Due to the nature of these records, Central Files are closed for 25 years after their creation.
This collection is located onsite.
Central Files mostly contains correspondence sent and received between Columbia University administrators and other University officers, faculty, and trustees, as well as correspondence sent and received between University administrators and individuals and organizations from outside the University. In most cases, incoming correspondence and copies of replies are filed under the name of the individual or organization corresponding with University administrators.
Correspondents from within Columbia include presidents and high-level administrators (the provost, secretary of the University, treasurer and controller, and vice presidents); administrators in various administrative units such as facilities management, budget, student services, controller's, provost's and registrar's offices; presidents, deans, and directors of Columbia's affiliated institutions, colleges, graduate schools, and professional schools; faculty members, in particular those who served as departmental chairs, departmental executive officers or committee chairs; trustees, in particular the chair of the board and the chairs of trustee standing committees; alumni and benefactors; and the chairs of University standing and special committees.
Correspondents from outside Columbia include the presidents, administrators, and faculty of other colleges, universities, or research institutions; the officers of private foundations; government officials and military personnel; appointed officials of the New York State Department of Education; honorary degree recipients; dignitaries and politicians; members of the public; and, occasionally, students at the University.
Other records in the files include: reports, budgets, proposals, minutes and agenda, legal documents, personnel records, invitations, pamphlets, publications, floor plans, petitions, fliers, press releases, and speeches. Records represent the tenure of presidents Seth Low (1890-1901), Nicholas Murray Butler (1902-1945), acting president Frank D. Fackenthal (1945-1948), Dwight D. Eisenhower (1948-1953), Grayson Kirk (1953-1968), Andrew Cordier (1968-1970), and William J. McGill (1970-1980). The first few years of the tenure of President Michael I. Sovern (1980-1993) are also represented.
This collection is arranged in 14 series. Correspondence within each folder is arranged chronologically and files can vary in size from a single folder to nearly 200 file folders on a particular person, corporate entity or topic. Each academic fiscal year (July 1 to June 30) after 1970-1971 constitutes a new series.
You will need to make an appointment in advance to use this collection material in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room. You can schedule an appointment once you've submitted your request through your Special Collections Research Account.
Due to the nature of these records, Central Files are closed for 25 years after their creation.
This collection is located onsite.
Reproductions may be made for research purposes. The RBML maintains ownership of the physical material only. Copyright remains with the creator and his/her heirs. The responsibility to secure copyright permission rests with the patron.
Identification of specific item; Date (if known); Central Files ; Box and Folder; University Archives, Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Columbia University in the City of New York.
Office of the Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs records, 1939-2006 [Bulk dates: 1956-2003] Columbia University Archives.
University Protest and Activism Collection, 1958-1999 [Bulk Dates: 1968-1972]. Columbia University Archives.
Columbia University in World War I Collection, 1914-1970. Columbia University Archives.
Columbia University in World War II Collection, 1933-1956. Columbia University Archives.
Materials have been added to the collection since this finding aid was prepared. Contact uarchives@columbia.edu for more information.
In 1995, Central Files was transferred from the Office of the President to the Columbia University Archives, where it forms the Archives' core collection on the history of the University. Subsequent records, dating from 1971 onwards, have been periodically transferred to the Archives from the Office of the President.
Columbia University Libraries, Rare Book and Manuscript Library
Records dating between 1890 and 1971 (681 cubic feet) in this collection were processed by David Hill, Linnea Anderson and Rhea Pliakas between 1995 and 1999.
Records dating between 1971-1972 and 1974-1975 were processed by Abby Lester in 2003.
Records dating from 1975-1976 to 1983-1984 were minimally processed by student employees Richard Mick (MFA 2011) and Madeline Stevens (MFA 2012).
The initial processing of this collection (the 1890-1971 records) was made possible by a grant from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission.
2011-10-18 PTL created file from PDF
2012-5-18 Jocelyn Wilk edited front matter and container lists.
2015-11-19 Call number information added by Catherine C. Ricciardi.
2019-05-20 EAD was imported spring 2019 as part of the ArchivesSpace Phase II migration.
Central Files grew out of the information needs, working relationships, and activities of the president of the University as well as the secretary, provost, and other administrators. In order to comprehend the scope and content of Central Files, it is helpful to understand the changing relationships between the president and secretary of the University, the working relationships and administrative patterns established at Columbia during the 1890s and the early years of the twentieth century, and the changing needs and structure of the University administration over time.
The records that eventually became Central Files originated in the Office of the President during the 1890s. President Seth Low's correspondence was organized by his personal secretary, William H.H. Beebe. Beebe later became the first secretary of the University, a position that was created in 1895 to assist the president in carrying out an ever-increasing number of administrative duties. As University secretary, Beebe continued to keep the president's correspondence, and this task remained a responsibility of the secretary's office until the 1970s.
Close cooperation between the president and secretary continued throughout the administration of Nicholas Murray Butler, particularly until the 1920s. As new administrative responsibilities emerged, they often devolved on the president and the secretary until new posts could be created to undertake them. Information for the president was often funneled through the secretary.
A closely interacting group of administrators and the centralization of administrative functions also helped to create and maintain Central Files. From the 1890s to 1920, in particular, administrative responsibilities were placed in the hands of these few individuals, many of whom remained at the University for decades. The president, treasurer, secretary, registrar, superintendent of buildings and grounds, and deans handled most administrative tasks. In addition, University Presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray Butler were actively and personally involved in administrative issues, kept close tabs on a range of issues and projects and frequently requested information from their staffs. Because Low and Butler were so intimately involved in administrative affairs, their records acted as the administrative files of the University.
This close collaboration among administrators, the personal involvement of presidents, and a continuously increasing number of administrative tasks resulted in the creation of the large body of interrelated correspondence and other records that became Central Files. The patterns established in the 1890s and early 1900s of channeling information to the president and secretary, filing records under the name of the sender, and centrally collecting and disseminating information continued even as the University administration developed into a larger and more complex organization. Eventually, however, these patterns no longer served the differing business needs and administrative styles of a more modern, professionalized administration.
Several important changes in the nature of Central Files occurred during Dwight D. Eisenhower's administration as president of the University from 1948 to 1952. During this time, there appears to have been a less direct relationship between the president, secretary, and Central Files. In addition, Eisenhower was often absent from the University and seems to have delegated many tasks to the provost, secretary, vice presidents, and other top administrators. These officers used Central Files as a depository and sent batches of records to the files as needed. It also appears that Eisenhower kept his own separate set of files and may not have used Central Files as much as his predecessors did. Finally, most of the records relating to Eisenhower's administration were removed from the University following his election as president of the United States. As a result, while Central Files remains an important resource for documenting the University and its administration during the late 1940s and the early 1950s, the records from this period provide less information on the presidency.
Throughout the 1960s, Central Files seems to have become less useful to the majority of administrators. Documents regarding Central Files cite difficulties locating information; the length of time needed to retrieve records; lack of subject filing; and administrators' concerns that, because of the filing system employed in Central Files, clerks were not able to locate all the materials relevant to their particular requests as reasons for reluctance to use the files and their proposed reorganization. (Plans for reforming the filing system were never realized. However, during the 1960s or 1970s, file clerks purged certain records dating prior to the 1940s. No documentation regarding what materials were removed from the files has been located). Other collections in the Archives that include records from this period show that many administrators were keeping their own separate sets of files. In fact, three top-level administrators made significant deposits of records to the files in 1967, apparently at the request of the secretary of the University. The absence of a single central figure requesting and filing information may also have contributed to the declining usefulness of the files as did the changing role of the secretary, whose post had become more administrative and less closely tied to the president and high-level policy decisions. For example, the Office of the Secretary was placed under the vice president in 1959, where it remained until 1969. Most importantly, the secretary's role as a link between the president and the rest of the administration appears to have lessened after the 1940s.
A third important change in Central Files occurred in 1971. After seventy-six years, responsibility for Central Files was transferred from the secretary to the president's office. At the time, a major argument in support of the move was that the president's records should be managed by the president's office rather than that of the secretary. The relationship that began with William Beebe overseeing the president's voluminous correspondence had been outgrown by a burgeoning University administration, changing administrative styles, and differing concepts of the role of key administrative offices.
Central Files documents a wide range of people, topics and functions. The strengths of Series I include documentation of the administration and governance of the University; Columbia's academic affairs and the administration of the academic divisions of the University; research programs and institutes; affiliated institutions and relations with other institutions; the development of disciplines and professions; the University's relations with the surrounding community; development programs; gifts to the University, donor relations, and alumni affairs; student affairs and services; campus planning and architecture; awards and honorary degrees; and events and ceremonies.
Central Files reflects Columbia's development into a university; the formation and implementation of administrative policies and procedures; the structure of the University administration; the activities and role of the University's governing bodies; and the daily operations of the University.
Central Files is a critical resource for documentation Columbia's development as a university. The earliest records in the files date from the administration of Presidents Low and Butler, who were instrumental in Columbia's transformation from a college into a university. Materials in the files chronicle the move to Morningside Heights, the establishment of schools and departments, the introduction of new administrative offices, and the increasing size and gradual professionalization of the administration.
As the University grew, so did the number of administrative tasks and issues to be faced. Central Files provides information on the formation and implementation of new policies and procedures as well as the introduction of new administrative posts and offices. For example, during the Butler and Low administrators, the president and secretary often corresponded regarding administrative issues and how to carry out administrative tasks. It is sometimes possible to follow the development of a particular procedure or policy from early discussions in the correspondence to the implementation of the new policy or procedure. Records in the files also relate to the formation of new administrative offices, many of which reflected the increasingly businesslike structure of the University administration. For example, the creation of the posts of vice president for business and comptroller as well as the evolution of new registration procedures are recorded in the files. The records also reflect the shift from assigning committees of faculty, alumni, and administrators to undertake tasks to the introduction of a new administrative post or office to oversee that task.
Central Files is an important resource for understanding the structure of the University administration and the administrative reorganizations that took place throughout the twentieth century, such as the major restructuring that occurred in 1949 when the entire administration was studied and business operations, in particular, were significantly revised. In addition to administrative reorganizations, Columbia conducted a number of self-studies and long-range planning projects during the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s. Some of the studies were University-wide, while others were aimed at a particular school or group of schools. A number of these projects are well documented in Central Files. Correspondence, reports, and working papers provide information on the motivation for the study, its mission and scope, the activities of the committee that was appointed to conduct the study, and the findings and recommendations of the study. Such records help to captures the University at a particular moment in time and provide information on a range of issues, such as space needs, finances, the mission and goals of the University, the curriculum, and the organizational structure of the University.
Records in Central Files also contribute to the understanding of University governance. In particular, substantial correspondence in the files relates to the board of trustees. Over 100 of the sub-series in Series I contain materials regarding the board or correspondence from trustees. For the most part, materials in the files reflect the routine business of the board, such as arrangements for meetings, social engagements, and membership on the board. In some cases, Central Files also contains reports regarding the board and substantive correspondence about the powers of the trustees. Correspondence between trustees and the president also illustrates the involvement of the trustees in the life of the University in all its variety. In their letters, trustees, presidents, and administrators discussed topics such as academic freedom, University finances, donor relations, the appointment of deans and administrators, and the mission and role of he University. The routine business and, in some cases, activities of the standing committees of the trustees are also recorded. Trustees' committees that are reflected in the files include the committees on honors, education, buildings and grounds, and alumni affairs.
Many of the records in Central Files relate to the daily operations of the University. The files record a host of routine tasks, including the management of administrative offices, in particular in terms of officer personnel, facilities and finances; the preparation of reports, bulletins, and other publications; and the scheduling of appointments and meetings, as well as administrative issues, such as University-wide employee benefits and labor relations. More importantly, Central Files documents admissions issues, registration and related tasks, finances, and facilities management through the University.
A number of sub-series files in Central Files Series I concern issues related to admissions. Materials in the files chronicle a number of periods in which admissions criteria and procedures were reviewed and changed. In particular, the records relate to the College Entrance Examination Board and the University Committee on Entrance Examinations from the 1890s to the 1920s. These materials reflect the formation of standardized entrance examinations and include discussions of admissions criteria, the content of examinations, and examination policies and procedures. In addition, correspondence documents the reevaluation of admission criteria and procedures during the late 1940s, and correspondence and announcements reflect issues surrounding admissions and recruiting efforts during the late 1960s.
Columbia's growing student body and the introduction of new schools presented complications for the antiquated registration system. Beginning in the 1890s, the University sought to improve the registration process and related tasks. Records regarding registration date from 1898 to 1971. In particular, Central Files records the formation of new registration procedures and the daily administration of registration and related tasks from 1898 to 1920. In some instances, the files also include enrollment statistics and the evaluation of enrollment trends.
Central Files chronicles the University's sometimes troubled finances and documents the financial administration of the institution. Between the 1890s and the 1930s, Columbia continuously struggled to service the debt accrued by the purchase of a new campus and the initial phase of expansion. In addition, throughout the twentieth century, the University's budget and expenditures increased drastically, new endowments were created, and investments were acquired in many forms. Columbia also underwent several financial crises, including those that occurred in 1917-18 and the 1930s. Central Files contributes to the understanding of these trends. Specific topics related to University finances range from routine appropriations and expenditures, accounting and reporting, and the management of special funds to University-wide budgetary policy and the preparation of the annual budget, investment policies and planning, financial planning and analysis and the financial needs of the University.
The management of Columbia's facilities is a common topic in Central Files. The records document construction and renovation projects, maintenance, and repairs. The continuous pressure of increased enrollment, growing numbers of faculty and staff, and new offices and departments made space needs a frequent topic of concern. Materials in the files document efforts to allocate space to competing offices and departments and attempts to carve more space out of existing buildings. Central Files also includes a number of studies that evaluate the use of individual buildings. For example, Low Memorial Library received the attention of at least two studies that assessed the condition of the building and use of space in it.
The University's academic functions altered dramatically during the first half of the twentieth century. Schools, departments, and programs expanded or were created; new professorships were established; new subjects were added to the curriculum; numerous institutes were formed; library facilities, collections, and staff increased; and new degrees were introduced. The University also confronted issues involving its growing graduate and professional programs along with related questions surrounding the role of Columbia College and undergraduate educations in the University. Central Files contains correspondence, reports, proposals, minutes, and bulletins documenting numerous topics related to the academic affairs of the University. The records also reflect influences on Columbia's educational mission and academic policies.
Schools: Central Files chronicles the history of a number of Columbia's schools and faculties, including undergraduate colleges, graduate, and professional schools; the continuing education division and home study program; and the summer session. Over 200 sub-series folders related to schools, and nearly 40 to Columbia College alone.
The files document the establishment of several schools. For example, records describing the establishment of the School of International Affairs and a number of its institutes and programs date from 1931 through the 1940s. Issues relating to the formation of schools include funding and planning, mission, curriculum, and facilities. Often, by reviewing the files of specific deans and administrators, it is possible to trace the history of a school over the course of decades, from its founding through its successive mergers, divisions, and administrative changes. To illustrate, the files contain extensive records on the School of Engineering and Applied Science and its predecessors (the School of Mines; Schools of Mines, Engineering and Chemistry; and the School of Engineering) dating from 1891 to the 1950s and, less comprehensively, from the 1950s to 1971. The development of graduate schools, including the School of Political Science; the Faculties of Political Science, Philosophy and Pure Science; the Graduate Faculties; and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, is chronicled from 1890 to 1939, 1949 to 1958, and the mid 1960s to 1971.
Central Files also reflects the daily administration of the schools. Numerous files contain information on faculty recruiting and appointments, gifts, budgeting, the administration of departments and divisions within the school, relations with the University's administration (often in terms of finances and facilities), school administrative and advisory boards, facilities, prizes and awards, and finances. Materials relating to the academic affairs of individual schools, including degree requirements, the creation of new degrees, the mission of the school, the administration of doctoral examinations, and the curriculum of the school are also prevalent in Central Files. In addition, the files detail major building programs, special projects, long-range planning efforts, and funding campaigns.
Academic Departments and Programs: Central files contain over 300 named folders related to the development and operation of numerous academic development and operation of numerous academic departments and programs. A number of these are documented over the course of decades. For example, the files provide a nearly complete record of the Department of Chemistry from 1890 to 1959, as well as a less comprehensive body of materials on the same department dating from 1960 to 1971. Records also chronicle the history of Asian studies at Columbia - including the Department of Chinese and Japanese, the Department of Chinese Languages and Literatures, the Committee on Oriental Studies, and the East Asian Institute - from 1891 to 1969. Records relating to the Department of Physics date from the 1890s to the 1950s.
Correspondence, budgets, reports, and other records reflect a wide variety of subjects involving departments. Topics treated range from the routine to the substantive. Most often, the records relate to budgeting; faculty recruiting and appointments; arrangements for courses; prizes and awards; appropriations and expenditures; the management of special funds for research, prizes, and scholarships; departmental office facilities; faculty affairs, such as sabbaticals and travel arrangements; gifts to the department; and visiting professors and lecturers. Folders relating to the science departments also include information on research facilities, equipments, fieldwork, laboratories, and the administration of sponsored projects.
In addition to the administrative issues listed above, department-related records illuminate more substantive topics regarding the curriculum, mission, faculty, and structure of the department. These subjects include staffing needs in terms of the number of faculty members required and fields for which the department hoped to hire a new faculty member; proposed special programs and new courses; course requirements; teaching loads; the establishment of named professorships; the curriculum of the department; the evaluation of faculty performance; and relations with other departments. On occasion, a department was evaluated by an outside committee comprised of faculty and administrators. The reports of these committees discuss issues ranging from the organization of the department to faculty performance to the curriculum. In some cases, records in Central Files also provide information on the establishment of a department. The influence of particular donors, developments in the curriculum and the structure of the new department are among the topics that relate to this issue.
Faculty: Records relating to schools, departments, and programs often include information on Columbia's faculty - both as individuals and in general terms. Most of the information regarding faculty is administrative in nature. For example, correspondence and budget letters related to faculty salaries, teaching loads, and courses and sometimes evaluate the work of faculty members. Materials in Central Files also record faculty personnel issues, such as appointments, recruiting efforts, appointments to fellowships, salaries, leaves, and benefits. In addition, correspondence, publications, and speeches help to document individual faculty members' committee responsibilities, professional activities, and attendance at conferences and official functions. In some cases, information regarding the administration of a faculty member's research projects, fieldwork, and writing projects is also available. Most of this material is routine in nature. Central Files does not include faculty members' research notes or lecture notes. Records also relate to faculty personnel policies and benefits on a University-wide basis. In particular, Central Files includes information regarding the formation and management of pension plans for University faculty.
Central Files also documents the related topics of academic freedom and relations between the faculty and the University administration. In particular, the records reflect these issues during times of crisis, such as World War I, when several professors were dismissed from the University; the late 1940s and early 1950s, when a number of faculty members faced charges of communist activities; and the 1960s, when faculty-administration relations were strained by social and educational issues as well as conflicts over student unrest.
Libraries: Columbia's library system changed dramatically during the first half of the twentieth century. New libraries were formed to serve the needs of specialized fields; library facilities, services, and collections were expanded; and the library staff grew from a single University librarian to a large staff of professionals. Central Files helps to chronicle this transformation and includes correspondence, reports, floor plans, newsletters, and financial statements relating to the Columbia University Libraries. Most of these materials date from the 1920s to the 1950s. The records documents facilities, personnel administration, library fees, finances and costs, collection management, gifts, the appraisal and acquisition of new collections, and policies of the University libraries as well as certain departmental and special libraries. Central Files also records the formation of the Rare Book and Manuscript Library and area studies libraries.
Columbia's Academic Mission and Philosophy: Central Files is an important resource for identifying and understanding influences on the academic mission and philosophy of the University - from individual donors to social and political trends. In particular, records prior to the 1940s demonstrate ties with German academia through the Roosevelt Professorship, Germanistic Society of America, the Kaiser Wilhelm Professorship, and Columbia's Deutsches Haus. Later records show the effects of World War II, which had a profound influence on the schools and departments in the sciences and engineering as well as the financial underpinning of research at the University; the postwar era, when concerns over competition with communist governments raised issues regarding progress in science and engineering; and the 1960s and 1970s, when minority group and student pressure brought upheaval and change to the campus.
Topics related to research include the formation of government, corporate, and foundation-sponsored research programs; the administration of research projects and research facilities; and the formation and operation of research institutes. While countless individual projects are documented, Central Files is particularly strong in the areas of physics, engineering, social sciences, and earth sciences research as well as the development of University-wide research programs and facilities.
Central Files chronicles the institution of an organized research program at Columbia from government-sponsored projects hastily set up in response to wartime needs to the eventual founding of the University's Office of Projects and Grants. In particular, the records focus on government-sponsored research and the growth of ties between the government and the University during the 1940s and 1950s. For the most part, the records relate to facilities, security, financial administration, and personnel issues involving government contracts. Occasionally, the records also discuss policies guiding sponsored research and demonstrate the ways in which Columbia determined its relationship with the government, especially in terms of cost overhead. The files also include records relating to training programs that were run by the University for the government and military during World War II.
Materials in Central Files also relate to the creation of research facilities at Columbia and the administration of research facilities and projects in departments, schools, and institutes. Most of the records documenting departmental research pertain to such routine subjects as payments to research assistants and laboratory equipment. Many departmental files, however, also contain research proposals that were submitted to foundations or reports summarizing research efforts in the department. Records in the files also document research-related issues and facilities on a University-wide basis. For example, records describe the founding and administration of the University's Nevis research facilities during the 1940s and 1950s.
Records in Central Files chronicle developments in the fields of science and engineering research. In particular, the records relate to research in physics from 1935 to 1969 and research projects involving a variety of fields that took place in the engineering school and engineering departments from the 1890s through the 1950s. Social science research institutes are also well documented in the files. Related topics range from the establishment, mission, and funding of institutes to administrative issues, such as facilities and personnel. The records also include reports and funding proposals that describe the activities and accomplishments of research institutes. For example, files chronicle the organization, policies, and research goals of the Bureau of Applied Social Research, which began as the University's Office of Radio Research, from 1934 to 1960. Records dating from 1949 to 1960 chronicle the National Manpower Council and the Conservation of Human Resources Project, which were based at Columbia.
Research in the earth sciences is also recorded in Central Files, first through records regarding the School of Mines and the Geology Department and, eventually, through materials relating to the formation and administration of the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, which is documented from the 1940s to 1971. Related records chronicle relations between the observatory and the Lamont family, who donated the estate that houses it, as well as negotiations with the Doherty Foundation, which provided major funding for its further development. Other topics include Lamont-Doherty's funding, facilities, and faculty and the administration of research projects, such as the ocean core sample project. Occasionally, letters or reports provide accounts of expeditions. In addition, the records often pertain to the needs of the observatory and its relations with donors and the University.
In addition to Columbia's schools, departments, and institutes, Central Files documents numerous other educational, research, social, and cultural institutions that are or were affiliated with Columbia. The files are an especially useful source of information on affiliations with New York area hospitals. Materials in the files relate to the formation of affiliation agreements; gifts to affiliates; and relations between affiliated institutions and Columbia, in particular in terms of finances, legal issues, faculty, and facilities. In some cases, it is possible to trace the history of an affiliation in order to see the development of a relationship with an institution and changes in that relationship over time. For example, Central Files chronicles the affiliation between Columbia University and Presbyterian Hospital, which began ca. 1910 and resulted in the creation of the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center in 1928.
Through records relation to schools, departments, programs, research, and affiliated institutions, Central Files also chronicles the growth of certain disciplines and professions, such as engineering, physics, chemistry, the social sciences, international affairs, and journalism. Correspondence and other records provide information on developments in the curriculum, funding efforts, and gifts supporting research and education in a particular area, prominent faculty in the field, the advent of professional training in certain fields, and the establishment of new programs and schools, as well as changes to existing ones in order to serve the needs of developing professions and disciplines.
Since its move to Morningside Heights, Columbia has had an impact on the surrounding community. Community issues and problems have also had a growing influence on the University. Columbia's public relations and community relations are documented in a variety of sources in Central Files. Most prominently, Central Files is a useful source of information on Columbia's troubled community relations during the 1960s. The records relate to Columbia's efforts to improve public relations and address community issues; landlord-tenant conflicts between the University and the community; Columbia's plan to erect a gymnasium in nearby Morningside Park; urban renewal programs; and community services such as medical clinics and sports programs.
Central Files contains extensive records regarding Columbia's development efforts, donor relations, alumni relations, benefactors, and gifts. In particular, the files are an important resource for information on the establishment, terms, and use of specific gifts and endowments. They also record such gifts as money, stocks, property, art and artifacts, library and manuscript collections, and equipment. Central Files also reflects the influence of donors on the University in terms of its finances, physical development, academic programs, and curriculum. Some files span many years, chronicling a donor's or potential donor's relationship with Columbia over time. Others record only a single gift or a short period of time.
The files also relate to the development campaigns for the University in general as well as for its schools. A number of major funding campaigns, both those that were realized and those that were not successful, are well documented in Central Files. For example, files include information on the successful campaign for an engineering center and failed attempts to fund an arts center. Funding proposals are often a detailed source of information regarding the space needs, costs, mission, and activities of a proposed project and reflect the goals and priorities of the University at a particular point in time.
Central Files also records the creation of a professional, organized development program at the University, which began in 1945 with the hiring of a development officer to plan a ten-year funding program. The records document the formation of development strategies and priorities, the work of development committees, and the operation of the Development Office.
Closely connected to development is alumni relations. While Central Files is not a comprehensive source of information on alumni groups and relations, it offers evidence of the interaction between certain alumni groups, in particular the Alumni Federation of Columbia University, and the University administration. Most of the records pertain to routine preparations for alumni events and the administration of local and regional alumni clubs. Alumni involvement is the life of the University – whether through funding, the oversight of student activities, or interaction with the administration – is also reflected in Central Files. In addition to materials relating to the Alumni Federation and other alumni groups, most of which date from 1914 through the mid 1960s, Central Files also contains numerous letters from individual alumni who wrote to the president and administrators on topics ranging from football to academic freedom.
The management of student affairs at Columbia has reflected the changing nature of student activities and student relations with the administration, a persistent concern for how student organizations reflect upon the University, and attempts to deal with conflicts between students and the administration. Between 1900 and the 1940s in particular, Columbia sought ways to centralize the administration of nonacademic services and to make those aspects of students' lives more conducive to a community spirit and more supportive of the academic function of the University. Central Files includes records from deans, deans of students, and the administrators and alumni who oversaw student groups, housing, discipline, athletics, health services, and other aspects of the students' lives outside the classroom.
Although students are documents in Central Files, they usually appear as the were seen through administrators' eyes – as recipients of financial aid, scholarships, and awards; users of student services; disciplinary problems; or in terms of demographics and statistics. For example, records relate to the management of residence halls and the formation of student health services. Materials in the files also pertain to provisions for students' social, religious, and civic lives through the Earl Hall religious center, the Ferris Booth Hall student center (replaced by Lerner Hall), and other programs. Periodically, policies governing students and student groups are also discussed in the records. For example, records from the 1950s relate to the introduction of policies governing speakers sponsored by student groups following a controversy regarding a student-sponsored speaker.
Central Files also helps to document issues surrounding female students at Columbia. A small body of records, including correspondence from the deans of Barnard College and the adviser to women graduate students, relates to housing, the admission of women to University courses, services for female students, and the status of women students on the campus. In addition, the files includes information regarding services for international students from the 1940s to 1971, as well as veterans' affairs and services during the 1940s and 1950s.
One important issue that is reflected in Central Files is the relationship between students and the University, in particular during the campus disturbances of the 1960s. Correspondence between deans, administrators, and trustees as well as proctors' reports and official University announcements illustrate this relationship. The proctors' reports are of particular interest in illuminating student activities. They list and very briefly discuss student meetings, events, demonstrations, disciplinary problems and pranks, security violations, rules infractions, and rumors regarding protests. In some cases fliers that were distributed at demonstrations as well as student petitions are also found in the records. Among other topics, the files reflect the administration's efforts to control and discipline students, responses to student demonstrations, attempts to respond to students' demands for reform of University government, and struggles with public relations issues.
The original concept for much of Columbia's Morningside Heights campus was determined by the architectural firm of McKim, Mead & White. Materials in Central Files document the initial plan for the development of the new campus, the design of buildings, plans for further development of the site, space needs, and diversions from the original campus plan. The records also relate to major building projects - both those that were proposed but never undertaken and those that were completed. For example, projects recorded in the files include the design and construction of Low Memorial Library, a plan by I.M. Pei to construct towers in the center of campus, and efforts to erect a gymnasium in Morningside Park. Other buildings and facilities that are well documented in the files include Butler Library, Ken Hall, University Hall (now the site of Uris Hall), Engineering Terrace, the Baker Field athletic facility, and the South Field portion of the campus.
Records relating to campus design and planning demonstrate trends in Columbia's architecture, influences on the physical growth and style of the campus, and concepts of the purpose of new buildings. In documenting Columbia's design and expansion, Central Files contributes to the understanding of the University's impact on the surrounding community and the development of the Morningside Heights neighborhood.
Countless prizes and awards - including those that were granted by individual departments or schools, the University, or nationally - are documented in Central Files. Topics relating to prizes and awards include their establishment, the selection of prize and award recipients, the management of prize funds, and the funding and purpose of prizes and awards. In particular, the records contain information on the Pulitzer Prizes dating from 1893 to 1971. Honorary degrees are also recorded in the files. Related topics include preparations for honorary degree convocations and the nomination and selection of degree recipients. The records also contain citations and speeches that were delivered at degree ceremonies.
Official University ceremonies and certain special events are often documented in Central Files. Records relating to events include minutes, correspondence, proposals, fliers, programs, newsletters, lists, invitations, texts of citations and speeches, press releases, and floor plans. Many of the issues related to events and ceremonies are routine in nature. For example, Central Files documents seating plans, travel arrangements, menus, crowd control, publicity, and acceptances and regrets. Certain named files also contain more substantive information on the purpose of events. In particular, records from the 1950s chronicle Columbia's yearlong bicentennial celebration, which took place in 1954. Many of the folders in Central Files dating from this period contain at least a small amount of correspondence regarding the 200th anniversary celebrations, and several named files contain extensive correspondence, minutes, newsletters, and other related materials. Beginning in the mid 1940s and continuing through the 1950s, committees of administrators, faculty, and trustees began planning for the bicentennial. Related topics include the selection of themes for the celebration, planning and preparations for events, publicity, and anniversary-related development campaigns.
Central Files also includes numerous records - such as correspondence, proceedings, and programs, regarding many lecture series, seminars, and conferences that were held at Columbia. Some lectures and seminars, such as the Bampton Lectures in America of the University Seminars, were University wide. Others were hosted by a particular department or school. For the most part, these records relate to the appointment of lecturers or seminar and conference participants, travel arrangements, honoraria, and the management of special funds in support of lectureships and seminars. Certain named folders also contain information on the purpose of lecture series, conference and seminars, as well as information regarding the establishment of lecture series and the agenda and proceedings of conferences.
Central Files documents a critical time in the history of one of the nation's leading academic institutions. During the twentieth century, Columbia has not only undergone significant changes to its curriculum, facilities, administration, and student body but has also played an important role beyond its gates. By documenting the transformation of Columbia from a college to a university and recording the history of its many schools and departments, the formation of research programs at the University, Columbia's relations with other educational and cultural institutions, new directions in numerous academic disciplines and professions, and a host of other topics, Central Files takes its place as a major resource for researching the evolution of higher education in the United States.
The first 318 cubic feet of correspondence and other records dating from 1890 to 1971 were filed under general alphabetical headings. Each letter of the alphabet is divided into chronological groups. For example, files labeled A-Az for 1930-1931 are followed by the A-Az files for 1931-1932 and so on. This sub-series contains the same types of materials relating to the same categories of subject as the rest of Central Files. It appears as though records were filed under general alphabetical headings when only a small amount of correspondence was received or when the subject of the correspondence was not considered to be important at the time. In spite of this, sub-series I.1 contains many substantial records as well as materials from significant persons and should not be overlooked by researchers.
If a desired personal name, corporate name, or subject does not appear in the following sub-series, or if the name or subject is found but the time period of interest falls outside the date range given for the folder, it may still be possible to find relevant materials in this series, through the use of the Central Files card index, or by confining the search to a very specific date range.
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Subseries consisting of records to, from, or about a person filed under the person's name. This is the only portion of Central Files that contains detailed descriptions of the contents of files. If a desired personal name does not appear in this sub-series, or if the name is found but the time period of interest falls outside the date range given for the folder, it may still be possible to find relevant materials in Series I.1 General Alphabetical, through the use of the Central Files card index, or by confining the search to a very specific date range.
Box 673 Folder 26
Records regarding an honorary degree from Columbia University that was awarded to Alvar Aalto, a Finnish architect and designer. Records include correspondence and a newspaper clipping.
Box 509 Folder 19
Correspondence between Elie Abel, Jeffery Loubat Professor and dean of the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the school. Topics include: faculty appointments, funding for the school, and budgeting.
Box 668 Folder 39
Correspondence between Theodore Fred Abel, professor of sociology and executive officer of the Department of Sociology at Columbia University, and the provost and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the department. Topics include faculty appointments, and budgeting.
Box 36 Folder 21
Correspondence between Charles Abrams and Columbia University administrators. Abrams was a professor of urban planning and director of the Institute of Urban Environment in the School of Architecture. Records relate to the institute, the school, and urban planning. Records include: correspondence regarding efforts to acquire grant funding for a study of urban minority problems to be conducted by the institute and the Division of Urban Planning; a copy of ""The City,"" Abrams' address at the University of Chicago; a report by Abrams for the Community Renewal Program; and reports regarding urban renewal in Philadelphia and the use of computers by the urban planning division.
Box 360 Folder 4 to 18
Correspondence between Carl W. Ackerman, dean of the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University, and the president and other high " level administrators of the University. Also includes correspondence between Ackerman and publishers and journalists from the United States and South America. Records relate to four main subjects: the Graduate School of Journalism, the Pulitzer Prizes, the Maria Moors Cabot Prizes, and journalism and journalists in the United States and South America.
Topics related to the Graduate School of Journalism include: budgeting, faculty affairs, faculty appointments, teaching loads, gifts to the school, events, and the management of special funds. Includes: school budgets; correspondence and a proposal (ca. 1934-1935) regarding the establishment of graduate programs in the school; and reports and correspondence (ca. 1943-1946) regarding a school of journalism in China, which was sponsored by the University. Also includes a report, dating from 1937 which discusses the journalism school's relationship with the Columbia Daily Spectator. The records also include correspondence, proposals, and reports (ca. 1946-1951) regarding the establishment, funding, and administration of the American Press Institute, a professional development and education program for journalists. Also, correspondence and reports regarding the effect of " radio on journalism education (ca. 1937) and the work of the University's Radio Committee (ca. 1938).
Also, reports and correspondence regarding the Pulitzer Prizes. Related topics include: the nomination and selection of Pulitzer Prize recipients, the work of the Advisory Board of the Pulitzer Prizes, and administrative and financial issues regarding the prizes. Includes jury reports and correspondence regarding the ""Pulitzer Prize Playhouse. Also, correspondence and reports regarding the Maria Moors Cabot Prizes. Related topics include: the establishment of the prizes, the nomination and selection of recipients, and administrative issues relating to the prizes. Includes correspondence with the Cabot family. In addition, " Ackerman made a number of trips to South America to meet with journalists and promote journalism. The records include correspondence regarding South American newspapers and journalists as well as correspondence and reports regarding Ackerman's tours of South America during the 1930s and 1940s.
Box 361 Folder 1 to 19
Box 362 Folder 1 to 12
Box 387 Folder 20
Correspondence between Charles M. Adams, assistant to the director of the libraries at Columbia University, and the provost of the University. Correspondence and reports relate to the appraisal and acquisition of library collections. Includes volume one, number 1 of Library Columns (November, 1943). Also, reports and minutes (ca. March, 1944) regarding the use of Low Memorial Library as an administration building. These reports relate to recommendations regarding the library that had been made in the Coykendal report of 1935.
Box 317 Folder 1
Correspondence between Edward D. Adams, president of the Germanistic Society of America, and the president and secretary of Columbia University regarding Deutsches Haus, Columbia's German cultural and educational center. Topics include: the purchase of Deutsches Haus and the effect of World War I on the center and on education in German culture. Also, correspondence and deeds of gift documenting the establishment of the Ernest Kempton Adams Fund for Physical Research, the management of special funds, and a gift to the University of scientific instruments.
Box 671 Folder 14
Correspondence regarding a formal complaint the was brought against Columbia University by Henry A. Adams, a student who did not receive credit for a course. Includes a copy of the petition which was filed with the New York State Department of Education.
Box 668 Folder 40
Correspondence between John C. Adams and high level administrators at Columbia University. Adams was president of Hofstra University and the secretary and treasurer of the Association of Colleges and Universities of the State of New York. Correspondence relates to the association's involvement in issues affecting higher education. Topics include discrimination in higher education and proposals for a state University. Includes a transcript of a hearing before the State of New York Temporary Commission on the Need for a State University (October, 1947) and a copy of the Austin Mahoney anti-discrimination bill.
Box 670 Folder 22
Correspondence between Louis Carroll Adams of the Department of Physical Education at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the use of the University gymnasium by students from the Julliard School. Includes a booklet on requirements and procedures for the physical education program.
Box 671 Folder 15
Records regarding the honorary degree from Columbia University that was awarded to Konrad Adenauer, the Chancellor of the West German Republic. The degree was awarded as part of the University's 1954 bicentennial celebration.
Box 659 Folder 1
Correspondence between Felix Adler, professor of social and political ethics in the Faculty of Philosophy at Columbia University, and University president Nicholas Murray Butler. Correspondence relates to the establishment of a professorship of social and political ethics and Adler's appointment to the post in 1902. Correspondence also relates to Adler's term as Roosevelt Professor during 1908 and 1909. The Roosevelt Professorship sent an American professor to Germany to lecture and act as an educational and cultural emissary.
Box 664 Folder 30
Correspondence between Eugene Ewald Agger, associate professor of economics at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Most of the correspondence relates to Agger's work as executive secretary of the Intercollegiate War Loan and Savings Committee of the Federal Reserve and his efforts to raise funds for the government during World War I.
Box 54 Folder 31
Correspondence regarding the mental and physical health of a student in the School of General Studies.
Box 668 Folder 22
Correspondence between Jose Antonio de Aguirre y Lecube, a lecturer in history at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to his five-year stay at Columbia and his return to Spain in order to support the Basque separatist movement.
Box 389 Folder 17 to 18
Records sent to the Columbia University administration by Fred W. Albertson. Records relate to Columbia's application for an FM radio license. Includes a proposal for operating a radio station as well as University by-laws and other records which were assembled in support of Columbia's application.
Box 659 Folder 2
Correspondence between Edwin Anderson Alderman and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Alderman was president of Tulane University and later became president of the University of Virginia. Correspondence relates to a range of subjects. Topics include: Butler's invitation for Alderman to attend his installation in 1902 Columbia's merger with the College of Physicians and Surgeons, entrance examinations and the College Entrance Examination Board, the selection of candidates for chairs in economics and physics at the University of Virginia, the selection of a southern candidate for the Roosevelt Professorship, and honorary degrees. Includes correspondence regarding Butler's inaugural and Alderman's plans to model his own installation at the University of Virginia on it.
Box 669 Folder 43
Correspondence between Walter H. Aldridge and high level administrators at Columbia University. Aldridge was chairman of the board of Texas Gulf Sulpher Company and a University benefactor. Correspondence relates to Aldridge's gifts in support of a proposed University engineering center. Also, correspondence regarding the awarding of the Class of 1889 Prize Medal to Aldridge.
Box 497 Folder 8 to 12
Correspondence between John W. Alexander, associate dean of Columbia College, and high level Columbia University administrators. Includes correspondence with the dean of Columbia College as well as individual students and their families. Correspondence relates to Columbia College, the University's undergraduate college. Much of the correspondence consists of letters regarding student affairs, academic standing, discipline, academic probation, and expulsion. Other topics include: events, prizes, the preparation and distribution of the student handbook, student groups, dormitory facilities, residence hall visitation policies, and space issues.
Records include: minutes of a meeting regarding conditions in residence halls and the administrative organization of the halls (July, 1962); a statement on policies regarding female visitors in residence halls (October, 1962) and other records regarding visitation policies; correspondence regarding the University's policy against the discriminatory fraternity membership requirements (ca. December, 1964), and correspondence regarding proposed community programs to be offered during the 1964 Summer Session.
Box 447 Folder 24
Correspondence between Ralph S. Alexander, professor of marketing at Columbia University, and University administrators. Alexander chaired the University's Committee on the Bookstore, which studied the operation of the Columbia University Bookstore. Correspondence relates to the business of the committee and committee membership.
Box 671 Folder 16
Records regarding the honorary degree from Columbia University that was granted to Mohammed Ali, the prime minister of Pakistan, during Columbia's 1954 bicentennial celebration.
Box 667 Folder 21
Correspondence between Carolyn E. Allen, controller of the Council for Research in the Social Sciences at Columbia University, and the assistant secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to disbursements to council-funded projects.
Box 391 Folder 18 to 20
Correspondence between George M. Allen, chairman of the Committee on Public Ceremonies and executive officer of the Department of Drafting at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The Committee on Public Ceremonies oversaw the University's academic exercises, visits from dignitaries, and other official events. Most of the records consist of correspondence, schedules, and seating charts relating to opening exercises, commencement, and convocations. Includes a file, dating from 1950 which contains designs for academic robes. Also, correspondence and budgets relating to the Department of Drafting. Topics include faculty appointments, faculty affairs, and equipment.
Box 495 Folder 23 to 24
Correspondence between Jane McMurtry Allen, administrative assistant to the secretary of the University at Columbia University, and University administrators. The records consist of correspondence and routine cover letters relating to: prizes and awards, personnel, scheduling, appointments, and supplies.
Box 669 Folder 44
Correspondence between Rayford W. Alley and the president of Columbia University. Alley was a University benefactor and chairman of special gifts for the Law School Sustaining Fund. Correspondence relates to Alley's gifts to Columbia and the possibility of his nomination as a University trustee. Includes correspondence with the president's staf.
Box 504 Folder 13
Correspondence between Rita Alt and administrative offices at Columbia University. Alt appears to have overseen arrangements for events in the rotunda of Columbia's Low Memorial Library. The correspondence is routine.
Box 659 Folder 3
Correspondence between Friedrich Althoff, the Prussian minister of education, and Columbia University president Nicholas Murray Butler. Correspondence relates to the Roosevelt Professorship, which sent American faculty to Germany to lecture and act as educational and cultural emissarys. Correspondence also relates to the Germanistic Society of America.
Box 495 Folder 3
Correspondence between Erwin H. Amick and Columbia University administrators. Amick's appointments included associate dean of the School of Engineering and chairman of the Department of Chemical Engineering. Correspondence relates to the school. Topics include: budgeting, scheduling, facilities, personnel, sponsored projects and grants, and gifts to the school. Includes a proposal to establish a research division in the school (1958). The proposal discusses planning for the division and the organization and purpose of the division. Also, correspondence regarding the routine business of the Department of Chemical Engineering.
Box 492 Folder 22
Correspondence between Theodore W. Anderson of the Department of Mathematical Statistics at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the department. Topics include faculty appointments and departmental personnel. Also, correspondence relating to Anderson's personnel issues.
Box 409 Folder 7 to 9
Correspondence between James W. Angell, acting executive officer of the Department of Economics at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Angell also served as chairman of the Informal Committee on University Salaries and the Committee on Instruction of the Faculty of Political Science. Correspondence relates to the department, the Faculty of Political Science (ca. 1952-1953), and a variety of other University-related subjects. Topics related to the Department of Economics include: enrollment, budgeting, lectures, faculty appointments, faculty affairs, funding for the department, and facilities. Includes departmental budgets. Topics related to the Faculty of Political Science include: the evaluation of departments, faculty appointments, faculty affairs, departmental budgeting, relations between the Faculty and the University administration, and faculty personnel policies. Includes a statement regarding academic freedom that was submitted to the administration by the faculty in May, 1953.
Also: correspondence (ca. 1949 to the 1950s) regarding faculty salary policies; correspondence and proposals regarding the Schuyler Fiske Seager Endowment and the Schuyler Fiske Seager Fellowship; a report regarding a proposed institute for research in industrial management at the University; and correspondence and a telegram regarding post-World War II aid to Europe.
Box 431 Folder 1 to 20
Box 432 Folder 1-19
Correspondence between Charles A. Anger, director of the Office of Development at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence, reports, and proposals relating to the establishment of a development program at Columbia.
Topics include: the creation of development policies and procedures, donor relations, funding proposals, and the status of development campaigns. Includes reports and proposals regarding: building projects, schools, events, research projects, and institutes. Also includes charts, reports, and other records relating to the organization and strategies of the University's development program. Records related to development include a public relations study (September, 1951) and an in-depth evaluation of Columbia's development strategy, income, and activities (1953). Other related records include: charts of the University's development organization in 1954 correspondence relating to the business of the trustees' committee on development; minutes of the University Development Committee; records regarding budgeting and operations in the Development Office; and development pamphlets.
