<p>“Michigan has produced three (Fiona Rose in 1998, Joseph Jewell in 2005 and Abdulrahman El Sayed in 2009) in the last 12 years and two in the last 5 years.”</p>
<p>Alexandre, not that this is important, but may I ask you how to determine the college affiliation of a student winning the Rhodes? Isn’t it the undergraduate?</p>
<p>As we know, the Rhodes scholarship is a competition among states. While Jewell is a native of Michigan, his endorsing university is Caltech. Had Joseph Jewell been lesser known, it would have been more difficult to notice the error in crediting Michigan.</p>
<p>Fwiw, here is the list of the correct institutions for the year 2005</p>
<p>[The</a> Rhodes Scholarships - Winner Statistics by Endorsing Institutions](<a href=“Office of the American Secretary | The Rhodes Scholarships”>Office of the American Secretary | The Rhodes Scholarships)</p>
<p>BOSTON UNIV. (1)
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY (1)
CITY UNIV. OF NEW YORK BROOKLYN COLLEGE (1)
CITY UNIV. OF NEW YORK THE CITY COLLEGE (1)
GEORGETOWN UNIV. (1)
GEORGIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY (1)
HARVARD UNIV. (including RADCLIFFE) (5)
MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY (2)
STANFORD UNIV. (1)
TEXAS A&M UNIV. (1)
U.S. MILITARY ACADEMY (1)
U.S. NAVAL ACADEMY (3)
UNIV. OF CHICAGO (2)
UNIV. OF KANSAS (1)
[?]
UNIV. OF NORTH CAROLINA (1)
UNIV. OF VIRGINIA (2)
UNIV. OF WISCONSIN-EAU CLAIRE (1)
WAKE FOREST UNIV. (1)</p>
<p>WHEATON COLLEGE (1)
WHITMAN COLLEGE (1)</p>
<p>WILLIAMS COLLEGE (1)
YALE UNIV. (2)</p>