Miss Gwendolyn C. Hale Was Crowned "Miss Tennessee State" for the School Year 1937-1938. Miss Hale Is a Member of the Junior Class, Phi Beta Tau Honorary Fraternity, Dramatic Club, Concert Singers, Theta Omega Pi Literati Club and the...
The Football Team of Tennessee State College, Also Known as the Tennessee Agricultural and Industrial State College, Poses for Their Team Photograph in 1937. The College is Now Tennessee State University.
Page 1 of History of the Teaching faculty employed at Southern University from its relocation in New Orleans along with their specialized field or department in which they served at Southern.
[Laundry/Riverside Hall]. This brick structure was built in 1922 as a one-story laundry facility. Some time before 1937 the building was renamed Riverside Hall. At that time, it was lengthened on its western end and a second story was added for...
The Bulletin of Tennessee A. & I. State College Celebrates its Twenty-Fifth Anniversary. This Publlication Was Sent Out Monthly to Faculty, Staff, Alumni and Friends. This Issue is November, 1937.
Lincoln University Pennsylvania, Yearbook, Students, Faculty
Yearbook. Leather Cover. Title page: The Lion, Published By the Class of June 1937, W.W. Layton, Editor-in-Chief. Microfilming and Digitization Funded By a Grant From the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission (PHMC).
Cloth bound "Record" Book With Leather Corners & Spine. 500 Printed Page Numbers, Pages 178-498 are Blank. Some Items are Folded and Pasted in; Some Loose in Back of Book. Starting Approx. 1935 (p. 123) Minutes are Typed and Pasted...
Cooke, Paul;
College presidents – Washington (D.C.) -- District of Columbia Teachers College;
District Of Columbia Teachers College;
District Of Columbia Teachers College – Presidents
Dr. Paul P. Cooke, was the third president of DCTC and served from 1966 through 1974.
Dr. Cooke has lived in the District of Columbia since 1921, when his family moved from Harlem, New York. He graduated from Dunbar High School. He earned a BA...
This building was Named in honor of Ruth Gwendolyn Rush, Dean of Women, teacher of education, and director of Student Teaching (1926-1948). She gave thirty-eight years of service to the university. Ruth Gwendolyn Rush Residence Hall was...
This building was named in honor of Benjamin Newton Duke, philanthropist, and tobacco business owner. Mr. Duke made substantial financial contributions to the college during its early development. The Benjamin N. Duke Auditorium was constructed...