Records regarding other University-related topics include: a 1951 proposal to establish the Citizenship Center, which became the Ferris Booth Hall student center; a report on the University's Health Sciences division dating from 1952 and a survey and analysis of the School of General Studies, the School of Pharmacy, and the School of Social Work dating from 1951. Other related records include: correspondence, proposals, statements, and reports (ca. 1952-1955) relating to the University's attempts to fund an arts center; correspondence and reports (ca. 1953-1954) regarding Columbia's bicentennial fundraising campaign; and a press packet that was produced in 1954 for Columbia's bicentennial celebration.
Box 508 Folder 11 to 13
Correspondence between Donald C. Anthony, assistant director of the libraries at Columbia University, and University administrators. Most of the records consist of routine cover letters and acquisition records. The materials were forwarded to the Office of the Secretary, which issued acknowledgement letters for donations to the libraries.
Box 480 Folder 19
Correspondence between Jack N. Arbolino, assistant dean in the School of General Studies at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Most of the correspondence relates to the School of General Studies, Columbia's continuing education division. Topics include: personnel, faculty appointments, prizes, and facilities.
Records include letters regarding the relationship between the School of General Studies and the University and public relations for the school, records regarding the revision of the General Studies curriculum (March, 1958), and records regarding procedures for the screening of non-matriculated students. Also includes cover letters and invitations.
Box 459 Folder 19 to 20
Correspondence between Conrad M. Arensberg, professor of anthropology at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Arensberg held appointments as executive officer of the Department of Anthropology and head of the Interdisciplinary Project in Economic Aspects of Institutional Growth. Most of the records relate to the project. Topics include: personnel, salaries, staffing needs, expenditures, and finances. Includes reports on the project. Also, correspondence regarding the Department of Anthropology. Topics include: events, expenditures, funding for the department, facilities, and routine business.
Box 669 Folder 25
Correspondence between Robert H. Armstrong, William J. Donovan, and E. R. Liebert. Armstrong was a trustee of The Town Hall, an educational institution for the advancement of social and political science, ethics, and the arts. Armstrong chaired the special committee that had been appointed to examine the institution's program of activities. Donovan served as an alumni trustee of Columbia University and also headed Columbia Associates, a group of benefactors who contributed to the University's general fund. Leibert appears to have been The Town Hall's public relations and development director. Correspondence relates to the operation and reorganization of The Town Hall. Includes several reports on the institution's development and revenues.
Box 377 Folder 1 to 18
Correspondence between Leopold Arnaud and the faculty and high level administrators of Columbia University. Arnaud held numerous appointments at the University including dean of the School of Architecture; director of the School of Painting and Sculpture, which was the predecessor of the University's School of the Arts; and director of the School of Dramatic Arts. Arnaud also served on many committees, including the Committee on Art Properties, and advised the University administration on a variety of design projects.
Most of the correspondence, budgets, and reports relate to the School of Architecture (ca. 1935 to 1955), the School of Painting and Sculpture (ca. 1948 to the 1950s), and the School of Dramatic Arts (ca. 1948 to the 1950s). Topics related to the School of Architecture include: faculty appointments, student exchanges, faculty affairs, budgeting, appropriations, fellowships, scholarships, lectures, gifts to the school, facilities, requirements, teaching loads, arrangements for courses, prizes, and awards. Includes correspondence regarding the McKim Travelling Fellowships and the William Kinne Fellowships as well as correspondence, reports, and a newsletter relating to the Housing and Town Planning Program (ca. 1935-1955).
Topics related to the School of Painting and Sculpture include: budgeting, appropriations, facilities, and gifts to the school. Includes the director's first annual report. Although this document dates from 1949 it is filed with the records dating from July, 1957. Topics relating to the School of Dramatic Arts include budgeting and administrative issues involving dramatic productions and theater facilities. Includes correspondence regarding the relationship between the school and the Columbia University Players. Also, correspondence, budgets, and reports regarding Casa Italiana, Columbia's Italian culture and educational center. Topics include gifts, lectures, budgeting, and administrative issues from the late 1940s to the 1950s.
The records also include a small amount of correspondence documenting the work of the Committee on Art Properties, which selected and administered the University's art properties. Most of the correspondence relates to the care and sale of works of art during the 1950s. Also, correspondence regarding the administration of a number of special design projects including plaques, medals, exhibitions, and buildings. Arnaud also served on a committee which was created to evaluate and suggest uses for the Nevis Estate. The estate, which is in Irvington-on-Hudson New York, was donated to the University in 1935.
Includes some correspondence regarding the estate and committee business. Most of the correspondence dating from 1959 relates to Arnaud's retirement. Includes a report dating from January, 1959 which summarizes his education, professional life, and Columbia Career.
Box 317 Folder 2
Correspondence between Robert Arrowsmith, editor of Columbia Alumni News and secretary of the Columbia University Alumni Council, and Columbia University administrators. Topics include: alumni affairs, the administration of the Alumni Council office, the purpose and content of Columbia Alumni News, and public relations involving academic freedom and the dismissal of faculty members.
Box 317 Folder 3
Correspondence between Samuel P. Avery, a benefactor of Columbia University, and Seth Low, president of the University. Also, correspondence between Seth Low, University administrators, and others regarding Avery's gifts to Columbia. Topics include: Avery's gifts to establish the Avery building, Avery Architectural Library, Avery Architectural Fund, and a fine arts endowment fund.
Box 672 Folder 5
Correspondence between Franklin A. Ayer, president of the Columbia Engineering School Alumni Association, and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to events and Ayer's involvement in the appointment of a new University trustee.
Box 380 Folder 1 to 8
Correspondence between Harry Morgan Ayres and the high level administrators of Columbia University. Ayres held a number of appointments including professor of English; director of the Summer Session; director of Casa Italiana, Columbia's Italian culture and educational center; director of the University Extension, the University's continuing education division; and chairman of the Committee on Extension Teaching. Ayers was also the first director of the School of General Studies, the successor to the University Extension. Most of the records consist of correspondence, budgets, and reports regarding the Summer Session and correspondence, budgets, reports, and minutes regarding the University Extension and its reorganization as the School of General Studies. Also includes correspondence and reports regarding Casa Italiana.
Topics related to the Summer Session include: financial planning, budgeting, finances, enrollment, registration procedures, the preparation of the Summer Session announcement, faculty affairs, faculty salaries, personnel, and the school calendar. Includes correspondence regarding accelerated courses and the expansion of summer programs during World War II. Also includes Ayres' regular reports to the Administrative Board of Summer Session. Topics related to University Extension include: the organization and administration of the extension program, faculty appointments, financial administration, budgeting, and the status of extension faculty in the University. Includes a proposal and correspondence (ca.1944) regarding courses on radio. Also, reports and correspondence regarding the reorganization of University Extension as the School of General Studies. Includes summary histories, extracts of the annual reports of the Summer Session and University Extension (ca. 1943), and a report on the study of faculty and administrative responses to the proposed creation of the School of General Studies which took place during the fall of 1944.
Also includes the first annual report of the School of General Studies, which was released in June, 1948. The report discusses a range of topics including: the origin and mission of the school, the relationship of the faculty to the school, the student body, and the future needs of the school. Topics related to Casa Italiana include: the management of special funds, the effects of World War II on the center, and center finances. Includes reports regarding: events at Casa Italiana, its use by outside groups, the Friends of Casa Italiana, activities and programs at the center, the center's calendar, the use of the libraries, faculty activities, and center finances. These reports also document the activities of the Columbia University Committee for War Relief, which used the center's facilities. Includes a report of the Committee on the Future Plans of the Italian Department dating from April, 1948. Also, correspondence regarding Ayres' annuity plan, death, and funeral.
Box 378 Folder 20
Correspondence between Richard Gordon Babbage, a trustee of Columbia University and chairman of the trustee's committee on finance, and high level University administrators. Babbage was also chairman of the University Sub Committee on a Retirement Program for Non-Teaching Employees. Most of the correspondence relates to the development of a retirement program for University stafIncludes a report from the committee. Also, correspondence regarding the University's accounting procedures and procedures for amending the University statutes. Also includes correspondence regarding the Nevis Estate in Irvington-on-Hudson, New York. The estate was given to the University in 1935. Also, correspondence and a report regarding the financial administration of athletics programs.
Box 664 Folder 31
Correspondence between Richard Bach and the president of Columbia University. Bach was a lecturer in the School of Architecture and also served as curator for the University. Most of the correspondence relates to the care and preservation of Columbia's art properties. Also, correspondence regarding budgeting for furniture and supplies in the School of Architecture and the Avery Library and reports on the use of funds in the school. Also includes correspondence regarding the proposed establishment of a life class in the school.
Box 376 Folder 16 to 17
Correspondence between George W. Bachman, professor of parasitological and director of the School of Tropical Medicine in Puerto Rico, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the school, which was established and operated with support from the University.
Topics include: faculty appointments, preparation of the school's announcement, fund raising, research funding, finances, federal support for the school, lectures, and clinics. Includes correspondence and reports evaluating the school and its future needs in terms of staff, research, finances, departmental administration, and library collections. Also includes correspondence (ca. 1938) regarding the relationship between the school, the University, and the Puerto Rican government; correspondence (ca. 1939-1940) regarding a primate research colony; correspondence (ca. February, 1937) regarding President Butler's trip to the school. Other records include a long-range planning report (1937) and a faculty bibliography that includes works published from 1926 to 1937. Also, correspondence and a report regarding the Rockefeller Foundation Nutrition Gift Fund in support of nutrition research at the school (ca. 1932) .
Box 350 Folder 17 to 19
Correspondence between Rogers H. Bacon and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University. Includes correspondence with the University treasurer and secretary. Bacon was an alumni trustee and trustee of the University. He served as chairman of the University Committee on Athletics, president of the Alumni Federation of Columbia University, comptroller of athletics, and comptroller of Kings Crown. Most of the correspondence dating from 1926 and 1927 relates to University policies governing athletics and the funding of athletic programs. Includes correspondence regarding the University's boat house. Correspondence dating from 1934 to 1937 documents Bacon's activities as comptroller of athletics and comptroller of King's Crown. King's Crown was the alumni body which oversaw the budgets of certain student organizations.
Topics include: athletic facilities, financial and accounting policies for athletics programs, student activity fees, and the financial management the student organizations which were administered by King's Crown. Includes budgets for Kings Crown activities and the Department of Physical Education and Intercollegiate Athletics. There is a gap in the records between 1929 and 1934.
Box 672 Folder 37
Correspondence between Albert M. Baer and Columbia University president Grayson Kirk. Baer was chairman of the Council of the School of General Studies. Correspondence relates to Baer's trip to Japan and the School of General Studies, Columbia's continuing education division. Includes the text of a presentation on Columbia's role in the New York City area that was given to the council by the dean of the School of General Studies.
Box 668 Folder 41
Correspondence between Elizabeth Feaster Baker and the acting president and provost of Columbia University. Baker was a professor of sociology and executive officer of the Department of Sociology. Correspondence relates to the department. Topics include appropriations and faculty appointments.
Box 659 Folder 4 to 6
Correspondence between George H. Baker, the librarian of Columbia University, and University presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray Butler. The records consist of long letters on a variety of subjects. Topics include: gifts of money and books, the acquisition of books, collection development, the construction of Low Memorial Library, and library appropriations and expenditures. Includes information regarding a gift to establish the Avery Library. Also includes detailed information regarding the design and construction of Low Memorial Library.
Box 343 Folder 1
Correspondence between George Baker, a benefactor of Columbia University, and University president Nicholas Murray Butler. Correspondence relates to the establishment of Baker Field, Columbia's stadium in northern Manhattan. Correspondence documents Baker's gifts to the University for the purchase of the Dykman Property, now called Baker Field, and the construction of a stadium on the site. Also includes correspondence regarding University finances.
Box 667 Folder 37
Correspondence between George Baker, Jr. and the president of Columbia University. Baker was the son of University benefactor George Baker. Correspondence relates to Columbia's Baker Field athletic facility and to the University's unsuccessful attempts to solicit funds from Baker for the construction of a new library.
Box 436 Folder 14
Correspondence between Professor Richard Baker and high level administrators at Columbia University. Baker held a number of appointments including secretary of the Faculty of Journalism, professor of journalism, and acting dean of the Graduate School of Journalism. The records consist of correspondence and minutes relating to the journalism school. Topics include: fees, policies, admissions, the administration of programs in the school, scholarships, financial aid, and student affairs. Correspondence dating from 1968 relates to the Maria Moors Cabot Prize and to Dean Emeritus Edward Barrett. Includes Baker's speech at the 30th presentation of the Cabot Prize.
Box 664 Folder 32
Correspondence between Stephen Baker and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Baker was a trustee of the University and chaired the University's finance committee. He was also a member of the committees on the library and honors. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects. Topics include: the preparation of the 1918-1919 budget, interest owed on bonds issued by the University, funding for the construction of a building to house the business school, Baker's gifts to the University, plans to erect a football field on South Field, the selection of trustees, and the appointment of Frederick A. Goetze as treasurer of the University. Includes copies of budgets.
Box 667 Folder 33
Correspondence between Boris A. Bakhmetev, professor of engineering at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Includes correspondence with Professor Charles Lucke. Correspondence relates to Bakhmetev's appointment and a proposed course in mechanics.
Box 659 Folder 7
Correspondence between Charles Sears Baldwin and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Baldwin held appointments as a tutor and instructor in Rhetoric in the Summer Session and the Department of Rhetoric and English Composition. Topics include: Baldwin's personnel issues, the nomination of the president-elect of Yale University for an honorary degree, and invitations. Includes detailed correspondence and a syllabus relating to proposed courses in rhetoric. Most of the correspondence dating from 1895 to 1910 is routine.
Box 380 Folder 17
Correspondence between Charles W. Ballard, Dean of the College of Pharmacy at Columbia University, and the provost and secretary of the University. Records dating from 1939 to 1940 consist of correspondence and a proposal regarding the establishment of a course in clinical laboratory technology. Correspondence dating from 1945 to 1949 relates to the routine academic, faculty, and student affairs of the pharmacy school. Includes a long-range plan for the school. Among other topics, the plan discusses the pharmacy profession, the history of the school, pharmacy research and education, and the public service role of the pharmacy profession.
Box 671 Folder 17
Correspondence between David M. Balme and the president of Columbia University. Balme was principal of University College of the Gold Coast in west Africa and chairman of the editorial board of Universitas, the college's publication. Correspondence relates to routine issues. Includes four issues of Universitas dating from 1953 to 1954.
Box 671 Folder 18
Correspondence and records that were sent to the president of Columbia University by New Orleans businessman H. J. Bluford Balter. Records relate to Bluford's proposals to repeal the 16th amendment and place a 25 percent ceiling on federal taxes.
Box 659 Folder 8
Correspondence between Frederick Bancroft, a lecturer in American history at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Correspondence relates to Bancroft's personnel issues and teaching.
Box 317 Folder 4 to 8
Correspondence between Francis S. Bangs, Columbia University presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray Butler, and other University administrators. Bangs was a trustee and alumnus of the University. Correspondence relates to Columbia's financial management, educational policy, student affairs, and government. bangs was a member of the committees on finance and education of Columbia University's board of trustees and also served as secretary of the Columbia University Alumni Association.
Topics include: the financial management of University athletics; Columbia's financial administration, policy, and reporting; and financial matters related to University real estate holdings. Also, student affairs in general, especially the affairs of athletic clubs; University government and the powers of the Trustees; and Columbia's educational role and educational policies. Includes correspondence regarding the dismissal of Professor James McKean Cattell in 1917.
Box 450 Folder 19 to 20
Correspondence between May Moore Barber, acting director of the personnel office at Columbia University, and University administrators. Records relate to personnel policies and personnel administration. Topics include: salaries, benefits, insurance, and tuition exemption. Many of the materials relate to individual University employees.
Box 497 Folder 20 to 21
Correspondence between Professor Harold Barger and high level administrators at Columbia University. Barger was a professor of economics and chairman of the Columbia University Chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP). Beginning in 1970 he also chaired the University Senate Committee on Faculty Affairs. Most of the correspondence relates to faculty affairs at the University. Correspondence also relates to the Department of Economics (ca. 1961-1964) and to Barger's personnel issues. Includes routine invitations, acceptances, and regrets.
Topics related to faculty affairs include: salaries, benefits, the retention of faculty members, and appointments. Related records include: a resolution against the National Defense Education Act by the Columbia chapter of the AAUP (January, 1960) and a statement regarding faculty salaries that was issued by the AAUP. Records dating from 1970 to 1971 include substantive letters regarding faculty housing, appointment policies, salaries, work loads, and benefits. Records from this period also include a University Senate resolution regarding the disruption of classes by demonstrations.
Topics related to the economics department include: fellowships, faculty appointments, staffing needs, the economics library, and the retention of departmental faculty. Related records include: a report on conditions in the department and the needs of the department (May, 1964), a letter regarding the proposed merger of the business and economics libraries (February, 1962), and correspondence and working papers regarding the Ford Foundation Research Professorship in Economics (May, 1964) .
Box 359 Folder 1 to 16
Correspondence between Joseph W. Barker and the high level administrators of Columbia University. Barker held a number of appointments including dean of the School of Engineering, chairman of the Advisory Committee on Educational Policy, and chairman of the Committee on Men's Residence Halls. Most of the records consist of correspondence, budgets, and reports relating to the School of Engineering, residence halls, and the University's buildings and grounds.
Topics related to the School of Engineering include: degrees, the curriculum, programs, faculty appointments, staffing needs, teaching loads, scholarships, fellowships, appropriations, expenditures, the management of special funds, research funding, gifts to the school, budgeting, facilities, and equipment. Includes a report on instruction in physics (1934) and a report regarding the faculty and staffing needs of the school (1935). Also, correspondence documenting the school's activities during World War II. During the war, Barker served as special assistant to the under secretary of the Navy. Correspondence dating from 1941 to 1945 includes letters to and from Barker and his staff regarding the administration of the school in his absence. Topics include: the administration of government contracts; the University's V-12 naval training program; and administrative issues involving the education of veterans.
Topics related to University residence halls include: the management of dormitory staff, student services, the residence halls budget, the daily operation of residence halls, and policies regarding residence halls. Includes a proposal from the Furnald Hall House Committee, dating from 1934 which requests permission to have female visitors in the dormitory. Barker also advised the University administration on facilities-related issues. Includes correspondence regarding the design and construction of campus buildings; correspondence and reports (ca. 1934-1935) regarding daily operations, the physical plant, equipment, and safety; and correspondence and reports (ca. 1937) regarding labor relations with employees in the Buildings and Grounds Department.
Box 670 Folder 23
Correspondence between Edward M. Barnet, acting assistant dean of the business school at Columbia University, and University administrators. correspondence relates to the selection of a new dean for the business school, routine administrative issues involving the school, and events at the school.
Box 409 Folder 20
Correspondence between Adriaan Jacob Barnouw, Queen Wilhelmina Professor of History at Columbia University, and University administrators. correspondence relates to Barnouw's personnel issues and retirement. Includes correspondence regarding his gift to the University of Dutch books.
Box 433 Folder 14
Correspondence between Associate Professor Erik Barnouw, editor of the Communications Materials Center at Columbia University, and the president of the University and the director of public relations. Records relate to a variety of topics. Includes a proposal for a television series entitled You and the Future ; correspondence regarding broadcasting courses which were offered by the School of General Studies, Columbia's continuing education division; and correspondence dating from 1953 regarding filming aboard the University's research vessel, the Vema. Includes many routine cover letters.
Box 407 Folder 20 to 21
Correspondence between Salo Wittmayer Baron of Columbia University and the secretary, provost, and vice president of the University. Baron held and appointment as professor of Jewish history, literature and institutions and was later appointed director of the Center for Israeli Studies. Correspondence relates to a variety of topics including: fellowships and scholarships for the Center for Israeli Studies (ca. 1951), the establishment of an archive of Russian and Eastern European history and literature (the Bakhmeteff Archive), the Committee on Retirement Insurance (ca. 1962), the Publications Committee of the Faculty of Political Science (ca. 1962), and funding for Baron's research and clerical assistants. Also, correspondence, minutes, and agenda (ca. 1962-1963) relating to the Advisory Committee of the Faculties and a proposed trimester system. There are gaps in the records from: 1941 to 1947, 1948 to 1950, 1954 to 1959, 1960 to 1962 and 1963 to 1964.
Box 672 Folder 50
Correspondence between Donald Barr and Columbia University administrators. Barr served as assistant to the dean of the School of Engineering at Columbia University and executive director of the Joint Program for Technical Education. Most of the correspondence relates to the Science Honors program for high school students. Also, Barr's proposal for the University to establish a boarding house for unmarried graduate students.
Box 458 Folder 1 to 20
Box 459 Folder 1 to 5
Correspondence between Edward W. Barrett, dean of the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Most of the records consist of correspondence, proposals, course descriptions and outlines, budgets, reports, copies of newspaper clippings, and invitations relating to the journalism school. Also: correspondence, programs, and speeches relating to the Pulitzer prizes and other journalism awards; correspondence and reports regarding public relations for the University and the United Nations; and correspondence regarding Barrett's personnel issues and professional activities.
Topics relating to the Graduate School of Journalism include: curriculum planning, the development of courses, gifts to the school, fees, the administration of programs in the school, prizes and awards, development, faculty appointments, faculty affairs, appropriations, facilities, scholarships, fellowships, and public relations. Includes the 50th anniversary annual report of the dean (1963); correspondence regarding the school's Half Century Fund (ca. 1963); correspondence regarding the Advanced International Reporting Program; correspondence regarding the Pulitzer scholarships; and a small amount of correspondence documenting the school's science writing certification program during the 1960s. Topics relating to journalism awards include the: Pulitzer Prizes, Pulitzer Prize Fund, Maria Moors Cabot Prize, and Catherwood awards. Includes Barrett's speeches at Cabot Prize award ceremonies. Records regarding public relations consist of correspondence and reports (ca. 1958) regarding the development of a public relations program for Columbia. Also includes reports and other records (ca. 1954) regarding public relations strategy for the United Nations and the evaluation of public opinion regarding the United Nations. Records relating to Barrett's personnel issues, professional activities, and appearances include correspondence, invitations, and acknowledgement letters. Includes a number of speeches by Barrett. Also includes: correspondence regarding his resignation in 1968 his remarks regarding student protests, which were made to journalism school alumni in 1968 and a letter regarding the University's budget crisis, which was sent by Barrett and other prominent Columbians to University president Grayson Kirk in 1960.
Box 659 Folder 9
Correspondence between John Barrett and the president of Columbia University. Barrett served as United States minister to Panama. Most of the records date from his term as director of the International Bureau of American Republics. Correspondence relates to the establishment and administration of the John Barrett Prizes for papers on Latin American republics. Correspondence also relates to a proposed school of archeology in Mexico.
Box 667 Folder 39
Correspondence between Professor David P. Barrows and the president of Columbia University. Barrows was a professor of political science at the University of California, Berkeley. He served as Roosevelt Professor during the 1933-1934 academic year. The Roosevelt Professorship sent an American professor to Germany to lecture and act as an educational and cultural liaison. Correspondence includes discussion of life at German universities under the Nazi government and the future of the Roosevelt Professorship. In particular, the correspondence relates to life in East Prussia and the treatment of Jews. Includes a handbill announcing one of Barrow's lectures.
Box 425 Folder 13
Correspondence between Lester G. Barth, chairman of the Department of Zoology at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to faculty appointments, equipment, and personnel in the department. Includes correspondence regarding plans for a new biology course.
Box 668 Folder 7
Correspondence between Bela Bartok, the Hungarian pianist and composer, and the provost of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Bartok's honorary degree from Columbia. Also, correspondence regarding bartok's appointment as a visiting associate in music for 1941 and 1942. Includes a letter in which Bartok discusses his work with the Parry collection of Yugoslav folk music recordings.
Box 672 Folder 70
Correspondence between Bernard M. Baruch and the president of Columbia University. Baruch was a benefactor of the University. Correspondence relates to his gifts to Columbia, including the funding of the Simon baruch Chair of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation.
Box 401 Folder 1 to 16
Correspondence between Jacques Barzun and high level administrators at Columbia University. Barzun held numerous appointments at the University including professor of history, Seth Low Professor of History, dean of the Graduate Faculties, dean of the faculties and provost, university professor, and special assistant to the president on the arts. The records document a wide range of topics. In particular, they relate to the academic affairs of the Graduate Faculties and the University during the 1950s and 1960s. Also, correspondence regarding Barzun's personnel issues and professional activities. Includes his address before a symposium on the role of the University that was held in February, 1968.
Many of the records dating from 1946 to 1954 consist of correspondence, reports, and proposals relating to the committee on the University's bicentennial celebration. Barzun was chairman of the committee. Records from this period also relate to payroll and personnel in the Department of History, the management of Barzun's clerical assistance account, and payments to his assistants. Includes correspondence (ca. 1952) regarding the Woodrow Wilson Fellowship Program. Also includes correspondence regarding relations between the University and the surrounding community and relations between Columbia's administration and its students. Records dating from 1955 to 1958 consist of correspondence, budgets, reports, and lists relating to the Graduate Faculties. As dean of the Graduate Faculties, Barzun oversaw the Faculty of Political Science, the Faculty of Philosophy, and the Faculty of Pure Science. Topics include: fellowships, scholarships, faculty affairs, development policies and strategies, the administration of Ph.D. examinations, departmental affairs, policies regarding graduate students, research funding, the management of special funds, faculty salaries, publications, financial administration, and the management of the dean's office. Includes Barzun's announcements to faculty and stafAlso includes correspondence and a pamphlet regarding a proposed University arts Center . Beginning ca. 1958 Barzun served as dean of the faculties and provost. Records dating from the late 1950s through the 1960s relate to the academic affairs of the University. In particular, the records relate to faculty appointments and faculty affairs. Topics include: faculty leave policies, sabbatical leaves, faculty salaries, the ranking and classification of faculty positions, faculty personnel policies, and relations between the administration and the faculty. Other topics include: issues involving graduate students, the organization of departments and schools, academic policies and procedures, tuition and fees policies, instructional budgeting, the preparation of guides and handbooks, and the business of the University Council. Includes Barzun's announcements to deans and department heads, an organizational chart for Columbia's schools (1965), and drafts of a University administrative guide (ca. 1963-1965) .
Box 448 Folder 20 to 21
Correspondence between Charles W. Bastable, assistant professor of accounting at Columbia University, and University administrators. records relate to the automation of the University accounting and budgetary system (ca. 1962). Includes procedures, policies, and suggested budget formats which were presented to the administration in preparation for the automation of the University's budget system. Includes a proposal, dating from 1952 which discusses plans to establish a school of accounting at the University.
Box 400 Folder 19
Correspondence between Theodore Baumeister, executive officer of the Department of Mechanical Engineering at Columbia University, and the acting president and secretary of the University. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the department and correspondence regarding Baumeister's personnel issues. Department-related topics include: faculty appointments, budgeting, salaries, the use of government surplus equipment in the department, and appropriations.
Box 54 Folder 32
Correspondence and other records regarding a scholarship for Nancy Ann Baumgarten, who received financial aid to attend the University of Miami as part of a scholarship program for faculty children.
Box 401 Folder 17 to 18
Correspondence between Carl Frank Bayerschmidt, acting executive officer of the Department of Germanic Languages at Columbia University, and the University's president, secretary, and dean of the Graduate Faculties. .
The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the department. Topics include: staffing needs, faculty appointments, enrollment, budgeting, professorships, graduate and undergraduate instruction, faculty affairs, and visiting professors. Includes correspondence and budgets regarding Deutches Haus, Columbia's German culture and educational center. Also includes correspondence regarding the Queen Wilhelmina Professorship. Correspondence also relates to Bayerschmidt's personnel issues. Includes letters in German which Bayerschmidt translated for the University administration.
Box 672 Folder 38
Correspondence between William A. Bayless of the Columbia University Press and the secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the cost of producing University bulletins.
Box 389 Folder 1 to 2
Correspondence between Stephen Bayne, chaplain of Columbia University, and the acting president, provost, and secretary of the University. Most of the records consist of correspondence and reports relating to St. Paul's Chapel and Earl Hall, Columbia's nondenominational religious and social center. Includes correspondence between the University and the YMCA of Greater New York regarding the government and mission of Earl Hall. Also, correspondence regarding special religious services, the oversight of religious activities at the University, and the administration of the Bampton Lectures in America. Also includes correspondence relating to the selection of Bayne's successor.
Box 433 Folder 15 to 17
Correspondence between Samuel H. Beach, director of placement at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence, budgets, and reports relating to job placement and the Placement Bureau. Topics include: armed forces recruiting, tuition exemption, draft deferment, and personnel administration. Includes correspondence regarding the National Service Information Center that was located at the University's Alumni House. Includes memoranda dating from July, 1957 which evaluate the University's placement services and organization. Also, correspondence regarding Beach's appointment and personnel issues.
Box 679 Folder 2
Correspondence between George Wells Beadle, president of the University of Chicago, and Grayson Kirk, president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Beadle's presentation of the inaugural lecture for a lecture series entitled The Relationship between the Biological and Physical Sciences. Correspondence also relates to a dinner that was given in Beadle's honor. Includes a guest list.
Box 317 Folder 9
Correspondence between Charles Austin Beard, professor of history in the Department of History at Columbia University, and University administrators regarding a wide range of subjects. Topics include: the curriculum, teaching, student and faculty relations to the administration, and academic freedom. Also, correspondence between Beard and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia, discussing the teaching of politics and government, the University's political science curriculum, and suggestions for a public service curriculum. correspondence also relates to faculty appointments in the Department of History as well as Beard's appointment, personnel issues, and teaching responsibilities. Includes a memorandum dated October 8, 1917 in which beard announces his resignation and discusses his views on the relationship between the faculty and the trustees, World War I, academic freedom, and the status of a Columbia professor. Also includes a petition in support of Beard.
Box 433 Folder 18
Correspondence between Benjamin Haggott Beckhart, professor of banking in the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Records relate to a variety of topics. Includes Beckhart's addresses to the Sixty-Fourth Annual Convention of the Iowa Bankers Association in October, 1950 and the Conference of Business Economists in March, 1951. Also includes correspondence regarding a commercial bank management program that was sponsored by the Graduate School of Business in November, 1959. Also, correspondence regarding Beckhart's personnel issues and professional activities. Includes his 1960 memorandum on relations between the faculty and administration of the business school and the administration of Dean Courtney Brown.
Box 672 Folder 71
Correspondence between Charles O. Beckman, chairman of the Department of Chemistry at Columbia University, and University administrators. correspondence relates to the Department. Topics include: faculty appointments, budgeting, appropriations, grants, prizes, and the establishment of the Society of Columbia Chemists.
Box 672 Folder 51
Correspondence between Charles O. Beckmann, chairman of the Department of Chemistry at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the department. Topics include: faculty appointments, budgeting, and the management of special funds.
Box 659 Folder 10
William H. H. Beebe served as both a private secretary to Columbia University president Seth Low and as Columbia's first secretary of the University. During Beebe's term as Low's secretary, Low established the secretary's post to assist the president in the administration of the University. Following Low's resignation in 1901. Beebe continued to act as his personal secretary. The records consist of: correspondence between Beebe and Low while Low was vacationing in Maine; correspondence between Beebe and his staff while Beebe was vacationing in Maine; and correspondence (ca. 1902-1906) between Beebe, University secretary Frederick Paul Keppel, and University president Nicholas Murray Butler. correspondence relates to construction on Columbia's new Morningside Heights campus, daily appointments, budgeting, Low's mayoral campaign (ca. 1900), and the compilation of information and statistics requested by President Low.
Box 317 Folder 10
Correspondence between Gerard Beekman, a trustee of Columbia University and clerk of the board of trustees, and the president and secretary of the University. Topics include: trustee and University business, social engagements, gifts to the University, and the management of special funds. Includes correspondence regarding the Queen Wilhelmina Lectureship. Contains many routine cover letters.
Box 504 Folder 14
Correspondence between Jack Beeson, acting secretary of the Alice M. Ditson Fund in the Department of Music at Columbia University, and University administrators. Records relate to: the organization and administration of the fund, allocations to composers and performers from the fund, fund finances, and information on award recipients. Includes minutes of the Advisory Committee on the Alice M. Ditson Fund dating from 1962, 1963, 1964 and 1967. In addition to other topics, the minutes relate to fund finances and projects that were sponsored by the fund.
Box 381 Folder 1 to 5
Correspondence between Charles H. Behre, professor of economic geology and executive officer of the Department of Geology at Columbia University, and University faculty and administrators. Records dating from 1940 to 1950 relate to routine administrative issues and to Behre's personnel matters and professional activities. Includes Behre's proposal for a grant to study mineral deposits in Mexico. Records dating from 1950 to 1963 relate to the Department of Geology, the University's Lamont Geological Observatory, and the University's Ore Genesis laboratory. Topics related to the department of Geology include: faculty affairs, the administration of research projects, facilities, personnel, expenditures, equipment, appropriations, graduate students, teaching loads, fellowships, and scholarships. Includes correspondence regarding University relations with the Lamont family, the donors of the estate in palisades New York which houses the Lamont Observatory. Also includes correspondence regarding the management of the Kemp Memorial Fund, the James Furman Kemp Fellowship Fund, the Nathaniel Lord Britton Scholarship fund, and other special funds. Records relating to the Ore genesis Laboratory include a proposal to establish the laboratory (1950) and a report on laboratory activities for the academic year 1954-1955. Also, correpsondence regarding Behre's appointment and personnel issues.
Box 667 Folder 40
Correspondence between Bernard Iddings Bell and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Bell was an administrator at St. Stephen's College. Correspondence relates to unresolved financial and faculty issues following the consolidation of St. Stephen's College with Columbia. The two institutions were affiliated from 1928 to 1944. During that time St. Stephen's, which offered a progressive education to its students, served as an additional undergraduate college of the University. In 1941 St. Stephen's was renamed Bard College in honor of its founder, John Bard. Correspondence also relates to Bell's search for employment and arrangements for Columbia to present an honorary degree to Will Spens, vice-chancellor of Cambridge University.
Box 669 Folder 45
Correspondence between Lillian Bell and the president of Columbia University. Bell was a former cosmetics industry sales representative who wrote to the president of the University regarding her medical and business troubles.
Box 670 Folder 24
Correspondence between Professor Samuel Flagg Bemis of Yale University and administrators at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the Bancroft Prize and to the Latin-American Assembly Conference that was held during Columbia's bicentennial celebration in 1954.
Box 379 Folder 6
Correspondence between Ruth Benedict and the secretary of Columbia University. Benedict was an associate professor of anthropology and the executive officer of the Department of Anthropology. Most of the records consist of correspondence and financial records relating to the business of the department. Topics include: funding for research projects and field training, gifts to the department, and the management of special funds. Includes correspondence regarding funding from the Rockefeller Foundation and correspondence relating to the Boas Gift Fund. Also includes a report to the Rockefeller Foundation which briefly outlines the work of graduate students in the department.
Box 317 Folder 11
Correspondence between Marcus Benjamin, president of the Columbia University Alumni Club of the District of Columbia, and Columbia University administrators. Topics include: preparations for social events, University public relations, faculty appointments, and the business of the club. Also, many cover letters and invitations.
Box 668 Folder 3
Correspondence between William Evarts Benjamin and Columbia University president Nicholas Murray Butler. Correspondence relates to Evarts' interest in becoming a University donor for tax purposes and Butler's efforts to encourage Evarts to establish an endowment.
Box 500 Folder 14
Correspondence between Professor Eric Bentley and the high level administrators of Columbia University. Bentley was Brander Matthews Professor of Dramatic Literature and chairman of the Advisory Committee on the Program in the Arts. Correspondence relates to committee business as well as administrative issues and procedures involving the program. Topics include: budgeting, faculty appointments, and the preparation of a directory. Includes records regarding the establishment of a program in film and broadcasting leading to the MFA degree.
Box 433 Folder 19
Correspondence between Aaron W. Berg, chairman of the standing committee of the Columbia College alumni association, and high level administrators at Columbia University. The records consist of correspondence, reports, and minutes relating to the Columbia College Fund campaign, events, alumni relations, and development.
Box 108 Folder 20
Correspondence between Ivar E. Berg, associate dean of the Graduate Faculties at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the Graduate Faculties. Topics include: assembling materials for the president's annual report, routine administrative issues, faculty appointments, special funds, and financial troubles in the School of the Arts. Also: correspondence and a report regarding the Council on Environmental Studies; correspondence and a press release regarding Berg's book, Education and Jobs: The Great Training Robbery; and correspondence and a press release regarding Berg's personnel issues and professional activities. Includes correspondence regarding Berg's resignation to return to teaching.
Box 664 Folder 33
Correspondence between Henri Bergson of the University of Paris and the president of Columbia University during Bergson's term as a visiting professor at Columbia. Most of the correspondence relates to Bergson's appointment, travel arrangements, and accommodations. Includes correspondence regarding the topics for his lectures.
Box 343 Folder 2 to 5
Correspondence between Charles Peter Berkey, Newberry Professor of geology and executive officer of the Department of Geology and Minerology at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Most of the correspondence relates to the department of Geology, which became the Department of Geology and Minerology. Topics include: facilities, equipment, laboratories, the management of departmental collections, gifts to the department, budgeting, fellowships, scholarships, prizes, and awards. Includes correspondence regarding the department's relations with the American Museum of Natural History. Also includes correspondence relating to the creation of the James Furman Kemp Memorial Fund which was established to promote research and publication in geology. Also, correspondence regarding Berkey's personnel issues, professional activities, and retirement.
Box 667 Folder 22
Correspondence between Adolf Augustus Berle, professor of law at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Correspondence relates to Berle's appointment. Includes his report on new courses at the law school.
Box 672 Folder 6
Correspondence between Edward J. Bermingham, a Columbia University trustee, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to Bermingham's gifts to the University.
Box 449 Folder 22
Correspondence between Edward L. Bernays, chairman of the Committee of the Educational Institute of the Air, and Columbia University president grayson Kirk. Bernays seems to have been soliciting President Kirk's involvement in a number of projects. Includes: correspondence and a press release regarding a survey of public attitudes towards televsion commercials, correspondence regarding conferences on educational television, a proposal for an educational radio program, and a report of a conference on Americans abroad.
Box 72 Folder 25
Correspondence regarding the nomination of Hans Albrecht Bethe to receive an honorary degree from Columbia University. Bethe, a nuclear physicist at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel, declined the degree on the grounds that he did not accept honorary degrees from American universities.
Box 668 Folder 42
Correspondence between Lowell P. Beveridge, director of chapel music at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. correspondence relates to the music program in St. Paul's Chapel. Topics include the chapel organ and choir. Also, correspondence regarding Beveridge's personnel issues.
Box 664 Folder 34
Records regarding Albin Beyer, lecturer in civil engineering at Columbia University. The records relate to an investigation by the government to determine Beyer's loyalty during World War I. .
Box 36 Folder 22
Correspondence regarding Henry G. Bieler's false claims to be associated with Columbia University in advertisements for a book entitled Food is Your Best Medicine.
Box 375 Folder 18 to 19
Correspondence between Dino Bigongiari and the faculty and high level administrators of Columbia University. Much of the correspondence is with Frank Fackenthal, who served as secretary, provost, and acting president of the University. Bigongiari was DuPonte Professor of Italian; executive officer of the Italian section of the Department of Romance Languages; and a member of the Administrative Board of Casa Italiana, Columbia's Italian culture and educational center. Most of the correspondence and reports relate to the Italian Department. Includes correspondence (ca. 1934) regarding the controversy involving the relationship between Casa Italiana and the Italian government. Topics related to the Italian Department include: scholarships, fellowships, faculty appointments, visiting professors, graduate instruction, the curriculum, staffing needs, faculty recruiting, and faculty affairs. Includes several reports and letters (ca. 1937-1938) which evaluate: the curriculum, requirements, and teaching methods of the department; the state of education in the classics; and departmental staffing needs. Also includes a report regarding the teaching method and requirements of the Department of Modern Languages and Literatures and the state of language instruction at the University. Also, correspondence regarding Bigongiari's personal affairs, including travel clearances for his trip to Italy following World War II. Includes correspondence regarding his retirement and the selection of his successor.
Box 18 Folder 29
Correspondence between Rudolph Binion, an associate professor in the Department of History at Columbia University, and the provost and provost's office stafCorrespondence relates to Binion's personnel issues.
Box 659 Folder 11
William Warner Bishop, the superintendent of the Reading Room in the Library of Congress, corresponded with Columbia University president Nicholas Murray Butler regarding the position of University librarian. The records consist of a letter and reprints of Bishop's articles on librarianship and Roman church mosaics and symbolism.
Box 669 Folder 32
Correspondence between Harry Bitner, associate librarian in the Law Library at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. correspondence relates to Bitner's professional activities. Includes supplements to the Index of Legal Periodicals (1952) .
Box 393 Folder 13 to 14
Correspondence between Douglas M. Black, a trustee of Columbia University, and the president and acting president of the University. Black chaired the trustee committees on buildings and grounds and honors and served on the trustee committees on development and alumni affairs. He also chaired the Trustee Committee on the Reorganization. The committee was involved in a major administrative reorganization of the University in 1949. Records relate to a wide range of subjects. Correspondence dating from 1945 to 1949 relates to construction projects, the management of Columbia's buildings and grounds, public relations, the University's development program, benefits for non-academic employees, relations between the University and Columbia College, and trustee affairs. Much of the correspondence dating from this period relates to the reorganization of the University's administrative structure in 1949. Includes an organizational chart of the University. Records dating from 1954 to 1955 Document the establishment of the Earle Fund and record gifts to the fund. Correspondence dating from 1957 to 1958 relates to honorary degrees, emeritus designations for university faculty members, and the funding of the Citizenship Center (Ferris Booth Hall) .
Box 672 Folder 52
Correspondence between William Black and high level administrators at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Black's gift to the University for the construction of the William Black Medical Research Center.
Box 317 Folder 12
Correspondence between Joseph A. Blake, professor of surgery and chair of the Department of Surgery at Columbia University, and University administrators. Topics include: equipment, facilities, personnel, faculty appointments, and fund raising in the Department of Surgery. Also, correspondence relating to special funds for medical research. Topics include the establishment of the Mackay Fund, which was used for research on surgical procedures, and the Crocker Fund for Cancer research. Also includes correspondence regarding Blake's appointment and personnel issues.
Box 665 Folder 1
Correspondence between Arthur H. Blanchard, professor of highway engineering in the Department of Civil Engineering at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Includes correspondence with the dean of the Faculty of Applied Science and Professor William Burr. Correspondence relates to: the establishment of graduate courses in highway engineering, Blanchard's appointment at Columbia, administrative issues involving the highway engineering courses, fundraising for the courses, and the elimination of the highway engineering graduate program due to lack of funds. Includes a program announcement. Blanchard also served as librarian of the University's Davis Library of Highway Engineering. Correspondence relates to the establishment and administration of the library and the donation of books for the library. Also, an offprint of a publication on the relationship between universities and municipal engineering offices. Includes announcements advertising the publication.
Box 409 Folder 10 to 11
Correspondence between Ralph H. Blanchard, chairman of Columbia University's Committee on Retirement Insurance, and high level University administrators. Correspondence dating from the 1940s relates to the establishment of a retirement plan for the University's non-academic employees, the administration of the University pension plan, and policies regarding retirement. Includes reports and pamphlets regarding retirment plans and policies. Also includes a table showing the age, gender, and years of service of the University's non-academic employees. Also, an address on disability insurance that was delivered by Blanchard in March, 1959 and correspondence regarding Blanchard's retirement.
Box 317 Folder 13
Correspondence between Edwin Howland Blashfield, chairman of the Advisory Committee on Art, and the president of Columbia University. correspondence relates to the University's buildings and art properties. The Advisory Committee on Art was established to oversee the selection of art works for Columbia and the administration of the University's art properties. Blashfield also advised University administrators regarding projects such as the design of Low Memorial Library, Kent Hall, and the Pulitzer Prize Medal.
Box 670 Folder 25
Correspondence between Hans H. Bleich and Columbia University administrators. Bleich was director of the Institute of Air Flight Structures that was held at the University. Correspondence relates to the institute.
Box 665 Folder 2
Correspondence between William T. Blodgett and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Blodgett was a benefactor of the University. Correspondence relates to the bequest and reconveyance of the Blodgett farm to Columbia, the establishment of courses in agriculture and forestry, and the purchase and sale of the Van Wyck farm.
Box 669 Folder 8
Correspondence between Louis E. Bloetjes, counsellor to veterans at Columbia University, and the president and provost of the University. correspondence relates to the Office of the Counsellor to Veterans and federal regulations governing veterans' education. In particular, the records discuss the GI Bill's provisions for doctoral candidates.
Box 415 Folder 1 to 19
Correspondence between William Bloor, treasurer of Columbia University, and the real estate manager, assistant treasurer, and other University administrators. The records consist of correspondence and financial records.
