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Men's sports include basketball and cross country; while women's sports include basketball, cross country and volleyball. The Trinity Bible College Lions football team was previously an associate member of the NCAA Division III Upper Midwest Athletic Conference from 1997 to 2007 wherein they had a record loss to Rockford College, 105-0. The ...
The 2003 Trinity Bible vs. Rockford football game was played on September 6, 2003, during week 1 of the 2003 NCAA Division III football season at Sam Greeley Field in Rockford, Illinois. By winning 105–0, Rockford broke the NCAA Division III scoring record of 97 points, which was set by Concordia-Moorhead against Macalester in 1977.
MacMurray College: Jacksonville, Illinois: 1846 United Methodist 683 Highlanders: 2009–10 2019–20 closed in 2020 Principia College: Elsah, Illinois: 1910 Scientist: 550 Panthers: 2002–03 2007–08 St. Louis (SLIAC) Rockford College [c] Rockford, Illinois: 1847 Nonsectarian 983 Regents: 2002–03 2007–08 Northern (NACC) Trinity Bible College
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After a 4-week run on Denver's practice squad, Trinity Benson is going back to Detroit.
Following the normal standard of U.S. sports media, the terms "University" and "College" are ignored in alphabetization, unless necessary to distinguish schools (such as Boston College and Boston University) or are actually used by the media in normally describing the school, such as the College of Charleston.
Public (Military college; University System of Georgia) 1931 Northwood University: Timberwolves: Midland: MI: Private, Independent 1971 Regis University: Rangers: Denver: CO: Private, Catholic 1942 Queens College, City University of New York: Silver Knights: Queens: NY: Public (City University of New York) 1974 Rollins College: Tars: Winter ...
The institution was founded as Florida Bible Institute in 1932, in Temple Terrace by Dr. William T. Watson, an evangelical tent preacher from North Carolina and pastor of a large Christian and Missionary Alliance church in St. Petersburg. [1] The name was changed to Trinity College of Florida in 1947.