Denver (Colo.)
Found in 55526 Collections and/or Records:
Margery Reed, 2006 May 11
Detail of carved stone sign at Margery Reed Hall.
Margery Reed, 2006 May 11
Detail of carved stone sign at Margery Reed Hall.
Margery Reed Hall, 2007 January 17
Margery Reed Hall.
Margery Reed Hall, 2007 January 17
Margery Reed Hall.
Margery Reed Hall Exterior, between 1944-1945
This item is a black and white 3.5" x 5" photo of the exterior of the Margery Reed Hall Building on the University of Denver Campus. This photo was taken when William P. MacGlaughlin (who was in the Army training at Lowry Field in Colorado) visited the University with other members of his company.
Margery Reed Hall Exterior with Army Soldiers Posing, between 1944-1945
This item is a black and white 3.5" x 5" photo of the exterior of the Mary Reed Building on the University of Denver Campus. In front of the building, two U.S. Army Soldiers are posing up on a platform with a statue of two women reading. This photo was taken when William P. MacGlaughlin (who was in the Army training at Lowry Field in Colorado) visited the University with other members of his company.
Margo Law, 1985
Margo Law, co-director of the Grant Street Dance Company in Denver, Colorado, rehearses an unidentified dance.
Margot Gilbert Part I, 1970 May
Margot Gilbert, a junior History Major, in connection with McGiffert's class on Comparative Revolution recorded the tapes and gave them to the History Department to use the material in any way they wished. Part I is her interpretation of Woodstock, the DU Strike.
Margot Gilbert Part II, 1970 May
Margot Gilbert, a junior History Major, in connection with McGiffert's class on Comparative Revolution recorded the tapes and gave them to the History Department to use the material in any way they wished. Part II continues her interpretation of Woodstock, the DU Strike.
Margot Gilbert Part III, 1970 May
Margot Gilbert, a junior History Major, in connection with McGiffert's class on Comparative Revolution recorded the tapes and gave them to the History Department to use the material in any way they wished. Part III continues her interpretation of Woodstock, the DU Strike.