Topics include: the rental of space for use by the University, real estate-related income and expenditures, University properties, the Kings Crown Hotel, gifts to the University, endowment funds, the management of special funds, the management of income from investments, financial analysis, and the financial administration of sponsored projects. The records often document gift receipts and track non-routine appropriations. Includes some minutes of the trustee finance committee
Box 416 Folder 1 to 20
Box 417 Folder 1 to 18
Box 418 Folder 1 to 18
Box 419 Folder 1 to 12
Box 317 Folder 14
Correspondence between George Blumenthal and the president and secretary of Columbia University regarding Blumenthal's gifts to Columbia and the Blumenthal Lectures.
Topics include: the organization and administration of the Blumenthal Lectures, the establishment of a fund to endow a chair in politics, and the selection of an appointee to hold the chair. Also, correspondence discussing Blumenthal's thoughts on the teaching of politics
Box 659 Folder 12 to 13
Correspondence between Edward T. Boag, registrar of the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University, and the offices of Columbia's president and secretary. Correspondence relates to: the registration of Columbia College seniors who were matriculating as first year medical students, issues involving student fees, arrangements for President Butler to sign the college's diplomas, and budgeting for the college.
Also includes correspondence regarding Butler's plans to distribute college announcements to seniors at good colleges, physicians in the eastern and middle states, and the secretaries of other medical schools. Includes a newspaper clipping regarding Boag's death in a drowning accident in 1909
Box 673 Folder 13
Correspondence between Harry Boardman, assistant provost of Columbia University, and University administrators. Most of the correspondence relates to his management of the University's furniture gift program.
Box 318 Folder 1 to 7
Correspondence between Franz Boas, Professor of Anthropology at Columbia University, and University administrators and faculty regarding the Department of Anthropology, projects, and expeditions.
Topics relating to the department include: gifts to the department, faculty appointments, budgeting, finances, and staffing needs. Correspondence also relates to anthropological research and expeditions, funding and appropriations for a variety of projects, the development of work in anthropology and enthnography at Columbia and elsewhere, and the state of anthropological education in the early twentieth century.
Specific topics include: instruction in East Asian cultures at Columbia, an expedition to China in the early 1900s and the establishment and work of the International School of Archeology and Ethnography in Mexico (ca. 1910 to 1911). Includes research proposals. Correspondence from the 1940s deals mainly with research appropriations.
Also, brief exchanges of correspondence between Boas and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University, regarding politics and academic freedom during World War I and World War II, respectively. Boas was also secretary of the Germanistic Society of America. Some correspondence discusses the society's gifts to Columbia. Also includes correspondence relating to Boas' appointment and personnel issues
Box 317 Folder 15 to 18
Correspondence between Marston Taylor Bogert, professor of organic chemistry and chair of the Department of Chemistry at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University.
Topics include: the finances, facilities, library acquisitions and holdings, personnel, staffing needs, faculty appointments, and budgeting of the department.
Also, correspondence discussing the state of chemistry as a profession and education in chemistry. Includes correspondence regarding Bogert's personnel issues, professional activities, and committee memberships
Box 381 Folder 21
Correspondence between Morton T. Bogue and the president, provost, and secretary of Columbia University. Bogue was an alumni trustee, a member of the trustee's committee on education and the University Committee on Athletics, and comptroller of athletics. Correspondence relates to items sent to the committee on education for approval as well as routine committee business and trustee affairs. Includes correspondence and budgets regarding financial administration and budgeting for athletics programs
Box 354 Folder 16
Correspondence between James Cummings Bonbright, secretary of the Council for Research in the Social Sciences at Columbia University, and the Secretary of the University. Correspondence dating from 1929 to 1930 relates to research appropriations which were made by the council. Correspondence dating from 1934 to 1935 relates to council appropriations for Bonbright's Judicial Valuation research project
Box 495 Folder 4 to 5
Correspondence between Eugene T. Booth, executive officer of the Department of Physics at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the department.
Topics include: facilities, personnel, the administration of research projects, staffing needs, equipment, and research funding. Includes a report regarding research and discoveries in the department (1957). Also includes a proposal to expand the particle physics research program at the University's Nevis Laboratories, the site of the Nevis Cyclotron. The proposal discusses the expansion of research facilities, the possible research uses of the site, and the expansion project's proposed budget
Box 671 Folder 55
Correspondence between Willis H. Booth and Grayson Kirk, President of Columbia University. Booth provided funding for the completion of the University's Citizenship Center. The building, which was to be used as a student center, was renamed Ferris Booth Hall as a memorial to Booth's son. Records include newspaper clippings and a list of donors. Also, correspondence between President Kirk and William Taylor regarding the Citizenship Center Finance Committee
Box 673 Folder 15
Correspondence between Stuart Borchard and Columbia University administrators. Correspondence and brochures relating to properties that the University hoped to purchase from Borchard
Box 108 Folder 21
Correspondence regarding the honorary degree from Columbia University that was awarded to Jorge Luis Borges, an Argentinian writer. Correspondence relates to preparations for the honorary degree ceremony. Records include: the invitation and program for the ceremony, the text of the citation that was read during the ceremony, a press release regarding Borges, and a guest list
Box 665 Folder 3
Correspondence between Gutzon Borglum and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Borglum was curator of an exhibition of the works of Constantin Meunier that was held at Columbia's Avery Library.
Topics include arrangements for the exhibition and exhibition-related expenditures
Box 342 Folder 13 to 14
Correspondence between William A. Boring, dean of the School of Architecture at Columbia University, and the University's president, secretary, and clerk of the board of trustees.
Topics include: faculty appointments, fellowships, equipment, professorships, prizes, personnel, and facilities. Includes correspondence and a proposal (ca. 1927-1929) relating to plans for the establishment of a chair and a school of city planning. Also includes a memorandum, dated 1917 proposing the establishment of a camouflage training camp for the Army and letters regarding the design and planning of Columbia's Morningside Heights campus
Box 433 Folder 6 to 12
Correspondence between John A. Borneman and other Columbia University administrators and stafBorneman held numerous appointments including assistant to the secretary of the university, assistant to the chairman of the Committee on Public Ceremonies, acting secretary of the university, and director of space allocation. The records consist of correspondence, schedules, reports, and lists. Most of the records relate to the routine business of the Office of the Secretary or to preparations for University ceremonies. Beginning ca. 1961 correspondence also relates to procedures for University space planning and allocation. Includes minutes of the Space Committee dating from 1962. Includes a Placement Office bulletin dating from 1958
Box 419 Folder 16 to 17
Correspondence between Hugh Borton, Professor of Japanese and Director of the East Asian Institute at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence, budgets, and reports relating to the institute.
Topics include: the establishment of the institute, faculty appointments, funding for the institute and its faculty, faculty exchanges, faculty affairs, lectures, programs, research, and publications. Includes correspondence regarding an academic freedom case involving Professor Shigeto Tsuru and correspondence with Sir George Sansom (ca. 1953) regarding a history of Japan that was sponsored by the institute. Also, correspondence regarding Borton's personnel issues and resignation. Includes information regarding Borton's project to write a history of Japan
Box 378 Folder 2 to 9
Correspondence between Frank Hamilton Bowles and the provost, secretary, and other high level administrators of Columbia University. Also includes correspondence with University faculty members. Bowles held a number of appointments including director of University admissions and secretary of the Pulitzer Scholarship Committee. He also served on the Administrative Board of University Extension, Columbia's continuing education division. Most of the records consist of correspondence, reports, and pamphlets regarding admissions. Records also relate to the Pulitzer Free Scholarships, University Extension, and international students.
Topics related to admissions include: admissions policies and procedures, admissions requirements, scholarships, recruiting candidates for admission, public relations, the management of special funds, placement services, and veterans affairs. Includes annual and special reports documenting admissions and enrollment trends and statistics, application statistics, and the geographic distribution of admissions candidates. Includes reports documenting the schools of business (1938), architecture (1939), optometry (1939), and journalism (1949).
Also, correspondence and a report regarding the Pulitzer Free Scholarships, which were granted to needy New York City high school graduates. The report relates to a study of Pulitzer Scholars and consists of a narrative section and statistics on the earnings, occupations, and publications of scholarship recipients. The records also include a small amount of materials relating to the University Extension. Includes a proposal to establish an evening college (November, 1943). Correspondence dating from 1948 relates to Bowles' resignation to become the director of the College Entrance Examination Board and to issues involving international students
Box 659 Folder 14
Correspondence between John G. Bowman and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Bowman was an assistant and tutor in English and served as secretary of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. Most of the correspondence relates to the Carnegie Foundation (ca. 1907-1910). Includes correspondence regarding faculty retirement plans
Box 317 Folder 19
Correspondence between Professor Wilhelm A. Braun of the Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures at Columbia University, and high level University administrators.
Braun was secretary of the Board of Religious and Social Work which oversaw Columbia's religious activities and helped to administer student social life and extracurricular activities. He also served as secretary of the Germanistic Society of America and director of Deutches Haus, Columbia's German cultural and educational center. Most of the correspondence relates to the administration of Deutsches Haus during World War I and the re-examination of its purpose in response to anti-German sentiment
Box 668 Folder 15
Correspondence between John Bartlet Brebner, professor of history at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects. Records include: a draft memorandum regarding the University's educational program for navy personnel, correspondence regarding relations between Columbia and Bard College, and correspondence regarding recruiting and appointments
Box 665 Folder 4
Correspondence between George Evans Brewer, professor of surgery in the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Includes correspondence with Samuel Lambert, dean of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. correspondence relates to the college.
Topics include: faculty appointments, funding, salaries, and proposed mergers with area hospitals. Also, detailed letters regarding army hospitals in France during World War I. The letters describe casualties, hospital affairs, bomb damage, and forays to the front lines.
Box 409 Folder 12 to 16
Correspondence between Lawrence A. Brewer of the Purchasing Department at Columbia University and University administrators.
Topics include: the purchase and sale of equipment and supplies, the authorization of purchases, and Brewer's personnel issues. Includes many cover letters.
Box 317 Folder 20 to 23
Correspondence between W. T. Brewster, professor of english and acting dean of Barnard College, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the administration of Barnard College, a women's college affiliated with Columbia. Brewster served as acting dean and, later, as provost and acting dean of Barnard
Topics include: faculty appointments, personnel issues, scheduling, budgeting, tuition and fees, student affairs and discipline, gifts to the college, public relations, staffing needs, financial aid, the curriculum, and college government. Also, correspondence discussing Barnard's mission, its relationship to New York City and to other institutions, and graduate education for women. Also includes correspondence on the administration of Barnard, the role of the dean, and the revision of the college statutes.
Includes the report of the Committee on the Conduct of Ph.D. Examinations. The report discusses Columbia's Ph.D. examination policies, criteria for granting the Ph.D., and procedures for the administration of examinations. Also, correspondence regarding Brewster's appointment and personnel issues. Records dating from 1929 to 1930 discuss Brewster's retirement
Box 670 Folder 26
Correspondence between Justin W. Brierly and Columbia University administrators. Brierly was regional chairman of the Colorado chapter of the University's Bicentennial Committee. Correspondence relates to University President Grayson Kirk's trip to Colorado in 1954 in order to take part in an alumni celebration of Columbia's bicentennial. Includes membership lists for the committee
Box 665 Folder 5
Correspondence between Christian Brinton and the secretary of Columbia University. Brinton was a representative of The Players Club who worked with the University to administer an exhibition of the works of Constantin Meunier at Columbia's Avery Library. Correspondence relates to the exhibition catalog and exhibition-related expenditures
Box 318 Folder 8
Correspondence between Professor Nathaniel Lord Britton of the Department of Botany at Columbia University and high level University administrators regarding the department and the New York Botanical Garden.
Topics relating to the Department of Botany include: appointments, facilities, funding, equipment, research and educational collections, and staffing needs. Topics relating to the New York botanical Garden include: the establishment of the garden's site in the Bronx, relations between the garden and Columbia University, and the use of the garden's facilities for research.
Also, minutes of the Board of Managers of the New York Botanical Garden dating from 1913 to 1914 the By Laws of the New York Botanical Garden, and volume I, number I of the Bulletin of the New York Botanical Garden, dated 1896. Also, proposals for a program in forestry dating from 1896 to the early 1900s and correspondence relating to Britton's personnel issues
Box 673 Folder 19
Correspondence between Robert R. Brookhart, assistant to the secretary of Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to routine administrative tasks.
Topics include: requisitions, pay orders, cash grants to individuals, and the updating of personnel records
Box 671 Folder 19
Correspondence between Robert Romano Ravi Brooks and the secretary of Columbia University. Brooks was dean of Williams College in Williamstown, Massachusetts, and executive director of the Tuition exchange Program. Correspondence relates to tuition remission and tuition exchanges between Columbia, Barnard College, and other colleges and universities. Includes forms, announcements, and estimates. Also includes correspondence from Brooks' staff and memoranda from Brooks to tuition exchange liaison officers
Box 500 Folder 15
Correspondence between Arthur Brown, assistant dean of the School of General Studies at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Records relate to: the discipline, academic standing, and expulsion of students. Other topics include: prizes, scholarships, and honors. Records include correspondence with individual students and their families. Includes student records
Box 493 Folder 21
Complaint letters regarding Columbia University and the New York School of Social Work which were sent to the University administration by Charles Brown
Box 665 Folder 6
Correspondence between Clifford K. Brown and the secretary and chief clerk of Columbia University. Brown was general secretary of the University's Committee on Religious Work and a member of the Columbia University Christian Association and the Univeristy's chapter of the Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA). Correspondence relates to the mission of the Committee on Religious Work, which helped to oversee campus religious groups and programs, and the roles of campus Christian organizations. Includes routine correspondence regarding office space, the scheduling of events, and arrangements for meetings. Also includes minutes of the Committee on Religious Work dating from 1914
Box 453 Folder 1 to 20
Correspondence between Courtney C. Brown, dean of the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University, and University administrators and donors. The records consist of correspondence and press releases relating to the school.
Topics include: faculty appointments, research projects, funding for the school, and the business administration of the school. Includes a small amount of correspondence regarding the curriculum. Also includes an announcement from the Executive Program in Business Administration (1955) and a newsletter of the Executive Association of the Graduate School of Business dating from December, 1954. Brown was also deputy chairman of the National Manpower Council.
The council, which was established under the auspices of Columbia's Graduate School of Business, was composed of representatives from business, labor, medicine, public service and academia. The council studied manpower problems and worked towards a national manpower policy. Includes correspondence relating to the work of the council. Also, correspondence regarding Brown's appointment
Box 454 Folder 1 to 8
Box 659 Folder 15
Correspondence between Elmer Ellsworth Brown, United States commissioner of education, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Most of the correspondence relates to national and international conferences on education. Also, correspondence regarding efforts to bring Chinese students to the United States (1908) and copies of regulations for the 10th International Art Exhibition, which was held at the Royal Crystal Palace of Munich in 1909
Box 670 Folder 27
Correspondence between Sevellon L. Brown, publisher of the Providence Journal and the Evening Bulletin, and Columbia University administrators. Correspondence relates to: Columbia's 1954 Bicentennial Celebration; the American Press Institute, Columbia's program of professional education for journalists; and Brown's candidacy for a honorary degree from Columbia
Box 667 Folder 43
A proposal by Thomas E. Brown entitled Proposed New Small Bore Range for Columbia University. The proposal, which appears to be for a firing range, includes blueprints and a construction budget
Box 659 Folder 16 to 17
Correspondence between Silas B. Brownell and the president of Columbia University. Brownell was a trustee of Barnard College, the women's college affiliated with Columbia. Correspondence relates to the college.
Topics include: the Barnard/Columbia Agreement (January 19, 1900), revisions to the by-laws of the Barnard board of trustees, plans for the construction of Milbank Quadrangle, and the search for a new dean of barnard (ca. 1908-1910). Records relating to the Barnard/Columbia Agreement include correspondence discussing the need for a resolution to stipulate that the dean of the college always be a woman
Box 668 Folder 14
Correspondence between Bruce Smith, secretary of the Institute for Public Administration at Columbia University, and the provost of the University. Correspondence relates to the budget of the institute for the 1942-1943 fiscal year
Box 668 Folder 4
A report entitled A Report for the Radio Committee of Columbia University on Radio and Mass Communications (October, 1939). The report discusses the relationship between radio and education, examines a proposal for the creation of a school of communications, and makes several recommendations regarding how Columbia should respond to developments in communications and broadcasting
Box 386 Folder 10
Correspondence between Herbert Bascom Bruner, professor of education in Teachers College at Columbia University, and the provost and secretary of the University. Records consist of correspondence and proposals relating to the planning and establishment of a program in rehabilitation training at Teachers College. The program was created in response to legislation proposing government-sponsored rehabilitation services for disabled veterans.
Topics include the mission, requirements, and curriculum of the program
Box 409 Folder 17
Correspondence between Edmund de Schweinitz Brunner, chairman of the Board of Governors of the Bureau of Applied Social Research, and the vice president and other high level administrators of Columbia University. The records relate to research funding, the financial administration of the Bureau and of Bureau-sponsored projects, faculty appointments, personnel, and the administration of the Bureau.
Box 670 Folder 28
A brochure celebrating the 30th anniversary of the public relations firm H. A. Bruno and Associates. The brochure was forwarded to Columbia University administrators by Harry A. Bruno
Box 448 Folder 6 to 8
Correspondence between William Cullen Bryant, chairman of the American Language Center in the School of General Studies at Columbia University, and University administrators. Includes correspondence with officials from aid organizations for international students. The records consist of correspondence and reports relating to the center.
Topics include: enrollment, orientation for international students, student affairs, financial aid, and student exchanges. The reports discuss the mission, staff, and educational and extracurricular programs of the center. Includes lists of international students. Also, a detailed report regarding a survey on teaching English in Japan that was prepared by Bryant for the Japan Society in 1955
Box 659 Folder 18
Correspondence between James Bryce, and the president of Columbia University. Bryce was a member of Parliament. Correspondence relates to Bryce's lecture series, "The Relation of Law to History", which was given in 1904
Box 386 Folder 11 to 15
Correspondence between Walter H. Bucher and the vice president and provost, dean of the graduate faculties, and other high level administrators of Columbia University. Bucher held a number of appointments including professor of Geology, Newberry Professor of Geology, and executive officer of the Department of Geology.
The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the Department of Geology. Also, correspondence regarding: Columbia's Lamont Geological Observatory, appropriations for Bucher's research and field work expenditures, and the management of a special fund that was established to support his research.
Also includes correspondence relating to his personnel issues and professional activities. Topics related to the Department of Geology include: faculty appointments, faculty affairs, equipment, laboratories, staffing needs, budgeting, appropriations, the management of special funds, field work, and visiting professors. Includes correspondence regarding the Woodbridge Prize and a letter, dating from 1950 which relates to research involving the carbon 14 dating process
Box 669 Folder 46
Correspondence between Justice Buchler, Professor of Philosophy at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to expenditures for Buchler's research project
Box 409 Folder 18
Correspondence between Philip Bucky, acting Executive Officer of the Department of Mining and Metallurgy at Columbia University, and the provost of the University. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the department and the School of Mines.
Topics include: personnel, appropriations, faculty appointments, budgeting, and staffing needs. Includes correspondence regarding school finances and budgetary problems
Box 489 Folder 22
Correspondence between Paul C. Bulger and Columbia University administrators. Bulger was provost of Teachers College and secretary of the college faculty. The records relate to Teachers College, an affiliate of Columbia University.
Topics include: admissions, personnel, and faculty affairs. Includes minutes of the Executive Committee of the Faculty of Teachers College dating from November, 1955. Also includes cover letters and acknowledgement letters. Also, correspondence regarding Bulger's personnel issues
Box 659 Folder 19
Correspondence between Hermon C. Bumpus, director of the American Museum of Natural History, and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to cooperation between the University and the museum.
Topics include: University and museum faculty, plans to appoint the director of the museum as an ex officio member of the University's Faculty of Pure Science, and fund raising for a bust of Charles Darwin that was to be presented to Christ's College at Cambridge University
Box 667 Folder 23
Correspondence between Henry J. Burchell, director of Casa Italiana at Columbia University, and the secretary and assistant secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to Casa Italiana, Columbia's Italian culture and educational center.
Topics include maintenance and funding for the center
Box 492 Folder 20 to 21
Correspondence between William A. M. Burden, a trustee of Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Most of the correspondence relates to routine trustee business and personal favors. Includes correspondence regarding the gift of the Twombley-Burden Room in Columbia's Low Memorial Library and correspondence (ca. 1966) regarding the controversy over the University's involvement with the Institute of Defense Analysis. Also, biographical information regarding burden and correspondence regarding his appointment as a trustee. Includes routine cover letters, acknowledgement letters, acceptances and regrets, and invitations
Box 659 Folder 20
Correspondence between Francis M. Burdick, professor of law in the School of Law at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Most of the correspondence is routine. Includes Burdick's congratulations to University President Seth Low on the reform of the New York City Charter in 1897 and correspondence regarding the administration of the Law Library (1901). Also includes minutes and correspondence regarding efforts by residents of Riverside Drive and Morningside Heights to close down illegal businesses at the corner of 110 Street and Broadway. The records, which date from 1899 refer to: the suppression of the nuisance at the south-west corner of Broadway and 110th Street, illegal resorts in the neighborhood, and the Little Coney Island nuisance
Box 318 Folder 9 to 16
Correspondence between John William Burgess, Columbia University presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray Butler, and other University administrators regarding a wide range of topics. Burgess held appointments as Ruggles Professor of Constitutional Law, dean of the faculty of Political Science and dean of the Faculties of Political Science, Philosophy and Pure Science. At times, he also seems to have acted in President Butler's stead during the president's absences from campus.
Correspondence includes substantive discussion of issues surrounding Columbia's growth as a university, graduate education, and exchanges between German and American universities.
Topics include: relationships between the various schools of the University, new degree requirements, and the organization and growth of graduate instruction at the University. Includes correspondence on publicizing Columbia's new status as a university and explaining the university system to the public. Also, correspondence relating to the curriculum of Columbia College, then known as the School of the Arts, and the relationship between the College and the University. Correspondence dating from Burgess' time as dean also deals with the business of the Faculty of Political Science and the Faculties of Political Science, Philosophy and Pure Science.
Topics include: faculty appointments, student affairs, faculty affairs, and the curriculum. includes correspondence regarding Burgess' personnel issues and gifts to the University. Also, Burgess' reminiscences of his time at Columbia which were prepared for the 50th anniversary of the Faculty of Political Science. Includes correspondence between Burgess and President Butler regarding a variety of issues including: happenings at the University during Butler's absences, University scandals, and public relations.
Also, substantive correspondence regarding the Roosevelt Professorship The Roosevelt Professor lectured at German universities and acted as a cultural emissary to German politicians and educators. Correspondence discusses the establishment and administration of the exchange professorship as well as the role and activities of the Roosevelt Professor. Includes correspondence and reports regarding German politics, society, higher education, and court life as well as the Roosevelt Professor's relations with German educators and officials. Includes correspondence on similar issues relating to the Kaiser Wilhelm Professorship, which brought German educators to the United States. Also, correspondence discussing the effect of World War I on Columbia's relations with German universities and American public opinion of Germany
Box 668 Folder 1
Correspondence between attorneys for Robert Burke and Columbia University. Burke was a Columbia student who was dismissed for participating in a demonstration. Correspondence relates to the case and Burke's political activities
Box 18 Folder 30
Correspondence between Anson Burlingame, director of the Office of Projects and Grants at Columbia University, and the vice president of the University. Correspondence relates to the administration of sponsored projects, grants, and government contracts at Columbia. Also, correspondence regarding University policies governing the payment of employee moving expenses
Box 667 Folder 14
Correspondence between C. Charles Burlingame and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Burlingame was executive officer of the joint administrative board of Columbia's medical school. Correspondence relates to the development of medical facilities in Manhattan.
Topics include: the transfer of land at 168th Street and Broadway from the Babies Hospital to the Neurological Institute of New York for the construction of medical facilities; the construction of the Neurological Institute's facilities at 168th Street; and the transfer of land at Riverside Drive to New York State for the construction of a state psychiatric institute and hospital. Incudes project budgets and deeds
Box 72 Folder 26
Records regarding Donald M. Burmister, professor of civil engineering in the School of Engineering and Applied Science at Columbia University. Burmister created the world's first soil mechanics laboratory at the University in 1933.
Topics include Burmister's achievements and his award from the American Society for Testing and Materials for his work in soil mechanics. Includes a copy of Burmister's report entitled "Hindsight Perspective and Foresight Forecasts" as well as a brief summary of the report. Also includes a photograph of Burmister and a letter in which he discusses his views on the world wide ferment of underprivileged and oppressed peoples
Box 676 Folder 4 to 10
Correspondence between Arthur Burns and high level administrators at Columbia University. Burns held a number of appointments at the University including Professor of Ecomonics, Executive Officer of the Department of Economics, Chairman of the Committee on Instruction, and Chairman of the Advisory Committee of the Faculties. Burns also served as director of research for the National Bureau of Economic Research and was a member of the Advisory Board of the Institute for Urban Land Use and Housing. After leaving the University, Burns became chairman of the federal Reserve Board during the Nixon administration. Records relate to a wide range of topics. Much of the material relates to: the Department of Economics, the responsibilities of the Advisory Committee of the Faculties, national economics and employment issues, and Burns' personnel issues and professional activities. Following his appointment to the Federal Reserve Board, Burns corresponded with University president Andrew Cordier regarding the funding of higher education.
Topics related to the Department of Economics include: faculty affairs, visiting professors, arrangements for courses, teaching loads, the departmental curriculum, the management of special funds, budgeting and appropriations, and faculty recruiting and appointments.
Most of the records dating from 1965 to 1967 consist of reports from the National Bureau of Economic Research. As Director of Research for the bureau, burns forwarded numerous bureau reports on economics and related topics to the University administration. A number of these reports also date from 1962 to 1963.
The records also include the annual report of the bureau dating from May, 1952. most of the records relating to Burn's professional activities consist of vouchers requesting payment for research and clerical assistance for his project on international economic organization and social policies. Other records include his remarks regarding employment legislation that were delivered before a meeting of the American Statistical Association (September, 1962) and a reprint of his article, Hicks and the Real Cycle, from the Journal of Economic Philosophy. The records also relate to Burns' committee work. Most of the materials dating from 1961 to 1962 consists of records from the Advisory Committee of the Faculties. The records relate to: faculty affairs, faculty personnel policies, faculty salaries and benefits, and the business and mission of the committee. Materials relating to the Advisory Board of the Institute for Urban Land Use and Housing include a report on the development of the Morningside Heights neighborhood adjoining Columbia. In 1959 Burns also chaired a sub committee of the University Council that was charged with studying the functions and structure of the council. The records include the committee's findings and recommendations, which were called the Burns Report. Records relating to the Committee on Instruction include a report, statistics, and ballots regarding policies governing the composition of doctoral examination committees and the participation of extra-departmental faculty members on examination committees (December, 1958). Other records include correspondence documenting efforts to nominate David Truman for the presidency of the Academy of Political Science in 1962 and a report regarding business education at Columbia (November, 1952)
Box 319 Folder 1 to 3
Correspondence between William H. Burr, Professor of Civil Engineering in the School of Mines at Columbia University, and University presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray Butler. Much of the correspondence relates to the Summer School of Surveying which was held at the University's Camp Columbia property in Lakeside, Connecticut.
Topics include the: facilities, equipment, finances, mission, and curriculum of the summer school. Also, correspondence regarding the Department of Civil Engineering.
Topics include: laboratories, research projects, teaching methods, the curriculum, faculty appointments, and departmental finances. Also includes correspondence on the construction of Low Memorial Library and other University buildings. Burr was also a member of the Isthmian Canal Commission. Some correspondence discusses his activities as a member of the commission while visiting the Panama Canal site
Box 669 Folder 33
Correspondence between Professor John Angus Burrell of the School of General Studies at Columbia University and the secretary and vice president of the University. Burrell chaired the University's Committee on Public Ceremonies, which oversaw academic ceremonies and other official functions. Correspondence relates to preparations for the 1952 commencement ceremonies and appointments in the School of General Studies, Columbia's continuing education division
Box 659 Folder 21
Correspondence between Russell Burton-Opitz of the Department of Physiology at Columbia University and the president and secretary of the University. Burton-Opitz held appointments as instructor, adjunct professor, and associate professor and was also the administrative head of the department. Most of the correspondence relates to faculty appointments and other routine matters. Includes letters (ca. September, 1909) regarding the admission of women to courses offered by the department
Box 108 Folder 22
Correspondence between Robert R. Bush, chairman of the Department of Social Psychology at Columbia University, and University administrators. Much of the correspondence relates to departmental concerns regarding funding, space needs, and other issues. Includes correspondence with departmental faculty and students regarding a variety of topics. Also includes Bush's letter of resignation as chairman.
Box 665 Folder 7
Correspondence between Wendell T. Bush, Associate Professor of Philosophy at Columbia University, and Nicholas Murray Butler, President of the University. Correspondence relates to: Bush's appointment, a lecture series on Greek religion that was given by Gilbert Murray, and the organization and housing of Butler's personal philosophy library for use by the University and the philosophy department. Includes copies of correspondence between Butler and Gilbert Murray
Box 667 Folder 44
Correspondence between Eliza Butler and the secretary of Columbia University. Butler was the sister of University president Nicholas Murray Butler and the executive secretary of the Women's Committee on College Contacts. Includes correspondence with Virginia C. Gildersleeve, Dean of Barnard College and chairman of the Women's Committee on College Contacts. Correspondence relates to the work of the committee. Includes reports rating the quality of female graduate students at Columbia, based on academic and extracurricular factors, in order to award graduate residence scholarships. Also includes minutes from the committee's organizational meeting
Box 486 Folder 1 to 21
Correspondence between Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University from 1902 to 1945 and high level University administrators. Butler was one of the most influential figures at the University from the 1890s throughout the first half of the 20th century -- a critical period of development for the University. Prior to his appointment as president, Butler served as dean of the Faculty of Philosophy. Following his retirement in 1945 he continued to serve as president emeritus and a trustee of the University. As dean of the Faculty of Philosophy during the administration of President Seth Low (1890-1901), Butler was a major force behind the transformation of Columbia College into a University. As president, Butler led the University during one of its greatest periods of growth and change. Butler was intimately involved in numerous details of developing and administering the institution. The correspondence relates to a wide range of subjects involving the development, mission, organization, administration, facilities, finances, faculty, and student body of the University. However, the materials are not a comprehensive record of Butler's presidency. His administration can be understood more fully by also reading the correspondence of the trustees, deans, and other top administrators who held office during Butler's presidency.
The records include: copies of a few of Butler's speeches, pages from his appointment books (1940-1944), and a copy of Academic Freedom and allied Subjects: Being Excerpts from the Annual Reports of President Nicholas Murray Butler, 1905-1935 (filed with records dating from 1948). Also, a file on the furnishings of the President's House (1936-1947), including itemized billing information and correspondence regarding the special fund for the Furnishing and Equipment of the President's house, which was established in 1922. Includes an inventory of furniture dated December 1, 1936.
Correspondence dating from Butler's term as dean of the Faculty of Philosophy (1890-1902) consists mostly of Butler's letters to Seth Low and copies of Low's replies. Includes numerous, detailed letters regarding the Faculty of Philosophy as well as other schools and departments at the University. Specific topics of interest include: the proposed integration of the School of Mines with Columbia College (November 3, 1893); Butler's objections to the creation of a trade school at Columbia (January 6, 1891); the University's affiliation with Teachers College, which Butler helped to establish in 1897 and which aligned with Columbia through agreements in 1893 and 1898 the establishment of a summer session in 1900 and Butler's involvement with organizations and committees outside of the University that dealt with college entrance requirements, secondary school curricula, and other educational issues.
The files dating from Butler's presidency served several purposes and the nature of the files changes over time. Much of the correspondence dating from approximately 1901 to 1918 was sent to University administrators by Butler while he was traveling overseas. Correspondents include Trustee John B. Pine and University secretaries Frederick P. Keppel and Frank D. Fackenthal. Correspondence dating from 1919 to 1930 consists of letters from Butler to Fackenthal and copies of Fackenthal's replies. Records from this period also include substantive correspondence (ca. 1919-1928) with Frederick J. E. Woodbridge, dean of the Graduate Faculties, and correspondence (ca. 1928-1930) with James C. Egbert, director of the University Extension, Columbia's continuing education division. Correspondence dating from 1930 to 1945 consists mostly of directives from Butler to Fackenthal, who served as secretary of the University until 1937 and Provost from 1937 to 1945 and University secretary Philip M. Hayden
Box 487 Folder 1 to 17
Box 487 Folder 18
Box 509 Folder 20
Correspondence between Benjamin J. Buttenwieser and high level administrators at Columbia University. Includes correspondence between Buttenwieser and Columbia presidents Andrew Cordier and William J. McGill. Buttenwieser was a trustee of the University. He also served on a number of committees, including the Committee on Development and the joint Administrative Board of the Medical Center. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects.
Topics include: gifts to Columbia, trustee business, events, donor relations, honorary degrees, and the management of special funds. Includes correspondence discussing procedural problems with the system for acknowledging gifts to the University. Also includes routine invitations and acknowledgement letters
Box 667 Folder 17
Correspondence between Kenyon L. Butterfield, president of the Michigan State College of Agriculture and Applied Science, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to efforts to establish an institute of rural affairs at Columbia.
Topics include sources of funding for the institute and plans for conferences to be held at the institute
Box 665 Folder 8
Correspondence between Ettore Cadorin, professor of Italian at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Correspondence relates to Cadorin's draft status in the Italian army during World War I, his petition for a waiver of the requirement to serve in the military, and his eventual return to Italy to serve in the army. Includes copies of correspondence with the Italian minister of foreign affairs, Italian ambassador, Italian counsel, and deputy of Venice
Box 667 Folder 24
Correspondence between Gary N. Calkins, professor of zoology at Columbia University, and the president and assistant secretary of the University. correspondence relates to the Department of Zoology.
Topics include: faculty appointments, equipment, and departmental facilities in Schermerhorn Hall. Includes a budget for scientific apparatus and a summary of space allocations in the department
Box 385 Folder 8 to 16
Correspondence between Robert D. Calkins, dean of Columbia University's School of Business, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence, budgets, and reports relating to the School of Business. Records also relate to veterans' affairs.
Topics related to the School of Business include: faculty affairs, budgeting, fellowships, research funding, the financial administration of research projects, personnel, faculty appointments, facilities, gifts to the school, student affairs, faculty salaries, tuition and fees, and veterans' affairs. Includes correspondence regarding the establishment of the MBA and BS degrees (ca. 1944) and correspondence documenting the influence of World War II on the school.
Also includes correspondence and proposals regarding research programs including: consumer economics research (ca. 1945) and the establishment of a research program in real estate, urban land use, and housing (ca. 1945). Also includes long-range planning reports for the school (ca. 1943 and 1945) and correspondence and reports regarding certification programs in business and secretarial studies (ca. 1944). Also, correspondence and reports relating to veterans' affairs.
Topics include the Veterans Advisory Service and a University study of the need for government-sponsored educational programs for veterans. Also, the report of the Advisory Committee on Post-War Problems and Policies. The committee was established to consider Columbia's role in post-war education, public service, and public policy. Correspondence ca. 1946 relates to Calkins' resignation to become vice president and chairman of the General Education Board and the selection of his successor
Box 659 Folder 22
Correspondence between Hermann H. Cammann of the real estate office of H. H. Cammann & Co. and the president of Columbia University. Cammann was a trustee of Columbia and chairman of the Real Estate Committee of the Society of the New York Hospital. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects involving Columbia's Morningside Heights campus.
Topics include: the purchase of the campus property from New York Hospital, the development of the campus, the purchase of the South Field addition to the campus, and the development of roads and subways in the neighborhood. Includes a detailed letter regarding the disturbance that resulted from the disruption of a freshman dinner at the Carnegie Restaurant by sophomores from the University's School of Applied Science (December, 1897)
Box 402 Folder 10 to 18
Correspondence between Joseph Campbell and the high level administrators of Columbia University, the assistant treasurer, and donors. Much of the correspondence dating from 1955 is between the assistant treasurer and other University administrators. Campbell served as treasurer and was later appointed to serve as the University's first vice president for business affairs. The records consist of correspondence, financial records, and legal documents relating to University finances and financial administration. Also, agenda, correspondence, and financial records of the Advisory Committee on Investments and resolutions of the trustee committee on finance. Most of the records relate to appointments, appropriations, and income from endowments. Other topics include: University budget policies and procedures, accounting and financial analysis, investments and investment policy, the management of special funds, gifts to the University, real estate, insurance, and research and development contracts. Includes: a table showing gifts and bequests to the University from 1918 to 1948 a copy of the affiliation agreement between Columbia and the New York School of Social Work (1951), and an amendment to the Rockefeller Center lease (1953)
Box 403 Folder 1 to 19
Box 404 Folder 1 to 20
Box 391 Folder 10 to 17
Correspondence between Oscar James Campbell, executive officer of the Department of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the department and to attempts to establish an arts center at the University. Correspondence also relates to Campbell's personnel issues and committee memberships. Includes a lengthy memorandum (1948) regarding the mission and needs of the Faculty of Philosophy and a copy of Campbell's address before the University's opening exercises in September, 1951. most of the records dating from the 1940s to the mid 1950s consist of correspondence, budgets, and reports relating to the Department of English and Comparative Literature.
Topics include: faculty appointments, faculty affairs, budgeting, appropriations, enrollment, visiting professors, prizes, graduate instruction, and staffing needs. Includes correspondence regarding the Brander Matthews Dramatic Museum, which was operated by the department. Also includes a number of letters regarding post-World War II overcrowding, enrollment, and staffing needs in the department and a copy of the departmental constitution dating from 1948. Campbell also chaired the Advisory Committee on the Arts Center. The committee worked to develop a University center for the fine and performing arts. Some of the records dating from the mid 1940s to the 1950s and most of the records dating from 1955 to 1958 consist of correspondence, reports, proposals, and minutes relating to attempts to establish the arts center.
Topics include: departments and schools to be included in the center, the proposed curriculum and programs of the center, space planning, and fund raising
Box 659 Folder 23 to 26
Correspondence between James Hulme Canfield and the president of Columbia University. Includes correspondence with Nicholas Murray Butler, who became president of Columbia in 1902 during his term as dean of the Faculty of Philosophy. Prior to Canfield's appointment at Columbia, he served as chancellor of the University of Nebraska and president of Ohio University. Canfield served as librarian of Columbia University from 1899 to 1909. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects involving education, Canfield's career, and the Columbia University Libraries.
Correspondence dating from 1895 to 1899 dates from Canfield's terms as chancellor of the University of Nebraska and president of Ohio State University. During this time, Canfield and Butler corresponded regarding recommendations for faculty appointments and the selection of a superintendent of schools for New York. Records from 1899 also include correspondence regarding Canfield's candidacy to become librarian of Congress and Butler's strong support for his appointment.
Correspondence dating from 1899 to 1909 dates from Canfield's term as librarian of Columbia University. Most of the records from this period consist of detailed correspondence regarding the operations and administration of the libraries. Topics include: acquisitions, gifts to the library, budgeting, and facilities. Includes: correspondence regarding preparations for Canfield's installation (1899), correspondence regarding the replacement of copyists with a printing press for the production of catalog cards (1899), and plans to extend reading privileges beyond the University (1899). Other records include a lengthy letter from Vladimir Simkhovitch in which he discusses anarchism and proposes a study of the subject (September, 1901) and correspondence regarding the national financial crisis of 1907. Also includes correspondence regarding Canfield's trip to England, France and Germany in the fall of 1907. During the trip, Canfield acted as Columbia's representative and investigated educational practices in each country. Correspondence dating from 1909 to 1910 relates to Canfield's death and his memorial tablet, which is located the University's St. Paul's chapel
Box 507 Folder 20
Correspondence between John D. Cannon, chaplain of Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects including religious events and issues involving the University's religious counsellors. Includes a letter regarding the University choir (September, 1965) and notes on meetings regarding a proposal to allow the Earl Hall religious center to be used as classroom space for elementary school students during a boycott of Public School 125 (April, 1967). Includes correspondence regarding Cannon's personnel issues and committee work
Box 669 Folder 9
Correspondence between Jane Perry Clark Carey, assistant professor of government in Barnard College at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to a travel grant in support of Carey's research trip to Germany and the administration of her research project
Box 672 Folder 39
Correspondence between Robert L. Carey, faculty chairman of the Columbia College alumni association, and the president of the University. correspondence relates to the annual Dean's Day celebration. Carey was in charge of Dean's Day events in 1959
Box 665 Folder 9
Correspondence between Newcomb Carlton, a Columbia University trustee, and the president and clerk of the University. Correspondence relates to Carlton's nomination to the board, the development of the University's medical school, the school's relations with Presbyterian hospital in New York City, and University public relations strategies. Includes a map of London's Mayfair District
Box 670 Folder 29
Correspondence between Robert A. W. Carlton and Columbia University administrators. Carlton was chairman of the Egleston Medal Award Committee and a member of Columbia Associates, a group of University benefactors who made regular contributions to Columbia's general fund. Most of the correspondence relates to gifts to Columbia
Box 389 Folder 1 to 13
Correspondence between Harry J. Carman, Moore Professor of History and Dean of Columbia College, and the high level administrators of Columbia University. Most of the records dating from 1943 to 1951 consist of correspondence, budgets, reports, and newsletters relating to Columbia College and undergraduate instruction at the University. Also, records documenting numerous educational organizations and committees on which Carman served. Also includes Carman's reminiscences of his time at Columbia.
Topics related to Columbia College include: budgeting, the curriculum, faculty appointments, faculty affairs, financial administration, prizes and awards, gifts to the college, scholarships, enrollment, staffing needs, fund raising, long-range planning, and requirements. Reports relating to the college include: a report on the revision of the major system (1947), reports of the Special Committee on the State of Columbia College dating from the 1940s and a report on the development of an undergraduate science curriculum (1949). Includes reports and correspondence dating from the early to mid 1940s which relate to the proposed establishment of a third undergraduate college at the University.
Records relating to the educational committees and organizations on which Carman Served include: a report of the Committee on Post-War Adult Education of the Adult Education Council of New York (1943); agenda and correspondence (ca. 1945-1949) relating to the Dean's Group, an organization of Ivy League deans that met to discuss a range of educational topics; correspondence and minutes (ca. 1957) of the Japan America Intellectual Exchange Program; and correspondence and reports (ca. 1950-1953) on the National Scholarship Service and Fund for Negro Students, which was chaired by Carman. Following his resignation in 1952 Carman continued to correspond with University administrators regarding a range of subjects.
Topics include invitations and administrative appointments as well as Carman's retirement and honors. Records from this period include his Reminiscences of Thirty Years
Box 668 Folder 43
Correspondence between Oliver C. Carmichael and the acting president and provost of Columbia University. Carmichael was vice chairman of the State of New York Temporary Commission on the Need for a State University. Correspondence relates to the commission, which studied proposals for a state University and anti-discrimination legislation involving colleges and universities. Correspondence also relates to a report on the cost of programs in higher education
Box 659 Folder 27
Correspondence between Andrew Carnegie and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University. Only a few items, most of which are invitations, are dated prior to Butler's installation as president of the University in 1902. Most of the correspondence dating from 1902 to 1908 relates to Butler's attempts to solicit donations for various projects.
Topics include funding for: the purchase of the South Field extension to Columbia's Morningside Heights campus, the construction of an athletic field near the Hudson River between 116th and 120th streets, and the establishment of a foundation for the promotion of surgical science. Correspondence regarding funding for an athletic field also includes information regarding Columbia's ban on football in 1905
Box 320 Folder 1 to 3
Correspondence between George Rice Carpenter, professor of Rhetoric and English Composition at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Carpenter was also chairman of the Committee on Instruction and a member of the University Committee on Entrance Examinations.
Topics include: the Department of Rhetoric and English Composition, the Department of English and Comparative Literature, and entrance examinations and requirements. Topics relating to the Department of Rhetoric and English Composition include: faculty appointments, course scheduling, staffing needs, facilities, prizes, fellowships, and the organization of the department. Also, correspondence regarding the establishment of the Department of English and Comparative Literature (ca. 1900) and the administration of the department.
Topics include: departmental relations with Barnard College, the women's college affiliated with Columbia; English instruction for Barnard students; departmental relations with Extension Teaching, the University's adult education division; the curriculum of the department; and graduate instruction in the department. Also, correspondence relating to the University Committee on Entrance Examinations.
Topics include: the business of the committee, admissions criteria, and the administration of entrance examinations. Also, correspondence regarding the routine business of the Committee on Instruction. Includes a study of teaching loads and faculty efficiency (ca. 1908) Also includes correspondence regarding registration procedures and the organization of the registrar's office as well as correspondence on the establishment of the George Rice Carpenter Memorial Library
Box 319 Folder 4 to 14
Correspondence between William H. Carpenter, professor of Germanic philosophy in the Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Carpenter also held numerous important administrative posts and committee appointments including: dean of the Graduate Faculties, secretary of the Committee on Higher Degrees, secretary of the University Council, secretary of the Columbia University Press, provost, and acting librarian. The primary focus of the correspondence is administrative, procedural and financial issues surrounding the University's academic affairs and faculty affairs.
