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History. 100th anniversary sign of TLU in Seguin, unveiled 2011. Texas Lutheran University historical marker in Brenham. The university traces its roots back to 1891 with the foundation of an academy, named Evangelical Lutheran College, by the first German Evangelical Lutheran Synod in Texas, [2] in Brenham. Its first president was the Reverend ...
Website. www.trinity.edu. Trinity University is a private liberal arts college in San Antonio, Texas. Founded in 1869, its student body consists of about 2,600 undergraduate and 200 graduate students. Trinity offers 49 majors and 61 minors among six degree programs, [5] and has an endowment of $1.725 billion. [1]
Hancock, Michigan. 1896–2023. ELCA. Gale College. Galesville, Wisconsin. 1854–1939. Norwegian Synod. Founded as a non-sectarian school, later run by the Methodists and Presbyterians, taken over by the Synod of the Norwegian Evangelical Lutheran Church in America in 1901.
The Main Building at the University of Texas at Austin (left), Lovett Hall at Rice University (middle), and the Academic Building at Texas A&M University (right) There are 226 colleges and universities in the State of Texas that are listed under the Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education.
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Dec. 5—SAN MARCOS — Following an extensive national search, Pranesh Aswath, Ph.D., has been named provost and executive vice president for academic affairs at Texas State University (TXST).
v. t. e. The Bush School of Government & Public Service is an academic college of Texas A&M University founded in 1997 under former President George H. W. Bush 's philosophy that "public service is a noble calling." [1] Since then, the Bush School has continued to reflect that notion in curriculum, research, and student experience and has ...
Website. www.lcu.edu. Lubbock Christian University (LCU) is a private Christian university associated with the Churches of Christ and located in Lubbock, Texas. Chartered originally as part of a grade school called Lubbock Christian School in 1954, the institution branched off as a junior college – Lubbock Christian College – in 1957.