University of Denver
Biography
The first reference to Colorado Seminary was in The Rocky Mountain News of November 27, 1862: “ a board of Trustees, composed of the solid men of Denver, has been organized to superintend the erection of a seminary building… for an academic education.”
Sources
Breck, "From the Rockies to the World"
Biography
University of Denver votes to adopt quarter system in 1929.
Sources
"University Adopts New Quarter Plan; Vote Unanimous," The Denver Clarion, vol. 34, no. 19, November 26, 1929, 1.
Biography
First year Hillel organization features full programming at DU
Citation:
Jan. 30, 1974, letter to faculty, U172._.0003, Hillel folderFound in 46995 Collections and/or Records:
William Fraser McDowell, between 1890-1899
Cabinet cards with black and white portrait of William Fraser McDowell, second chancellor of the University of Denver.
William Fraser McDowell
Black and white headshot of William Fraser McDowell, second Chancellor of the University of Denver.
William Fraser McDowell
Black and white print of William Fraser McDowell, former chancellor of the University of Denver and later Methodist bishop in Chicago and Washington, D.C.
William Fraser McDowell, between 1890-1899
University of Denver second chancellor William Fraser McDowell poses for a portrait. McDowell was DU's chancellor from 1890-1899.
William Gray Evans, between 1910-1925
Black and white print of portrait of William Gray Evans, son of Governor John Evans and president of the Board of Trustees at the University of Denver.
William Key Papers
William T. Driscoll, between 1943-1980
Black and white portrait of William T. Driscoll, Professor of Zoology and Dean at the University of Denver.
William Zaranka Lecturing to Students, 1983 January 25
Still image of English professor William (Bill) Zaranka, right, seated and lecturing to students seated at desks in a semicircle around him, on the University of Denver campus, 1/25/1983.
Williams, Dr. Michael, 1980 November 11
Contains correspondence between members of the Eleanor Roosevelt Institute, primarily Dr. Theodore Puck, and other individuals or companies. Includes correspondence related to business practices and experimentation results and progress, publications when exchanged for review, newspaper articles, photographs, cards, and occasionally patient information when related to research.