Topics include: funding, awarding and administering scholarships and fellowships; setting and monitoring degree requirements; interpreting course and degree requirements and policies to students; and addressing issues regarding the recognition of requirements and privileges between the various schools of the University. Other topics include: faculty appointments and benefits, the establishment and administration of named professorships, gifts to the University, and equipment for laboratories and departments. Also, correspondence regarding the financial relationship between Columbia University Press and the University. Includes correspondence on faculty manuscripts which were submitted to the press. Also, correspondence relating to the administration of Columbia's libraries.
Topics include: budgeting, facilities, collections, staff, finances, and policies
Box 320 Folder 4 to 6
Correspondence between Horace W. Carpentier, a trustee and benefactor of Columbia University, and University presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray Butler. Correspondence relates to: Carpentier's gifts to support study and instruction in Asian culture, his other gifts to Columbia, and University finances and government.
Much of the correspondence relates to Carpentier's support for the establishment of the Department of Chinese Languages and Literatures. Topics related to the department include: its mission, funding, faculty appointments, and the curriculum. Also, correspondence regarding carpentier's gift to establish the Dean Lung Professorship and his support for education and research in Asian cultures. Also includes correspondence discussing Carpentier's thoughts on education in Asian cultures and languages, American public opinion of China, and American political relations with China. Also, correspondence regarding Carpentier's numerous other gifts to columbia.
Topics include: the establishment of the James S. Carpentier Fund in support of a lectureship in law, funding for Kent Hall, and the establishment of the Henry Berg Fund to promote what Carpentier described as humane education and the prevention of cruelty. also, correspondence with President Butler regarding a range of subjects.
Topics include: Columbia's government and mission, alumni representation, the powers of the board of trustees, and the University's financial problems and financial strategy. Includes a brief exchange of letters regarding the admission of women to the School of Law. Also includes a copy of Carpentier's will
Box 72 Folder 27
Correspondence regarding the honorary degree that was awarded to cellist Pablo Casals by Columbia University. Correspondence relates to preparations for the special convocation in honor of Casals. Records include: several copies of the program from the convocation, information regarding Casals' life and works, and the text of the president's introductory address at the degree presentation ceremony
Box 409 Folder 19
Correspondence between Everett Needham Case, president of Colgate University, and Frank D. Fackenthal, the acting president of Columbia University. Includes correspondence with Columbia's provost. Case and Fackenthal represented the Association of Colleges and Universities of the State of New York at hearings regarding legislation to ban discrimination in college admissions that were held before the New York State Legislature and the Board of Trustees of the State University of New York. Most of the records consist of correspondence, reports, and statements regarding the anti-discrimination legislation and charges of discrimination which were brought against Columbia
Box 679 Folder 25
Correspondence regarding a visit to Columbia University by Fidel Castro in April of 1959. Most of the records consist of intra-university memoranda regarding arrangements for the visit. Also includes a guest list and procedures to be followed during the visit
Box 419 Folder 18 to 20
Correspondence between Hollis L. Caswell and high level administrators at Columbia University. Caswell served as Associate Dean, Dean, and President of Teachers College, an affiliate of Columbia. The records consist of correspondence and budgets regarding Teachers College. Also, correspondence and invitations (ca. 1955) relating to Caswell's inaugural as President of Teachers College and a number of letters regarding issues involving education and the education of teachers. Also, correspondence (ca. 1955) regarding negotiations between the Transport Workers Union of American (TWU) and the college.
Topics related to Teachers College include: faculty appointments, admissions and admission policies, relations between Teachers College and Columbia, the preparation of College announcements, and policies regarding cross-registration between Teachers College and the University's School of General Studies and College of Physicians and Surgeons. Includes correspondence regarding the Horace Mann and Lincoln schools, a proposal for a school on Morningside Heights (1957), and a proposal for a research and training program in comparative education (1959)
Box 320 Folder 7 to 11
Correspondence between James McKeen Cattell, professor of psychology at Columbia University, University presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray Butler, and other University administrators.
Topics include the business and organization of Department of Psychology and Cattell's dismissal from the University.
Correspondence dating from 1890 to approximately 1917 relates to the Department of Psychology. In particular, the correspondence documents the frequent reorganizations and mergers in the department. During the period covered by these records, the department became the Department of Psychology and Anthropology, the Department of Philosophy and Psychology, and, eventually, the Division of Philosophy, Psychology and anthropology. Topics related to the business of the department include: faculty appointments, laboratories, finances, personnel, course and degree requirements, and staffing needs. Include substantive correspondence on the curriculum in both psychology and anthropology.
Also includes a proposal for the physical and psychological testing of students and related correspondence as well as correspondence regarding the application of psychology to teaching. Also, correspondence between Cattell and President Butler regarding the role of the faculty of Columbia College, the relationship between the faculty and the trustees, faculty relations with the administration, and the powers of the faculty. Also, correspondence between Cattell, Butler, and University trustees regarding Cattell's dismissal in 1917. Also includes correspondence between Butler, trustees, faculty, alumni, and the public regarding Cattell's dismissal. Includes reports, legal documents, and clippings regarding the case
Box 672 Folder 7
Records submitted to the Columbia University administration by Margaret Chalmers, administrative assistant to the Director of the University's School of International Affairs. Among other topics, the records relate to the evaluation of candidates for Ford Foundation fellowships and efforts to conduct a census of School of International Affairs students
Box 667 Folder 25
Correspondence between John Armstrong Chaloner and the secretary and trustees of Columbia University. Chaloner was a benefactor of the University. Correspondence relates to the Chaloner Historical Prize
Box 342 Folder 15
Correspondence between Joseph Perkins Chamberlain, a benefactor of Columbia University and secretary of the advisory board of the University's Legislative Drafting Research Fund, and high level University administrators. Correspondence dating from 1911 to 1918 relates to Chamberlain's gift to establish the Legislative Drafting Research Fund, the endowment of a professorship of legislative drafting, the work of the Advisory Board of the Legislative Drafting Research Fund, and the administration of the Fund office.
Also, correspondence dating from 1947 to 1948 documenting the work of the Committee on Student Organizations to study issues surrounding the approval of speakers sponsored by student groups and to write regulations governing the selection of speakers by student organizations. There is a gap in the records between 1918 and 1947
Box 410 Folder 1 to 19
Correspondence between Joseph A. Chamberlain and the high level administrators of Columbia University. Chamberlain held numerous appointments including executive officer of the Department of Public Law, Dean of Columbia College, and Vice President of the University. Correspondence dating from the 1940s relates to the Department of Public Law. Records dating from the 1950s consist of correspondence, reports, proposals, budgets, and discussion papers relating to the academic affairs of Columbia College. Much of the correspondence dating from the 1960s relates to Chamberlain's responsibilities as vice president. Also, correspondence (ca. 1950-1955) relating to the Columbia Forum on Democracy, a leadership conference for students from area high schools. includes the proceedings of the forum.
Topics related to the Department of Public Law include: staffing needs, the curriculum, prizes, teaching loads, and undergraduate instruction. includes correspondence regarding the Bennett Prize. Topics related to Columbia College include: faculty appointments, prizes, student organizations and activities, scholarships, faculty affairs, the curriculum, and requirements. Includes records regarding the relationship between Columbia College and the University and correspondence regarding University long-range planning.
Also includes a proposal, dating from 1950 which argues for a national examination for the purpose of indentifying candidates for military service. As vice president, Chamberlain appears to have assumed University-wide academic and administrative responsibilities that were similar to his activities as dean of Columbia College. Additional topics related to the University include: development, building programs, student affairs, and policies regarding students
Box 411 Folder 1
Box 667 Folder 5 to 6
Correspondence between Lydia C. Chamberlain, a benefactor of Columbia University, and the University's president, secretary and clerk of the board of trustees. Correspondence relates to the Lydia C. Roberts Graduate Fellowships and the Lydia C. Roberts Travelling Fellowships. The fellowships were established to fund the graduate education of caucasian college graduates from Iowa. Includes a copy of Chamberlain's will and the agreement between Chamberlain and the New York Trust Company to establish the fellowship funds
Box 672 Folder 8
Correspondence between Mervin A. Chamberlain, professor of air science at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence consists of personal messages
Box 671 Folder 20
Correspondence between Jo Hubbard Chamberlain, associate director of the American Assembly, and the president's office at Columbia University. includes correspondence with businessmen and faculty members. Correspondence relates to the American Assembly, a national conference and discussion program that was based in the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University.
Topics include: gifts to the assembly and events
Box 668 Folder 27
Correspondence between Frank W. Chambers, president of the Alumni Federation of Columbia University, and the acting president of the University. Correspondence relates to: the administration of the federation, the financial relationship between the federation and the University, and the care of alumni records
Box 319 Folder 15 to 18
Correspondence between Charles Frederick Chandler, professor of chemistry and dean of the School of Mines at Columbia University, and University presidents and other administrators regarding the School of Mines, the Department of Chemistry, and the role of the dean. Much of the correspondence deals with the Department of Chemistry.
Topics include: laboratories, equipment and supplies, appointments, staffing needs, facilities, personnel, tuition and fees, instruction in the department, and departmental privileges. Also, correspondence regarding the laboratories and facilities of the School of Mines, the design of Havermeyer Hall, and the chemistry curriculum of the School of mines and the University's medical school. Also includes correspondence between Chandler and President Seth Low regarding the role of the dean and relations between Chandler and Low. Also includes correspondence relating to Chandler's personnel issues
Box 672 Folder 72
Correspondence between Norman Chandler and high level administrators at Columbia University. Chandler was an alumnus of the University and president of the Time-Mirror Company. Correspondence relates to a luncheon meeting regarding admissions and Chandler's suggestions for appointments to the Pulitzer Prize Committee
Box 670 Folder 30
Correspondence between John Martin Chapman of the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the Consumer Management Program that was held at Columbia's Arden House conference center
Box 672 Folder 9
Correspondence between Daniel Chase, executive director of the Sportsmanship Brotherhood, and the president and trustees of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to various events sponsored by the Sportsmanship Brotherhood
Box 669 Folder 10
Correspondence between William J. Chase, assistant chaplain of Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the chaplain's Office and religious activities at the University.
Topics include: religious services, organ concerts in Columbia's St. Paul's Chapel, and budgeting for religious activities. Includes Christmas cards and condolence letters
Box 18 Folder 20
Correspondence between Marie-Claude Chauvet, a visiting professor at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to Chauvet's visa
Box 405 Folder 15 to 16
Records sent to Columbia University administrators from Elliot Evans Cheatham, professor of law at the University. The records document four projects in which Cheatham was involved on behalf of the administration. The records relate to the Bureau of Applied Social Research (ca. 1945-1946), admissions policies and the admissions office (1948), the Committee on University Education for the Professions (1955), and the School of Painting and Sculpture (1956).
Records dating from 1945 to 1946 consist of 3 reports from the Committee on Social Science Agencies to the Council for Research in the Social Sciences. The reports discuss the organization, policies, and research goals of the Bureau of Applied Social Research and relations between the bureau and the Council for Research in the Social Sciences. Records dating from 1948 consist of correspondence and a report regarding the revision of admissions policies and procedures, the administration of the admissions office, and the establishment of the Office of the director of University Admissions. Records dating from 1955 consist of multiple copies of a report from the Committee on University Education for the Professions to the University Council. The report discusses the University's role in providing professional education, the relationship between undergraduate instruction and professional education, and the University's educational objectives and methods. Records dating from 1956 consist of correspondence and a report regarding the administration of Columbia's School of Painting and Sculpture and its relationship to the University
Box 318 Folder 17
Correspondence between Timothy M. Cheeseman and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University.
Topics include: the administration of Columbia's medical school and the Vanderbilt Clinic, the selection of a director for the University's cancer research center, and University relations with Presbyterian Hospital
Box 668 Folder 5
Correspondence between Richard S. Childs, chairman of the Institute for Public Administration at Columbia University, and the provost of the University. Correspondence relates to the institute.
Topics include: relations between the institute and Columbia, budgeting, University concerns regarding the staff of the institute, and proposals for the institute's reorganization. Includes an audit of the institute for the 1938-1939 fiscal year
Box 659 Folder 28
Correspondence between Russell H. Chittenden and the president of Columbia University. Chittenden was director of the Department of Physiological Chemistry in Columbia's College of Physicians and Surgeons. Correspondence dating from 1898 to 1901 relates to the creation of the department, Chittenden's appointment, and faculty appointments in the department. Records dating from 1909 consist of one letter regarding Chittenden's son. There is a gap in the records between 1901 and 1909
Box 425 Folder 14
Correspondence between Thomas Wittier Chrystie and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Chrystie was an alumni trustee. Correspondence relates to: arrangements to care for the graves of Columbia University president Nicholas Murray Butler and his wife, the inscriptions on the gravestones, and the disposition of certain of president Butler's personal items. Correspondence also relates to personal favors, events, and Chrystie's committee memberships.
Includes a newspaper clipping regarding the death of Chrystie's father and prominent Columbia alumnus, T. L. Chrystie (1954). Also includes routine invitations
Box 668 Folder 21
Records relating to the honorary degree that was conferred on Winston Churchill by Columbia University. Includes the text of Churchill's speech at the degree ceremony. Includes newspaper clippings and announcements relating to the Committee on Permanent Peace, a newly-established campus organization that opposed Churchill's foreign policy
Box 18 Folder 21
Correspondence between Alexander Clark, director of the Office of University Placement and Career Planning at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the 1965 Columbia Conference on Careers and the dissolution of the Advisory Committee on Student Agencies. Includes two copies of the placement office's annual report for the 1964-1965 academic year
Box 668 Folder 28
Records relating to the proposed establishment of a new school of the arts at Columbia University. The records appear to have been forwarded to the University administration by Donald L. Clark, a professor of rhetoric at Columbia and chairman of the committee that was appointed to determine the organization and administration of the new school. Includes budgets for the project and committee reports
Box 659 Folder 29
Correspondence between John Bates Clark, professor of political economy in the Department of Economics and Social Sciences at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Most of the correspondence relates to Clark's personnel matters. Much of the correspondence also relates to Barnard College, the women's college affiliated with Columbia.
In particular, the correspondence discusses: the division of Clark's teaching responsibilities between the University and Barnard College; his concerns over being perceived as a Barnard faculty member; and disputes between University president Seth Low, the dean of the School of Political Science, and the University Council regarding the use of Columbia faculty to teach Barnard courses and the admission of Barnard students to University courses. Also, routine correspondence regarding faculty appointments and faculty affairs in the Department of Economics and Social Sciences
Box 671 Folder 21
Correspondence between John Maurice Clark, professor of political economy at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the honorary degree that was awarded to Clark during Columbia's 1954 bicentennial celebration. Correspondence also relates to Clark's service as an escort to Elizabeth II, Queen of England, during her visit to Columbia in 1954. Includes biographical information on Clark. Also, records relating to Clark's personnel issues and appointment
Box 671 Folder 22
Correspondence between Kenneth Clark, chairman of the Arts Council of Great Britain, and the secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the honorary degree that was awarded to Clark at Columbia's 3rd Bicentennial Convocation in 1954. Includes biographical information on Clark
Box 667 Folder 26
Correspondence between Hans Thacher Clarke, professor of biological chemistry at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. correspondence relates to the Gies Fellowship in Biological Chemistry and Clarke's work on the University's Committee on Patent Procedure
Box 672 Folder 53
Correspondence from Lucius D. Clay, chairman of the columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center Development Committee. Most of the correspondence consists of acknowledgement letters to donors. Also, a letter regarding docking for the Vema, the research vessel that belonged to the University's Lamont Geological Observatory
Box 425 Folder 15
Correspondence between Shepard B. Clough, Professor of History in the Department of History at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Most of the records dating from the 1940s relate to a student exchange program and the preparation of doctoral dissertations in the history department. Clough also served on the administrative committee for Casa Italiana, Columbia's Italian culture and educational center. Many of the records dating from the 1950s relate to Casa Italiana.
Topics include: personnel, events, and Clough's relations with other faculty members. Clough also chaired the University's placement committee. Records include correspondence and statistics regarding job placement for University graduates
Box 320 Folder 12 to 13
Correspondence between Edward B. Coe, a trustee of Columbia University and chairman of the trustee committees on honors and education, and the president and secretary of the University.
Topics include: the business of the trustees, arrangements for trustee meetings, and setting the agenda items for trustee meetings. Also, correspondence relating to the work of the committees on education and honors as well as the academic affairs of the University.
Topics include: faculty appointments; the reorganization of departments, in particular the Department of Economics; and honorary degree nominations. Also, a brief exchange of letters (ca. 1910) with Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia, regarding the rights and responsibilities of the faculty and trustees and a conflict between instruction in the Department of History and the religious beliefs of students
Box 455 Folder 1 to 14
Correspondence between Joseph D. Coffee and other Columbia University administrators. Coffee held appointments as development director for Columbia College and assistant to the president for alumni affairs. Correspondence relates to: University development activities and strategies in general; specific gifts, funds, or development projects; public relations; alumni relations; and events. Also, correspondence relating to Coffee's resignation to become vice president of Eisenhower College. Includes many congratulatory letters dating from 1966.
Records relating to development projects include: reports (ca. 1953-1954) on the planning and use of buildings; a development brochure promoting the University's plan to erect a gymnasium in Morningside Park; correspondence regarding the Columbia Gymnasium Building Fund; correspondence regarding the organization and membership of the Gymnasium Committee; and correspondence regarding the administration of the Development Office. Also includes records relating to the planning and funding of the University's Citizenship Center, which became the Ferris Booth Hall student center, and programs from the center's ground-breaking ceremony in 1957
Box 90 Folder 20
Correspondence between Audrey C. Cohen, executive director of the Women's Talent Corps and founder of the College for Human Services (Audrey Cohen College), and Columbia University administrators. Correspondence relates to the establishment of the College for Human Services. Records include reports regarding the college and the Women's Talent Corps (1967-1968). Also includes articles and other information regarding Cohen, The College for Human Services, and the Women's Talent corps
Box 320 Folder 14 to 17
Correspondence between Adolphe Cohn, chairman of the Department of Romance Languages at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the department, language requirements, and issues surrounding Columbia's transformation into a University. Topics related to the Department of Romance Languages include: faculty recruiting and appointments, faculty affairs, the evaluation of junior faculty, personnel, budgeting, course scheduling, the curriculum, prizes, facilities, and finances.
Also, correspondence with University presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray Butler regarding language requirements for admission to the University and the administration of entrance examinations in the romance languages. Also, correspondence regarding the establishment of Columbia as a university, the effect of the University's growth on Columbia College, and the College's relationship to the University's graduate and professional schools. Also includes correspondence relating to Cohn's professional activities and relations with French academics
Box 504 Folder 15
Correspondence between Thomas S. Colahan, associate director of admissions for Columbia College, and Columbia University administrators. most of the records consist of itineraries for recruiting trips to high schools. Includes correspondence regarding tuition levels and the recruiting of candidates for admission to Columbia
Box 501 Folder 12 to 14
Correspondence between Charles Colbert and high level administrators at Columbia University. Much of the correspondence dating from 1959 relates to Colbert's appointment as dean of Columbia's School of Architecture and his plans for the organization of the school and the dean's office. Records dating from 1960 to 1963 relate to the school.
Topics include: facilities, equipment, events, prizes and awards, the management of special funds, gifts to the school, and fellowships. Includes the curriculum for a new BA degree in planning (February, 1961) and a lengthy memorandum regarding Colbert's administrative and personnel policies for the school (September, 1961). Records dating from 1963 consist of minutes and correspondence regarding Colbert's dismissal. Also, records regarding campus planning at Columbia. Includes minutes of the Advisory Committee on Architecture and Planning (June, 1961). The minutes discuss the role of the committee and of architects in designing and planning the Columbia campus
Box 436 Folder 15 to 19
Correspondence between Charles Chester Cole, associate dean of Columbia College at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the routine administration of the college. Includes correspondence regarding faculty appointments and prizes in the college. Also, reports (ca. 1951-1957) that record income from fees and a detailed report (1951) regarding college aptitude tests and the recruiting of prospective science majors. Also, a small amount of correspondence regarding the Bancroft Prize
Box 320 Folder 18
Correspondence between Frank Nelson Cole, professor of mathematics at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Cole held several committee appointments at the University and at Barnard College, the women's college affiliated with Columbia. He was chairman of the Barnard Committee on Curriculum and Scheme of Attendance, chairman of the Committee on Admissions of Barnard College, and secretary of the University's Faculty of Pure Science.
Topics related to Barnard College include the college's admissions requirements and policies as well as individual candidates for admission to the college. Topics related to the Faculty of Pure Science include: the creation of the Committee on Instruction of the Faculty of Pure Science, degree requirements, the establishment graduate degrees in engineering, faculty affairs, and faculty appointments. Includes minutes of the Commitee on Instruction dated February, 1915. Also, correspondence relating to Cole's appointment and personnel issues. Many letters are brief and routine in nature. Contains little correspondence regarding the Department of Mathematics
Box 668 Folder 44
Correspondence between William Graham Cole, counsellor to Protestant students at Columbia University, and the acting president of the University. Correspondence relates to contributions to the Religious Counselors'' Inter-Faith Fund. Also, correspondence regarding Cole's appointment
Box 405 Folder 17
Correspondence between Arthur Prudden Coleman, assistant professor of polish languages and literatures in the Department of East European Languages at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence, bulletins, and other records dating from 1946 to 1947 relate to the American Association of Teachers of Slavonic and East European Languages. Correspondence dating from 1948 to 1949 relates to Coleman's resignation in protest over the funding of the Adam Mickiewicz Chair by the Polish government. Includes a biographical pamphlet on Adam Mickiewicz which was published in 1940
Box 470 Folder 18 to 19
Correspondence between Henry S. Coleman and high level administrators at Columbia University. Coleman was assistant to the dean of Columbia College and was later appointed director of admissions for the college.
Topics include: admissions, scholarships, and the recruiting of candidates for admission. Includes correspondence regarding individual candidates for admission
Box 659 Folder 30
Correspondence between Jonathen Ackerman Coles, an alumnus and benefactor of Columbia University, and the president of the University. Coles was a graduate of the School of the Arts (Columbia College) in 1864 and the College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1868. Correspondence relates to Coles' gifts to the University for the acquisition of statuary.
Topics include busts of Homer, Minerva, and Benjamin Franklin. includes correspondence regarding proposed gifts which were refused by the University
Box 672 Folder 54
Correspondence between George Roseborough Collins and high level administrators at Columbia University. Collins was an associate professor of fine arts and executive secretary of the University's Committee on the Program in the Arts. Correspondence relates to: faculty affairs, appropriations, and other routine issues involving the administration of the arts program. Includes correspondence regarding Collins' personnel issues
Box 672 Folder 22
Correspondence between Walter Collins and the associate provost of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to routine requests for permission for student groups to erect tables in front of Low Memorial Library
Box 667 Folder 45
Correspondence between Roy J. Colony, assistant professor of geology at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to Colony's retirement
Box 671 Folder 56
Correspondence between Henry Steele Commager, professor of American history at Columbia University, and University administrators. correspondence relates to Commager's personnel issues
Box 108 Folder 23
Correspondence regarding the proposed appointment of biologist Barry Commoner to a post at Columbia University. Includes letters for and against Commoner's appointment and correspondence regarding issues surrounding his appointment. Also includes a memorandum regarding the decision not to extend an offer to Commoner
Box 659 Folder 31
Correspondence between George Brokaw Compton, an alumnus of Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Compton was secretary of the Columbia Alumni Council and editor of the Columbia Alumni News. Most of the records consist of correspondence regarding scholarships. Includes reports on scholarships
Box 385 Folder 1
Correspondence between James Bryant Conant, president of Harvard University, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence dating from 1939 relates to attempts by the American Association of Universities to develop a plan for providing asylum to displaced scholars. Includes the program's statement of principles.
Topics include: the status of displaced scholars, the selection of aid recipients, and funding for the program. Correspondence dating from 1951 to 1952 relates to arrangements for Conant to give the 1952 Bampton Lectures in America. Includes a program of the lecture series
Box 668 Folder 8
Correspondence between Lawrence R. Condon and high level administrators at Columbia University. Condon served as chairman of the Committee of the Class of 1921. Includes the committee's report entitled Survey of the Relationship of Columbia College to Columbia University
Box 670 Folder 31
Correspondence between Carl R. Cooper, an alumnus of Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to Cooper's attendance, as a representative of Columbia, at the inauguration of the president of Kalamazoo College
Box 433 Folder 20
Correspondence between George V. Cooper of the Affiliated Alumni Clubs of Columbia University and high level University administrators. Most of the correspondence relates to alumni clubs, development, alumni relations, and alumni affairs. Includes a draft alumni club handbook and volume 1, number 1 of The Affiliate, the newsletter of Columbia's alumni clubs. Also, correspondence regarding nominations for honorary degrees and scholarships
Box 672 Folder 40
Correspondence between Senator John Sherman Cooper of Kentucky and the secretary of Columbia University. Sherman was appointed to give the Mary Keating Das Memorial Lectures for 1959. Correspondence relates to preparations for the lectures
Box 669 Folder 47
Correspondence between Kent Cooper, executive director of The Associated Press, and the Vice President and Provost of Columbia University. correspondence relates to plans to commission a portrait of Carl Ackerman, former dean of Columbia's Graduate School of Journalism. Includes a list of donors who supported the project
Box 505 Folder 1 to 16
Correspondence between Andrew W. Cordier, president of Columbia University, and high level University administrators, University donors and alumni, and funding agencies. From 1962 until his appointment as acting president in 1968 Cordier served as Dean of the Faculty of International Affairs, director of the European Institute, and professor of international relations. He also chaired the Coordinating Committee on International Affairs. Records dating from 1962 to 1968 consist of correspondence, reports, and funding proposals relating to the School of international Affairs and Columbia's international studies programs. In 1968 following the resignation of President Grayson Kirk, Cordier agreed to serve as acting president of the University for one year. In 1969 he accepted a one-year appointment as president of the University. Records dating from 1968 to 1971 consist of correspondence, statements, press releases, notes, and clippings regarding Cordier's presidency, campus unrest, relations between Columbia and the community, and relations between students, faculty and the administration. Topics include: demonstrations, discipline, public relations, and Cordier's efforts to improve communication with students. Beginning in 1970 the records also include correspondence regarding University finances, income, and development.
Prior to Cordier's appointment as dean of the Faculty of International Affairs, he served as under-secretary of the United Nations. He was also a member of the United States Committee of the Dag Hammarskjold Foundation. Records dating from 1961 until approximately 1965 include correspondence between Cordier and Columbia University president Grayson Kirk regarding the work of the committee and the foundation. The records include a certificate of incorporation for the committee (February, 1962) and copies of a brochure regarding the foundation.
Topics related to the School of International Affairs include: appropriations, the management of special funds, faculty affairs, administrative issues involving programs and institutes in the school, the business of the Advisory Board of the School of International Affairs, funding for the school, faculty appointments, facilities, events, and gifts to the school. Related records include: a report (April 1963), brochure (October, 1963), and correspondence and floor plans (1967-1968) regarding plans for Columbia's new international affairs building; reprints of two articles by Cordier (1963); his speech on the professionalization of international studies (filed December, 1966); correspondence and a report regarding professorships funded by the Ford Foundation (ca. May-June, 1965); a report on the Research Project on National Income in East Central Europe (November, 1967); and Cordier's eulogy for Adlai Stevenson, which was delivered at a memorial service in Columbia's St. Paul's Chapel. The records also include a small amount of correspondence, press releases, and newspaper clippings dating from 1971 when Cordier returned to the school after his term as president.
Topics include events and donor relations. Most of the records from 1971 consist of calendar pages. The records also include a report on gifts and grants that were received by the school between 1962 and 1971.
Topics related to the campus disturbances of 1968 1969 and 1970 include: demonstrations, discipline, public relations, Black studies programs, the Naval Reserve Officer's Training Corps (NROTC) and campus recruiting by the military, Columbia's plans to erect a gymnasium in Morningside Park, and Cordier's efforts to improve communication between students, faculty and administrators. Many of the records consist of press releases and Cordier's statements on a variety of subjects related to demonstrations. Among other topics, Cordier issued statements regarding: the Cox Commission's report on the investigation of the 1968 campus disturbances; relations between students and the administration, the role of the University, and disciplinary policies (August 23, 1968); the reorganization of the University's Earl Hall religious center as the Center for Religion and Life (January, 1970); and military action in Vietnam. Other related records include: substantive letters regarding the handling of demonstrations and issues involving campus unrest; a press release regarding Cordier's appointment; his open letter to students regarding the situation on campus (September 10, 1968); a transcript of his appearance on Face the Nation (August 24, 1969); telegrams regarding the Vietnam War and Kent State riots that were sent to President Richard Nixon by Cordier and the presidents of other universities; Cordier's 1970 commencement address; and his calendar pages. Also, two files of records regarding Cordier's investiture as president and two files of congratulatory letters from alumni, donors, and the public. Some of these letters also discuss campus demonstrations
Box 451 Folder 9 to 10
Correspondence between Walter R. Corey, assistant dean of the School of Engineering at Columbia University, and University administrators. correspondence relates to the School of Engineering.
Topics include: personnel, faculty appointments, finances, financial aid, and prizes. Also, correspondence relating to Corey's personnel issues
Box 351 Folder 12 to 13
Correspondence between Milton L. Cornell, president of the Alumni Association of the School of Mines, Engineering, and Chemistry at Columbia Univerity, and the president of the University. Correspondence dating from 1926 to 1928 relates to the work of the Alumni Committee on the Engineering Schools which was appointed by President Nicholas Murray Butler to study School of Mines, Engineering, and Chemistry and to report on its enrollment, faculty, facilities, requirements, and standing. Correspondence dating from 1946 to 1949 relates to the work of the University Development Plan Committee which was appointed by Acting President Frank D. Fackenthal to study the University and develop a report on its future goals and needs. Includes the committee's report. Also, routine correspondence regarding the Society of Older Graduates
Box 343 Folder 6 to 12
Correspondence between Professor John J. Coss of Columbia University and the president and secretary of the University. Coss held a number of appointments including, professor of philosophy, director of the Summer Session, executive officer of the Department of Philosophy, and chairman of the Advisory Board of the Columbia University Statistical Bureau. Correspondence relates to the department, the Summer Session, and the bureau. Topics related to the Department of Philosophy include: faculty appointments, faculty affairs, departmental finances and budgeting, scholarships, personnel, and special events. Includes departmental budgets. Also, correspondence (ca. 1924-1926) documenting the work of the Executive Committee of the 6th International Congress of Philosophy and the agenda of the Congress. Also, correspondence and budgets (ca. 1911) regarding plans for a celebration commemorating Roger Bacon as well as a script outline for a pageant in honor of Bacon.
Topics related to the Summer Session include: finances, the curriculum, scholarships, faculty appointments, student affairs, registration, and budgeting. Includes Summer Session budgets and financial statements. Also includes correspondence and a report regarding a workers' class which was offered during 1929 and 1930. The report documents teaching methods, curriculum, enrollment, and other topics related to the course. As director of the Summer Session, Coss seems to have been active in a number of studies and proposals involving student programs. These include a study of the University's extra-curricular programs and services for students (ca. 1927) and a report from the University Committee on Graduate Training in Collegiate Teaching, dated 1931.
Records related to the Statistical Bureau include a report and map (ca. 1926) entitled "The Distribution of the Negro in Harlem" as well as a small amount of other correspondence and reports. Also, correspondence regarding the closing of Seth Low Junior College, a two-year junior college in Brooklyn which was affiliated with the University's continuing education division. Also includes correspondence relating to Coss' personnel issues and professional activities
Box 668 Folder 45
Correspondence between Douglas W. Coster, Columbia University's liaison to the United Nations, and the secretary of the University. correspondence relates to the Office of the University Committee on the United Nations.
Topics include: the establishment of the office and its programs, the maintenance of office facilities, student internships, and budgeting. Includes reports for the Summer Session of 1947 and the 1947-1948 academic year
Box 321 Folder 23
Correspondence between Frederic R. Coudert, a trustee of Columbia University and a member of the Committee on Education of the board of trustees, and Seth Low, president of the University.
Topics include: faculty appointments, Coudert's nomination to the board of trustees, and his resignation. Contains mostly routine correspondence
Box 321 Folder 1 to 3
Correspondence between Frederic R. Coudert, a trustee of Columbia University and a member of the trustee committees on education and honors, and the president, acting president, faculty, and trustees of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to trustee business and the academic affairs of the University.
Topics include: the membership of the board of trustees, arrangements for meetings, faculty appointments, student affairs, special lectures, and the relationship between the University and Teacher's College. Also, correspondence regarding nominations for honorary degrees. Contains many routine cover letters, invitations, and acknowledgement letters. There is a gap in the records between 1919 and 1944
Box 495 Folder 25
Correspondence between Philip Courtney and high level administrators at Columbia University. Courtney was president of Coty, Inc. and chairman of the United States Council of the International Chamber of Commerce. The records consist of correspondence, cover letters, clippings, and invitations relating to a variety of subjects.
Topics include the routine business of the American Society of the French Legion of Honor, membership in the legion, and legion events. Other records include: several letters regarding the quiz show scandal involving Columbia professor Charles Van Doren's appearance on 21 and the role and dangers of television; a speech and statement on the problems of television (1959); and a speech and memorandum on international monetary problems and American monetary policies (1958)
Box 669 Folder 48
Correspondence between Laing Gray Cowan, assistant professor of government and assistant director of the School of International Affairs at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to Cowan's leave of absence and the awarding of the Einstein Prize in 1953
Box 345 Folder 1 to 10
Correspondence between Frederick Coykendall, a trustee of Columbia University, the president and other high level University administrators, trustees, and donors. Coykendall served as an alumni trustee and trustee from 1916 to 1954. He was a member of the committees on finance and education and served as chairman of the board from 1933 until his death in 1954.
Correspondence relates to a wide range of topics including: the merger of Columbia University's medical school with Presbyterian Hospital; University finances and debt service; and the transition period between the administration of long-time University president, Nicholas Murray Butler, to the administrations of University presidents Dwight D. Eisenhower and Grayson Kirk. Correspondence dating from 1911 to 1924 relates to the merger between Columbia's College of Physicians and Surgeons and Presbyterian Hospital in New York. Topics include: the organization of the medical school, the funding and purchase of a location for the new medical school and hospital, proposed facilities and curricula, and other issues related to the establishment, funding, and administration of the new organization. Much of the correspondence consists of copies of letters from trustees, University administratiors, the dean of the medical school, and the general Education Board which were fowarded to Coykendall for his comments.
Records dating from the 1920s to the 1940s deal with a range of University-related issues. These include: correspondence and reports (ca. 1924-1940) regarding the publications, administration, income, and publication costs of the Columbia University Press; correspondence regarding University finances and debt service, gifts to the University, and the management of special funds; and correspondence and reports (ca. 1930 to the early 1940s) documenting the work of University Patent, Inc. which was run by Columbia in order to secure patents for work done by University faculty members. Also includes correspondence and reports from the 1930s which document the work of the Committee on Residence Halls and Dining Halls and correspondence (ca. 1942-1943) relating to the creation of a comptroller's office, which was established to oversee certain administrative tasks and the manage University's buildings and grounds.
Much of the correspondence dating from the mid 1940s to 1954 deals with routine trustee business. However, records from this period also include some correspondence regarding the retirement of President Butler, the selection of Dwight D. Eisenhower as president of the University, Eisenhower's resignation, and the inaugural of Grayson Kirk as president. Includes a letter dating from February 3, 1949 in which Eisenhower discusses the role of higher education in combating communism
Box 659 Folder 32
Correspondence between Professor Edwin B. Cragin of Columbia University and the president and secretary of the University. Cragin's appointments included secretary of the Faculty of Medicine, professor of obstetrics, and professor of gynecology. Most of the correspondence relates to faculty and student affairs.
Topics include: candidates for degrees, attendance figures, and students who were caught cheating
Box 672 Folder 55
Correspondence between Ronald M. Craigmyle and Columbia University president Grayson Kirk. Craigmyle was a University trustee and chairman of the trustees' committee on development and alumni affairs. Correspondence relates to: Craigmyle's gift to Columbia, the 40th anniversary of the Class of 1920 and a gift from Percy Uris for the construction of a building for the Graduate School of Business. Also includes minutes of the Trustee Committee on Development and Alumni Affairs
Box 659 Folder 33
Correspondence between Henry E. Crampton, professor of Zoology in Barnard College at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Crampton also chaired the committee in charge of commencement. Most of the correspondence relates to preparations for commencement ceremonies. Also, correspondence regarding Crampton's personnel matters and appointment as Hewitt Lecturer for the 1906-1907 academic year
Box 667 Folder 15
Correspondence between Rebekeh Crawford, a benefactor of Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to Crawford's donation of books for use by undergraduate students and the agreement between Crawford and Columbia that the collection be named the Misses Crawford School Library
Box 90 Folder 21 to 22
Correspondence between Olga Cristo-Loveanu and Columbia University administrators. Mrs. Cristo-Louveanu was the widow of Elie Cristo-Louveanu, a painter and professor of Romanian languages at Columbia. Correspondence relates to: Mrs. Cristo-Louveanu's personal finances and requests for financial assistance from the University; disputes between the University and Mrs. Cristo-Louveanu regarding missing and damaged paintings and reimbursement for the artworks; proposals for the completion of Elie Cristo-Louveanu's manuscript of a Romanian etymological dictionary; and numerous requests for various types of assistance and favors from the University
Box 659 Folder 34
Correspondence between Francis B. Crocker, professor of electrical engineering and head of the Department of Electrical Engineering at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the department.
Topics include: equipment, faculty appointments, and faculty affairs. Includes detailed correspondence regarding the departmental curriculum (ca. 1905-1908) and correspondence regarding the establishment of a four-year course in electrical engineering (1891)
Box 668 Folder 29
Correspondence between Lincoln Cromwell, president of St. Luke's Hospital in New York City, and the president of Columbia University. Most of the correspondence relates to cooperation between colleges, hospitals, and churches in the Morningside Heights area in order to address community problems
Box 669 Folder 11
Correspondence between Harold L. Cross, associate dean of the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University, and the provost and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to scholarships, student affairs, and alumni affairs
Box 18 Folder 31
Correspondence between Robert D. Cross, chairman of the Department of History at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Includes correspondence with William T. R. Fox, professor of international relations and director of the Institute of War and Peace Studies. Correspondence relates to the Department of History.
Topics include: staffing needs and funding for graduate students. In particular, the correspondence relates to a departmental search for someone to teach Latin American topics and attempts to hire E. Bradford Burns over the objections of a University ad hoc committee. Includes the committee report on the search. Also, correspondence regarding Cross' personnel issues and resignation to become the president of Hunter College
Box 495 Folder 6 to 7
Most of the records consist of correspondence between Allen B. Crow, president of the Economic Club of Detroit, and Frank Abrams of the council for Financial Aid to Higher Education. The correspondence was forwarded to Columbia University administrators by Crow. Also, correspondence between Crow and high level Columbia administrators regarding an address on the financing of higher education and the relationship between business and education that was given at the Economic Club by Columbia University president Grayson Kirk
Box 393 Folder 15 to 20
Correspondence between professor Frederick Emory Croxton of Columbia University and high level University administrators. Croxton held a number of appointments including professor of statistics, director of the Statistical Laboratories, secretary of the Faculty of Columbia College, and interim director of admissions. He also served on numerous committees including the Committee on School Problems of Faculty Families, the Committee on Government Surplus Equipment, and the Committee on Space Analysis. Most of the records relate to admissions, the Registrar's Office, and issues involving schooling for faculty children. Includes records regarding a wide range of additional topics. Records related to the Committee on School Problems of Faculty Families consist of correspondence and reports (ca. 1946-1959).
Topics include: public schooling in the University neighborhood, attempts to establish a school at the University, and scholarships for faculty children to attend private schools. Records related to admissions and the Registrar's Office include correspondence, reports, and budgets (ca. 1951-1960). Topics include: application and admissions statistics, class numbering and scheduling, individual candidates for admission, financial aid, and the management of the Foreign Student Advisor's Office.
Other records include: correspondence and lists regarding membership in the Faculty of Columbia College (ca. 1945-1960), correspondence and lists regarding the acquisition of surplus government equipment (ca. 1945-1947), correspondence regarding the equipment and administration of the University's statistics laboratory, and correspondence and reports (ca. 1956-1961) regarding campus space assignments and long-range space planning
Box 672 Folder 56
Correspondence between Robert Denoon Cumming and Columbia University administrators. Cumming was an associate professor of philosophy and acting chairman of the Department of Philosophy. Correspondence relates to faculty affairs in the department. Also, correspondence regarding Cumming's personnel issues
Box 349 Folder 1
Correspondence between John William Cunliffe, professor of English and director of the School of Journalism at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Much of the correspondence relates to Cunliffe's appointment and the routine administration of the School of Journalism. Includes some correspondence regarding the selection of Pulitzer Prize recipients.
Box 405 Folder 18 to 20
Correspondence between Walter A. Curry, executive officer of the department of Electrical Engineering and secretary of the Faculty of Engineering at Columbia University, and the acting president, university secretary, and dean of the School of Engineering. Most of the records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the Department of Electrical Engineering.
Topics include: faculty appointments, budgeting, equipment, and faculty affairs. Includes correspondence regarding membership in the Faculty of Engineering
Box 669 Folder 49
Correspondence between Merle E. Curti, professor of history at the University of Wisconsin, and high level administrators at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Curti's appointment to give the Gino Speranza Lectures on American Traditions and Ideals
Box 659 Folder 35
Correspondence between Professor Carlton C. Curtis and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Curtis held a number of appointments including assistant professor and professor of botany and acting head of the Department of Botany. Correspondence relates to the department.
Topics include staffing needs, faculty appointments, and student affairs. Includes correspondence regarding the reorganization of the department in 1907. Also, correspondence regarding Carlton's personnel issues. Much of the correspondence is routine
Box 437 Folder 1 to 8
Correspondence between J. Montgomery Curtis, professor of journalism at Columbia University, and University administrators. Curtis was also director of the American Press Institute, a professional development and education program for journalists which was run by the journalism school. The records consist of correspondence, reports, articles, and newspaper clippings regarding the institute.
Topics include: institute finances, attendance, programs, the management of special funds in support of the institute, and institute sponsors. Includes membership lists, annual reports to the institute's board, and routine gift acknowledgement letters. Also includes reports documenting a seminar for journalists in South East Asia.
Box 321 Folder 4 to 7
Correspondence between Professor John G. Curtis of the Department of Physiology in the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the curriculum of the college and the business of the department. Topics related to the College of Physicians and Surgeons include the development of a four-year undergraduate program in medicine and the organization of departments in the college. Topics related to the Department of Physiology include: faculty appointments, facilities, laboratories, and equipment. Includes, a report on the history and condition of the department written by Curtis before his retirement in 1909. Also includes correspondence (ca. 1907-1908) regarding anti-vivisection legislation and the purpose and proper conduct of animal research
Box 660 Folder 1
Correspondence between Professor Harry Alonzo Cushing and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Cushing held appointments as a tutor and lecturer in history, professor of law, and acting dean of the School of Law. Most of the correspondence relates to routine matters involving Cushing's personnel issues and the administration of the School of Law. Includes correspondence and newspaper clippings regarding Cushing's resignation in protest over the appointment of Harlan Fiske Stone as dean of the law school. The records also include a detailed report of the Special Committee on Library Policies. The report discusses staffing, the improvement of library facilities, and the organization of the University libraries
Box 672 Folder 41
Correspondence between Ben Scott Custer, director of the Columbia College Citizenship Program, and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to his appointment and personnel issues. Includes a press release
Box 669 Folder 50
Correspondence between Harold G. Cutright and the president and special advisor to the president at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Cutright's newspaper columns and issues regarding political activity and academic freedom. Includes newspaper clippings and Methodist pamphlets. Records make note of Lou Little, the University football coach
Box 665 Folder 10
Correspondence between Olivia M. Cutting, the widow of Columbia University Trustee William Bayard Cutting, and the president of the University. Correspondence relates to the establishment of the William Bayard Cutting fellowships and proposed alternate uses of the fellowship funds during World War I. Includes letters regarding the negative impact of World War I on University finances
Box 660 Folder 2
Correspondence between Robert Fulton Cutting and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects regarding the University and social issues. Among other topics, the records document: Cutting's gifts to Columbia in support of prizes for student essays, his appointment as a Curtis Medal judge for 1903 funding for the New York Association for Improving the Condition of the Poor, starvation in Russia, and the Fulton Memorial Association
Box 660 Folder 3
Correspondence between William Bayard Cutting and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Cutting was chairman of the University's finance committee and a member of the Citizen's Relief Committee. Correspondence relates to the University and social problems.
