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The university has been fielding athletic teams since 1867. DU's athletic teams are known as the Pioneers. In the early years of competition from the 1860s to the early 1920s, Denver had no official nickname, but sportswriters of the day referred to Denver teams as the "Ministers" or "Fighting Parsons" in homage to the Methodist heritage of the ...
Denver began intercollegiate basketball in 1904, playing their first game against the Denver Athletic Club on January 16, who they defeated. [2] They played at the regional level prior to World War II. They played in the Rocky Mountain Faculty Athletic Conference from 1913 to 1938, when they left to become a founding member of the Skyline ...
The Pioneer Athletic Conference (PAC) is a high school athletic conference with 12 members. The conference' is affiliated with the Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic Association (PIAA) and all participating school districts are located within the southeastern quadrant of Pennsylvania.
Pioneer High School is a public high school in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Founded in 1856, the school was previously called the Union School and Ann Arbor High School . In 2010, Pioneer was listed as a "Silver Medal School" by the U.S. News & World Report .
Rocky Mountain Athletic (1910–1937) Skyline (1938–1960) Bowl record: 0–3 (.000) Conference titles: 1 (Colorado Football Association) 1 (Colorado Faculty Athletic) 2 (Rocky Mountain Athletic) 3 (Mountain States) Rivalries: Colorado School of the Mines Colorado College Colorado Colorado State: Colors: Crimson and gold [1] Fight song "D-Rah ...
In the fall of 1985, five Ches-Mont schools, including charter members Phoenixville and Pottstown, announced that they were joining with two smaller Bux-Mont League schools and Lansdale Catholic of the Bicentennial Athletic League to form the new Pioneer Athletic Conference, which started league play in 1986.
Original contraction. In 1997, the league was reduced to five members when the University of Evansville downgraded football from Division I to club status.. 2001 expansion. In 2001, the conference nearly doubled in size and was reorganized with the five pre-2001 members forming the North Division, and newcomers Austin Peay State University, Davidson College, Jacksonville University and ...
Arlington State left the Pioneer Conference in 1959 when the school became a four-year college. [7] Cameron left in 1960 and returned to the Oklahoma Junior College Conference. [8] The Pioneer Conference disbanded in 1961. The league's final competition was a track meet held on April 29 of that year, in Stephenville, Texas. [9]