorships, the books and authorities to be used in the several departments, and also to confer such degrees and grant such diplomas as are usually conferred and granted by other universities.
Page 31 - The object of the University shall be to provide the inhabitants of the state with the means of acquiring a thorough knowledge of the various branches of literature, science and the arts.
Page 26 - ... to establish colleges, academies, schools, libraries, museums, atheneums, botanic gardens, laboratories and other useful literary and scientific institutions, consonant to the laws of the United States of America, and of Michigan, and to appoint officers and instructors and instructrices, in, among, and throughout the various counties, cities, towns, townships and other geographical divisions of Michigan.
Page 15 - June next, all that part of the Indiana Territory which lies north of a line drawn east from the southerly bend, or extreme, of Lake Michigan, until it shall intersect Lake Erie, and east of a line drawn from the said southerly bend through the middle of said lake to its northern extremity, and thence due north to the northern boundary of the United States, shall, for the purpose of temporary government, constitute a separate Territory, and be called Michigan.
Page 26 - The honorarium for a course of lectures shall not exceed fifteen dollars, for classical instruction ten dollars a quarter, for ordinary instruction six dollars a quarter. If the judges of the court of any county, or a majority of them, shall certify that the parent, or guardian, of any person has not adequate means to defray the expense of the suitable instruction, and that the same ought to be a public charge, the honorarium shall be paid from the treasury of Michigan.
Page 54 - SEC. 6. There shall be elected in the year eighteen hundred and sixty-three, at the time of the election of a justice of the supreme court, eight regents of the university, two of whom shall hold their office for two years, two for four years, two for six years, and two for eight years.
Page 12 - Frenchmen of the Territory of Michigan! You ought to begin immediately to give an education to your children. In a little time there will be in this Territory as many Yankees as French, and if you do not have your children educated, the situations will all be given to the Yankees.
Page 173 - All specific state taxes, except those received from the mining companies of the upper peninsula, shall be applied in paying the interest upon the primary school, university and other educational funds and the interest and principal of the state debt in the order herein recited, until the extinguishment of the state debt, other than the amounts due to educational funds, when such specific taxes shall be added to, and constitute a part of the primary school interest fund.