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Lists of alumni of universities, research institutes or other organizations Pages in category "Alumni lists" The following 11 pages are in this category, out of 11 total.
Name Discipline(s) Description Access Cost Provider(s) Academic Search: Multidisciplinary Several versions: Complete, Elite, Premier, and Alumni Edition [1] Subscription EBSCO Publishing [2] Aerospace & High Technology Database: Aerospace, aeronautics, astronautics: Subscription ProQuest [3] African Journals OnLine (AJOL) Multidisciplinary
Educational resources from over 3,000 websites and hundreds of CD-ROMs 35,000,000+ resources An offline digital library for communities with inadequate Internet bandwidth, i.e., developing countries, rural schools, prisons. Over 35 million resources in every format: books, journals, websites, video, audio, software, multimedia.
University of Florida Emerson Alumni Hall. An alumni association or alumnae association is an association of graduates or, more broadly, of former students ().In the United Kingdom and the United States, alumni of universities, colleges, schools (especially independent schools), fraternities, and sororities often form groups with alumni from the same organization.
And through Virginia Tech's "Hokies4Hire" program, students and alumni can apply for jobs, internships, and co-ops. Current students can even land on-campus interviews from the program.
The word comes from Latin, meaning nurslings, pupils or foster children, derived from alere "to nourish". [ 1 ] The term is not synonymous with "graduates": people can be alumni without graduating, e.g. Burt Reynolds was an alumnus of Florida State University but did not graduate.
Alumni associations of former students of a particular academic institution, as opposed to those with membership in a particular student organization or alumni of companies and other organizations. Subcategories
Many universities and other institutions [7] have official Latin names. In fields where Latin is the current standard language, Vicipaedia normally adopts official names as pagenames, even if they belong to scientific or technical, rather than to classical Latin. This applies to: names of Catholic dioceses; Catholic official titles