Topics include: Cutting's gifts to the Columbia, fund raising for the University, University finances, Cutting's opposition to the creation of a business school at the University, and relief work on Manhattan's lower East Side. Includes a number of detailed letters from Columbia president Seth Low regarding salaries, Low's opinions on departments and faculty members, and other topics
Box 507 Folder 16
Routine correspondence regarding expenditures and reimbursements
Box 667 Folder 41
Correspondence between Samuel S. Dale, a benefactor of Columbia University, and the University's president, secretary and clerk of the board of trustees. Correspondence relates to arrangements for Columbia to maintain the Thomas and Fanny Dale Memorial Library, which Dale had donated to the University
Box 501 Folder 21
Correspondence between Jack Dalton and high level administrators at Columbia University. Dalton served as Dean of the University's School of Library Service. Correspondence relates to the school.
Topics include: appropriations, faculty affairs, faculty appointments, and membership on the advisory council of the school
Box 321 Folder 9
Correspondence between Professor Henry W. L. Dana of the Department of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University, and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia. Correspondence relates to Dana's dismissal from the University in 1917. Also, correspondence between butler and University administrators and trustees as well as letters to Butler from alumni regarding Dana's case.
Topics include: the controversy over Dana's memberships in The People's Council and the Collegiate Anti-Militaristic League, his dismissal from the University, and academic freedom. Also, correspondence regarding the activities of the Committee of Nine, the Committee on Education, and the Special committee of Inquiry into the State of Teaching in the University in relation to Dana's dismissal and issues of academic freedom
Box 322 Folder 1 to 16
Correspondence between Charles S. Danielson, the bursar of Columbia University, and University administrators. Routine correspondence regarding the processing of salary, loan, gift, and other financial transactions
Box 660 Folder 4 to 6
Correspondence between Edward A. Darling, superintendent of buildings and grounds at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Most of the records consist of correspondence, bids, proposals, and budgets regarding the purchase and development of Columbia's Morningside Heights campus.
Topics include: the removal of existing buildings, construction, meetings with Charles Follen McKim of the architectural firm of McKim, Meade & White, funding for the new site, and furnishing and equipping the new campus. Also, correspondence regarding the investigation of a theft of microscopes (1899) and correspondence regarding Darling's death and his bequest to the University (ca. 1903-1905)
Box 349 Folder 2 to 9
Correspondence between William Darrach, dean of the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Much of the correspondence relates to the medical school.
Topics include: activities and programs, faculty affairs, management of the school's libraries, faculty appointments and recruiting, prizes, fellowships, and research funding. Includes correspondence regarding the administration of Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center and the Vanderbilt Clinic. Also, correspondence and other records regarding the School of Tropical Medicine in Puerto Rico
Box 672 Folder 57
Correspondence between Nilima Das of the Taraknath Das Foundation and high level administrators at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the awarding of the Taraknath Das Foundation Prize to Leon Finder, a professor at Queens College. Includes a list of prize recipients. Also, correspondence regarding memorial lectures in honor of Taraknath Das and the routine business of the Das foundation
Box 428 Folder 21 to 22
Correspondence between Taraknath Das, a lecturer in history and benefactor of Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Das was also chairman of the Taraknath Das Foundation and the Mary Keating Das Committee. Correspondence relates to the Mary Keating Das Memorial Lectures, Das' relations with Indian officials, and his work to promote Indian studies and the understanding of India in the United States. Includes a number of addresses and lectures regarding India. Also includes correspondence regarding the selection of Mary Keating Das lecturers and the management of the Mary Keating Das Fund. Includes invitations and routine correspondence
Box 488 Folder 16 to 18
Correspondence between Henry David, executive director of the National Manpower Council, and high level administrators at Columbia University. The National Manpower Council, which was established under the auspices of Columbia's Graduate School of Business, consisted of representatives from business, labor, medicine, public service, and academia. The council studied human resources issues and worked to stimulate the use of human resources and the development of a national human resources policy. The records consist of correspondence, reports and statements regarding council research and correspondence relating to membership in the council.
Records include: the council's statement in response to federal equal pay legislation; an evaluation of the council's report on vocational education, A Policy for Skilled Manpower; correspondence regarding the council's Womanpower report (ca. June, 1957); correspondence relating to a study of the governmental labor force (ca. July, 1959); a printed compilation of reviews of council reports dating from 1951 to 1956 and council minutes dating from February 18, 1956 and November 17, 1956
Box 90 Folder 23
Correspondence and other records regarding the dismissal of Arthur T. Davidson, head of surgery at Harlem Hospital, and Davidson's subsequent discrimination lawsuit against Columbia University. Includes reports regarding the case and correspondence between attorney's regarding settlements
Box 660 Folder 7
Correspondence between Julian T. Davies, president of the Columbia College alumni association, and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to alumni representation on the University's board of trustees, which was first approved in 1909. Correspondence also relates to fund raising
Box 665 Folder 11
Correspondence between Milton J. Davies, assistant to the director of Columbia University's Extension Teaching division, and the secretary of the University. Includes correspondence with James C. Egbert, director of Extension Teaching. Correspondence relates to the Institute of Arts and Sciences, a program of public lectures and short courses which were offered through Columbia's continuing education division
Box 667 Folder 27
Correspondence between Charles Davis and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Includes correspondence with the director of University Extension, Columbia's continuing education division. Davis was a benefactor of the University. Correspondence relates to a lecture series by psychologist Alfred Adler and the possibility of establishing an academy of human science
Box 433 Folder 21 to 22
Correspondence between Kingsley Davis, head of the Bureau of Applied Social Research at Columbia University, and the president and vice president of the University. Correspondence relates to research projects and publications sponsored by the Bureau of Applied Social Research. Includes draft proposals (ca. 1953) to establish an international population research center. Also, routine correspondence regarding funding for Davis' own research projects from the Council for Research in the Social Sciences
Box 396 Folder 1 to 11
Correspondence between Paul H. Davis and the high level administrators of Columbia University, University alumni, trustees, and donors. Davis was recruited in 1945 to head a ten-year development program for the University. He served as general secretary and, later, as the vice president in charge of development. Most of the records consist of correspondence, reports, minutes, agenda, and notes relating to the University's development, alumni relations, and public relations activities. Other related records include: clippings, pamphlets, lists, press releases and budgets. Also, correspondence relating to prizes, funds, gifts, and awards.
Topics include the Ambrose Monell Medal, Columbia American Scholars, the Harriman Estate (Arden House), and the Pupin Medal. Also includes records documenting preparations for the inauguration of University president Dwight D. Eisenhower and correspondence regarding Davis' appointment and resignation
Box 501 Folder 22
Correspondence between William H. Davison and high level administrators at Columbia University. Davison was a professor of naval science and commanding officer of the University's Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps (NROTC) program. Correspondence relates to the NROTC program.
Topics include: faculty affairs, faculty appointments, and administrative issues. Includes a pamphlet regarding the NROTC program at Columbia (November, 1960)
Box 18 Folder 35
Correspondence between Professor Charles R. Dawson and the president and vice president of Columbia University. Dawson was president of the Men's Faculty Club at the University and chairman of the University Committee on Athletic Eligibility. Correspondence relates to his appointment as chairman of the committee and a stag party that was held at the Men's faculty Club in April of 1959
Box 672 Folder 23
Correspondence between Ray Dawson, professor of botany at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to routine requests for permission to use University property for a series of auctions. Also, correspondence regarding the use of the mansion at the University's Nevis Estate in Irvington-on-Hudson, New York
Box 669 Folder 26
Correspondence between Mrs. Robert W. Dayton, associate director of admissions at Barnard College, and the secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to tuition exemption for the daughters of University faculty who were applying to Barnard
Box 497 Folder 13 to 18
Correspondence between William Theodore De Bary and high level administrators at Columbia University. De Bary held a number of appointments at Columbia including professor of Chinese and Japanese, Horace Walpole Carpentier Professor of Oriental Studies, director of the Columbia College Oriental Studies Program, chairman of the Department of Chinese and Japanese, chairman of the Committee on Oriental Studies, director of the East Asian Language and Area Center, chairman of the Executive Committee of the University Senate, and vice president for academic affairs. Correspondence dating from 1958 to 1969 relates to Asian studies at Columbia. Correspondence dating from 1969 to 1971 relates to Columbia during the campus disturbances of the late 1960s and early 1970s. Also, a report from the Dean's Committee on the Humanities Courses in Columbia College to the dean of Columbia College (March, 1963). The report discusses the humanities portion of Columbia's Core Curriculum and includes the results of a survey of students in humanities courses.
Topics related to the Department of Chinese and Japanese include: appropriations, faculty appointments, the East Asian library, funding for programs and research, faculty affairs and immigration issues, budgeting, and the financial administration of departmental research projects. Topics related to Asian studies include: the Columbia College Oriental Studies Program (ca. 1960-1964); the Committee on Oriental Studies, which was established in 1961 to oversee undergraduate Asian studies; and the East Asian Language and Area Center, which was established to conduct research and education in the languages, cultures, and history of China, Japan, and Korea (ca. 1963-1965). related records include: an annual report of the college oriental studies program for the 1960-1961 academic year; annual reports of the Committee on Oriental Studies for the 1962-1963 1963-1964 and 1964-1965 academic years; comprehensive reports on the East Asian center for the 1962-1963 and 1964-1965 academic years as well as the Summer Sessions of 1964 and 1965 a report on the Ming Biographical History Project, a study of the 14th through the 17th centuries in China that was conducted by the Association for Asian Studies (October, 1964); and a press release regarding a high school Asian studies program (July, 1965). Includes three articles regarding Asian studies: Asian Studies for Undergraduates from the Journal of Higher Education (vol. xxx, no. 1); East Asian Studies: A Comprehensive Program from Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science (vol. 356 November, 1964); and Education for a World Community from the Bulletin of the Association of American Colleges (vol. L, no. 4). Also, one file of substantive reports on the East Asian center dating from 1963 to 1964. Some of the reports are duplicates. Records dating from 1969 to 1971 relate to campus unrest and the business of the University Senate.
The records include a number of letters discussing policies regarding demonstrations and discipline. Includes a statement on campus unrest by University president Andrew Cordier (August, 1969) and a press release that quotes a letter from president William J. McGill regarding the disruption of a Puerto Rican history class by a demonstration. Also, substantive memoranda regarding University organization, policies, finances, and other University Senate agenda items. Records dating from 1971 consist of press releases regarding De Bary's appointment as vice president for academic affairs
Box 668 Folder 12
Correspondence between Mario P. de Brito of the Administrative Department of Public Service in Brazil and the secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the translation of Columbia's bulletin into Portugese for distribution in Brazil
Box 321 Folder 11
Correspondence between Robert W. De Forest, President of the Charity organization Society of the City of New York and Secretary of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Nicholas Murray Butler, President of Columbia University. Also, correspondence between De Forest and Presbyterian Hospital administrators. Correspondence relates to the establishment of an affiliation agreement between Columbia and Presbyterian Hospital (ca. 1910-1911), relations between the University and the hospital, and relations between Columbia and the Metropolitan museum of Art
Box 668 Folder 16
Correspondence between Manuel Ma. de Ynchausti and the provost and secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Ynchausti's anonymous gift in support of a lecturing position at the University for Dr. Jose Antonio de Aguirre
Box 321 Folder 10
Correspondence between Bashford Dean, adjunct professor of zoology at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Also includes Dean's letters to Henry Fairfield Osborn, Da Costa Professor of Biology at Columbia University.
Topics include: field work, research trips, the acquisition of specimens. Includes correspondence describing specimens viewed in the field or at other institutions. Also, correspondence regarding fellowships and facilities in the departments of biology and zoology. Dean was also director of the College of the City of New York Summer School of Biology which was held at Cold Spring Harbor, New York (ca. 1890). Includes a detailed report discussing the: student body, lectures, curriculum, organization, equipment, and expenses of the school
Box 508 Folder 6
Correspondence between Herbert A. Deane and high level administrators at Columbia University. Deane's appointments included dean of the Graduate Faculties and vice provost of academic planning. Most of the correspondence related to the Graduate Faculties is routine. However, some correspondence relates to: student affairs and discipline, faculty affairs, demonstrations, and relations between students and the administration. Includes Deane's speech on student attitudes towards institutions (1968). In particular, the speech addresses anarchist and nihilist opposition to institutions. As vice provost, Deane was charged with evaluating and revising the University's structure and mission. Includes a proposal for changes to the organization and government of the University (1968). Among other topics, the proposal discusses discipline, the role of the faculty, and the relationship of students to the administration. Also, correspondence regarding Deane's personnel issues
Box 54 Folder 33
Records regarding the appointment of Irving DeKoff as director of student interests at Columbia University. Most of the records relate to personnel issues and other routine topics
Box 386 Folder 1
Correspondence between Milton C. Del Manzo, provost of Teachers College at Columbia University, and the provost and secretary of the University.
Topics include membership in the Faculty of Teachers College, student affairs, and enrollment privileges for Teachers College and University courses. Includes a copy of the revised by-laws of Teachers College dated September, 1941
Box 508 Folder 14 to 15
Correspondence between George T. Delacorte, president of Dell Publishing Company, and the president and vice president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Delacorte's gifts to Columbia. Includes correspondence regarding funding for the College Walk landscaping project and the erection of gates on College Walk at the Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue entrances to Columbia's Morningside Heights campus. Also includes numerous routine acknowledgement letters
Box 36 Folder 23
Correspondence between Edward C. Delafield and administrators at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Delafield's gift to Columbia of his estate, Fieldston Hall, for use as a botanical garden.
Topics include: the renaming of the estate as the Edward C. Delafield Botanical Garden, issues regarding taxes and the rebuilding of city streets through and around the estate, possible uses for the house and land, and the question of who would live in the main house at the estate. Includes a report regarding the estate and Delafield as well as a newspaper clipping regarding the gift of the estate. Also includes correspondence regarding Delafield's complaints that the property was not being used as he intended
Box 501 Folder 15 to 20
Correspondence between Fred DelliQuadri, dean of the New York School of Social Work, and high level administrators at Columbia University. The records consist of correspondence and reports relating to the school.
Topics include: faculty appointments, events, funding for the school, alumni relations, development, cooperation between the school and social service agencies, gifts to the school, the management of loan funds, and faculty affairs. Also, many of the records dating from 1964 to 1965 consist of correspondence and reports regarding the Mobilization for Youth program, which was established to control and prevent juvenile delinquency on Manhattan's Lower East Side. Also includes a file of records regarding a reception for Dean DelliQuadri and his wife. Records related to the school of social work include: records regarding the school's change of name to the Columbia University School of Social Work (1962); by-laws of the school's advisory council and a summary report regarding the council (January, 1963); annual reports of the school from the 1961-1962 1963-1964 and 1965-1966 academic years; and a proposal to establish a center for training and research in intergroup relations to be named for Eleanor Roosevelt (July, 1966)
Box 504 Folder 16
Correspondence between Adam DeNisco, Columbia University's security officer, and University administrators. The correspondence is routine
Box 321 Folder 12
Correspondence between Edward T. Devine, director of the School of philanthropy and general secretary of the Charity Organization Society of the City of New York, and high level administrators at Columbia University. Correspondence documents Columbia's activities in relation to social work, social services, charities, and hospitals. Also, correspondence regarding the School of Philanthropy.
Topics include: Columbia's financial support for the school, relations between the school and the University, and faculty appointments in the school. Devine also served as a special representative of the American Red Cross. Includes correspondence discussing his work as a representative of the Red Cross after the San Fransisco earthquake of 1906 as an observer of the condition of German prisoners in Russian camps during World War I, and as a relief worker in Paris between 1916 and 1918. Much of this correspondence is administrative. However, there is some discussion of Devine's activities and of conditions in the field
Box 321 Folder 13
Correspondence between John Dewey, professor of philosophy in the Department of Philosophy and Psychology at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the department.
Topics include: special lectures, facilities, faculty appointments, budgeting, fellowships, and course scheduling. Also, correspondence regarding Dewey's personnel issues and memberships on University committees
Box 670 Folder 32
Correspondence between Thomas E. Dewey, governor of New York, and Columbia University administrators. Correspondence relates to invitations for Dewey to speak at University events. Includes invitations for Dewey to speak at the 25th anniversary of the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center
Box 493 Folder 22
Correspondence between Aquilla G. Dibrell, professor of naval science in the Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps (NROTC) at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the NROTC program.
Topics include: facilities, prizes and awards, personnel, and NROTC policies and programs. Includes invitations
Box 665 Folder 13 to 14
Correspondence between Frank A. Dickey and the president, secretary, and consulting engineer of Columbia University. Dickey served as assistant registrar and registrar of the University. Correspondence relates to the numerous responsibilities of the Registrar's Office.
Topics include: fees, classroom size, examination procedures, student records, and diplomas. Includes a report on examination procedures in the law school and a report on the operation of the student mail system
Box 495 Folder 26
Correspondence between Lois Dickson, acting foreign student advisor at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to issues involving international students.
Topics include: admissions, orientation, financial aid, immigration and visas, and events. Includes: correspondence regarding admissions and financial aid for Hungarian students during the 1950s directories of international students dating from 1957 and a copy of Columbia Worldwide, the international student newsletter. According to a note in the file, correspondence dated prior to 1956 is filed under Lois D. Stitch
Box 660 Folder 8
Correspondence between Frederick Dielman of the National Academy of Design and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to an agreement between the University and the academy and the formation of a faculty of fine arts at Columbia
Box 669 Folder 51
Correspondence between John Dillenberger, associate professor of religion and acting executive officer of the Department of Religion at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to administrative issues involving the department. Includes supporting documents for a report on the relationship between Columbia and Union Theological Seminary
Box 670 Folder 33
Correspondence between Carolyn C. Dilworth, administrative assistant to the dean of the School of Law at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to various issues.
Topics include: the school's Hardship Fund, a gift to the school from Mrs. Harlan Fiske Stone, prizes, and student affairs
Box 375 Folder 14 to 15
Correspondence between Professor William Bell Dinsmoor and the high level administrators of Columbia University. Dinsmoor held appointments as professor of architecture and, later, professor of archeology. He served as executive officer of the Department of Fine Arts, which was reorganized as the Department of Fine Arts and Archeology. Records relate to the department and to attempts to establish a University arts center. Most of the records dating from the 1930s consist of correspondence, reports and proposals which evaluate the faculty, organization, curriculum, and future needs of the Department of Fine Arts. Correspondence and budgets also document the routine business of the department during this period.
Topics include: budgeting, finances, faculty affairs, and relations with the Metropolitan Museum of Art. In particular, the correspondence discusses the appointment of Professor Margaret Beiber, who was a displaced German scholar, and her status in the department. Most of the records dating from the 1940s to the 1950s consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the department.
Topics include: faculty affairs, faculty appointments, budgeting, and finances. Includes proposals to establish a fine arts center and a University art museum (ca. 1947). Also includes correspondence regarding a proposed Apollinic Festival of fine arts, letters, and sciences (ca. 1936). Also, correspondence regarding Dinsmoor's personnel issues and research
Box 500 Folder 16 to 17
Correspondence between Richard Dirlick, an employee in the Alumni Records Center at Columbia University, and University administrators. most of the records consist of routine forms relating to alumni mailings and address updates
Box 425 Folder 16 to 17
Records forwarded from Moritz A. Dittmar to Columbia University president Grayson Kirk. Dittmar was secretary of Columbia University's College of Pharmacy. Records include: minutes of the Board of Trustees of the College of Pharmacy; the by-laws of the college; and reports from the dean, treasurer, and other administrators of the college.
Box 660 Folder 9 to 10
Correspondence between Morgan Dix and the president of Columbia University. Dix was rector of the Parish of Trinity Church in New York City, a Columbia trustee, and a member of the trustees' committee on honors. Much of the correspondence relates to honorary degrees, University ceremonies, and faculty appointments. Dix also served on the committee on the Course and the Committee on Education. Correspondence dating from 1890 to 1895 relates to the curriculum in a number of Columbia's schools. Also includes: correspondence regarding religious issues involving the teaching of Hebrew Scriptures (April, 1904); Dix's recommendation letters for candidates for admission to the University; and newspaper clippings regarding his death in 1909
Box 668 Folder 30
Correspondence between Professor Elliot V. K. Dobbie and Columbia University administrators. Correspondence relates to the Faculty of Philosophy. Topics include faculty appointments and salaries
Box 427 Folder 16
Correspondence between David L. Dodd, associate dean of the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University, and University administrators and faculty. Most of the records relate to the school. Topics include: course scheduling, facilities, personnel, and financial aid. Includes a 1952 proposal regarding the revision of accounting courses for the business major. Also, correspondence regarding the reorganization of the University's administration that took place in 1949 and the establishment of the Office of the Vice President for Business Affairs
Box 448 Folder 9
Correspondence between Harold W. Dodds, president of Princeton University, and high level administrators at Columbia University. The records consist of correspondence and press releases relating to Dodds' address before the Columbia University Bicentennial opening dinner. Includes the text of his address. Also, correspondence between Dodds and University president Grayson Kirk regarding the Association of American Universities. Includes memoranda from Dodds regarding the response to a statement on academic freedom that was released by the association in March, 1953
Box 321 Folder 14 to 16
Correspondence between Grace H. Dodge, a founder and benefactor of Teachers College at Columbia University, and University presidents Seth low and Nicholas Murray Butler. Most of the correspondence is between Dodge and President Low.
Topics include: the representation of Teachers College on University governing bodies, financial relations between the College and the University, the extension of University privileges to Teachers College students, faculty appointments, issues regarding women students, and the administration of Teachers College and Columbia University. Includes correspondence regarding religious quotas for admission to the Horace Mann School at Teachers College (ca. 1908). Correspondence between Dodge and President Butler deals primarily with Teachers College finances and the membership of the college's board of trustees. Includes correspondence regarding Butler's plan to absorb the Teachers College board into the University's board of trustees and the affiliation of the two institutions in 1914
Box 323 Folder 1 to 17
Correspondence between Marcellus Hartley Dodge and the trustees and high level administrators of Columbia University. Dodge was an alumnus, benefactor, and trustee of the University and also servied as clerk of the University's board of trustees. Contains mostly routine business or courtesy correspondence on a variety of topics as well as invitations, cover letters, and acknowledgement letters. Also, correspondence relating to fund raising, campus development, the acquisition of real estate, gifts to the University, donor relations, and trustee relations
Box 660 Folder 11
Correspondence between William E. Dodge, a benefactor of Columbia University, and University president Seth Low. Most of the correspondence relates to Earl Hall, Columbia's nondenominational religious and social center. Dodge funded Earl Hall as a memorial to his son
Box 437 Folder 9 to 15
Correspondence between James L. Dohr, professor of accounting in the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University, and University president Grayson Kirk. Dohr also held appointments as a special assistant to the president and the director of the Institute of Accounting. The records relate to a survey and evaluation of Columbia's financial and accounting procedures (ca. 1957-1958) and the reorganization of the University's budget, accounting, and financial reporting operations (ca. 1959-1960). Also, routine gift acknowledgement letters. Dohr was also a special assistant to President Kirk. Includes correspondence with the president on a variety of topics
Box 671 Folder 57
Correspondence between Seymour Dombroff, associate professor of naval science at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps (NROTC).
Topics include: facilities, expenditures, prizes and awards, and faculty appointments. Includes copies of a Navy directive regarding the transfer of Air Force Reserve Officers Training Corps (AFROTC) students to the NROTC program.
Box 669 Folder 52
Correspondence between David Herbert Donald, associate professor of history, and the secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to funding for Donald's research project and his retirement plan
Box 668 Folder 31
Correspondence between Major General William J. Donovan and Columbia University administrators. Among other topics, the correspondence relates to Donovan's honorary degree from Columbia
Box 451 Folder 11
Correspondence between Pierre Donzelot and high level administrators at Columbia University. Donzelot was director general of the French Ministry of National Education and permanent representative of French universities in the United States. Correspondence relates to Donzelot's honorary degree from Columbia as well as arrangements for events and visits to the University. Includes a catalog from an exhibition entitled French Universities and their Pursuit of Freedom. Includes invitations and routine correspondence. Some of the correspondence is in French
Box 671 Folder 23
Correspondence between Richard A. Dougherty, deputy commissioner of community relations in the New York City police department, and Robert Harron, assistant to the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to publicity for the police department's community projects, including Little League teams in Harlem. Other topics include: Morningside Heights, Inc., a community development and urban renewal program that included Columbia and other area institutions; security at public events during Columbia's 1954 bicentennial celebration; and arrangements to provide Dougherty with tickets to Columbia athletic events
Box 451 Folder 12
Correspondence between Richard Erwin Dougherty and Columbia University president Grayson Kirk. The records consist of correspondence and reports regarding the University's project to fund an engineering center. Dougherty chaired the committee in charge of planning the center.
Topics include the: funding, long-range planning, mission, and design of the center. Includes a memorandum (February, 1954) from James K. Finch, Dean Emeritus of the School of Engineering. The memorandum recounts the history of the school's space problems
Box 348 Folder 19 to 21
Correspondence between Archibald Douglas, a trustee of Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. correspondence relates to a variety of issues.
Topics include: the work of the stadium committee and planning for the University's stadium, planning for a school of international affairs, scholarships in the Faculty of Applied Science, gifts to Columbia, and University finances. includes a report on the gift to Columbia of the Nevis Estate in Irvington-on-Hudson, New York. Also includes a report on the University's ambulance corps during World War I
Box 411 Folder 2 to 3
Correspondence between Noel Thomas Dowling, Nash Professor of Law at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Dowling advised the University administration on a variety of policy decisions and administrative issues. Records relate to the reorganization of the University's administrative structure in 1949 retirement policies (ca. 1947-1953), and the rights of student groups to bring speakers to campus (ca. 1950-1951).
The records include correspondence and drafts (ca. 1947-1949) regarding the restructuring of the University's administration and the establishment of the Development Committee, Development Office, and Office of the Vice President for Business Affairs. Also, correspondence, proposals, and reports (ca. 1947-1953) documenting retirement policies and the Committee on Retirement Plans. Also includes correspondence and a file of working papers (ca. 1950-1951) documenting the work of the Committee on Student Organizations and Speakers to establish policies governing student groups. Also, correspondence (ca. 1954-1955) regarding Dowling's honorary degree from Columbia
Box 451 Folder 13
Correspondence between Robert W. Dowling and Columbia University administrators. Dowling was president of the City Investing Company and chairman of the Policy Committee of the New York City Department of Commerce and Public Events. The records consist of correspondence and invitations relating to arrangements for events and committee meetings. Includes committee minutes dating from January and April, 1955
Box 323 Folder 18 to 20
Correspondence between Augustus S. Downing, first assistant commissioner of education in the New York State Education Department, and the president and secretary of Columbia University.
Topics include: Columbia's authority to grant degrees and the recognition of new degrees offered by the University, legislation affecting educational institutions, and state scholarships. Includes a detailed letter dated April, 1910 in which Downing responds to Columbia's proposal for the establishment of a department of agriculture at the University
Box 660 Folder 12
Correspondence between Andrew S. Draper and the president of Columbia University. Draper served as president of the University of Illinois and, beginning in 1904 as Commissioner of Education in the New York State Education Department. Correspondence dating from 1898 to 1904 relates to attempts to get Draper to accept an appointment as superintendent of schools for New York City. Also includes correspondence regarding Draper's honorary degree from Columbia. Correspondence dating from 1904 to 1909 relates to a variety of issues involving higher education.
Topics include: Draper's plan for the organization of the New York State Education Department; a failed attempt to promote cooperation between the education department and the College Entrance Examination Board and the creation of the New York State Examinations Board (1905); and Columbia's combined course of overlapping college and professional education. Includes invitations and routine correspondence
Box 660 Folder 13
Correspondence between Daniel LeRoy Dresser, an alumnus of Columbia University, and the president of the University. Dresser appears to have been a benefactor of the University. Correspondence relates to: fund raising and planning for the purchase of the South Field extension to Columbia's Morningside Heights campus; Columbia's 1905 ban on football; and plans to locate a University athletic field at 220th Street (the Dyckman property) and along the Hudson between 116th and 120th streets. Includes blueprints for an athletic field. Also includes a newspaper clipping, which dates from 1907 regarding Dresser's bankruptcy in 1903
Box 425 Folder 18 to 20
Correspondence between Thomas Bradford Drew, executive officer of the Department of Chemical Engineering at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence, budgets, and policies relating to the department.
Topics include: arrangements for courses, equipment, faculty affairs, student affairs, personnel, the retention of faculty members, and the administration of the department's Chandler Chemical Museum. Also, correspondence and working papers of the Committee on Industrial Research dating from the 1950s.
Topics include: the funding, personnel, and administration of sponsored research projects; policies regarding research and development contracts; and the administration of research and development contracts
Box 669 Folder 34
Correspondence between David Dubinsky, president of the International Ladies Garment Workers' Union, and the associate provost of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to proposals to endow a chair at Columbia as a memorial to Victor Alter and Henry K. Erlich, Jewish labor leaders in Poland who had been executed for political and labor activities. Includes biographical information on Alter and Erlich
Box 672 Folder 58
Correspondence between David A. Dudley, director of undergraduate admissions at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to a variety of topics involving admissions. Records include a paper regarding the introduction of a writing sample as a requirement for college admission; the results of admissions questionnaires that were completed by School of Engineering freshmen; and routine correspondence regarding admissions. Also, correspondence regarding a dispute between Dudley and the University president as well as Dudley's resignation
Box 669 Folder 12
Correspondence between Charles Wesley Dunn and the provost of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to plans to endow a chair and an institute in food law at the University's School of Law
Box 354 Folder 17
Correspondence between Gano Dunn, a trustee of Columbia University, and the president and other trustees of the University. Dunn was chairman of the trustee's committee on buildings and grounds. Most of the correspondence relates to the renovation, maintenance, and funding of University buildings. Includes correspondence regarding research facilities and residence halls. Also includes correspondence and reports regarding corruption in the management of the University's power plant (ca. 1933). Also, correspondence regarding the selection of a dean for the School of Engineering (ca. 1929-1930).
Box 382 Folder 1 to 6
Correspondence between Leslie C. Dunn and high level administrators at Columbia University. Dunn held a number of appointments including executive officer of the Department of Zoology, secretary of the University's Faculty Fellowship Fund, director of the Institute for the Study of Human Variation. He was also a member of the Nevis Committee, which oversaw the University's Nevis Estate research facility, and the Committee on the Program, which was established ca. 1941 in order to propose changes to the University curriculum in light of the changing needs of society. Most of the records dating from 1940 to 1945 relate to the zoology department and the Faculty Fellowship Fund, a fund which was established to aid displaced European scholars. Records dating from the 1940s and 1950s also document a variety of subjects related to sponsored research at the University. In particular, the records relate to administrative issues involving research in genetics. Most of the records dating from 1951 to 1959 relate to the Nevis Biological Field Station, the Nevis Committee, or the Institute for the Study of Human Variation. Also, correspondence regarding Dunn's personnel issues and a memorandum (May, 1943) regarding his research on genetics. Includes his 1937 Armistice Day radio address on science and democracy and science and the arts. There is a gap in the records between 1949 and 1951. Records related to the Department of Zoology consist of correspondence and budgets.
Topics include: faculty appointments, equipment, facilities, appropriations, expenditures, faculty affairs, budgeting, the administration of grants and sponsored projects, and the administration of research projects. Includes correspondence regarding the celebration of the department's 50th anniversary in 1942 joint programs with the American Museum of Natural History, and the Jessup lectures. Also includes a proposal for a Navy training program (November, 1942). The proposal discusses the purpose, instructional method, curriculum, and staffing of the program. Records related to the faculty Fellowship Fund include correspondence and reports documenting assistance to scholars who fled Europe between 1935 and 1945.
Topics include: faculty appointments; financial, salary, and immigration issues involving displaced scholars; and fund finances. Includes a 10-year summary report which discusses the fund's mission and the effects of World War II on scholars. Also includes a list of aid recipients from 1935 to 1941. Records relating to research include correspondence, reports, questionnaires, and papers. The materials were compiled in 1945 in response to a survey by the government's Office of Scientific Research and Development (OSRD) that studied scientific research in American universities.
Topics include: research expenditures, research policies, and general issues involving research funding. Records related to the Nevis Biological Field Station and the Nevis Committee include correspondence and reports. Also, correspondence, reports, announcements, proposals, and bibliographies relating to the Institute for the Study of Human Variation.
Topics include: the administration of genetics and biology research projects, facilities, research funding, budgeting, and faculty affairs. In particular, the records deal with the establishment and eventual closing of the institute. Includes a report regarding the institute's research activities (July, 1956). Also includes a proposal to establish a genetics department (April, 1948)
Box 429 Folder 1 to 22
Correspondence between John R. Dunning and faculty and high level administrators at Columbia University. Dunning held a number of appointments including: Professor of Physics, Director of Scientific Research, Chairman of the Committee on Government Aided Research, chairman of the Development Committee on Science and Research, and dean of the School of Engineering. Records relate to: the Department of Physics; the Division of Scientific Research; the School of Engineering, which became the School of Engineering and Applied Science; the establishment of the University's engineering center; and Dunning's personnel issues and career. Also, correspondence and minutes (ca. 1950) regarding the Eugene Higgins Trust and a 1949 proposal regarding the gift to the University of Arden House and the use of the property.
Records regarding the Department of Physics consist of routine correspondence. Topics relating to the department include the Pupin Medal and departmental personnel. Records regarding research consist of correspondence, lists, financial records, and proposals. Related topics include: financial administration, indirect costs, expenditures, appropriations, research and development contracts, government contracts, the management of special funds, facilities, faculty appointments, payments to research associates, and the administration of faculty and research personnel. Includes records regarding the electron microscope, aeronautics, and atomic energy. records relating to the School of Engineering consist of correspondence, budgets, clippings, proposals, reports, and pamphlets.
Topics include: scholarships, professorships, faculty appointments, personnel, departmental business, enrollment, the administration of the Dean's Office, the curriculum, research contracts awarded to the school, degrees, faculty affairs, budgeting, the establishment of programs, and student affairs. Includes minutes of faculty meetings (ca. 1956-1957) as well as minutes of the Electronics Research Laboratories Administrative Board and related records (ca. 1958-1959). Also includes: correspondence (ca. 1961) regarding the establishment of the School of Engineering and Applied Science, Dunning's 1962 report on the school and the relationship between science and engineering, and correspondence (ca. 1964) regarding the school's centennial anniversary. Records relating to the Engineering Center consist of correspondence, reports, proposals, and acknowledgement letters (ca. 1950-1956).
Topics include fund raising for the center and the design of the center. Records relating to Dunning's personnel issues and career include correspondence, press releases, and a 1968 biographical statement.
Topics include his involvement in atom splitting research at the University in 1939 and his resignation as dean of the School of Engineering and Applied Science in 1969. Includes the proceedings of a press conference on engineering manpower and scientific training in the United States and the Soviet Union that was held in July, 1955. Also includes correspondence, by-laws, and a certificate of incorporation relating to the establishment of the Basic Science Foundation (ca. 1959). The foundation supported research in science and engineering
Box 430 Folder 1 to 6
Box 321 Folder 17
Correspondence between William Archibald Dunning, Professor of History in the Department of History at Columbia University, and the President and Secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the Department of History.
Topics include: course scheduling, staffing needs, budgeting, faculty appointments, the curriculum, teaching assignments, and personnel. Also, a report regarding the establishment and organization of a faculty advisor program and correspondence regarding Dunning's personnel issues
Box 667 Folder 7
Correspondence between Arthur S. Dwight and Columbia University's president, secretary and clerk of the board of trustees. Dwight was a trustee of the University and chairman of the trustees' committee on buildings and grounds. Correspondence relates to the business of the committee on buildings and grounds and plans for the erection of a war memorial. Includes minutes and a blueprint from a joint meeting of University trustees and faculty members from the Schools of Mines, Engineering, and Chemistry (November, 1920). The records relate to the organization of the schools, the recruiting of faculty members, and publicity for the schools
Box 18 Folder 22
Correspondence relates to the closing of University records on Dorothy Louise Dyke and her husband, Dunward H. Dyke
Box 660 Folder 14
Correspondence between Ethel Deodata Earle and the president and trustees of Columbia University. Ethel Earle was the widow of Mortimer L. Earle, a professor of classical philology at Columbia's Barnard College. Correspondence relates to Professor Earle's death and Mrs. Earle's efforts to secure a pension from the University
Box 668 Folder 46
Correspondence between Bion R. East, dean of the School of Dental and Oral Surgery at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the school.
Topics include: appropriations and expenditures, the opening of the school's Kamen Seminar Room, and prizes awarded by the school
Box 670 Folder 1 to 2
Correspondence between Robert Parker Eastwood, assistant dean of the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the school.
Topics include routine personnel administration and faculty affairs. Includes materials that were submitted to the committee in charge of deciding whether to continue undergraduate instruction at the business school
Box 669 Folder 35
Correspondence between Anthony Eden, British secretary of state for foreign affairs, and Grayson Kirk, the vice president and provost of columbia University. Includes correspondence with Arthur Hays Sulzberger, publisher of the New York Times. Correspondence relates to eden's honorary degree from Columbia and his appointment to deliver the Gabriel Silver Lectures. Includes copies of Eden's speech at the honorary degree ceremony and programs from the ceremony
Box 411 Folder 19 to 20
Correspondence between Irwin Edman, executive officer of the Department of Philosophy at Columbia University, and the acting president and secretary of the University. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the department.
Topics include: prizes, special lectures, budgeting, staffing needs, faculty appointments, faculty affairs, and budgeting. Includes correspondence regarding the awarding of the Butler Medal and the Woodbridge Prize. Also, correspondence regarding Edman's personnel issues, committee memberships, and professional activities. Includes a memorial biographical pamphlet regarding Edman.
Box 324 Folder 1 to 14
Correspondence between James Chidester Egbert, and high level administrators at Columbia University. Egbert held numerous posts at the University including director of the Summer Session; director of the School of Business; and director of Extension Teaching, Columbia's continuing education division. Correspondence dating from the 1890s relates to the funding of the American School of Classical Studies in Rome. Topics related to the Summer Session include: faculty appointments, publicity and advertising, budgeting, expenditures, finances, events, tuition and fees, and the organization and operation of the summer program. The correspondence also documents the role of the school in the University system and its administrative and financial relationship to the University.
Topics related to Extension Teaching include: expenditures, tuition and fees, faculty appointments, instructional costs, course scheduling, teaching assignments, finances, budgeting, the curriculum, and personnel. Includes correspondence regarding Home Study, the University's correspondence course. Also includes correspondence regarding the use of radio as an educational resource. Also, routine correspondence relating to the School of Business. Includes correspondence proposing the addition of the subject of economic geography to the curriculum of the school. Also, correspondence regarding Egbert's work on numerous committees including a committee to study the relationship between Columbia University and Teachers College, the Committee on Religous Work, and the University Commons Committee
Box 425 Folder 21 to 22
Correspondence between Lester D. Egbert and high level administrators at Columbia University. Egbert was president of Brown, Crosby & Co., Inc. and a trustee of Columbia University. He chaired the trustees' development committee and served on numerous other trustee committees. Correspondence dating from 1948 to 1949 relates to the establishment of a retirement plan for the University's non-academic employees. Records dating from the 1950s consist of correspondence and minutes relating to development and alumni relations. Includes a 1954 report regarding the University's development program. Also, routine correspondence regarding trustee business and Egbert's gifts to the University
Box 660 Folder 15
Correspondence between Professor Thomas Egleston and the president of Columbia University. Egleston held appointments as professor of metallurgy and professor emeritus of metallurgy in the School of Mines. Correspondence relates to the school.
Topics include: the school's facilities at Columbia's 49th Street campus; the reorganization of departments in the school (ca. 1892-1893); Egleston's efforts to create a metallurgical laboratory and to increase funding for metallurgical collections and supplies (1896); and the donation of Egleston's collection of specimens, books, and periodicals (1897). Includes correspondence regarding the history of the School of Mines and the evaluation of other mining schools (July, 1894)
Box 495 Folder 27
Correspondence between Samuel Eilenberg, executive officer of the Department of Mathematics at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the department.
Topics include: personnel, faculty appointments, finances, and facilities
Box 411 Folder 4 to 13
Correspondence between Dwight D. Eisenhower and the trustees and high level administrators of Columbia University. Also includes: correspondence between University administrators regarding Eisenhower, correspondence between Eisenhower's staff and the University, and letters that were received by Eisenhower and then forwarded to the University for handling. Eisenhower was president of the University from 1948 to 1953. (He took leave without pay in 1951 in order to campaign for president.) Most of the records relate to the period prior to his arrival and the period immediately following his resignation. Although the records do include some materials dating from his term as president of the University, they are not a comprehensive record of his administration.
Includes correspondence and minutes regarding preparations for Eisenhower's inaugural as president of the University as well as invitations, programs, and printed copies of his inaugural address. Also includes correspondence regarding Eisenhower's move to Columbia and his plans for the operation of the President's Office. Also: letters from Eisenhower regarding his views on his role as president of Columbia and the University's mission; correspondence regarding the reorganization of the University's administrative structure that took place in 1949 statements regarding a controversy involving funding from Eastern European governments; and a small number of Eisenhower's speeches. Includes his farewell addresses to Columbia's faculty and student body. Also, correspondence and proposals documenting studies by the Conservation for Human Resources Project and the American Assembly, an organization that Eisenhower helped to establish. Other topics include: events, convocations, visits from dignitaries, University development activities, and Columbia's 1954 bicentennial. Includes newspaper clippings regarding Eisenhower's presidential campaign
Box 660 Folder 16 to 17
Correspondence between Charles William Eliot, president of Harvard University, and Columbia University presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray Butler. Correspondence relates to a range of subjects involving Columbia and higher education in general.
Topics include: admissions criteria for graduate schools, efforts to develop standardized entrance examinations for admission to college, the establishment of Barnard College, the reform of collegiate athletics, Columbia's athletic facilities, and efforts to establish a school of archeology and ethnography in Mexico City. Includes: detailed letters from President Low regarding the development of Columbia's Collegiate Course for Women, which allowed female students to audit courses at the University; correspondence regarding President Butler's interest in making knowledge of the Bible as literature a prerequisite for college admission; and correspondence regarding the decision to change Columbia's name from Columbia College to Columbia University
Box 679 Folder 26
Correspondence between Hugh Bullock, president of the Pilgrims of the United States and the English Speaking Union, and Bernard M. Shanley, secretary to President Dwight D. Eisenhower. Correspondence relates to a invitation to attend a dinner in honor of Elizabeth II, Queen of england
Box 380 Folder 18
Correspondence between Edward S. Elliott, director of athletics at Columbia University, and University provost Frank D. Fackenthal. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the Department of Physical Education and the Division of Intercollegiate Athletics.
Topics include budgeting and gifts to the department. Includes a report on the University's intramural sports program for 1941
Box 667 Folder 28
Correspondence between Richard Theodore Ely, director of the Institute for Research in Land Economics and Public Utilities, and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the proposed relocation of the institute from Northwestern University to Columbia. The proposed move was not completed due to a lack of funding and office space
Box 507 Folder 21 to 22
Correspondence between Harold E. Emerson and high level administrators at Columbia University. Emerson held appointments as executive director of Columbia's National Alumni Program and vice president of development and alumni relations. Correspondence relates to alumni events and programs, development, gifts to Columbia, and routine administrative issues regarding alumni and the Office of Development and Alumni Relations. Includes routine invitations
Box 495 Folder 8
Correspondence between John E. Englund, executive officer of the Department of Mechanical Engineering at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the department. Topics include: personnel, faculty appointments, finances, expenditures, and equipment
Box 434 Folder 1 to 7
Correspondence between Anne B. Ennis and Columbia University administrators. Ennis was the University paymaster. Records relate to the routine processing of salary and benefits payments
Box 501 Folder 23
Correspondence between Armand G. Erpf and high level administrators at Columbia University. Erpf was chairman of Columbia Associates, a group of benefactors who agreed to make regular contributions to Columbia's general fund.
Topics include gifts to the University and University finances
Box 665 Folder 15
Correspondence between Professor John Erskine and the president of Columbia University. Erskine was a professor of English at Columbia University and acting director of the Education Department of the YMCA of Greater New York. Correspondence dating from 1911 to 1917 relates to Columbia's English Department.
Topics include delinquent students and the use of profanity during English courses. Records dating from 1918 document Erskine's work for the YMCA in France during World War I. Includes YMCA Educational Department reports and pamphlets
Box 670 Folder 34
Correspondence between Columbia University administrators and Karl E. Ettinger, a research consultant for the congressional Special Committee to Investigate Tax Exempt Foundations. Records relate to foundation support for colleges and universities. Includes a questionnaire and supporting documents regarding funding from foundations. Also includes a chronological list of contributions to the University from foundations between 1920 and 1953
Box 375 Folder 16 to 17
Correspondence between Austin P. Evans and the high level administrators of Columbia University. Evans was a professor of history, executive officer of the Department of History, and chairman of the Committee on Instruction of the Faculty of Political Science. Most of the correspondence relates to the Department of History. Correspondence also relates to the Program in International Administration and the University Seminars.
