Michigan | University of Michigan | Central Intelligence Agency | Michigan State University | Comedy Central | Central Park | Central Asia | Central processing unit | Central America | Central | Lake Michigan | Central Europe | Central Committee | Central Java | 2006 Central American and Caribbean Games | Swimming at the 2006 Central American and Caribbean Games | Flint, Michigan | Grand Rapids, Michigan | Great Central Railway | Grand Central Terminal | Battle Creek, Michigan | Wayne County, Michigan | University of Michigan Law School | Lansing, Michigan | Michigan Supreme Court | Central African Republic | New York Central Railroad | central business district | Western Michigan University | University of Central Florida |
In addition to his wife, Sharon, whom he met at Central Michigan and married in 1955, he was survived by two sisters, Patricia Graham and Mary Lois Armstrong, both of Niles; four daughters, Michelle Wieghart of Beldenville, Wisconsin; Elizabeth Queen of Lake, Michigan; Bridget Wieghart of Portland, Oregon; and Rebecca Eaton of Silver Spring, Maryland; and six grandchildren.
Ralph William Thacker (September 13, 1880 – ?) was the head coach of the Central Michigan (1907), Wyoming (1913–1914) and Lake Forest (1915) college football programs.
The journal is currently published by the Clarke Historical Library with support from the Department of History (Central Michigan University), the Historical Society of Michigan, the Bentley Historical Library (University of Michigan), and the Grand Rapids Public Library.
It has established 13 joint international schools with foreign universities including New York Syracuse University (America), New York Queen College (America), MIT Sloan School of Management (America), University of North Dakota (America), Central Michigan University (America), Hamburg University for Applied Sciences (Germany), Montreal University (Canada), University of Central Lancashire (Britain) and Griffith College (Ireland).
Artists and partnerships include The Wheatland Music Organization, Freshwater, the Harlem Quartet, Central Michigan University faculty, and others.
Kenneth Kelly (1905–1984), nicknamed "Bill", American football player and coach, head coach at Central Michigan University, 1951–1966
In September 1817, Winamac and Metea represented the eastern Potawatomis at the treaty of Fort Meigs, in which they sold lands in Ohio and south central Michigan to the United States.