Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Angelo State University Honors Program; Texas Tech University Honors College; Texas State University System (4 universities) Lamar University Reaud Honors College; Sam Houston State University Elliott T. Bowers Honors College; Sul Ross State University Honors Program; Texas State University Honors College; Non-system affiliated (4 universities)
The Minnesota State Colleges and Universities system or Minnesota State, previously branded as MnSCU, [4] comprises 26 state colleges and 7 state universities with 54 campuses throughout Minnesota. The system is the largest higher education system in Minnesota (separate from the University of Minnesota system ) and the third largest in the ...
This list of dental schools in the U.S. includes major academic institutions in the U.S. that award advanced professional degrees of either D.D.S. or D.M.D. in the field of dentistry. [1]
The University of St. Thomas in St. Paul is Minnesota's largest private university or college [5] with a fall 2010 enrollment of 10,815 students. [6] Center City –based Hazelden Graduate School of Addiction Studies is the state's smallest postsecondary institution, while Century College in White Bear Lake is Minnesota's largest community and ...
A collegiate university, one that is composed of several constituent colleges might, administratively, favor an honors college over an honors program. Alternatively, university departments, constituent institutes, and constituent colleges might prefer honors programs specific to their respective missions. If a university is institute centric ...
[15] [16] Minnesota State University, Mankato is a significant contributor to the local and state economies, adding $827 million annually. [17] [18] Across seven colleges and schools, Minnesota State offers over 130 undergraduate programs of study, over 80 master's programs, and 4 doctoral programs. [19]
The University of Minnesota was established in 1851, and it took over the Minnesota College Hospital in 1888 in order to establish its own department of medicine. [1] Its dental school, originally a part of that department, was separated off in 1892, and in 1932 it took the name of the School of Dentistry.
The Society originated with the 1914 graduating class of the dental school at Northwestern University in Chicago. The idea for the fraternity came from the Dean of the Northwestern University Dental School, Dr. Green Vardiman Black who soon invited the deans of 51 other dental school extant at the time to organize chapters of their own, forming a network of locals.