The University Seminars promote interdisciplinary, inter-institutional study and discussion of a variety of topics and problems. Topics related to the department of History include: staffing needs, teaching loads, faculty affairs, professorships, faculty recruiting, appropriations, budgeting, the curriculum, the Bennett Prize, and fellowships. Topics related to the Program in International Administration include: faculty appointments, degrees, scholarships, the curriculum, and enrollment between 1940 and 1943. Includes reports on the program. Also, correspondence and reports documenting the work of the Committee on Instruction.
The committee approved courses and academic programs and also oversaw other issues involving the academic affairs of the University. Also, a proposal and correspondence regarding the University Seminars, which were established to promote interdisciplinary, inter-institutional discussion of a range of topics and issues.
Topics include: the establishment, budgets, format, purpose, and content of the Seminars (ca. 1944-1945). Also includes a 1947 report on the reorganization of the Graduate Faculties
Box 504 Folder 1 to 4
Most of the records dating from 1961 to 1962 consist of materials that were forwarded to the Columbia University administration by Luther Harris Evans of the National Education Association. Records from this period relate to two National Education Association projects. Evans chaired a working group that was involved in: providing published materials to developing countries, assisting countries with the establishment of publishing and printing programs, and helping to create government book programs.
Includes two files containing the group's report. Also includes correspondence and reports regarding the Educational Implications of Automation Project, which addressed the impact of computers on education. Correspondence dating from 1966 to 1967 relates to Evans' appointment at Columbia as director of international and legal collections. Records from 1967 include materials relating to the work of the National Ellis Island Association, Inc. to develop the Ellis Island site as an historic monument. Also, a report on UNESCO programs that was authored by Evans and a report from the American Conference on Universities and the Quest for Peace, which was held in Lima, Peru, in November of 1964. There is a gap in the records between 1962 and 1966
Box 451 Folder 14
Correspondence between Walter Everett, associate director of the American Press Institute at Columbia University, and University administrators. The American Press Institute, which was operated by Columbia's Graduate School of Journalism, provided professional development and education programs for journalists. Records relate to the institute's finances and arrangements for events. Includes lists relating to seminars for city editors and lists and biographical information relating to seminars for Latin American journalists. Also includes the minutes of the annual neeting of the American Press Institute which was held in April, 1955. Also, correspondence relating to Everett's personnel issues.
Box 394 Folder 1 to 14
Correspondence between Professor Maurice Ewing and the high level administrators of Columbia University, donors, and funding agencies. Ewing held appointments as professor of geology and, later, director of the University's Lamont Geological Observatory. Includes correspondence with University presidents Grayson Kirk, Andrew Cordier, and William McGill.
Most of the records consist of correspondence, reports, proposals, clippings, press releases, and photographs. These records relate to the administration, funding, and faculty of the Lamont Geological Observatory, Columbia's facility for research and instruction in the earth sciences. Also, some items of correspondence relating to the Vetelsen Prize and Vetelsen Visiting Professorship. Includes remarks made at the presentation of the first Vetelsen Prize to Ewing.
Also, correspondence regarding Ewing's personnel issues, awards, honors, and professional activities. Includes a photograph of Ewing and copies of some of his published papers. Topics related to the Lamont Geological Observatory include: staffing needs, faculty recruiting and appointments, faculty standing and accomplishments, the administration of government- and corporate-sponsored research projects, public relations, fund raising, relations between the observatory and the University, facilities, space needs, and the oversight of the observatory's research vessels.
Includes correspondence regarding the establishment of the Observatory through a gift from the Lamont Family and subsequent relations between the University, Ewing, and the Lamonts. Also includes correspondence (ca. 1968-1971) regarding a grant in support of the observatory from the Doherty Foundation. Most of the correspondence dating from 1970 to 1971 consists of letters regarding relations between the faculty at Lamont and the University administration. Includes correspondence regarding disciplinary action taken against Professor Bruce C. Heezen. Also includes photographs of the observatory's research vessels. Also, correspondence, reports, and proposals documenting proposed and actual research projects and instructional programs at the Lamont Observatory.
Topics include: cooperation between the observatory and the Bermudan government to establish a seismological research station (ca. 1951-1952), a proposed study of ocean floor movement (ca. 1959), a research cruise to Trinidad in 1952 and the Ocean Sediment Drilling project (1966). Other projects include: a proposed graduate program in meteorology (ca. 1960), the establishment of the American Association of Universities for Polar Research (ca. 1960), and the Lamont Observatory's involvement in the Apollo 11 mission. Includes a letter dating from January, 1954 which describes an accident on board the observatory's research vessel and the death of one of the crew members.
Box 90 Folder 24
Correspondence regarding Francis Facciolo, a Columbia University student who took part in demonstrations at the University's Kent Hall in November of 1969. Records include: the report of Facciolo's disciplinary hearing (February, 1970), a report on Facciolo's appeal of the judgment that resulted from the hearing (February, 1970), transcripts of the disciplinary hearing, and a letter to the Joint Commitee on Disciplinary affairs regarding Facciolo's appeal
Box 481 Folder 1 to 20
Correspondence between Frank Diehl Fackenthal and other high level administrators at Columbia University. Fackenthal held important appointments during his more than 50 years at Columbia. He served as secretary, provost, and acting president of the University. He also chaired a number of committees, was a member of numerous others, and served as a trustee of the University. The records relate to a wide range of subjects. The records consist of: correspondence relating to Fackenthal's time as chief clerk in the Office of the Secretary under Secretary Frederick P. Keppel (1909-1910); correspondence, reports, proposals, and other records relating to Fackenthal's term as secretary of the University (1910-1937); correspondence, reports, and other records relating to his administration as provost (1937-1945) and Columbia's activities during World War II; correspondence, press releases, and proposals regarding the retirement of long-time University president Nicholas Murray Butler and Fackenthal's term as acting president (1945-1948); correspondence, invitations, cover letters, and other records relating to his term as a trustee and president emeritus (1949-1963); and correspondence regarding his death and memorial (1968-1969). Also, a small amount of correspondence dating from 1905 when Fackenthal was a Columbia College student and manager of the Columbia University Musical Clubs. Includes a list of club alumni.
While serving as secretary of the University under President Butler, Fackenthal handled increasing numbers of tasks and assumed new responsibilities as the University's administration changed and grew. During Fackenthal's administration, the Office of the Secretary became an increasingly important administrative unit. In 1937 Fackenthal was appointed provost, a postition which was re-instated in order to give him a post more suited to his responsibilities. Throughout his terms as secretary and provost, Fackenthal worked closely with Butler, responded to his inquiries and suggestions on a wide range of subjects, and undertook a huge number of projects at his request. He also informed Butler of decisions by University committees and answered inquiries from other administrators and faculty. In the correspondence, Fackenthal often provides information or advice on: how to accomplish a task or solve a problem; the use of funds and gifts; the application and interpretation of policies, agreements, statutes, and by-laws; the origin of decisions and policies; and the administration and organization of schools, offices, and departments. Butler and Fackenthal also corresponded regarding how to bring issues to the University's board of trustees and the meaning or result of a trustee resolution. On occasion, they corresponded about the promotion of individual faculty members and officers -- discussing their qualifications, predicting how they might react if not promoted, and determining how to address problems involving the promotion. While Butler was abroad, Fackenthal corresponded with him regarding University news and administrative issues.
Topics related to Fackenthal's term as secretary include: scheduling and keeping the calendar, the administration of University printing services, the preparation and distribution of University publications, the compilation of statistics and information for the president's annual reports, student affairs, scholarship recipients, University mailings, faculty affairs, faculty appointments and recruiting, appropriations, the establishment and membership of committees, financial policies, the management of special funds, administrative issues involving prizes and awards, gifts to the University, fees, faculty standing and performance, faculty personnel administration and benefits, donor relations, University budgetary and financial troubles, honorary degrees, medals, space allocation, and the selection of deans and administrators.
Records of interest dating from Fackenthal's term as secretary include: a report regarding the reinstatement of football, which had been banned at Columbia since 1905 (February, 1915); correspondence relating to Fackenthal's term as secretary of the Kahn Foundation for the Foreign Travel of American Teachers (begins ca. 1927); a statement regarding the leasing of the Rockefeller Center site (December 28, 1928); correspondence regarding the University's new pension plan agreement with the Carnegie Foundation (ca. 1925-1929); correspondence regarding the University's 175 anniversary (ca. 1927-1929); a proposal for the creation of an institute of human behavior (August, 1929); correspondence regarding efforts to establish a Japanese culture center (ca. 1929); and several letters regarding the protests by alumni, donors, and students that insued when the University agreed to send a representative to the 500th anniversary of the University of Heidleberg (March, 1936).
As provost, Fackenthal undertook many of the same responsibilities that he had assumed as secretary. However, he did not administer as many routine tasks or respond to as many routine requests for the president. During his term as provost, Fackenthal was involved in: policy issues, University finances and budgeting, the selection of deans and administrators, donor relations, trustee affairs, and honorary degrees. He was also an important figure in the oversight of Columbia's war-time programs during World War II and, as a member of the University Committee on War Research, was involved in the development of Columbia's sponsored research program. Related topics include: the negotiation and administration of government contracts and sponsored research agreements, research policies, security, faculty leaves for national service and research appointments, space allocation, special programs which were established by Columbia during the war, the education of veterans, and veterans' affairs. Includes correspondence regarding the establishment of a training program for the Navy and correspondence regarding the post-war need for an engineering research center and the development of work in engineering and science. Beginning during the 1940s the records also include reports from the Committee on Honors regarding honorary degree candidates.
Records of interest dating from Fackenthal's term as provost include: a lengthy memorandum evaluating budget resolutions from 1930 to 1940 (January 2, 1940); a report (May 4, 1937) on proposed uses for the Nevis Estate, which was given to the University in 1935 and correspondence regarding the estate (ca. May, 1937); correspondence regarding the creation of a committee to study radio as an educational tool and the formation of a radio department at the University (ca. 1938-1939); correspondence regarding the financial relationship between Columbia and the Institute for Public Administration (ca. 1940); correspondence regarding the establishment of the Office of the Comptroller to oversee certain financial and facilities functions (1942); and a report on a University Council resolution to establish of a school of international affairs (February, 1945).
Records dating from 1945 to 1948 relate to Nicholas Murray Bulter's retirement and Fackenthal's administration as acting president of the University. Beginning in 1946 the records include Fackenthal's statements and speeches on a variety of topics. Other records include: a press release regarding Fackenthal's appointment (October, 1945); a proposal for a campus medical service (November, 1947); statements regarding plans for Columbia's bicentennial celebration in 1954 and a report of the bicentennial committee (ca. April, 1947); records regarding tuition and the composition of the student body (ca. 1948); and the handbook of the Advisory Board of the Graduate School of Journalism (1948).
Following his retirement in 1948 Fackenthal continued to serve as acting president emeritus and a trustee of the University until 1965. Administrators continued to correspond with Fackenthal regarding the origin of policies, decisions, and procedures. Other topics include: Columbia's 1954 bicentennial (ca. 1949-1954), trustee business, and honorary degrees. The records also include: correspondence regarding the major reorganization of the University's administrative structure that took place in 1949 a plan by the Manhattanville Neighborhood Center for community programs and urban renewal (March, 1949); and a memorandum regarding the Columbia University Press that was written in response to the report of the President's Committee on the Educational Future of the University (November, 1957). Fackenthal also served as chairman of the trustees' committee on education. The records include correspondence regarding committee business and a long-range plan and report (ca. March, 1960) from the committee on the Lamont Geological Observatory, Columbia's center for research and education in the earth sciences. Correspondence dating from 1962 to 1963 relates to Fackenthal's health and his gifts to the University. Records dating from 1968 to 1969 relate to his death from injuries which were received in a car accident that took place in 1965.
Topics include his death and memorial service and the Fackenthal Fund. Includes a copy of the Jacques Barzun's address at Fackenthal's memorial service. Also Includes many invitations and cover letters
Box 482 Folder 1 to 19
Box 483 Folder 1 to 20
Box 504 Folder 20 to 22
Correspondence between John A. B. Faggi, director of the Foreign Student Center at Columbia University, and University administrators. Records dating from 1962 to 1967 consist of correspondence, reports, budgets, and pamphlets relating to international student programs in the Foreign Student Center and the American Language Program.
Topics include: events, expenditures, student affairs, services for international students, personnel, faculty affairs, and finances. Includes a number of annual reports. Among other topics, the reports discuss orientation programs, events, facilities, enrollment, requirements, and educational programs. Includes the first issue of Visa, the monthly international student newsletter (March, 1963), and correspondence regarding the World Dance Fesitval, which was held at Columbia in 1965. Most of the records dating from 1970 to 1971 relate to Faggi's term as director of Casa Italiana, Columbia's Italian culture and educational center. Includes his letter of resignation as director of the center. Also, correspondence regarding Faggi's personnel issues and his letter regarding the robbery of some of his family members. There is a gap in the records between 1967 and 1969
Box 495 Folder 9
Correspondence between Alphonse Falise, Columbia University security officer, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to parking and security incidents
Box 672 Folder 24
Correspondence between Larkin H. Farinholt and Columbia University administrators. Farinholt held appointments as director of Columbia University's chemical laboratories and assistant to the dean of Columbia College. Correspondence relates to space needs in the chemistry department and Farinholt's personnel issues
Box 665 Folder 16
Correspondence between Henry W. Farnam, professor of economics at Yale University, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. correspondence relates to Farnam's nomination as Roosevelt Professor for the 1914-1915 academic year. The Roosevelt Professorship sent an American professor to Germany to lecture and act as an educational and cultural liaison. Farnam's term as Roosevelt Professor was postponed due to the outbreak of World War I
Box 503 Folder 24
Correspondence between L. Leighton Farrar, director of the budget at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to appropriations, the management of accounts, and the allocation of expenditures. Includes instructions for formulating the University budget. Most of the records are routine
Box 671 Folder 58
Correspondence between Herbert Feis and Columbia University administrators. Feiss participated in the University Seminar on Peace and held an appointment as an associate in the seminar. The University Seminars promote interdisciplinary, inter-institutional discussion of a variety of problems and issues. For the most part, the records do not relate to the seminars. Correspondence relates to funding for Feis' research project from the Council for Research in the Social Sciences and the administration of the project. Also, correspondence regarding Feis' personnel issues
Box 672 Folder 25
Correspondence between Carl Feiss, a city planning and urban renewal consultant, and administrators at Columbia University. Includes a report on the Morningside Heights neighborhood adjoining Columbia. Also includes correspondence regarding Morningside Heights, Inc., a community development and urban renewal organization that included Columbia and other area institutions
Box 90 Folder 25
Records regarding the nomination of Frederico Fellini to receive an honorary degree from Columbia University. Fellinin declined the invitation
Box 488 Folder 11 to 15
Correspondence between William C. Fels, associate provost and director for student interests at Columbia University, and University administrators. The records consist of correspondence, statements, and speeches on a wide range of subjects related to the academic and student affairs of the University. Also, Fels was often asked to evaluate plans or reports written by University offices and committees or outside organizations and agencies. Some of his comments are interesting and substantive. Also includes: correspondence and speeches regarding standardized testing; correspondence regarding Fel's appointment; Fels' speech regarding admissions policy and mandatory college education, which was delivered at the Conference on Rising Enrollment on March 30, 1957 and a small amount of correspondence with Fels after he became president of Bennington College.
Topics related to academic and student affairs include: the management of student organizations, policies regarding student organizations, lobbying for educational funding and other issues related to higher education, admissions, housing, fees, financial aid, and financial aid policies. Includes: correspondence regarding the definintion of research associates (ca. 1957) correspondence regarding the University's radiation safety protocols (ca. May, 1957), and a study of the roles and organization of University committees (ca. June, 1957)
Box 668 Folder 47
Correspondence between Enrico Fermi, professor of physics at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to: Fermi's emigration to the United States and appointment at Columbia, staffing needs for his research project on atomic energy, and his departure following World War II in order to conduct research in New Mexico and the University of Chicago. Also, correspondence regarding Fermi's honorary degree from Columbia
Box 660 Folder 18
Correspondence between Guglielmo Ferrero and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to a lecture series that was given by Ferrero at the University and Ferrero's honorary degree from Columbia
Box 349 Folder 10 to 15
Correspondence between Robert Herndon Fife, Gebhart Professor of Germanic Languages at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Fife held a number of appointments including executive officer of the Department of Germanic Languages and chairman of the Council for Research in the Humanities. Correspondence relates to the Department of Germanic Languages and the Department of Eastern European Languages.
Topics related to the Department of Germanic Languages include: faculty affairs, arrangements for courses, publication of the Germanic Review, faculty appointments and recruiting, personnel, budgeting, enrollment, staffing needs, and special lectures. Includes correspondence regarding special lectures in Swedish during the 1940s the Queen Wilhelmina Lectureship; and the administration of Deutches Haus, Columbia's German culture and educational center. Also includes departmental budgets.
Fife was chairman of the Advisory Committee to the Dean on the Department of Eastern European Languages. Correspondence, budgets, and reports document the organization and administration of the department during the 1930s and 1940s. Also, correspondence regarding funding for the Council for Research in the Humanities from the General Education Board and annual reports of the Council from the 1930s. Also, correspondence and reports on the establishment of an oriental institute during the 1940s and a 1944 proposal for the revision of the foreign language curriculum. Includes correspondence relating to Fife's personnel issues and retirement
Box 343 Folder 13 to 18
Correspondence between Professor James Kip Finch and high level administrators at Columbia University. Finch was Renwick Professor of Civil Engineering and, later, associate dean of the School of engineering. Records relate to the Department of Civil Engineering; Camp Columbia, the University's facility in Lakeside, Connecticut; and the School of Engineering. Records also document the administration of research projects, including corporate- and government-sponsored research, and the School of Engineering's response to World War I and World War II through research, special programs, and curriculum revisions. Includes correspondence with President Nicholas Murray Butler, Provost Frank D. Fackenthal, and Joseph Barker, the dean of the School of Engineering.
Topics related to Camp Columbia include the administration and facilities of the camp during the 1910s. Records consist of correspondence reports and statistics. Includes a report of the Officer Training Course which was held at the camp during 1917. Topics related to the Department of Civil Engineering include: research, laboratory facilities and equipment, financial administration, and staffing needs. includes annual reports of the department's research laboratories. Also, correspondence and reports documenting the School of Engineering from 1941 to the 1950s.
Topics related to the school include: nominations for honorary degrees, laboratories, faculty appointments, gifts to the school, admissions, fellowships, salaries, and budgeting. Includes Finch's 1942 address, Science, Engineering and the Modern World, which outlines the school's response to World War II; correspondence (ca. 1942) relating to the work of the Committee on the Admission of Women to the Engineering School; and the school's long range planning report, dated 1943.
Also includes correspondence regarding a Navy officers' training program which was held at Columbia during World War II. Also, correspondence regarding the administration of sponsored research projects and research facilities as well as correspondence documenting the work of the University's Committee on Patent Policy and Committee on Industrial Research
Box 344 Folder 1 to 15
Box 668 Folder 9
Correspondence between Professor Hugh Findlay and the provost of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the University's Institute of Horticulture, which was located at Columbia's Nevis Estate in Irvington-on-Hudson, New York.
Topics include: audits, maintenance, the allotment of land to faculty in the botany department, payments to lecturers at the institute, and the institute's summer session classes
Box 321 Folder 18
Correspondence between John H. Finley, president of the College of the City of New York and, later, commissioner of education for New York State, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Mostly routine correspondence and invitations.
Topics include: prizes, committee memberships, and legislation affecting higher education. Includes correspondence in which Finely and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University, exchange opinions on a variety of topics. Also includes correspondence regarding Finley's nomination for an honorary degree from the University
Box 506 Folder 16 to 18
Correspondence between Wesley First, director of University relations at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to: relations between Columbia and the surrounding community, University public relations and press relations strategy, and publicity for University events. Records include: statements regarding student demonstrations at Columbia; statements regarding plans to erect a University gymnasium in Morningside Park; policies regarding speakers engaged by student groups (October, 1965); minutes of the University Relations Committee from January, April and November of 1966 and January of 1967 a proposal for a University public relations program (January, 1966); a letter regarding relations with the African American community (July, 1966); and addresses by University president Grayson Kirk on a variety of subjects. Also, correspondence regarding First's appointment and personnel issues as well as routine acknowledgement letters
Box 18 Folder 13
Correspondence between Robert L. Fischelis, executive officer of the Columbia University Research Project on Hungary, and high level University administrators. Includes correspondence with Professor Henry L. Roberts. Correspondence relates to a 1957 court case involving a dispute regarding a lease between the Columbia University Research Project on Hungary and Dr. Wilhelm KorfFishcelis provided testimony in the case and requested statements from the University absolving him of any responsibility in the case beyond his testimony
Box 660 Folder 19
Correspondence between Hamilton Fish, chairman of Columbia University's board of trustees, and the president of the University. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects.
Topics include: the use of the Wheelock property in Manhattan for athletic facilities, Columbia's merger with the College of Physicians and Surgeons, faculty appointments in the School of Law, and Columbia's Morningside Heights campus
Box 660 Folder 20
Correspondence between Stuyvesant Fish, president of the Illinois Central Railroad Company, and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects.
Topics include Fish's gifts to the University and nominations for honorary degrees. Includes correspondence regarding memorials to Stuyvensant's father, Hamilton Fish, and his grandfather, Nicholas Fish. Both men had served as chairmen of Columbia's board of trustees. Also includes correspondence and clippings regarding railroad regulation and correspondence regarding the selection of suitable candidates from the School of Mines to run a mine in Mexico
Box 406 Folder 1 to 3
Correspondence between Ernest M. Fisher, professor of land economics and director of the Institute for Urban Land Use and Housing at Columbia University, and the acting president of the University, Columbia administrators, and the Rockefeller Foundation. Correspondence relates to the establishment and administration of the Institute for Urban Land Use and Housing. Includes budgets, reports, proposals, and publications.
Topics include: funding for the institute, faculty appointments, research methods, grants administration, staffing needs, faculty affairs, and financial administration. Also, addresses entitled "How Columbia University Serves Business and Industry" and "Basic Research in Urban Land Use" which were given by Fisher in 1952. Also, reports dating from January, 1951 regarding the proposed affiliation between Columbia and the School of Insurance
Box 325 Folder 1 to 5
Correspondence between George Fisher, bursar of Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University.
Topics include: purchasing, admissions, registration, tuition and fees, and the payment of bills. Includes correspondence documenting the reorganization of these functions to suit the changing needs of the growing University. Contains many routine authorizations for payments. Also, correspondence regarding Fisher's personnel issues and the probate of his estate
Box 672 Folder 10
Correspondence between Aaron Fishman, an alumnus of Columbia College, and Grayson Kirk, the president of Columbia University. Fishman published an alumni newsletter for the Class of 1923. Correspondence relates to the newsletter. Also, personal correspondence regarding the death of a classmate and Fishman and Kirk's shared interest in photography
Box 325 Folder 6 to 10
Correspondence between Thomas S. Fiske, secretary of the College entrance Examination Board and professor in the Department of Mathematics at Columbia University, and the president and other high level administrators of the University.
Topics include: admissions policies and requirements, the content of entrance examinations, scholarships and awards, and the business of the Committee on Entrance Examinations. Also, correspondence regarding the Department of Mathematics.
Topics include: budgeting, the routine business of the department, and the evaluation of the department's standing
Box 451 Folder 15
Correspondence between Thomas O'Gorman FitzGibbon, a Columbia University alumnus and trustee, and University president Grayson Kirk. FitzGibbon chaired the Columbia Law School Sustaining Fund and served as president of the Columbia Law School Alumni Association. Correspondence relates to gifts to the University. Includes a 1956 report regarding the Columbia University Club and the transcript of a meeting of the Columbia University Law School Alumni Association which was held in London in July of 1957. Also includes routine correspondence and invitations
Box 406 Folder 10
Correspondence between Frederic S. Fleming and the acting president and provost of Columbia University. Fleming was rector of Trinity Church in New York City and a trustee of Columbia University. He served on a number of trustee committees and chaired the trustees' committee on honors. Correspondence relates to the committee on honors, the nomination and selection of honorary degree recipients, convocations and other events, and development. Includes correspondence regarding the appointment of a University chaplain
Box 665 Folder 17
Correspondence between Matthew C. Fleming, counsel for the Presbyterian Hospital in New York City, and the secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to academic appointments for visiting doctors at the hospital
Box 660 Folder 21
Correspondence between Jefferson Butler Fletcher, professor of comparative literature at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the Department of Comparative Literature.
Topics include staffing needs, recruiting, and student affairs. Includes correspondence regarding the merger of the Department of English and the Department of Comparative Literature
Box 451 Folder 16
Correspondence between Walter D. Fletcher, a Columbia University trustee and chairman of the Nomination Committee of the Trustees, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to trustee business and to relations between the University and Presbyterian Hospital in New York City.
Topics include: development, honors, and arrangements for events. Includes minutes of the hospital's administrative board dating from 1953 to 1955. Also includes routine invitations and personal messages. Also, correspondence (ca. 1958) regarding the nomination of candidates for the post of president of the State University of New York
Box 665 Folder 18
Correspondence between Abraham Flexner, chairman of the General Education Board, and the president of Columbia University. Includes correspondence with the deans of Teachers College and the College of Physicians and Surgeons. Records relate: to the reorganization of Columbia's medical school, the proposed consolidation of the medical schools at Columbia and Cornell University, and dealings with New York State officials regarding cooperation between Columbia and hospitals in New York City. Includes a pamphlet and report on medical education at the University of Chicago and three copies of a memorandum on medical education at Columbia
Box 451 Folder 17 to 18
Correspondence between Merrill M. Flood, director of the Columbia Institute for Research in the Management of Industrial Production, and University administrators. Records relate to the planning, establishment, funding, and eventual closing of the institute.
Topics include: research projects, finances, the curriculum, procedures and regulations, and administrative issues. Includes proposals regarding the institute's organization, government, staffing, and research. Also includes research project reports
Box 495 Folder 28
Correspondence between Henry M. Foley, chairman of the Department of Physics at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the department.
Topics include: staffing needs, expenditures, faculty appointments, committee memberships, personnel, facilities, the administration of research projects, and salaries. Includes a report and a proposal regarding particle physics research at the University's Nevis Laboratories, the site of the Nevis Cyclotron. Also includes letters on the relationship between science and liberal arts education, the proposed creation of a separate school for undergraduate science majors, and undergraduate engineering education
Box 673 Folder 6
Correspondence between Ruth Forbesner and other administrative assistants in the Office of the Secretary at Columbia University.
Topics include: requisitions, the management of funds, office equipment, and other routine matters
Box 670 Folder 35
Correspondence between Professor John Foster of the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University, and University administrators. Records include correspondence regarding the television news program News-O-Rama and clippings regarding the stained glass window of the Statue of Liberty that was given to the journalism school
Box 665 Folder 19
Correspondence between Alfred Foucher, professor of Indian languages and literatures at the University of Paris, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Foucher's appointment as a visiting professor for the 1915-1916 academic year and his return to France in 1916. Includes a document entitled L'Enseignement de L'Indianisme a Columbia University
Box 347 Folder 18
Correspondence between Dixon Ryan Fox, professor of history at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to events and publications commemorating Columbia's history. Includes correspondence and a report documenting the work of the committee in charge of planning Columbia's 175th anniversary. Also includes correspondence regarding gifts of portraits, including the gift of a portrait of King George II of England. Also, correspondence regarding Fox' personnel issues and professional activities
Box 381 Folder 6 to 20
Correspondence between Edward B. Fox, an administrator at Columbia University, and the provost, secretary, and other University administrators. Fox held positions as: assistant registrar, assistant dean of Columbia College, associate registrar, and registrar. Records relate to the registrar's functions, the University during World War II, and student affairs.
Topics include: registration procedures, tuition and fees, the academic calendar, arrangements for examinations, classroom space needs and scheduling, arrangements for events, and the care of student records
Topics related to student organizations and government include: the purpose and membership of student groups, the authorization and oversight of student groups, eligibility and academic standing, arrangements for student-sponsored events, and the use of campus facilities. Also, correspondence, fliers, and pamphlets documenting student responses to World War II. Includes records regarding the Columbia Council for Peace and Democracy and the University Committee for the Defense of Academic Freedom. Also, correspondence regarding Fox's retirement and personnel issues
Box 437 Folder 16 to 17
Correspondence between Professor William T. R. Fox of Columbia University and high level University administrators. Fox held a number of appointments including professor of international relations, director of the Institute of War and Peace Studies, and chairman of the Council for Research in the Social Sciences. The records consist of correspondence relating to the establishment, administration, and work of the Institute of War and Peace Studies as well as correspondence and reports regarding sponsored research projects. Includes an agreement between the institute and the Special Committee to Study the Foreign Aid Program of the United States Senate. Also includes a description of the television news program, Voices to America, and a copy of Fox's study of Anglo-American relations dating from 1952
Box 508 Folder 16 to 17
Correspondence between George K. Fraenkel and high level administrators at Columbia University. Fraenkel's appointments included chairman of the Department of Chemistry and dean of the Graduate Faculties. Correspondence relates to the department and the Graduate Faculties.
Topics include: faculty affairs, faculty appointments, research funding, the composition of the student body, the discipline of student's involved in protests, and issues involving students and the draft. includes correspondence regarding the creation of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. In particular, these records relate to the revision of instructional budgeting procedures. Also, correspondence regarding Fraenkel's personnel issues
Box 670 Folder 3
Correspondence between Clarence Francis, chairman of the board of General Foods Corporation, and Columbia University administrators. Records relate to proposals to establish the Institute of Nutrition Sciences. Also includes a copy of "Unquote", a digest of important speeches. The digest contains a speech by Francis
Box 436 Folder 20
Correspondence between Charles Frankel, Old Dominion Professor of Philosophy and Public Affairs at Columbia University, and University administrators and stafThe records consist of correspondence and press releases relating to Frankel's research projects and correspondence regarding his personnel issues. Includes newspaper clippings regarding his resignation as Assistant Secretary of State for Cultural Affairs. Also includes biographical information
Box 665 Folder 20
Correspondence between Leon Fraser, an instructor in the Department of Public Law at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to Fraser's appointment and comments he made to the press regarding a Plattsburg Speech. It is not clear to what speech the records refer
Box 673 Folder 20 to 21
Records regarding the visit to Columbia University of Queen Frederika, consort of Paul I, King of the Hellenes. Records include: correspondence, newspaper clippings, and photographs
Box 668 Folder 48
Correspondence between Douglas Southall Freeman and Columbia University administrators. Freeman appears to have been the publisher of the News Leader in Richmond, Virginia. Correspondence relates to Freeman's appointment as chairman of the jury that selected the recipient of the Bancroft Prize for 1948. Correspondence relates to his appointment and jury business
Box 672 Folder 59
Correspondence between Edwin Freeman, assistant to the director of financial aid at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to loan payments. Also, two copies of a report regarding fellowships for the 1959-1960 academic year
Box 668 Folder 23
Correspondence between Charles A. Fremd, public relations officer for the New York National Guard, and administrators at Columbia University. correspondence relates to Fremd's application for the position of University director of public relations. Includes a pamphlet regarding Marcellus Hartley Dodge, who was chairman of the University's board of trustees
Box 321 Folder 19
Correspondence between Daniel Chester French, and the president, secretary, and clerk of the board of trustees of Columbia University. French produced the Alma Mater statue and other works for the University and was a member of the University's Advisory Committee on Art. The committee was established to oversee the selection of art works for Columbia and the administration of the University's art properties.
Topics include: the design of French's Alma Mater statue, the evaluation of the artistic merits of works offered to Columbia, the design of pieces commissioned by the University, and the placement of art works on the campus. Includes French's comments on the Pulitzer Prize Medal
Box 500 Folder 20
Correspondence between Ferdinand Freudenstein, chairman of the department of Mechanical Engineering at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the department.
Topics include: faculty appointments, faculty affairs, and the disposal of equipment. Correspondence also relates to the appointment of Professor Rudolf Beyer as a visiting professor in the department. Includes a proposal for undergraduate education in science and engineering and funding for equipment to be used in instructional experiments (April, 1961)
Box 671 Folder 24
Correspondence between Gilberto Freyre, a Brazilian writer and social anthropologist, and the secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the honorary degree that was awarded to Freye at Columbia's 3rd Bicentennial Convocation in 1954. Includes biographical information on Freye. Also, correspondence regarding Freye's frequent appointments as a visiting professor at the University
Box 672 Folder 60
Correspondence between Wolfgang Friedmann, professor of law at Columbia University and chairman of the Council for Research in the Social Sciences, and University administrators. Most of the records relate to the Arden House Conference on Joint International Business Ventures in Economically Underdeveloped Countries (March, 1960). Records include: a conference agenda, a list of participants, and summary reports from conference panels. Also, correspondence regarding funding for Friedmann's research and routine matters regarding the Council for Research in the Social Sciences
Box 437 Folder 23
Correspondence between Professor Horace Leland Friess of the Department of Philosophy at Columbia University and University administrators. Records relate to the Department of Philosophy and the establishment of a religion department at Columbia. Includes correspondence and a report regarding problems in the philosophy department. Friess was also chairman of the University Seminar on Religion and Health. Includes a report on the seminar
Box 409 Folder 5
Correspondence between Kurt von Fritz, executive officer of the Department of Greek and Latin at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence dated circa 1946 relates to the reorganization of the department. Includes a proposal regarding the reorganization. Correspondence, budgets, and other records dating from 1947 to 1949 relate to the department.
Topics include: faculty affairs, faculty recruiting, and budgeting. Includes minutes of departmental meetings. Among other topics, the minutes discuss enrollment, faculty, curriculum, the progress of degree candidates, prizes, and Ph.D. examinations. Also includes reports and proposals discussing departmental instruction, requirements, curriculum. Correspondence dating from 1952 to 1953 relates to the work of the committee which was appointed to oversee the Stanwood Cockey Lodge Foundation's gift in support of publications in classical philology and literature
Box 668 Folder 49
Correspondence between Wilbur M. Frohock, professor of French in the Department of Romance Languages at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to Frohock's appointment, housing, and personnel issues
Box 670 Folder 4
Correspondence between Bisen Fukuda and the Columbia University administration. Correspondence relates to Chinese scrolls that were given to the University by Fukuda. Includes letters written in Japanese and the accompanying translations
Box 665 Folder 21
Correspondence between Leonhard Felix Fuld and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Fuld appears to have been an alumnus of the University. Correspondence relates to problems involving the reprinting of the King's College alumni directory. Includes a letter discussing negative publicity regarding Barnard College that was being circulated by a freelance, undergraduate writer
Box 665 Folder 22
Correspondence between George S. Fullerton, professor of philosophy at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. most of the correspondence relates to Fullerton's experiences during a faculty exchange program in Austria in 1913 and 1914. Other correspondence relates to: attempts to bring the International Congress of Philosophy's annual conference to Columbia, Fullerton's opinions on life in Munich during World War I, and the administrative practices of American universities
Box 395 Folder 1 to 16
Correspondence between Ralph Furey, director of physical education and intercollegiate athletics at Columbia University, and high level University administrators, university development officers, and others. Most of the records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the Department of Physical Education, intramural sports, and intercollegiate athletics. Also, correspondence and proposals regarding the University's Morningside Park gymnasium project (ca. 1954-1967) and University-run community athletic programs. Topics related to the Department of Physical Education include: faculty appointments, expenditures, the organization of the department, budgeting, gifts, and facilities. Athletics-related topics include: facilities, team finances, prizes, awards, athletic eligibility, intercollegiate athletics rules and agreements, and the appointment of coaches. Includes correspondence regarding football and other sports, the Varsity Club, and University athletic facilities at Baker Field and South Field. Also includes copies of the Lines on Lions athletics newsletter, minutes and correspondence of the University Committee on Athletics, reports and correspondence of the NCAA Television Committee, and a small number of football game programs. Includes a poster for an Army-Columbia football game in October, 1952
Box 325 Folder 11 to 15
Correspondence between Clyde Furst and the faculty and high level administrators of Columbia University. Furst was secretary of Teachers College, an affiliate of Columbia University; secretary of the Carnegie foundation for the Advancement of Teaching; and secretary of the Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association.
Topics include: trustee business and faculty appointments at Teacher's College, retirement annuities for University faculty, and the University's retirement plan and policies. Includes a brief exchange of detailed letters regarding the School of Dental and Oral Surgery and dental education at the University (ca. 1926)
Box 483 Folder 21
Correspondence between Ralph H. Gabriel and administrators at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Gabriel's appointment as Gino Speranza lecturer for the 1954-1955 academic year and the Gino Speranza Lectures in American Traditions and Ideals. Correspondence also relates to the selection of the Loubat Prize recipient for the 1957-1958 academic year
Box 667 Folder 38
Correspondence between administrators at Columbia University and St. Stephen's College regarding Clarence Gardinier's claims for payment for architectural plans that he developed for St. Stephen's College
Box 671 Folder 59
Correspondence between Major Hugh H. Gardner and Robert Harron, assistant to the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to University president Grayson Kirk's visit to Japan and Gardner's assistance to Kirk and his wife during the trip. Includes clippings regarding the trip
Box 411 Folder 14 to 18
Correspondence between Jewell M. Garrelts and Columbia University administrators. Garrelts was the executive officer of the Department of Civil Engineering at Columbia University and was later appointed associate dean of the School of Engineering. Records relate to the department and the school.
Topics include: salaries, faculty appointments, budgeting, expenditures, appropriations, conferences, scholarships, and the administration of research projects. Includes reports regarding departmental research laboratories and correspondence and budgets regarding the Institute for Air Flight Structures. Garrelts was also chairman of the Industrial Reactor Laboratories Advisory Committee. Includes reports and correspondence (ca. 1960) regarding the mission, equipment, and facilities of the laboratories. Also, correspondence regarding his personnel matters and committee memberships
Box 394 Folder 15 to 16
Correspondence between Henry Edward Garrett, executive officer of the Department of Psychology at Columbia University, and the acting president and secretary of the University. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the department.
Topics include: requisitions and expenditures for equipment, faculty appointments, and facilities
Box 672 Folder 11
Records relating to the controversy surrounding a speech by John Gates that was given at Columbia University. Gates, who was editor of the New York Daily Worker, spoke at Columbia at the invitation of a student group. The event sparked a controversy that led to the enactment of University regulations regarding the sponsoring of speakers by student organizations
Box 90 Folder 26
Correspondence regarding Peter Gay, professor of history at Yale University and an alumnus of Columbia University. Includes a letter from the Columbia University alumni association that congratulates Gay on the publication of his new book. Also includes a letter regarding Gay's request for a Dunning Fund grant to purchase historiographical materials
Box 667 Folder 29
Correspondence between John Gellatly of Gellatly Galleries and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Gellatly's offer to donate his art collection to Columbia on the condition that the University build a museum to house it. Correspondence also relates to the University's unsuccessful attempts to raise money for the museum
Box 36 Folder 24
Correspondence between Alfred Gellhorn, professor of medicine at columbia University and director of the University's institute for cancer research, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the Delafield Hospital.
Topics include: the needs of the hospital, solutions to problems facing the hospital, Gellhorn's proposals to form affiliations with other hospitals, and relations with Presbyterian hospital. Includes minutes of a meeting regarding the future of the Delafield Hospital. Also, correspondence regarding Gellhorn's resignation to become Dean of the school of medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. Includes newspaper clippings regarding his resignation and appointment as dean
Box 434 Folder 16
Correspondence between Walter Gellhorn, professor of law at Columbia University and chairman of the University's Advisory Committee of the Faculties, and high level University administrators. Records relate to academic freedom issues and the creation a committee to evaluate Columbia's policies regarding student-sponsored guest speakers. Includes Gellhorn's memorandum in response to accusations that he was involved in communist activities. Also includes Gellhorn's testimony regarding the accusations against him (1952). Also, correspondence (ca. 1956-1957) relating to the Graduate Faculties.
Topics include: the business of the Advisory Committee of the faculties, policies regarding research assistants, tuition remission, and the academic affairs of the graduate schools
Box 373 Folder 1 to 16
Box 372 Folder 1 to 16
Box 374 Folder 1 to 18
Box 375 Folder 1 to 12
Correspondence between W. Emerson Gentzler and the high level administrators of Columbia University. Gentzler held a number of positions at the University including secretary of appointments, bursar, assistant provost, and director of student interests. Correspondence relates to a variety of topics involving financial transactions, financial aid during the Depression, the business affairs of the University, and student affairs. most of the correspondence dating from 1932 to 1935 documents cash payments to students from the University's Emergency Relief Fund, the administration of National Youth Administration loan programs, and federal Emergency Recovery Administration-sponsored work projects for Columbia students. Much of the correspondence dating from 1935 to 1950 relates to the business administration of the University.
Topics include: procedures for recording income from fees and fines, the deposit of gift checks, the management of special funds, accounting issues involving the University's budget, appropriations and expenditures, and the policies and procedures of the Bursar's Office. correspondence, minutes, and financial records dating from 1950 to 1957 relate to the business administration and student affairs of the University. Most of the correspondence relates to financial matters and personnel administration.
Topics include: benefits policies, grants and contracts, facilities, benefits programs for faculty and employees, tuition exchange programs, and tuition exemption policies. The records also document the work of the director of student interests and the Committee on Student Organizations. Includes correspondence regarding the discriminatory membership policies of University fraternities, correspondence and reports regarding the student medical service, and correspondence regarding the constitution of the Columbia University Student Council
Box 668 Folder 13
Correspondence relates to the conferral of an honorary degree on George II, King of Greece. Includes the text of President butler's and George II's speeches
Box 347 Folder 19
Correspondence between John L. Gerig, professor of Celtic and executive officer of the Department of Romance Languages at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Gerig seems to have been in charge of administering the Romanic Review, which was published by the department. Correspondence relates to the Romanic Review and to routine departmental business. Includes reports on the Romanic Review and a memorandum regarding its history. Also, correspondence regarding Gerig's personnel issues and retirement
Box 660 Folder 22 to 23
Correspondence between George B. Germann, registrar of Columbia University, and the president of the University. Correspondence relates to registration and other administrative issues.
Topics include: the establishment of registration procedures, the preparation of statistics for the president's annual reports, fees, diplomas, fellowships, and scholarships. Includes a report which compares Columbia's entrance requirements for 1860 1880 and 1902. Also includes correspondence regarding Germann's appointment to oversee purchasing for the University
Box 448 Folder 10
Correspondence between Edwin T. Gibson and high level administrators at Columbia University. Gibson served as executive director of the American Assembly and executive secretary of the Faculty Steering Committee for the Harriman Campus. Includes correspondence with benefactors of the American Assembly and scholars. The correspondence relates to Arden House and the American Assembly. Arden House is located on Columbia's Harriman Campus, which was donated to Columbia by W. Averill Harriman
The site is used as a University conference center. Arden House was also the home of the American Assembly, a national conference and discussion program affiliated with Columbia.
Topics include: salaries, faculty appointments, programs offered by the American Assembly, events at Arden House, and development. Includes acknowledgement letters and invitations
Box 321 Folder 20 to 21
Correspondence between Franklin Henry Giddings, professor of sociology and the history of civilization in the Department of Sociology at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. correspondence relates to the department and to the School of Political Science.
Topics include: staffing needs, teaching assignments, gifts, budgeting, faculty appointments, personnel, prizes, and special lectures. Also, correspondence and proposals regarding the sociology curriculum and projects in sociology and social services. Includes correspondence relating to cooperation between Columbia and The People's Institute. Also, correspondence regarding Giddings' appointment, personnel issues, and retirement. Includes a letter dated June, 1894 in which Giddings supports opening University courses to women
Box 327 Folder 1 to 3
Correspondence between William John Gies of the Department of Biological Chemistry at Columbia University and the University's faculty and high level administrators. Correspondence relates to the department.
Topics include: staffing needs, faculty appointments, personnel, gifts to the department, fellowships, budgeting, publications, and research. Includes correspondence regarding the reorganization of the department and its relations with other departments and schools. Also includes detailed correspondence and reports on departmental activities, faculty research on cancer and other subjects, and the needs of the department. Also, correspondence and a report regarding the evaluation and ranking of the School of Dental and Oral Surgery during the 1920s. Also includes correspondence relating to Gies' personnel issues
Box 411 Folder 21
Correspondence between James P. Gifford, associate dean of the Columbia University School of Law, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the school.
Topics include: faculty affairs, scholarships, administrative issues, and prizes. Includes a report on Gifford's trip to the Midwest and West in order to establish job placement contacts and build alumni relations for the school. Also includes a petition protesting the style of the school's diploma, which was submitted by law students in 1948. Also, correspondence regarding Gifford's personnel issues.
Box 326 Folder 1 to 19
Correspondence between Virginia Crocheron Gildersleeve, dean of Barnard College, and the president, secretary, and provost of Columbia University as well as other faculty and officers of Barnard and Columbia. Much of the correspondence relates to Barnard College, the women's college affiliated with Columbia University.
Topics include: faculty appointments, teaching assignments, faculty affairs, budgeting, events, entrance requirements, and privileges extended to the students of the College and the University. Also, correspondence relating to issues regarding women students.
