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The Chicago Business College (founded as the Gondering and Virden Business College in 1888) was a for-profit business school located at 67 Wabash Avenue in downtown Chicago, Illinois. It was run by Frederick B. Virden, who founded or purchased several such schools in subsequent years.
The following is a List of defunct universities and colleges in Illinois. This list includes accredited, degree-granting institutions and bona fide institutions of higher learning that operated before accreditation existed.
Ron Huberman, CEO of Chicago Public Schools, previously president of the Chicago Transit Authority; Jörg Kukies, German Minister of Finance (2024-) Christina Liu (MBA, PhD), former finance minister of Taiwan (2012) Jack Markell, 1985, Governor of Delaware; Peter G. Peterson, (1972–73) U.S. Secretary of Commerce; chairman of The Blackstone Group
Hult International Business School - Converted to nonprofit in 2014. [18] Keiser University (converted in 2011). [19] After the conversion the school owner remained involved in the school as a landlord, contractor, and chancellor. Kendall College – Chicago, Illinois, formerly owned by Laureate Education, purchased by National Louis University ...
Central YMCA College; Chicago Business College; Chicago College of Performing Arts; The Chicago Conservatory College; The Chicago School; Chicago State University; Chicago Theological Seminary; College of the University of Chicago; University of Chicago; City Colleges of Chicago; Columbia College Chicago; Coyne College; Curtiss–Wright ...
John Graham (1988), financial economist and professor at the Duke University Fuqua School of Business [10] Edward C. Halperin, chancellor and CEO of New York Medical College [11] James C. Hickman, professor emeritus of business and statistics and former dean of the University of Wisconsin–Madison School of Business [12]
The University of Chicago Booth School of Business traces its roots to 1898 when university faculty member James Laurence Laughlin chartered the College of Commerce and Politics, [6] which was intended to be an extension of the school's founding principles of "scientific guidance and investigation of great economic and social matters of everyday importance."
The college established a Master of Business Administration program in 1948 and launched the Graduate School of Business. The college, including the Graduate School of Business, moved to its current Chicago location in the DePaul Center, 1 E. Jackson Blvd., in 1993. In 1971, Commerce established its first center, the Small Business Institute.