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Several of the Beloit College sites have been partially excavated and restored, and material found within them—including pottery and tool fragments—is held in the college's Logan Museum of Anthropology. [9] In 2008 Beloit College completed a 120,000 sq ft (11,000 m 2) Center for the Sciences, which was named the Marjorie and James Sanger ...
Agnes Scott College; Bard College; Beloit College; Boricua College; Brown University; Bryn Mawr College; Charter Oak State College; Columbia College (Missouri) Columbia University School of General Studies; Connecticut College; Empire State University, State University of New York; Excelsior University; Fordham University; Grinnell College ...
Logan Museum of Anthropology is a museum of Beloit College, located in Beloit, Wisconsin, United States. It was founded in 1894 by Beloit trustee and patron of the arts Frank Granger Logan and contains about 300,000 archaeological and ethnological objects from around the world. Its collections and exhibitions relate to indigenous cultures of ...
In the United States, undergraduate programs toward a bachelor's degree often follow a liberal arts model, and have a set group or type of coursework (sometimes called distribution or core requirements) together with a specialization, called a major—a double major would usually complete one set of the core requirements and two sets of the ...
Beloit College people (5 C, 3 P) Pages in category "Beloit College" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total. ... Logan Museum of Anthropology; M.
William Hamilton was a professor of Mathematics and Astronomy and Registrar at Beloit College, and pushed the college toward career-oriented programs. [26] The G.M. Moss house at 636 Harrison is a 2.5-story house built in 1906, with the first story clad in shingles and the higher ones clad in stucco and ornamental half-timbering.
Born in Janesville, Wisconsin, he was assistant curator of the Logan Museum of Anthropology in Beloit, Wisconsin, starting in that position in 1924.Between 1925 and 1930 he conducted four excavations of prehistoric (paleolithic) sites in northeastern Algeria, the first of which is described, along with his portrayals of extensive encounters with the Tuareg, in his narrative Veiled Men, Red ...
Aaron Lucius Chapin (February 6, 1817 – July 22, 1892) was an American minister and the first president of Beloit College. Chapin, the second son and third child of Deacon Laertes and Laura (Colton) Chapin, of Hartford, Connecticut was born there on February 6, 1817. He graduated from Yale College in 1837.