Topics include: female graduate and undergraduate students, the status and role of women graduate students in the University, Columbia's obligations involving the education of women, the work of the advisor to women graduate students, the propriety and safety of female students, women's housing, and the social and educational needs of women students. Also includes correspondence regarding Gildersleeve's appointment and personnel issues
Box 660 Folder 24 to 25
Correspondence between Laura D. Gill, dean of Barnard College, and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Barnard College, the women's college affiliated with Columbia. Much of the correspondence deals with faculty appointments and faculty affairs. Includes correspondence regarding the development of formal registration procedures for the University and problems involving the registration of students who took courses in Teachers College, Barnard College, or the University Extension. Also includes correspondence regarding Gill's installation in 1901 and a letter from Barnard Alumni that calls for her dismissal (December, 1905)
Box 350 Folder 20
Correspondence between Henry W. Gillett, professor of dentistry in the School of Dental and Oral Surgery at Columbia University, and the president of the University.
Topics include: the Ewall Medal, proposed research projects, and the dental school's fund raising strategy. Also, correspondence regarding Gillett's gift to the school
Box 660 Folder 26
Correspondence between Daniel C. Gilman, president of Johns Hopkins University, and Seth Low, president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects.
Topics include: fellowships and Johns Hopkins (1890); Low and Gilman's thoughts on liberal education, the study of Greek and Latin, and proposed changes to the curriculum of Columbia College; a meeting of the National Educational Association that was held in 1903 the proposed establishment of a national university; recommendations for faculty appointments, and Gilman's candidacy for an appointment as superintendent of schools for New York City (1896)
Box 406 Folder 4 to 9
Correspondence between Eli Ginsberg, Hepburn Professor of Economics and director of the Conservation of Human Resources project at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence dating from 1943 to 1950 authorizes payments to staff working on projects sponsored by the Council for Research in the Social Sciences. Correspondence dating from 1949 to 1957 relates to the establishment, administration, and research projects of the Conservation of Human Resources project and the National Manpower Council.
The council, which was established under the auspices of Columbia's Graduate School of Business, was composed of representatives from business, labor, medicine, public service, and academia. The council studied human resources issues and worked towards the development of a national manpower policy. Includes project reports and conference proceedings. Also, two policy papers regarding the Middle East (1956) and Iran and Southern Asia (1969)
Box 18 Folder 23
Correspondence regarding preparations for a lecture series on the Atlantic Community that was given at Columbia University by Hubert Miles Gladwyn Jebb, 1st Baron Gladwyn. Gladwyn was a British diplomat and a member of the House of Lords
Box 90 Folder 22
Correspondence between Martin J. Gleason, vice president for public affairs at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to: Gleason's appointment to the recently-created post of vice president for public affairs, the routine business of the vice president's office, University-community relations issues, and community programs. Records include a report that proposes steps to improve relations between Columbia and the surrounding communities (July, 1969) and a job description for the vice president for University relations. Also includes a report on University policies governing Black studies, the Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps (NROTC), military research at the University, urban renewal projects, University-owned apartments, University expansion, religious counselors, and residence halls
Box 434 Folder 8 to 12
Correspondence between Charles Y. Glock, executive director of the Bureau of Applied Social Research at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the bureau and to bureau-sponsored research projects. Topics related to the bureau include: finances, personnel, facilities, and relations between the bureau and the University. Topics related to research projects include: funding, salaries, and expenditures. Includes a number of research project proposals
Box 18 Folder 14
Correspondence between Dorothy Gluck and the vice president of Columbia University. Gluck was an alumna of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Gluck's proposed gift to the University
Box 437 Folder 18 to 20
Correspondence between Arthur Goebel of the Department of Buildings and Grounds at Columbia University and the secretary and provost of the University. The records consist of requisitions and estimates for repairs, services, and equipment
Box 670 Folder 36
Correspondence between Julius Gobel, professor of law at Columbia University, and University administrators. Routine correspondence regarding payments for typing services related to the preparation of a history of the law school
Box 461 Folder 1 to 17
Box 462 Folder 1 to 17
Box 463 Folder 1 to 18
Box 464 Folder 1 to 17
Box 465 Folder 1 to 18
Box 466 Folder 1 to 21
Box 467 Folder 1 to 18
Box 468 Folder 1 to 20
Box 469 Folder 1 to 19
Box 470 Folder 1 to 17
Correspondence between Frederick A. Goetze and other high level administrators at Columbia University. During more than 50 years at Columbia, Goetze held appointments as consulting engineer; superintendent of buildings and grounds; comptroller of student organizations; dean of the Faculty of Applied Science (also called the School of Mines, Engineering, and Chemistry for part of this period); comptroller of the University; and treasurer. Many of the records relate to Columbia's facilities. Goetze joined the University when it had just moved to its new campus at Morningside Heights on Manhattan's upper west side. Goetze administered Columbia's buildings and grounds during an important period of campus development, construction, and expansion. Correspondence also relates to: student affairs; the Faculty of Applied Science; University employees; and the financial administration of the University. Records related to Columbia's facilities include: correspondence, floor plans, budgets, maps, and blueprints dating from 1895 to approximately 1913.
Topics include: maintenance, renovation, and construction projects; the development of Columbia's Morningside Heights campus; campus design and planning; the placement of art properties and trophies; equipment inspection and the analysis of equipment needs; the management of the Buildings and Grounds Department and buildings and grounds employees; payments for utilities and services; the University's physical plant (plumbing, electrical, and heating); construction bids and estimates; space needs; student services; safety; purchasing procedures and operations; and gifts in support of buildings, gates, and other facilities. Includes a rendering of Kent Hall (1909). Other campus buildings which are documented by the records include: Low Memorial Library, Earl Hall, University Hall, and Hamilton Hall. as comptroller of student organizations during the early 1900s Goetze oversaw official student groups and activities.
Topics related to student affairs and student groups include: housing, the management of scholarship funds, and arrangements and authorization for events. includes a letter regarding disturbances between freshmen and sophomores in May, 1901. Also includes three tickets to a basketball game and dance, which was held at Columbia's gymnasium in December, 1909
Topics related to the Faculty of Applied Science from 1906 to approximately 1917 include: requirements, recruiting, faculty appointments, faculty affairs, budgeting, facilities, equipment, fund raising, departmental affairs, and the development of departments, courses, and programs in the school. Includes a letter regarding housing for women students (February, 1910). Goetze served as comptroller from 1913 to 1916 and treasurer from 1916 to 1948. As comptroller and treasurer, he oversaw University financial operations and the administration of non-academic employees. He also responded to requests from the University administration for information on project costs and prepared income projections for the University. Although the records from this period contain some substantive materials, many of the records consist of routine form memoranda regarding appropriations. In particular, records from the mid to late 1940s become increasingly routine in nature.
Topics include: issues and policies regarding the University's non-academic employees; financial issues regarding mergers and affiliations, the establishment of programs, and construction projects; the approval of construction and renovation projects and project costs; funding for sponsored research projects; and the University's development strategies and financial needs. Other topics include: appointments, wills, gifts, salaries, pension benefits, income from special funds, the management of special funds, budgeting, and the business of the trustees' committee on finance. Also, correspondence regarding government contracts and research projects during World War II. Includes a list of Columbia's non-academic employees which shows their gender, ages, titles, salaries, and years of service (December, 1915). Also includes an agreement between Columbia and the Community Service Society regarding the New York School of Social Work (June 11, 1940)
Box 452 Folder 14 to 17
Correspondence between Warren Goodell and other high level administrators at Columbia University. Goodell held a number of appointments including: assistant to the director and associate director of the University's Nevis Cyclotron Laboratories; associate director of Columbia's Office of Projects and Grants, which was established to oversee sponsored projects at the University; and vice president for administration. Records relate to the Nevis laboratories and sponsored projects.
Correspondence dating from 1967 to 1970 relates to the responsibilities of the vice president for administration. Topics related to the Nevis Cyclotron Laboratories include: equipment, facilities, finances, the administration of sponsored research projects, and the administration of the laboratories. Records relating to the Office of Projects and Grants include lists of sponsored projects and contracts and cover letters for contracts. As vice president for administration, Goodell was responsible for a variety of tasks relating to the facilities and operations of the University. Topics include: computers and data processing, space planning, facilities management, campus architecture, capital funds, and the management of University finances. Includes correspondence regarding the creation of the post of vice president for administration
Box 327 Folder 3
Correspondence between Frank Johnson Goodnow, professor of administrative law in the Department of Public Law at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Goodnow was also secretary of the Faculty of Political Science and chairman of the Committee on Instruction of the Faculty of Political Science. Much of the correspondence relates to the School of Political Science and the Department of Public Law.
Topics related to the School of Political Science and the Faculty of Political Science include: degree requirements, admissions, and faculty appointments. Includes correspondence regarding the curriculum in law, political science, public service, and social economy. Topics related to the Department of Public Law include: teaching assignments, faculty appointments, the organization of the department, and the curriculum. Also, correspondence regarding Goodnow's appointment as a legal advisor to the Chinese government in 1913. Among other issues, Goodnow discusses Chinese politics and proposals to establish a school of political science in Peking. Also includes correspondence on Goodnow's personnel issues and professional activities
Box 406 Folder 11 to 14
Correspondence between Professor Carter Goodrich of Columbia University and high level University administrators. Goodrich held appointments as professor of economics, executive officer of the Department of Economics, and chairman of the Committee on Instruction of the Faculty of Philosophy. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the Department of Economics and correspondence, resolutions, and minutes regarding the Faculty of Philosophy. Also, a report regarding the Department of Mathematical Statistics (March, 1951)
Topics related to the economics department include: faculty appointments, staffing needs, faculty affairs, budgeting, appropriations, and payments to research assistants. Includes records regarding the Julius Beer Lectures and records relating to the Committee on Economics Instruction in Columbia College (ca. 1946). Topics related to the Faculty of Philosophy include: professorships, faculty affairs, financial aid policies, and faculty appointments. Includes reports evaluating departmental budgets and individual items of correspondence regarding faculty housing, faculty salaries, and faculty relations with the University administration.
Box 394 Folder 17 to 18
Correspondence between L. Carrington Goodrich, Dean Lung Professor of Chinese at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Goodrich was executive officer of the Department of Chinese and Japanese and served as chairman of the Committee on Instruction of the Faculty of Philosophy. Records relate to the department and the Faculty of Philosophy. Includes a letter regarding the reorganization of the University's administration that took place in 1949 and the selection of persons to fill newly-created administrative posts. Records relating to the Department of Chinese and Japanese consist of correspondence and budgets.
Topics include: fellowships, faculty affairs, visiting professors and lecturers, and arrangements for courses. Includes correspondence regarding the Chinese Cultural Scholarships. Topics related to the Faculty of Philosophy include: faculty salaries, faculty appointments, and departmental affairs
Box 448 Folder 11
Correspondence between Aubrey Gorbman, executive officer of the Department of Zoology at Columbia University, and the secretary and assistant provost of the University. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the department.
Topics include: appropriations, budgeting, expenditures, faculty affairs, and faculty appointments. Includes a photograph of departmental staff dating from 1954.
Box 504 Folder 17 to 19
Correspondence between William T. Gossett and high level administrators at Columbia University. Gossett, who was vice president and general counsel of Ford Motor Company, served as a Columbia trustee. Records dating from 1961 to 1965 consist of routine correspondence, personal notes, acknowledgement letters, and invitations.
Topics include: events, trustee business, and Gossett's gifts to Columbia. Records dating from 1967 also relate to the Columbia Campaign development program. Records dating from 1968 also relate to Gossett's appointment as president of the American Bar Association. The records include printed copies of a number of Gossett's speeches on society, politics, business, and other issues. There are gaps in the records from 1965 to 1967 and 1968 to 1971.
Box 327 Folder 4 to 5
Correspondence between Professor Richard J. H. Gottheil and the president and other high level administrators of Columbia University. Gottheil was a professor of rabbinical literature in the Department of Oriental Languages and, later, head of the Department of Semitic Languages.
Topics include: faculty appointments, gifts to the department, the acquisition of collections, special lectures, scholarships, prizes, and departmental relations with other schools. Includes correspondence regarding the Dean Lung Fund for the study of Asian cultures and languages and a gift to Columbia of Babylonian tablets. Also, some of the correspondence dating from the early 1900s relates to the American School for Oriental Study and Research in Palestine.
Box 351 Folder 14
Correspondence between Edwin Gould, an alumnus and benefactor of Columbia University, and the president of the University.
Topics include: funding for the Edwin Gould Boat House, the planning and construction of the boat house, and donor relations. Includes a print of the boat house
Box 665 Folder 23
Correspondence between Amadeus W. Grabeau, professor of geology at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Includes correspondence with Frederick A. Goetze, Dean of the Faculty of Applied Science. Correspondence relates to issues involving geology and paleontology at Columbia. Topics include faculty affairs in the geology department
Box 382 Folder 7
Correspondence between James T. Grady, director of public information at Columbia University, and the provost of the University. Correspondence relates to public relations and publicity for a wide range of events, promotions and retirements, and programs. Includes press releases
Box 503 Folder 26
Correspondence between Henry Graff, chairman of the Department of History at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the department.
Topics include: faculty affairs, funding for the department, special lectures and other events, prizes, and routine administrative issues. Includes correspondence regarding plans to establish a joint professorship of history with Cambridge University in England. Also, correspondence regarding Graff's personnel issues
Box 483 Folder 22
Correspondence relates to Clarence H. Graham, executive officer of the Department of Psychology at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the department. Topics include: faculty recruiting and appointments, faculty affairs, appropriations, and facilities
Box 54 Folder 34
Routine service requests and office supply orders that were placed by the assistant secretary of the University.
Box 350 Folder 1 to 16
Correspondence between Edward J. Grant, registrar of Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Much of the correspondence is about tuition and fees policies and related amendments to the statutes. Also, correspondence and reports on a variety of topics including: tuition remission, enrollment, the preparation of diplomas, recognition of student organizations, student affairs, scholarships, prizes, fellowships, athletic eligibility, University publications and announcements, University privileges, and the administration of the registrar's Office. Includes correspondence and reports on the enrollment of veterans in 1946 and 1947
Box 670 Folder 5
Correspondence between Leo Grebler, acting director of the Institute for Urban Land Use and Housing at Columbia University, and University administrators. Records relate to administrative issues involving the institute
Box 670 Folder 37
Correspondence between Norvin H. Green and Columbia University administrators. Green was a Columbia alumnus and a member of Columbia Associates, a group of benefactors who made regular contributions to Columbia's general fund. Correspondence relates to gifts to Columbia
Box 672 Folder 26
Correspondence regarding payments to assistants who were working on a research project for Jack Greenberg, a faculty member in the Sociology department at Columbia University
Box 351 Folder 15 to 16
Correspondence between Evarts B. Greene, professor of history at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Greene was also Chairman of the University Committee on Japanese Studies. Most of the records consist of correspondence and reports regarding the Institute of Japanese Studies.
Topics include: instruction in Japanese and other Asian languages and cultures, long-range planning for the institute, gifts to the institute, faculty appointments and recruiting, and funding for the institute. Includes correspondence regarding collections management and the acquisition of books, art, and artifacts. Includes a report on the state of Japanese studies at Columbia which was written by Sir George Sansom in 1936. Also, correspondence dating from 1926 to 1928 regarding the Loubat Prize Jury
Box 354 Folder 18
Correspondence between Jerome D. Greene, associate professor of business at Columbia University, and University president Nicholas Murray Butler. Greene was Chairman of the Executive Committee of the Japanese Culture Center of America. Correspondence relates to the establishment of a Japanese culture center at Columbia.
Topics include: the acquisition of books and materials, the purpose and policies of the center, and relations with Japanese donors
Box 327 Folder 6
Correspondence between David H. Greer and the high level administrators of Columbia University. Greer was rector of Saint Bartholomew's Church in New York City, coadjutor bishop of New York, and a trustee of Columbia University. Contains mostly correspondence and invitations regarding the business of the University's board of trustees. Includes correspondence regarding the appointment of a chaplain at Columbia as well as the University's religious and charity work. Also includes the draft of an appeal for the American Church Institute for Negroes which discusses the purpose and activities of the institute
Box 329 Folder 1
Correspondence between Professor William K. Gregory and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Gregory held appointments in the Department of Zoology at Columbia University and the Department of Vertebrate Paleontology at the American Museum of Natural History. Most of the correspondence relates to the African Anatomical Expedition. The expedition, which traversed the Congo River in 1929 in search of gorillas for use as specimens, was jointly funded by the University and the museum. Includes correspondence regarding negotiations with French and Belgian officials for persmission to hunt gorillas. Also includes an account of the killing of a male gorilla and a report containing Gregory's observations regarding gorillas and local peoples. Also, correspondence relating to Gregory's appointment and personnel issues
Box 660 Folder 27
Correspondence between Orange J. Griffin, assistant secretary of the College of Pharmacy, and the secretary and chief clerk of Columbia University. Most of the records consist of routine correspondence and cover letters. Includes college financial reports for 1899 to 1903 and 1902 to 1903. Also includes a copy of the college's charters, by-laws, and code of ethics
Box 451 Folder 20 to 21
Correspondence between Peter Grimm, chairman of the board of William A. White & Sons, and high level administrators at Columbia University. Grimm was an alumnus of the University and president of Columbia Associates, a group of University benefactors who contributed regularly to Columbia's general fund. Correspondence relates to gifts to the University and nominations for honorary degrees. Includes routine invitations and acknowledgement letters
Box 501 Folder 24
Correspondence between Professor Robert Gross of the Department of Mechanical Engineering at Columbia University and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to Gross' appointment and personnel issues. Includes recommendation letters
Box 665 Folder 24
Correspondence between Charles C. Grove and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Includes correspondence with Professor George Pegram. Grove held appointments as assistant professor in the Department of Mathematics at Columbia University and secretary of the Faculty of Columbia College. Correspondence relates to two topics: 1.) membership in the Columbia College faculty and 2.) the elimination of Grove's position and subsequent concern over legal issues involving his dismissal
Box 671 Folder 60
Correspondence between Agnes Forrest Gruliow, acting president of the Greenhouse Group Parents Association, and the secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the Columbia-Greenhouse Nursery School, which was affiliated with the University.
Topics include: the administration of the school as well as planning and budgeting for the school. Records include: the school handbook, a list of staff members, a questionnaire for parents, and a report on the school
Box 671 Folder 25
Records regarding Harry Grundfest, professor of neurology at Columbia University. The records relate to an investigation of Grundfest's alleged communist activities. Includes reports, transcripts of senate hearings, correspondence, samples of Grundfest's publications and statements, and Grundfest's curriculum vitae as well as copies of "Counterattack", an anti-communist newsletter. Also includes letters regarding Grundfest from members of the public to Grayson Kirk, president of Columbia University
Box 672 Folder 61
Correspondence between William R. Gruver, an alumnus of Columbia University's School of General Studies, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to a variety of topics, including the annual Dean's Day celebration that took place in 1959
Box 72 Folder 13
Correspondence and reports regarding the termination and workers compensation case of Eleftheria Guest
Box 668 Folder 10
Correspondence between Luther Halsey Gulick, director of the Institute of Public Administration at Columbia University, and the provost of the University. Correspondence relates to routine matters involving the institute.
Topics include budgeting and space needs. Includes an auditor's report for the 1939-1940 fiscal year and a report from the director (January, 1941)
Box 18 Folder 15
Correspondence between Mary Gunn, an administrative assistant in the Office of the Secretary at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University and other office staf Correspondence relates to arrangements for University ceremonies, including commencement and convocations
Box 665 Folder 25
Correspondence between William D. Guthrie, Ruggles Professor of Constitutional Law at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Includes correspondence with Harlan Fiske Stone, dean of the University's School of Law. Correspondence relates to Guthrie's appointment as Ruggles Professor and preparations for his lectures on constitutional law that were to be delivered at the Sorbonne in Paris
Box 437 Folder 21 to 22
Correspondence between James Gutmann, professor of philosophy at Columbia University, and University administrators. Gutmann served as executive officer of the Department of Philosophy and was later appointed chairman of the department. The records consist of correspondence and budgets regarding the department.
Topics include: faculty affairs, staffing needs, and the retention of faculty members. much of the correspondence is routine
Box 503 Folder 27
Correspondence between Joseph M. Ha and Columbia University administrators. Ha held a number of appointments involving the oversight of international students. He served as coordinator of interfaith work with foreign students, the Chaplain's assistant for foreign student work, and director of the Foreign Student Center. Many of the records relate to events for international students. Includes a report dating from 1961
Box 451 Folder 22
Correspondence between Henry C. Haas, an alumnus of the School of Engineering at Columbia University, and the president and other University administrators. Haas was editor of 1905 "This Way!", the newsletter and reunion bulletin of the School of Engineering Class of 1905. Includes copies of newsletters as well as routine cover letters and acknowledgement letters. Also includes a letter from Haas regarding environmental issues
Box 405 Folder 1 to 14
Correspondence between Louis Morton Hacker and the provost and secretary of Columbia University. Hacker was the director of the University's School of General Studies and later served as dean of the Faculty of General Studies. The School of General Studies succeeded the University Extension as Columbia's continuing education division. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the early years of the School of General Studies.
Topics include: curriculum and programs, financial administration, facilities, relations between the school and the University, faculty affairs, degree requirements, community relations, and the student body. Also, minutes of the first meeting of the University's Bicentennial Committee, which was held in September 1946 and a report outlining plans for the anniversary celebration
Box 668 Folder 50
Correspondence between Frank S. Hackett, headmaster of the Riverdale Country School, and the acting president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the school.
Topics include the development of the school's curriculum. Includes a proposal for implementing the world school method at the Riverdale School
Box 667 Folder 30
Correspondence between Gavin Hadden and the secretary of Columbia University. Hadden was a civil engineer who appears to have been retained by the University. Correspondence relates to Gavin's plans for the development of the University's property at Baker Field in upper Manhattan
Box 660 Folder 29
Correspondence between Arthur Twining Hadley, president of Yale University, and the president and acting president of Columbia University. Much of the correspondence relates to faculty exchange programs.
Topics include: the Roosevelt Professorship, which sent American faculty to Germany to lecture and act as educational and cultural emissaries; the Kaiser Wilhelm Professorship, which brought a German professor to lecture in the United States; and a proposed Japanese exchange program. Includes correspondence that relates to a dispute between Yale and Columbia over the obligations of the Kaiser Wilhelm Professor (1908). Also, correspondence relating to: scholarships and fellowships (1916), Hadley's advice on the process of selecting deans (1904), and a dispute between Yale and Columbia over the sale and donation to Columbia of the Reinhard manuscript collection (1904). Also includes correspondence and a report on Columbia's combined course, which overlapped undergraduate and professional education
Box 670 Folder 6
Correspondence between Associate Professor William A. Hadley of the Department of Mechanical Engineering at Columbia University and University administrators. Correspondence relates to a Job Evaluation Study. Also, correspondence regarding Hadley's personnel issues
Box 671 Folder 61
Correspondence between Robert J. Haggstrom, professor of Air Science at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the University's Air Force Reserve Officers Training Corps (AFROTC) air sciences program.
Topics include: enrollment, admissions, tuition exemption, budgeting and expenditures, prizes, and student affairs. Records include: proceedings of the AFROTC Unit Selection Board, correspondence with the provost's office regarding the possible closing of the program, and a Department of Air Sciences bulletin
Box 386 Folder 2 to 8
Correspondence between Robert Murray Haig, McVikar Professor of political Economy and executive officer of the Department of Economics at Columbia University, and the provost and secretary of the University. Most of the records relate to the Department of Economics and long-range planning for a new political science building. Also, correspondence (ca. 1942) regarding Columbia's relationship with the Institute for Public Administration, correspondence (ca. 1946) regarding the selection of a dean for the School of Business, a report evaluating a plan to institute fees for library services, and correspondence regarding Haig's personnel issues. Records dating from 1941 to 1943 and 1946 to 1947 consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the Department of Economics.
Topics include: faculty appointments, personnel issues, faculty affairs, arrangements for courses, budgeting, research funding and expenditures, prizes, acquisitions of library materials, and facilities. Some of the records also document the effects of World War II on the department. Records dating from 1945 to 1949 consist of correpsondence, minutes, reports, financial records, pamphlets, architectural plans, and proposals documenting the work of the Committee to Examine the Need for a New Political Science Building. Haig was chairman of the committee.
Topics include: departmental space requirements, proposed renovations, and fund raising
Box 670 Folder 65
Correspondence regarding Teferra Haile-Selassie, Emperor of Ethiopia, and his receipt of an honorary degree from Columbia University. Includes an itinerary of his trip through the United States, Canada, and Mexico
Box 494 Folder 1 to 13
Correspondence between Ralph S. Halford and high level administrators at Columbia University. Halford held appointments as executive officer of the Department of Chemistry, vice provost for projects and grants, and dean of the Graduate Faculties. Correspondence relates to: the Department of Chemistry during the 1950s and 1960s the Office of Projects and Grants and issues involving grants and sponsored projects during the 1950s and 1960s and the Graduate Faculties during the 1960s. Topics related to the Department of Chemistry include: faculty appointments, facilities, personnel, finances, the administration of research projects, and research funding. Topics related to sponsored projects and grants include: indirect costs, administrative issues involving sponsored projects and grants, matching funds, University policies regarding research funding, and routine expenditures involving projects and grants.
Includes numerous routine award notification letters and cover letters regarding the terms of research contracts. Also includes: records regarding the functions of the Office of Projects and Grants and the Faculty Committee on Projects and Grants, quarterly reports from the Office of Projects and Grants, correspondence regarding the Watson Scientific Computing Laboratory (ca. 1963-1965), a letter regarding the history of the computing center (August, 1963), and a proposal for research projects in the University's Electronics Research Laboratories (October, 1958). As dean of the Graduate Faculties (formerly the Faculties of Political Science, Philosophy, and Pure Science), Halford oversaw the University's graduate division. Records dating from Halford's term as dean relate to: faculty affairs, development, gifts, personnel, tuition and fees, and the administration of Ph.D. examinations
Box 660 Folder 28
Correspondence between Charles Cuthbert Hall, president of Union Theological Seminary, and the president of Columbia University. Most of the records consist of routine correspondence, invitations, and recommendation letters. Includes correspondence from Nicholas Murray Butler, the president of Columbia University. The letters discuss the role of religion in education and the establishment of faculties of theology in American universities. Also includes correspondence relating to Hall's terms a president of the Religious Education Association
Box 665 Folder 36
Correspondence between George Henry Hall and the president and clerk of the board of trustees of Columbia University. Hall was an artist and benefactor of the University. Correspondence relates to Hall's gift of paintings and 15,000. Includes copies of Hall's will
Box 327 Folder 7 to 8
Correspondence between William Hallock, professor of physics in the Department of Physics at Columbia University, and the president and faculty of the University.
Topics include: equipment and supplies, expenditures, budgeting, gifts, faculty appointments, staffing needs and personnel in the Department of Physics. Includes correspondence regarding the organization of the department and its relations with other departments in the University. Also, correspondence relating to Hallock's appointment, personnel issues, and committee memberships
Box 670 Folder 38
Correspondence between Professor Robert P. Hamilton and Columbia University administrators. Hamilton was a professor of law and secretary of the University's Faculty of Law. Correspondence relates to faculty affairs in the law school and membership in the Faculty of Law. Correspondence also relates to a proposal for a master of comparative law degree.
Box 327 Folder 9 to 11
Correspondence between Alfred D. Hamlin, executive head of the School of Architecture at Columbia University, and the president and other high level administrators of the University. Also includes correspondence between Hamlin and other architects. Correspondence relates to the School of Architecture.
Topics include: personnel, faculty appointments, fellowships, staffing needs, and publicity. Includes detailed correspondence and reports evaluating the organization, faculty, administration, curriculum, and performance of the school. also, correspondence regarding the relationship between the School of architecture and the Society of Beaux-Arts Architects (ca. 1911). The correspondence discusses whether the school should adopt the society's programs and grading criteria. Also includes correspondence regarding campus design, in particular the use of South Field and the design of buildings at Barnard College. Also, correspondence relating to Hamlin's appointment, personnel issues, and professional activities
Box 671 Folder 26
Correspondence between Dag Hammarskjold, secretary general of the United Nations, and the secretary of Columbia University. Most of the correspondence relates to the honorary degree that was awarded to Hammarskjold at Columbia's 3rd Bicentennial Convocation in 1954. Hammarskjold was also the principal speaker at the convocation. Also: a press release regarding Hammarskjold's appearance at the University's Charter Day Dinner in 1954 correspondence between Hammarskjold and University president Grayson Kirk regarding collaboration between the United Nations and the University; and two United Nations publications
Box 446 Folder 18 to 21
Correspondence between Louis P. Hammett, professor of chemistry and executive officer of the Department of Chemistry at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Includes correspondence with funding agencies and University faculty members. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the Department of Chemistry and correspondence, reports, and minutes regarding the Division of government Aided Research and government-sponsored research at the University. Also, correspondence and programs relating to a meeting of the National Academy of Science which was held at Columbia in November, 1954. Also includes a 1957 report from the Committee on Professional Training of the American Chemical Society. Topics related to the Department of Chemistry include: student affairs, faculty appointments, staffing needs, faculty affairs, research funding, the appointment of laboratory assistants, fellowships, and facilities.
Includes: correspondence regarding the Chandler Medal, a 1954 report on teaching assistanceships in the department and problems with the recruiting of qualified graduate students, and a 1956 report regarding departmental space problems and undergraduate enrollment. Beginning ca. 1956 the records also relate to government-sponsored research. Much of the material relates to: the administration of research contracts and research personnel, contract negotiations, and relations with the government. Includes: a report (1957) to the National Science Foundation regarding University research activities; a letter and brief report (1957) regarding University policies and criteria for accepting government contracts; a letter (February, 1957) regarding the institute for Defense Analysis; and correspondence and minutes (ca. 1958) regarding contracts and contract policies in the University's Electronics Research Laboratories. Also, correspondence regarding Hammett's personnel issues and committee memberships and a reprint of his article, Rights and Responsibilities in the Search for Knowledge, which appeared in Chemical and Engineering news in 1954
Box 412 Folder 1
Correspondence between William Adams Hance, assistant dean of Columbia College, and the secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates Columbia College, the University's undergraduate college.
Topics include: scholarships, prizes, and the recruiting of students. Hance was also chairman of the Advisory Committee of the Faculties. Related topics include retirement policies and faculty fringe benefits
Box 670 Folder 39
Correspondence between Milton Handler, professor of law in the School of Law at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to Handler's personnel issues. Includes two printed copies of Handler's lecture on antitrust law that was delivered to the New York Bar Association in 1954
Box 670 Folder 7
Correspondence between Jacob B. S. Hardman and Columbia University administrators. Correspondence relates to the financial administration of the Labor Leadership Study, which was supported by the Columbia-based bureau of Applied Social Research
Box 342 Folder 16 to 19
Correspondence between Edward Stephen Harkness, a benefactor of Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Includes legal documents, minutes, reports, acknowledgement letters, and cover letters. Records dating from 1911 to 1923 relate to Harkness' gift to the University to fund the purchase and construction of a new medical school campus and document the University's efforts to solicit Harkness for funds.
Related topics include: fund raising efforts on behalf of the medical center, the purchase and construction of the medical center, and negotiations with Presbyterian Hospital. Records dating from 1928 to 1935 relate to Harkness' subsequent gifts to the medical school and the construction of additional buildings at the medical center. Also, correspondence regarding Harkness' gifts to build Butler Library, then known as South Hall, and the construction of the library building
Box 672 Folder 12
Correspondence between Francis Stuart Harmon and Columbia University administrators. Harmon chaired a special committee of Riverside Church that was appointed to study the possibility of installing radio and television transmitters on Riverside Church, which is located near Columbia University. Includes a copy of the committee report, which discusses religious television broadcasts
Box 661 Folder 1
Correspondence between Joseph W. Harper of the Harper & Brothers publishing company and the president of Columbia University. Harper was a Columbia trustee, chairman of the trustees' committee on buildings and grounds, and a member of the library committee. Topics related to the committee on buildings and grounds include: buildings at Columbia's 49th Street campus, the hiring of a new superintendent of buildings and grounds in 1890 and the purchase of the property for Columbia's new campus at Morningside Heights. Topics related to the library committee include routine business. Other topics include: the establishment of the Columbia University Press (ca. 1890-1893); the exhibition of books that was part of Columbia's exhibit at the World's Columbian Exposition (1893); a portrait of Columbia trustee Hamilton Fish (1894); the use of funds from Harper's estate (1896); and the decision to change Columbia's name from Columbia College to Columbia University
Box 669 Folder 3
Correspondence between Philip S. Harper, president of Harper-Wyman Company, and John R. Dunning, dean of the School of Engineering at Columbia University. In the correspondence, Harper expresses concern about the socialistic trends in teaching at Columbia. Includes newspaper clippings regarding a citizen training course in Columbia's Teachers College
Box 665 Folder 27
Correspondence between Robert A. Harper, Torrey Professor of Botany at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to Harper's appointment as Torrey Professor. Correspondence also relates to faculty affairs and budgeting in the Department of Botany
Box 660 Folder 30
Correspondence between William Rainey Harper, president of the University of Chicago, and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to: scholarships and fellowships at the University of Chicago, the creation of the Association of American Universities, and Harper's death in 1906
Box 378 Folder 1
Correspondence between Reed Harris and Columbia University president Nicholas Murray Butler, the dean of Columbia College, and the University counsel. Includes correspondence with Harris' attorney. Harris was editor in chief of the Columbia Daily Spectator, the college's student newspaper. Correspondence relates to Harris' allegations regarding graft in the University dining services, his suspension and subsequent reinstatement, and the University's investigation of Harris and The Spartan Society. Includes correspondence regarding the powers of the University and the public relations issues surrounding the case
Box 661 Folder 2
Correspondence between William Torrey Harris and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Harris was commissioner of education in the Bureau of Education at the Department of the Interior. Most of records consist of routine correspondence and invitations. Includes correspondence regarding two issues -- changing the name of Columbian University and the problem of fake diplomas -- which were brought before Congress by the University. Also, two detailed letters (May, 1908) in which Harris argues against socialism, in particular the socialist beliefs of Henry George and Edward Bellamy
Box 661 Folder 3
Correspondence between Charles Custis Harrison, provost of the University of Pennsylvania, and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects. Topics include: entrance examinations; the College Entrance Examination Board; and efforts to establish a school of American archeology, ethnography, and linguistics in Mexico
Box 668 Folder 51
Correspondence between George L. Harrison and the acting president of Columbia University. Harrison was a University trustee. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects. Topics include: trustee nominations, arrangements for trustee meetings, and Harrison's gifts to Columbia
Box 672 Folder 62
Correspondence between T. Carter Harrison, director of development in the School of General Studies at Columbia University, and University administrators. Most of the correspondence relates to the fund raising campaign for the General Studies Fund
Box 412 Folder 2 to 3
Correspondence between C. Lowell Harriss, professor of economics in the Department of Economics at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Harriss held appointments as associate professor and professor of economics. Most of the correspondence relates to Harriss' research projects.
Topics include payments to his research and clerical assistants and the financial administration of research projects. Also, reports and correspondence regarding Harriss' professional activities. Topics include: his work as Columbia's representative to the International Institute of Public Finance in 1950 his trip to Europe for a taxation conference in 1951 and his sabbatical leave as a Fullbright lecturer in the Netherlands from 1953 to 1954. Includes copies of a number of papers by Harriss. Correspondence dating from 1969 to 1970 includes letters in which Harriss advises the University regarding tax issues
Box 397 Folder 1 to 19
Box 398 Folder 1 to 15
Correspondence between Robert Harron, director of university relations at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to University publicity and community relations.
Topics include: events, appointments, programs, public services, faculty achievements, University finances, gifts to the University, awards, honorary degrees, research, discoveries, and buildings. Includes drafts and final copies of press releases. The records document Columbia's public relations strategies in response to anti-communist politics during the 1940s and 1950s and to the University's increasing community relations troubles during the early 1960s. The records also document publicity for the University's bicentennial in 1954
Box 500 Folder 21
Correspondence between Albert Gailord Hart, chairman of the Department of Economics at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the department.
Topics include: faculty affairs, staffing needs, faculty appointments, budgeting, gifts, and funding for the department. Includes correspondence regarding the Ford Foundation Research Professorships and the Ford Research Professorship committee (ca. 1960-1961). Also includes a proposal and a brief exchange of letters regarding plans for a research program in international economics (January, 1961)
Box 382 Folder 8
Correspondence between Henry S. Haskell and Provost Frank D. Fackenthal of Columbia University. Haskell was University president Nicholas Murray Butler's assistant at the Carnegie Foundation for International Peace, where Butler served as director. Correspondence relates to funding for: fellowships, faculty travel, aid to displaced European scholars, and other purposes
Box 671 Folder 27
Correspondence between Frederick E. Hasler of the Chemical Bank and Trust Company and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Hasler chaired Columbia's Bicentennial Birthday Fund. Correspondence relates to the honorary degree that was awarded to Hasler at Columbia's 1955 commencement ceremony. Correspondence also relates to: events, Hasler's gifts to Columbia, and the Bicentennial Fund. Includes correspondence between Hasler and donors.
Box 448 Folder 12 to 15
Correspondence between Menelaos D. Hassialis, Henry Krumb Professor of Mining at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Hassialis held appointments at executive officer of the School of Mines and chairman of the Henry Krumb School of Mines. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the school.
Topics include: sponsored research, budgeting, personnel, finances, faculty appointments, research assistants, and faculty affairs. Includes: correspondence and a procedures manual relating to the Columbia University Mineral Beneficiation Laboratory; correspondence regarding Industrial Reactor Laboratories; and a report, dating from 1964 which relates to the school's electrical engineering and electronics research laboratories. Records dating from 1970 to 1971 consist of the text and translation of a German university bill. These documents were sent to Columbia president's Cordier and McGill as an example of an alternative university governmental structure and an alternate role for the University senate
Box 438 Folder 1 to 21
Box 439 Folder 1 to 19
Box 440 Folder 1 to 20
Box 441 Folder 1 to 21
Box 442 Folder 1 to 21
Box 443 Folder 1 to 20
Box 444 Folder 1 to 20
Box 445 Folder 1 to 21
Box 446 Folder 1 to 17
Press releases and correspondence from John Hastings, director of the office of Public Information at Columbia University. Most of the records consist of press releases relating to a wide range of topics. Includes monthly reports regarding public relations activities and correspondence regarding the public information office. Also includes Pulitzer Prize press packets and a report on the Pulitzer Prizes which contains a list of prize recipients from 1917 to 1957
Box 661 Folder 4
Correspondence between Thomas S. Hastings, president of Union Theological Seminary, and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects.
Topics include: opening courses at Columbia and Union Theological Seminary to students from both institutions, a proposal for Columbia to begin offering Bachelor of Divinity degrees, and women students
Box 480 Folder 20
Correspondence between Vermont Hatch, a trustee of Columbia University, and the president and vice president of the University. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects.
Topics include: personal favors, Hatch's committee memberships, and his death, funeral, and estate. includes a report of the Alumni Federation Survey Committee dated October, 1954 (the Hatch Report ). The report discusses alumni organizations, alumni programs, and fund raising. Also includes a draft of the agreement between Columbia and the New York School of Social Work (July, 1959).
Box 668 Folder 52
Correspondence between Professor Henry Caraway Hatfield of the Department of Germanic Languages at Columbia University and University administrators. Hatfield was also editor of The Germanic Review, which was published by the department. Correspondence relates to the finances of the Germanic Review. Also, correspondence regarding Hatfield's appointments
Box 346 Folder 1 to 11
Correspondence between Herbert E. Hawkes, dean of Columbia College, and high level administrators, faculty members, religious counsellors at Columbia University. Although dean of Columbia's undergraduate college, Hawkes was also involved in overseeing extracurricular programs and student services on a University-wide basis. He served on a number of committees including the Board of Religious and Social Work and the Committee on Men's Residence Halls. Most of the correspondence relates to University residence halls and other issues involving students' lives outside of the classroom. Related topics include: student disturbances and discipline, student social life and social events, the oversight of student organizations and athletics, and the role of religious counselling at the University. Includes correspondence regarding the administration of Earl Hall, Columbia's nondenominational religious and social center, and the relationship between Earl Hall and the YMCA of Greater New York. Much of the correspondence also relates to the academic affairs of Columbia College.
Topics include: the curriculum, the organization of departments, prizes and awards, faculty affairs, faculty appointments, and admissions. Includes correspondence, reports, and proposals regarding significant curriculum revisions, the nature and role of undergraduate instruction, the student body of the college, and the college's responsibilities towards its students. Also, correspondence regarding the administration and awarding of scholarship and fellowship funds and correspondence relating to student aid policies in general. Includes correspondence regarding the Kellet Fellowships. Also, correspondence regarding numerous other topics related to Columbia College, residence halls, student services, and gifts to the College. Correspondence also documents the effects of World War I and World War II on the University's curriculum and finances
Box 661 Folder 5
Correspondence between Harriet Hawley, secretary to the dean of Teachers College at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Most of the records consist of routine correspondence and cover letters.
Topics include: faculty appointments, financial information and statistics for the president's annual reports, and payments to cover the cost of instruction
Box 661 Folder 6
Correspondence between John Hay, United States secretary of state, and the president of Columbia University. Most of the records consist of routine correspondence, invitations, recommendation letters and letters of introduction.
Topics include: efforts by University president Seth Low to have the British government send all of its official publications to the University library and Hay's plan to recruit student interpreters to serve in China
Box 460 Folder 1 to 20
Correspondence between Philip M. Hayden and other high level administrators at Columbia University. Hayden served as assistant secretary of the University under Frank D. Fackenthal and later succeeded Fackenthal as secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the numerous responsibilities of the Office of the Secretary, one of Columbia's top administrative units. During Hayden's term as secretary, the office compiled statistics and information for administrative purposes; handled personnel issues involving faculty and employees; researched issues involving the intrepretation and implementation of University policies and statutes and the use of gifts and special funds; and oversaw routine administrative tasks such as the preparation of catalogs and announcements, mailings, and the University calendar. The records include both substantive letters and memoranda as well as routine notes and cover letters. Also, 1 Folder of correspondence, charts, minutes, and amendments to the statutes relating to the major reorganization of the University's administrative structure that took place in 1949.
The records relate to a wide range of other topics including: budgeting and operations in the secretary's office, job placement services for students, policies regarding scholarships and fellowships, the awarding of scholarships and fellowships, the business of the Council for Research in the Social Sciences, Columbia's Upper Estate (the site of Rockefeller Center), and preparations for events. The records include: minutes and correspondence (ca. 1934) relating to residence halls, a report of the special committee that was appointed to study the use of the University's Claremont Avenue Apartments (1934), resolutions and a report regarding a proposed University arts center (1946), correspondence regarding the business of the University Council, and (beginning in the 1940s) resolutions of the University Council. Also, correspondence regarding Hayden's retirement.
Topics related to faculty personnel include: retirement plans and other benefits, faculty affairs, and accounting and financial planning for retirement funds. Much of the correspondence relates to retirement benefits and survivor's benefits for individual faculty members and their spouses. The records include: correspondence and reports regarding the University's retirement plan (ca. 1929-1930); records regarding the state of University clerical staff (October, 1946); and a report (September, 1933) on a review of the minutes from meetings of the University's board of trustees prior to 1892 which was conducted by the secretary's office in order to determine policies regarding pensions, widow's benefits, emeritus status, and other personnel issues. Topics related to University employees include the classification of job titles and status, tuition exemption, and employee personnel policies during the 1930s.
Box 344 Folder 16 to 18
Correspondence between Carlton Joseph Huntley Hayes, Seth Low Professor of History and executive officer of the Department of History at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the Department of History and Hayes' post-World War I study of France.
Topics related to the Department of History include: faculty appointments, staffing needs, faculty affairs, personnel, the curriculum, fellowships, the management of special funds, research funding, and budgeting. Includes correspondence and reports (ca. 1921 1938 and 1941) evaluating the department's educational strengths and weaknesses, curriculum, faculty, and degree requirements.
Much of the correspondence dating from the mid to late 1920s relates to a study of economic and social development in post-war France which was sponsored by the Council for Research in the Social Sciences. Includes reports on the project. Also, correspondence, reports and proposals regarding a variety of University-related topics. These include: correspondence (ca. 1912-1914) documenting the work of the Committee on Student Organizations and the creation of King's Crown, an alumni group which was established to oversee the budgets of certain student organizations; a 1921 report from the Joint Committee on Graduate Instruction which recommends changes to the University's faculty salary policies; and a proposal (ca. 1922) for instruction in Geography.
