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Route 1U: Pontiac University [6] Route 2(A/B): Plymouth [7] Route 4: Washtenaw [8] Route 14: Geddes – E. Stadium [9] Route 18: Miller–University [10] Route 609: Dexter–University [11] These routes stop in front of Markley at the Michigan Medicine, but the stop is called "University Hospital, Mott" which is a part of the Michigan Medicine.
Currently, the building serves as a residence hall and home to one of the University's program houses, St. Anthony Hall. [63] [94] Perkins Hall Kent, Cruise & Aldrich: 1960 154 Power St. Opened as Gardner Hall for Bryant College, the residence hall was later renamed Perkins Hall in 1974 in honor of Judge Fred B. Perkins (class of 1919).
Construction was completed in the summer of 2015 for the Munger Graduate Residences, a new residence hall for graduate students. In April 2013, University Housing announced a $110 million gift from U-M alumnus Charles Munger; $100 million was dedicated to the new facility and $10 million was dedicated to fellowship funding. With a focus on ...
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Brown University acquired the building in 1922 to house faculty and graduate students and converted the first floor into its faculty club. [6] [7] The new facility opened in March 1923 on Visiting Day in the presence of "more than 200 alumni, many members of the corporation and board of trustees, and practically all the faculty." [15] [16]
The sixth floor of Bursley Hall was the site of a double-shooting that occurred on April 17, 1981. The morning of April 17, 22-year-old Leo Kelly Jr., a junior Psychology major at the University, threw several Molotov cocktail fire bombs down the sixth-floor hallway of Bursley's Douglas wing, igniting fires and triggering the building's fire alarms.
Martha Cook is the only University of Michigan dormitory with an alumni association. There is an alumni board, as well as a board of governors, who help in making key decisions about the maintenance and upgrading of the building, raising scholarship money to assist residents with room and board, and helping plan events such as Fall and Spring ...
Originally named Monroe Hill College, Brown opened in 1986 as the first modern residential college at the University of Virginia. It was renamed Brown College at Monroe Hill in recognition of the endowment donated by the Brown family (of the Brown-Forman Corporation) [1] in 1994. The college is led by John T. Casteen, Principal.