Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Central Michigan game in 1974–75 season. Coach Davis was introduced by Central Michigan University as the Chippewas' 20th head men's basketball coach on April 3, 2012. In his inaugural season, he led a team of 8 new student-athletes to 11 wins.
Eastern Michigan University: Ypsilanti, Michigan: 1991 Eagles (The mascot is "Swoop") The change remained controversial as some students and alumni sought to restore it. In 2012, the university president brought back the Hurons logo, which was placed inside a flap of the band uniforms, along with another historic logo, with the stated intent of ...
Central Michigan University (CMU) is a public research university in Mount Pleasant, Michigan, United States. It was established in 1892 as a private normal school and became a state institution in 1895.
Central Michigan has the largest on-campus stadium in the Mid-American Conference, [7] seating 32,885 fans and has been playing home football games dating back to 1896. The Sporting News has named Kelly/Shorts Stadium "the finest football facility in the Mid-American Conference" and "the best game day atmosphere in the MAC".
Blizzard T. Husky – mascot of the Michigan Tech Huskies; Blockie – an anthropomorphized block, unofficial mascot of the University of Houston–Clear Lake; Blossom and Weezy – co-mascots of the Arkansas–Monticello Boll Weevils and Cotton Blossoms; Blue – live bobcat mascot of the Kentucky Wildcats (does not attend games)
Institution Nickname Location University of Alabama: Crimson Tide: Tuscaloosa, Alabama: University of Alabama at Birmingham: Blazers: Birmingham, Alabama
This is a list of organizations that use the bulldog as a mascot.. Because of its tenacity, the bulldog is a symbol of the United Kingdom and is a popular mascot for professional sports teams, universities, secondary schools, military institutions, and other organizations, including the following:
Butler Bulldogs — First known as "Christians", alluding to the school's original name of North Western Christian University (though it had become Butler University in 1877, before the school had an athletic program). The "Bulldogs" nickname was first used in 1919 by a cartoonist for Butler's student newspaper, and was soon officially adopted.