Also includes Hayes' letter in support of Professor Charles Beard who was dismissed from the University in 1917. Includes correspondence relating to Hayes' professional activities and retirement
Box 665 Folder 28
Correspondence between E. K. Hayt, assistant registrar and assistant bursar for the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. Includes correspondence with the University bursar and treasurer. Correspondence relates to the college. Topics include: budgeting, scholarships, and other financial matters
Box 671 Folder 29
Correspondence between John N. Hazard, professor of public law at Columbia University, and University faculty members and administrators. hazard appears to have been involved with the American Slavic and East European Review. Correspondence relates to the journal and routine topics involving Slavic and Eastern European studies. Includes the annual report of the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, Inc. Also, records relating to Hazard's personnel issues
Box 665 Folder 29
Correspondence between Harold D. Hazeltine, a reader in English law at Cambridge University, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to: Hazeltine's visit to deliver a lecture series on the history of English law, his possible appointment at Columbia, and the University's purchase of the Bushe-Fox law library. it also appears as though Hazeltine may have visited the University as Carpentier Lecturer
Box 670 Folder 40
Correspondence between Henry T. Heald and Columbia University administrators. Heald was chancellor of New York University and chairman of the Education Group of the Greater New York Fund. Most of the correspondence relates to Heald's honorary degree from Columbia. Includes biographical information on Heald. Correspondence also relates to efforts to develop an arts center at Columbia and the University's involvement with the Greater New York Fund
Box 452 Folder 20 to 21
Correspondence between Charles C. Healy, a Columbia University development officer, and University administrators, donors, trustees, and faculty. Topics include: donor relations, gifts to the University, development activities, estates, special funds, and scholarships. Includes a photograph of the annual Class Dinner (May, 1954). Also, minutes of the University's Committee on Wills and Special Gifts dating from February and December, 1954 and January, 1956
Box 665 Folder 30
Correspondence between John Langdon Heaton, editor of The World newspaper, and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the University's School of Journalism. Topics include: the establishment of the school, the nature and composition of the school's advisory board, and the appointment of the school's first director. includes two letters in which Heaton vigorously opposes the nomination of Professor John W. Cunliffe as director of the school and a report from Heaton to Joesph Pulitzer regarding Columbia
Box 18 Folder 32
A press release (April 20, 1967) regarding Bruce C. Heezen's work to retrieve cosmic body fragments from the site of ancient asteroid collisions in the Pacific and Indian oceans. Heezen was an associate professor of geology at Columbia University's Lamont Geological Observatory
Box 672 Folder 27
Correspondence regarding payments to laboratory assistants who were working for Jack Hefferline in the psychology department at Columbia University
Box 670 Folder 41
Correspondence between Richard Heathcote Heindel, deputy director of the UNESCO relations staff, and Columbia University administrators. Correspondence relates to the United States National Commission for UNESCO and the Institute on World Affairs and International Cooperation, which was located at Pennsylvania State University. Records include: an outline of a course that was taught by Heindel at the Institute on World Affairs and International Cooperation; a pamphlet on the institute; and an outline of a conference on the social impact of industrialization and urban conditions in Africa
Box 494 Folder 14
The records consist of cash deposit vouchers which were sent to the Columbia University administration by Lillian Heisler, administrative assistant for the University's Building Fund office. The vouchers record gifts to the Building Fund
Box 505 Folder 17
Routine correspondence regarding campus audio visual services. Includes one interesting memorandum regarding classroon facilities (May 27, 1963)
Box 108 Folder 24
Correspondence between Herbert Hendin, a research associate in psychiatry at the Columbia University Health Service, and University administrators. Some of the correspondence relates to Hendin's study of depression, drug addiction, and suicide among Columbia College students. includes an outline of the study as well as a copy of a study entitled "Student Revolutionaries: Who Are They?" Also, correspondence regarding the University tennis club. Topics related to the club include: expenditures, gifts, fund raising, increasing interest in the tennis program, a proposed tennis program for Harlem youth, and budgeting
Box 448 Folder 16 to 19
Correspondence between Wesley J. Hennessy and high level administrators at Columbia University. Hennessy was assistant dean of the School of Engineering and was later appointed executive dean of the School of Engineering and Applied Science (SEAS). Correspondence relates to the school.
Topics include: faculty appointments, salaries, development, finances, financial aid, gifts to the school, appropriations, the management of special funds, faculty affairs, and faculty personnel policies. Includes correspondence (ca. 1964-1965) regarding the work of the committees on instruction and educational policy of the SEAS and correspondence (ca. 1969) regarding faculty and student relations with the school. Also includes the text of Hennessy's address in honor of the school's centennial in March, 1965. Also, correspondence, press releases, and minutes regarding Hennessy's appointment, personnel issues, and committee memberships. Includes correspondence (ca. 1969) with University president Cordier regarding the restructuring of University government
Box 345 Folder 11 to 14
Correspondence between Ambrose D. Henry, high level administrators at Columbia University, and the chairman of the University's board of trustees. Ambrose was chairman of the trustee's committee on buildings and grounds and president of the Alumni Association of Columbia College. Correspondence relates to alumni and student affairs, Columbia's buildings and campus, and the Buildings and Grounds Department. most of the correspondence dating from 1913 to 1920 relates to alumni and student affairs.
Topics include: the election of alumni trustees, student services, student social life and extracurricular activities, and class gifts to the University. Most of the correspondence dating from the mid 1920s to the late 1930s relates to Columbia's buildings and the Department of Buildings and Grounds.
Topics include: campus design and planning, building programs and construction projects, the renovation and maintenance of campus buildings, real estate purchases, and funding for construction and renovation projects. Includes correspondence regarding the design and construction of Butler Library, then known as South Hall; the gift to Columbia of the Nevis Estate (ca. 1934); and the planning of a women's residence hall. Also includes correspondence (ca. 1935-1937) regarding labor relations policies and relations with the Columbia University Employees Organization of Buildings and Grounds, an employee association in the Buildings and Grounds Department. Includes correspondence regarding employee pensions and salaries donations and correspondence regarding Hepburn's nomination for an honorary degree and election to the University's board of trustees
Box 471 Folder 1 to 23
Box 472 Folder 1 to 20
Box 473 Folder 1 to 20
Box 474 Folder 1 to 21
Box 475 Folder 1 to 7
Correspondence between Richard Herpers and other high level administrators at Columbia University. Herpers held numerous appointments including assistant to the chairman of the Committee on Public Ceremonies, assistant to the secretary of the University, secretary of the University, and secretary of the Executive Committee of the University Council. Most of the records relate to the numerous responsibilities of the Office of the Secretary. Records also relate to Columbia's official events and ceremonies, the work of the University Council, and the work of the Advisory Committee on Educational Policy.
Records related to University ceremonies include correspondence, schedules, floor plans, and programs dating from the 1940s. The records document academic ceremonies and other events at the University. Includes records regarding the installation of Dwight D. Eisenhower as president of the University in 1949. Records documenting the University Council consist of correspondence, resolutions, agenda, and extracts of minutes dating from the 1940s and the 1950s. The records relate to a range of subjects.
Topics include: academic policies; the establishment of institutes, programs, and courses; degrees; fellowships; scholarships; and the routine business of the University Council. Also, resolutions, minutes, and correspondence relating to the Advisory committee on Educational Policy during the 1950s.
Most of the records relate to Herper's terms as assistant secretary and secretary of the University. Records documenting the secretary's duties consist of correspondence, budgets, procedures, policies, and memoranda dating from the 1950s. The Office of the Secretary was one of the top administrative units at the University. During Herpers' administration, the secretary and his staff handled: numerous, University-wide administrative tasks; personnel issues involving faculty and employees; and trustee affairs.
Topics include: the administration of prizes and awards, assembling statistics and information for administrative purposes, the origin and purpose of gifts and special funds, interpretation of the terms governing the use of gifts and funds, preparation of the University bulletins, the wording of degrees and certificates, the business of various University committees, honorary degrees, issuing official University credentials, arrangements for the printing of University publications, the care of University records, emergency loans to students and faculty, orders for medals and certificates, orders for academic regalia, and arrangements for events
Topics related to faculty and staff personnel include: retirement and other benefits plans and policies, faculty travel arrangements, faculty appointments, tuition exchanges for faculty children, and personnel record-keeping. Topics related to the Columbia's board of trustees include: arrangements for meetings, trustee resolutions, and other trustee business. Individual records of note include: correspondence and resolutions regarding the school of General Studies, Columbia's continuing education division; the University's weekly calendar (beginning ca. 1953); a draft of the faculty handbook (1958); a eulogy for former secretary Philip M. Hayden, which was deliverd February 18, 1959 correspondence regarding Herpers' death and memorial service in 1961 and a copy of the eulogy for Herpers
Box 54 Folder 22 to 23
Correspondence between Jeffrey Herrmann and Columbia University administrators. Herrmann was a research assistant who was conducting a study of the faculty resignations that took place between 1945 and 1967. Most of the records consist of work study time sheets and policies relating to the administration of Herrmann's work study position. Includes some correspondence regarding the faculty study, which was called the faculty attrition study, and a list of faculty members who resigned between 1945 and 1967
Box 671 Folder 62
A report on self government that was submitted to Columbia University
Box 661 Folder 7
Correspondence between Professor Christian Archibald Herter and the president of Columbia University. Herter was a professor of pharmacology and therapeutics in the Department of Pharmacology, Materia Medica, and Therapeutics at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects.
Topics include: a proposed pharmacology laboratory, a scholarship in pharmacology, and Herter's thoughts on the teaching of therapeutics and the therapeutics curriculum. Also, correspondence regarding Herter's appointment
Box 661 Folder 8
Correspondence between Walter L. Hervey, president of Teachers College at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Most of the correspondence relates to the Pulitzer Scholarships, which were established in 1903 through a donation from Joseph Pulitzer. Other topics include the relationship between Columbia and Teachers College and proposed changes to the Teachers College curriculum
Box 328 Folder 1 to 4
Correspondence between William Addison Hervey, registrar of Columbia University and chairman of the Committee on Admissions, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the planning and administration of admissions and registration procedures. Includes correspondence regarding the reorganization of the University's registration procedures in 1908
Box 345 Folder 16 to 18
Correspondence between Professor Frederick J. Heuser of Columbia University and the high level admimistrators of the University. Heuser was a professor of Germanic languages and literatures; corresponding secretary of the Germanistic Society of America; and director of Deutches Haus, Columbia's German cultural and educational center. Correspondence relates to Deutches Haus and the work of the Germanistic Society of America. Most of the correspondence dating from 1928 to 1945 records gifts to a fund in support of Deutches Haus. Other topics related to Deutches Haus include: expenditures, the selection of a building for the center, and the revision of the center's mission following World War I. Records dating from 1946 to 1955 consist of correspondence, reports, and annual reports documenting the activities of the Germanistic Society of America
Box 488 Folder 22
Correspondence between John Heuss, rector of the Parish of Trinity Church in New York City, and Columbia University administrators. Heuss was a trustee of the University. The records consist of routine cover letters and invitations.
Topics include: trustee business, events related to Columbia's bicentennial celebration in 1954 and honorary degrees. Includes a newspaper clipping regarding Heuss
Box 661 Folder 9
Correspondence between Abram S. Hewitt and the president of Columbia University. Hewitt was an alumnus of Columbia College who served as chairman of the Barnard College board of trustees and, briefly, as a columbia trustee. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects.
Topics include: Hewitt's gifts to the University, his fund raising efforts, the Columbia College Building Fund, and Hewitt's work as chairman of the Columbia University Alumni Memorial Hall Committee. Includes correspondence regarding a biography of Hewitt's father-in-law, Peter Cooper, which was not published due to the objections of Peter cooper's widow. Also includes a letter regarding plans to incorporate Cooper Union into the educational system of the the University
Box 665 Folder 31
Correspondence between George G. Heye and the president of Columbia University. Includes correspondence with Franz Boas and Henry Fairfield Osborn. Correspondence relates to proposals for cooperation between the Heye Museum (the Museum of the American Indian), the American Museum of Natural History, and Columbia University. Correspondence dating from 1917 to 1918 concerns Marshall H. Saville, Loubat Professor of American archaeology. The correspondence discusses Saville's role at the University and the museum
Box 500 Folder 22
Correspondence between George Whiting Hibbitt, associate dean of Columbia College, and the administrators of Columbia University. Most of the records consist of routine correspondence regarding the academic standing, discipline, and expulsion of students. Includes correspondence with individual students and their families. Also includes student records. Also, correspondence relating to Hibbitt's personnel issues
Box 669 Folder 37
Correspondence between Maurice Hickey, associate dean of the Faculty of Medicine at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. includes correspondence with donors to the medical school. Correspondence relates to gifts in support of scholarships and prize funds in the School of Dental and Oral Surgery. Includes a list of prize recipients for 1952
Box 346 Folder 12
Correspondence between Frederick C. Hicks, assistant librarian at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the administration of the University's library system.
Topics include: acquisitions, personnel, finances and budgeting, library privileges, gifts to the libraries, and library policies. includes correspondence relating to the work of the Library Council and the Law School Committee on the Law Library. Also includes a 1920 report on the Law Library
Box 495 Folder 10
Correspondence between Gilbert Highet of the Department of Greek and Latin at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to routine departmental business.
Topics include: staffing needs, personnel, and recruiting
Box 506 Folder 19
Correspondence between Norman E. Hildes-Heim and high level administrators at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Hildes-Heim's efforts to secure a teaching appointment in the School of Architecture
Box 665 Folder 32
Correspondence between David Jayne Hill, American ambassador to Germany, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Includes correspondence with Professor John Burgess. Correspondence relates to Hill's appointment to give the Carpentier Lectures at Columbia in 1911. Also, letters regarding Columbia's proposal for an international lecture series on United States' foreign policy
Box 72 Folder 14
Correspondence from Columbia University alumnus A. L. Hillard. Correspondence consists of complaint letters regarding the Columbia University Forum. Includes two issues of the Forum
Box 668 Folder 17
Correspondence between Alfred Dexter Hinckley, assistant to the dean in the School of Engineering at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the school.
Topics include: scholarships; funding for student housing; and the University's Engineering, Science, and Management War Training (ESMWT) program. Includes enrollment and course information for the program. Also, correspondence regarding Hinckley's personnel issues
Box 665 Folder 33
Correspondence between Gertrude Hirst, assistant professor of classical philology in Barnard College, and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Hirst's appointment. Correspondence also relates to the Department of Classical Philology at Barnard College, the undergraduate women's college affiliated with Columbia. Includes minutes of departmental meetings (1913 and 1914). Also, a letter from University president Nicholas Murray Butler regarding advances in women's education and a detailed letter in which Hirst responds to a report on faculty pension plans
Box 321 Folder 22
Correspondence between Friedrich Hirth, Dean Lung Professor of Chinese in the Department of Chinese Languages and Literatures at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Most of the correspondence relates to the establishment of the department and the Dean Lung Professorship. Other topics related to the department include: staffing needs, faculty appointments, special lectures, events, and the acquisition and administration of library collections. Also, correspondence regarding lectures on fine arts in China which were given by Hirth at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1905. Also, correspondence relating to Hirth's appointment, personnel issues, and retirement
Box 394 Folder 19 to 20
Correspondence between Arthur W. Hixson, executive officer of the Department of Chemical Engineering at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Most of the records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the department. Also, correspondence (ca. 1954) regarding Hixon's receipt of an honorary degree from the University. Includes biographical information about Hixon. Topics related to the Department of Chemical Engineering include: personnel issues, research funding, budgeting and appropriations, faculty appointments, and faculty affairs. Includes correspondence regarding the Chandler Chemical Museum. Also includes a long-range plan for the department dating from January, 1946. Among other topics, the plan discusses the department's curriculum, enrollment, facilities, graduate program, and staffing needs
Box 667 Folder 18
Correspondence between Daniel Russell Hodgdon and high level administrators at Columbia University. Includes correspondence between administrators and between administrators and the University's attorney. Hodgson was the principal of the Columbus, Ohio, schools. Correspondence relates to Hodgdon's dispute with Columbia over admission to the University's School of Law and Columbia's refusal to enroll him because he was on the University's black list
Box 452 Folder 18 to 19
Correspondence between Rabbi Isidor B. Hoffman, counsellor to Jewish students at Columbia University, and University administrators. Most of the records consist of cash deposit vouchers for gifts in support of the University's Jewish counsellors
Box 672 Folder 13
Correspondence between Albert Hofstadter, chairman of the Department of Fine Arts and Archaeology, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to routine departmental business
Box 507 Folder 1
Correspondence between Frank S. Hogan and high level administrators at Columbia University. Hogan, who was the district attorney for New York County, served as an alumni-trustee of the University and chairman of the Columbia College Council. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects.
Topics include: trustee business, the composition and mission of trustee committees, and issues involving the University's residence halls. Includes: a report on dormitories by the Columbia College Council (February, 1962); correspondence regarding tuition increases, University finances, and the role of the college council in setting tuition and fees (ca. November, 1961-February, 1962); and routine acknowledgement letters and personal notes
Box 672 Folder 42
Correspondence regarding medical and personnel issues involving Helen Hogue, an assistant in the Office of the President at Columbia University
Box 456 Folder 1 to 15
Box 457 Folder 1 to 10
Correspondence between John Hohenberg, professor of journalism at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Hohenberg served as secretary of the Advisory Board of the Pulitzer Prize and administered the Pulitzer Prizes for over twenty years. Most of the records consist of correspondence, minutes, agenda, jury reports, newspaper clippings, programs, and press releases relating to the Pulitzer Prizes.
Topics include: publicity, the selection of jury members, and the nomination and selection of prize recipients. Includes: correspondence regarding the establishment of the Pulitzer Prize Playhouse television program, a list of jurors dating from 1917 to 1959 an advisory board policy statement dating from 1959 and correspondence with Joseph Pulitzer Jr. Also, a draft of the Columbia Report, which was issued by a special committee of the trustees in July, 1966. Among other topics, this extensive, long-range planning report discusses the: curriculum, research, facilities, student life, faculty, administration, and public role of the University. Hohenberg was also secretary of the Faculty of Journalism. Correspondence relates to fellowships and faculty business. Includes correspondence regarding the Grantland Rice Fellowships. Also, records regarding Hohenberg's personnel issues and professional activities. Includes records relating to his address before the Air War College in June, 1954
Box 673 Folder 22
Correspondence regarding the dismissal of Herbert C. Holcomb, a technician in the Language Laboratory at Columbia University
Box 661 Folder 10
Correspondence between Luther Emmett Holt, professor of the diseases of children in the Faculty of Medicine at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Much of the correspondence is routine. Includes correspondence regarding faculty appointments. Also includes New York State proposals regarding combined undergraduate and medical degrees. The proposals include information on curriculum and entrance requirements. Also, correspondence regarding Holt's appointment as director of the Vanderbilt Clinic in 1904 and other personnel issues
Box 354 Folder 19
Correspondence between John T. Hopkins, supervisor of purchasing at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the authorization and recording of purchases and the management of the Purchasing Department
Box 661 Folder 11
Correspondence between John J. Hopper and Columbia University administrators. Hopper was a civil engineer and contractor who was hired by the University. The records consist of correspondence and proposals regarding the construction of Columbia's Morningside Heights campus.
Topics include: foundations, sewers, and other masonry projects. The proposals include cost estimates for construction projects
Box 671 Folder 28
Correspondence between Schuyler Hoslett and the secretary of Columbia University. Hoslett was an associate professor of business administration and director of the Executive Program in Business Administration, which was offered by the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the routine administration of the program and Hoslett's personnel issues. Includes a statistical profile of executive program members
Box 671 Folder 30
Correspondence between Bernardo A. Houssay, a scientist at the Institute of Biological and Medical Studies (Instituto de Biologia y Mediciaa Experimental) in Buenos Aires, and high level administrators at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the honorary degree that was awarded to Houssay at Columbia's 3rd Bicentennial Convocation in 1954. Includes biographical information regarding Houssay.
Box 508 Folder 19 to 20
Correspondence between Carl Hovde, dean of Columbia College, and high level administrators at Columbia University. Hovde was dean of the college during the campus disturbances of the late 1960s.
Topics include: the government of resident halls, student life, financial issues regarding student organizations, and the organization of undergraduate instruction in Columbia College and the School of General Studies
Box 328 Folder 5 to 6
Correspondence between Henry Marion Howe, professor of metallurgy in the Department of Metallurgy at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Topics related to the department include: facilities, laboratories, equipment and supplies, expenditures, budgeting, finances, gifts to the department, faculty appointments, staffing needs, and faculty affairs. Also, correspondence regarding Howe's appointment and professional activities. Includes an abstract of a paper on technical education at Columbia which was presented by Howe to the Association of American Universities in January, 1904
Box 351 Folder 22
Correspondence between Herbert B. Howe, a Columbia University administrator, and the president and secretary of the University. Howe was chairman of the Committee on Men's Residence Halls and director of Earl Hall, Columbia's nondenominational religious and social center. most of the correspondence relates to housing fees and the management and maintenance of University residence halls. Includes a student petition, dating from 1926 which protests living conditions in John Jay hall
Box 351 Folder 1 to 11
Correspondence between Roger Howson, librarian of Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the administration of the Columbia University Libraries from the 1920s through the 1930s as well as Columbia's history and historical records. Topics related to the Columbia University Libraries include: library personnel, the acquisition of books and collections, library operations, gifts to the libraries, library privileges, facilities, insurance, budgeting, and departmental libraries. Also correspondence relating to donor relations and the evaluation of collections offered to the libraries.
Howson also served as an associate in history from 1939 to 1947 and seems to have conducted research on the history of the University. Correspondence dating from 1940 to 1946 relates to a variety of historical subjects including the University's Charters and Statutes and the Board of Trustees. Includes correspondence regarding the evaluation and disposition of the papers of John B. Pine, clerk of the University's board of trustees, and correspondence regarding other historical and official University records. Also includes manuscript chapters of a history of Columbia University
Box 669 Folder 13
Correspondence between Ralph Gordon Hoxie, assistant to the provost of Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the various responsibilities of the provost's office.
Topics include: faculty affairs, fraternities, scholarships, issues involving registration for the draft, and the University budget. Also, correspondence regarding the need for primary and secondary schools near the Columbia campus
Box 668 Folder 32
Correspondence between N. Deming Hoyt and Columbia University administrators. Hoyt served as assistant to the director of admissions and advisor to foreign students. Correspondence relates to international students at Columbia. Includes an annual report for the 1946-1947 academic year from the International Committee of Columbia University. Also, correspondence regarding Hoyt's personnel issues and professional activities, including his grant to study comparative education in Paris
Box 378 Folder 15 to 19
Correspondence between Benjamin A. Hubbard and the provost and secretary of Columbia University. Hubbard was director of Kings Crown, an alumni organization which oversaw the budgets of certain student groups. Most of the records consist of the annual financial reports of the director of Kings Crown and the budgets of Kings Crown organizations. Also, correspondence regarding administrative issues and policies involving student organizations and government. Includes minutes of the King's Crown Advisory Committee dating from 1948 to 1952. Also includes correspondence regarding prizes and scholarships
Box 661 Folder 12
Correspondence between Francis Huber, instructor in the diseases of children at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Correspondence relates to an endowment to establish the Abraham Jacobi Ward for Children at Roosevelt Hospital and Columbia's authority to appoint physicians to serve as instructors in the ward
Box 352 Folder 1 to 2
Correspondence between Professor Joseph Hudnut of Columbia University and the secretary of the University. Hudnut was a professor of the history of architecture. He served as acting director and acting dean of Columbia's School of Architecture prior to his appointment as dean of the school in 1934. Most of the correspondence relates to the School of Architecture. Topics related to the School of Architecture include: faculty appointments, faculty affairs, budgeting, expenditures, degrees, the curriculum, and alumni relations.
Includes correspondence proposing the creation of a town planning studio and a report, dating from 1934 which proposes the reorganization of the school. Also, correspondence and reports regarding Hudnut's resignation and the appointment of Leopold Arnaud as acting dean. Includes a report regarding the teaching method and educational philosophy of the school and a report containing Hudnut's recommendations regarding the selection of a new dean. Also, correspondence and reports regarding architectural and public service projects in the School of Architecture.
Topics include: cooperation between the school and the Federal Emergency Housing Administration during the Depression; a study of the Clairmont Avenue Apartments (ca. 1934); and the use of the Nevis Estate, which was donated to the University in 1935
Box 673 Folder 23 to 24
Correspondence and legal documents relating to a lawsuit that was brought against doctors at Columbia University's College of Physicians and Surgeons by Professor Perry B. Hudson
Box 18 Folder 33
Correspondence between Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey and Grayson Kirk, the president of Columbia University. Among other topics, the correspondence relates to an invitation for Humphrey to visit the Lamont Geological Observatory, Columbia's facility for research and education in the earth sciences. Also includes a congressional report on the space program that was forwarded to Kirk by Humphrey
Box 669 Folder 27
Correspondence between George H. W. Humphreys, Director of the Surgical Service at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to Humphreys' leave to travel to Taiwan and his visit to the National Taiwan University Medical College in order to investigate the possibility of a working relationship between the College and Columbia
Box 352 Folder 16 to 18
Correspondence between Thad. L. Hungate and the faculty and staff of Teachers College at Columbia University, the high level administrators of the University, and personnel at Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association. Hungate was the auditor and controller of Teachers College, which was affiliated with Columbia. Correspondence relates to personnel issues and retirement benefits for Teachers College faculty. Also, correspondence and proposals regarding Teachers College retirement plans and policies. Most of the correspondence from the 1950s relates to the budget of Teachers College. Includes a plan, dating from 1956 which proposes a joint Teachers College-Columbia University development program. There are gaps in the records from 1930 to 1939 1942 to 1946 1948 to 1950 and 1951 to 1953
Box 670 Folder 43
Correspondence between Professor Benjamin Hunningher and Columbia University administrators. Hunningher held an appointment as Queen Wilhelmina Professor of the History, Language and Culture of the Netherlands. Correspondence relates to: the nomination of Pieter Geyl as an University honorary degree candidate and the gift of a stained glass window from Netherlands Antilles to the city of New York. Includes a translation of Hunningher's article on Columbia, which was printed in the Nieuwe Rotterdamse Courant
Box 508 Folder 21
Correspondence between Douglas Hunt, vice president for finance at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to Columbia's finances, financial policies, and accounting and reporting procedures. In particular, the records relate to policies regarding restricted and special funds and attempts to establish a computerized accounting system. Includes some correspondence documenting the beginnings of Columbia's financial crisis of the 1970s. Also includes correspondence regarding the responsibilities, organization, and management of the vice president's office
Box 18 Folder 24
Correspondence between Anna Hyatt Huntington and faculty and administrators at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Huntington's sculptures, visits to her studio in Connecticut, and the possibility of a donation from Huntington to the University. Includes correspondence between faculty members regarding Huntington
Box 328 Folder 7
Correspondence between Archer M. Huntington, president of the Hispanic Society of America, and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University.
Topics include: gifts in support of Hispanic studies at Columbia, the endowment in support of the Butler Medals, and other gifts to the University
Box 328 Folder 8 to 10
Correspondence between George S. Huntington, head of the Department of anatomy in the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University.
Topics include: facilities, laboratories, equipment, the acquisition of specimens, faculty appointments, personnel, expenditures, and publications. Includes some correspondence on the administration of the Museum of Human and Comparative Morphology
Box 490 Folder 1 to 15
Correspondence between Charles P. Hurd, registrar of Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to: the University's academic calendar, admissions, tuition exemption and tuition exchanges, tuition and fees, income from tuition and fees, classroom scheduling, enrollment, student affairs, registration procedures, regulations governing the awarding of degrees, attendance requirements, student services, and the preparation of diplomas and certificates. Includes a report on the academic calendar (1956) and registrar's reports that include enrollment statistics
Box 449 Folder 13
Correspondence between J. C. Hurewitz, assistant professor of government in the Near and Middle East Studies Institute at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. Records relate to Hurewitz's research and clerical assistants. Hurewitz was also president of the University-affiliated Tompkins Hall Nursery School. Includes annual reports of the school from 1954 and 1955 as well as correspondence regarding the school (ca. 1955). Also includes a reprint of Hurewitz's article on the United Nations and Palestine, which was published in international Organization in 1953
Box 494 Folder 24
Correspondence between John A. Hutchison, chairman of the Department of Religion at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the department.
Topics include: faculty appointments, expenditures, finances, and events. Includes a bulletin for graduate studies in religion for the 1957-1958 academic year. Records also relate to the establishment of the department. During the period covered by the records, graduate religious instruction at Columbia was overseen by the Joint Committee for the Ph.D. in Religion. The records include a committee agenda from May, 1950 and a proposal for the formal establishment of a religion department (June, 1960).
Box 328 Folder 11 to 17
Correspondence between Professor Frederick R. Hutton and the president of Columbia University. Hutton was a professor of mechanical engineering in the Department of Mechanical Engineering and, later, Dean of the faculty of Applied Science. Topics related to the Department of Mechanical Engineering include: the organization of the department, expenditures, gifts to the department, tuition and fees, and relations with other departments. Includes detailed correspondence regarding the curriculum and mission of the department and technical education at Columbia. Also includes correspondence regarding the management, instructional use, and equipment of departmental laboratories. Topics related to the Faculty of Applied Science include: student and faculty affairs, prizes and awards, scholarships, and degrees. Also, correspondence regarding Hutton's professional activities and retirement
Box 668 Folder 33
Correspondence between James H. Hyde and the acting president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to various routine issues. Includes correspondence regarding Hyde's gift to Columbia
Box 671 Folder 63
Correspondence between Ruth Ihrig, departmental secretary in the Department of Music at Columbia University, and University administrative staf Correspondence relates to expenditures and requests for equipment and supplies
Box 673 Folder 1
Correspondence between Columbia University administrators and Japanese diplomats and politicians regarding an honorary degree that was to be awarded to Hayato Ikeda, the prime minister of Japan
Box 36 Folder 16
Correspondence between Professor John Imbrie and administrators at Columbia University. Imbrie was a professor of geology and chairman of the geology department. He also served on the Advisory Board of the Lamont Geological Observatory, Columbia's facility for research and education in the earth sciences. Records relate to the geology department and to teaching and research in geology at the University.
Records include: a report on problems in the geology department, a proposal for the future organization of teaching and research in geology, and correspondence regarding a proposal to move the geology department to the Lamont Geological Observatory. Other topics include: departmental space needs, faculty appointments, and the nomination of professor Miyashiro to be the first recipient of the Vetlesen Visiting Professorship Award. Also, correspondence regarding Imbrie's dissatisfaction with his position at Columbia, his request for a leave, and his resignation
Box 495 Folder 11 to 12
Correspondence between Roscoe C. Ingalls and Columbia University administrators. Ingalls was an alumni trustee of the University and president of Columbia Associates, a group of benefactors who regularly made gifts in support of Columbia's general fund. Correspondence relates to Ingalls' gifts to the University. Includes routine cover letters, acknowledgement letters, and invitations
Box 672 Folder 28
Correspondence between Howell A. Inghram, director of the Institute of Accounting at Columbia University, and the vice president of the University. Correspondence relates a variety of routine topics. Includes a letter regarding the tax laws governing prizes and awards granted to students and faculty members by educational institutions
Box 665 Folder 34
Correspondence between George L. Ingraham and the president and clerk of the board of trustees of Columbia University. Ingraham, who was presiding justice of the Appellate Division of the the New York State Supreme Court, was a Columbia trustee and president of the University's Law School Alumni Association. Among other topics, the correspondence relates to: the University's legal affairs, the creation of the trustee's committee on legal affairs, the appointment of a counsel for the University, pacifists at Columbia during World War I, and the question of admitting women to the University's School of Law. Includes a transcription of a court hearing for Miss Parker, a student pacifist who contested Columbia's decision to withold her degree
Box 407 Folder 15 to 17
Correspondence between Bernard P. Ireland, associate director of University admissions at Columbia University, and the University's provost, secretary, and assistant to the president. Correspondence relates to admissions requirements, the recruiting of candidates for admission, and individual candidates for admission. Also, correspondence regarding the administration and activities of the admissions office
Box 433 Folder 1 to 5
Correspondence between Thomas C. Izard, director of the Summer Session at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Includes some correspondence with the Administrative Board of Summer Session. The records consist of correspondence, budgets, financial statements, and reports relating to the Summer Session.
Topics include: enrollment, faculty affairs, fees, relations between the Summer Session and schools at the University, the government and administration of Summer Session, and arrangements for courses. Includes a flier advertising the 1959 Summer Session. Also, correspondence regarding a meeting of the Association of Summer Session Directors that was held in October, 1954
Box 328 Folder 18 to 19
Correspondence between A. V. Williams Jackson, professor of Indo-Iranian languages in the Department of Indo-Iranian Languages at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University.
Topics include: facilities, expenditures, and gifts to the department. Includes correspondence regarding Jackson's appointment as Columbia's representative to the 10th International Congress of Orientalists, which was held in 1894. Also, correspondence regarding Jackson's personnel matters and professional activities. Includes a number of letters describing his trips to India in 1901 and Persia in 1903
Box 665 Folder 35
Correspondence between Daniel Dana Jackson, professor of chemical engineering at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Includes correspondence with the dean of the School of Mines and Engineering. Correspondence relates to Jackson's appointment and to routine business in the Department of Chemical Engineering. Includes a letter regarding conditions in the department's Chandler museum of chemistry
Box 412 Folder 4 to 5
Correspondence between John G. Jackson, a trustee of Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Jackson was a member of the trustee committees on legal affairs and development and served as chairman of the Council on Medical Affairs. Correspondence relates to trustee business and University government.
Topics include: the establishment of the Committee on Development; the relationship between the trustee committees on development and finance; amendments to the University charter, statutes, and by-laws; policies regarding faculty appointments; and University finances. Includes a 1952 statement outlining the trustees' position on academic freedom and the University's administration, finances, mission, and student facilities. Also, correspondence, pamphlets, and other records regarding the columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center and other medical institutions which were affiliated with the University
Box 671 Folder 64
Correspondence between William T. H. Jackson, executive officer of the Department of Germanic Languages at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the department.
Topics include: staffing needs, faculty affairs, expenditures, and faculty appointments. Also, correspondence regarding the Germanic Review and correspondence regarding Jackson's personnel issues
Box 661 Folder 13
Correspondence between Professor Abraham Jacobi and the president of Columbia University. Jacobi held appointments as clinical professor, professor, and emeritus professor of the diseases of children. Correspondence relates to problems involving an agreement between the University and Roosevelt Hospital. Also includes a long letter regarding the history of instruction in the diseases of children in New York City and recommendations regarding the curriculum of the Department of the Diseases of Children. Also, routine correspondence and cover letters
Box 383 Folder 1 to 16
Correspondence between Albert C. Jacobs and other Columbia University administrators. Jacobs held appointments as assistant to the president for veterans' affairs and provost. He also served as chairman of numerous committees including the Committee on Public Ceremonies, the Committee on Campus Protection, and the Advisory Committee on Veterans affairs.
Most of the records relate to veterans' affairs (ca. 1945-1949) and the academic and administrative affairs of the University from 1947 to 1949. There is no correspondence dating from 1943 to 1944 while Jacobs was on leave for military service. Correspondence dating from 1940 to 1942 documents the work of the Committee on Public Ceremonies, which oversaw academic ceremonies and other public University functions, and the Committee on Campus Protection, which was created during World War II to develop safety procedures for the University. Records dating from 1945 to 1949 include correspondence and reports regarding veterans' affairs.
Topics include services for veterans and administrative issues and policies involving the registration of veterans. Other veteran-related topics include: admissions, advanced placement credit, housing, enrollment, student affairs, and relations with veterans' agencies. Includes correspondence regarding the administration of Camp Shanks, the University's temporary housing facility. Most of the records dating from 1947 to 1950 consist of correspondence, reports, and financial records relating to the academic and administrative affairs of the University during Jacobs' tenure as provost. Topics related to academic affairs include: faculty affairs, faculty appointments, enrollment, policies regarding scholarship and fellowship funds, tuition and fees, named professorships, student health services, academic ceremonies, departmental budgeting, and student affairs. Topics related to administrative affairs include: University finances and business administration, administrative appointments, and benefits policies and payroll administration for non-academic personnel. Includes correspondence regarding the appointment of a University chaplain (ca. 1947-1948) the creation of the post of vice president in charge of business affairs in 1949.
Also, correspondence regarding the agenda and activities of the Advisory committee on Educational Policy. The committee assisted in the development of policies and budget recommendations governing the University's teaching activities. Also, correspondence and other records regarding anti-discrimination legislation (the Austin-Mahoney Bill) and discrimination in higher education (ca. 1947-1948). The records also include correspondence and copies of the University statutes that document changes to the relationship between Columbia University and Teacher's College (ca. 1948). Most of the correspondence dating from 1949 to 1950 relates to Jacob's resignation to become chancellor of the University of Denver, the selection of Grayson Kirk as provost of the University, and the honorary degree that was granted to Jacobs by the University.
Includes correspondence and a report on the proposed Middletown College Extension, which was intended to accommodate the growing college-bound population. Also includes Jacob's speeches on a variety of topics
Box 328 Folder 20 to 21
Correspondence between Harold Jacoby, Rutherford Professor of Astronomy at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Most of the correspondence relates to the Department of Astronomy.
Topics include: teaching assignments, staffing needs, budgeting, the organization of the department, personnel, research funding, appropriations, equipment, and undergraduate instruction at Columbia College and Barnard College. Includes correspondence regarding Professor Rees, the head of the department. Also includes a proposal for a student observatory
Box 666 Folder 6
Correspondence between M. C. Jacques-Mennier and the secretary of Columbia University. Jacques-Mennier was the son-in-law of sculptor Constantin Meunier and the executor of his estate. Correspondence relates to arrangements for an exhibition of Constantin Meunier's works that was held at Columbia in 1914. Includes correspondence between administrators, alumni, and other parties regarding the exhibition. Also, correspondence regarding the purchase of Meunier's work, Martelleur, by a committee of alumni as a gift to the University
Box 669 Folder 14
Correspondence between Roman Jakobson, professor of Czechoslovak studies at Columbia University, and the provost of the University. Most of the correspondence relates to the Thomas G. Masaryk Chair of Czechoslovak Studies.
Topics include: funding for the Masaryk Chair from the Czechoslovakian government and possible changes to the chair's title to reflect changes in the government of Czechoslovakia
Box 447 Folder 9
Correspondence between Professor James Marquis and the Office of the Secretary at Columbia University. Most of the records consist of expense statements and pay requisitions relating to a Rockefeller Foundation grant in support of Marquis' biography of Booker T. Washington. Includes a proposal for the project and correspondence related to the project
Box 661 Folder 14
Correspondence between Professor Walter B. James and the president of Columbia University. James held a number of appointments including professor of the practice of medicine and Bard Professor of the Practice of Medicine. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects.
Topics include: faculty appointments, faculty salaries, the Proudfit Fellowship, the appointment of a medical director of the gymnasium in order to improve the health and care of students, and the need for a new public hospital on Manhattan's West Side
Box 665 Folder 36
Correspondence between Theodore C. Janeway, Bard Professor of the practice of Medicine in the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Includes correspondence with the dean of the college and the clerk of the University's board of trustees. Correspondence relates to the Department of the Practice of Medicine.
Topics include budgeting and plans to expand the department
Box 108 Folder 25
The records appear to be crank letters and other materials mailed to the University
Box 670 Folder 44
Correspondence between Arthur Jansen and Columbia University administrators. Jansen was a lecturer in finance and a member of the Subcommittee on Undergraduate Affairs of the Standing Committee of the Alumni Association of Columbia College. The records consist of correspondence and reports relating to the alumni association
Box 494 Folder 21 to 23
Correspondence between Joe Jefferson, director of admissions and financial aid at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to: University loan funds, financial aid programs, and financial aid policies; issues involving the establishment of governmental student loan programs and government financing for college tuition; and the routine business of Columbia's admissions and financial aid office. Includes a proposal by the New York State Higher Education Assistance Corporation for a college loan program
Box 394 Folder 21 to 22
Correspondence between Arthur Jeffery, executive officer of the department of Semitic Languages at Columbia University and chairman of the University's Bampton Lecture Committee, and high level University administrators. Most of the correspondence relates to the department and to the selection and appointment of Bampton lecturers. Also, correspondence regarding Jeffery's personnel issues and professional activities. Includes correspondence regarding his one-year appointment to the School of Oriental Studies at the American University in Cairo in 1946. Includes a letter dating from June, 1946 which discusses his travels, meetings with fellow scholars, and regional politics
Topics related to the Department of Semitic Languages include: staffing needs, faculty recruiting, special lecturers, visiting professors, faculty appointments, faculty affairs, and budgeting. Includes correspondence regarding the administration of courses in Indo-Iranian languages and cultures and proposals for programs in Ethiopian and Armenian studies
Box 507 Folder 23
Correspondence regarding routine administrative issues
Box 661 Folder 15
Correspondence regarding gifts to Columbia University from Helen Hartley Jenkins (Mrs. George W. Jenkins). Includes correspondence regarding Hartley Hall, which was funded as a memorial to Marcellus Hartley by Jenkins, who was Hartley's daughter, and Marcellus Hartley Dodge, who was his grandson. The correspondence includes only one letter from Jenkins. The letter relates to a gift in support of a building to be used for graduate work
Box 661 Folder 16
Correspondence between Professor Jeremiah Whipple Jenks of Cornell University and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Jenks' appointment as Blumenthal Lecturer for the 1907-1908 academic year
Box 669 Folder 15
Correspondence between Herbert R. Jensen and Columbia University administrators, faculty, and alumni. Jensen was manager of University audio-visual services. Correspondence relates to the University's audio-visual needs. Includes correspondence regarding the filming of the installation of Dwight D. Eisenhower as president of the University. Also includes a 106 page survey of audio-visual department activities
Box 352 Folder 3 to 4
Correspondence between Huger W. Jervey and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Jervey was dean of Columbia's School of Law. After resigning the deanship, Jervey was appointed director of the University's Institute of International Affairs, which became the Parker School of Advanced International Studies and was later renamed the Parker School of Foreign and Comparative Law. Correspondence dating from 1926 to 1928 relates to the School of Law. Correspondence dating from 1931 to 1932 and 1947 to 1948 relates to the Institute of International Affairs and the Parker School. There are gaps in the records from 1928 to 1931 and 1932 to 1947. Topics related to the School of Law include: faculty appointments, faculty affairs, appropriations, fees, and scholarships. Includes a proposal for a criminology program, dated 1926. Also includes correspondence regarding Jervey's resignation and the appointment of Young B. Smith as dean of the school.
Correspondence dating from 1931 to 1932 relates to the establishment and funding of the Institute of International Affairs, which became the parker Institute for Advanced International Studies. Includes a proposal that discusses the staffing needs, teaching methods, mission, and organization of the institute. Also includes correspondence regarding the creation of the Administrative Board of the Institute of International Affairs. Correspondence dating from 1947 to 1948 is between Jervey and the acting president of the University, the University provost, and the dean of Columbia's School of International affairs. The correspondence relates to the reorganization of the Parker School of Advanced International Affairs as the Parker School of Foreign and Comparative Law. Includes correspondence regarding budgeting, facilities, and the Parker Fund. Correspondence from this period also relates to Jervey's retirement
Box 661 Folder 17
Correspondence between Professor Otto Jesperson of the University of Copenhagen and Columbia University administrators. Correspondence relates to Jesperson's appointment as a visiting professor of English philology for the 1909-1910 academic year. Includes correspondence regarding his travel arrangements
Box 661 Folder 18
Correspondence between Richard H. Jesse, president of the University of Missouri, and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University. Jesse and Butler exchanged opinions and advice on a variety of subjects relating to the administration of their respective institutions.
Topics include recommendations for faculty appointments and the organization and administration of graduate schools
Box 384 Folder 19 to 22
Correspondence between Professor Philip C. Jessup of Columbia University and high level University administrators. Jessup held a number of appointments including professor of international law, Hamilton Fish Professor of International Law and Diplomacy, assistant director of the Program of Training in International Administration, chairman of the Committee on Instruction of the Faculty of Political Science, and chairman of the Columbia University Council on Atomic Age Studies. He was also a member of the Administrative Board of the School of International Affairs. Most of the records relate to Columbia's activities and programs in the fields of public affairs, international affairs, and international law. includes correspondence, proposals, and reports (ca. 1940-1942) regarding attempts to develop the Columbia University Program. The program was intended to: 1.) organize and direct the University's teaching and research and 2.) find ways to apply the knowledge and expertise of University faculty to national and international affairs.
Also, correspondence and a proposal (ca. 1943-1944) regarding the Training Program in International Administration, which was a predecessor of the School of International Affairs. In addition, the records include a report regarding relations between the United Nations and the University (ca. 1946-1947). Also, correspondence (ca. 1950-1954) regarding Jessup's nomination to the United Nations General Assembly and charges of communist activities that were brought against him. Also includes correspondence (ca. 1957-1959) regarding the Advisory Committee of the Faculties; a funding proposal for a study of the international administration of space (1958); and correspondence (ca. 1959) regarding the Columbia University Council for Atomic Age Studies, which sought to address issues involving the study and use of atomic energy. Also, correspondence relating to Jessup's personnel issues, service during World War II, payments to research assistants, and arrangements to take part in the University Seminars
Box 661 Folder 19
Correspondence between Morris K. Jesup, President of the American Museum of Natural History, and the president of Columbia University. Much of the correspondence relates to Franz Boas, who served as curator of the museum's ethnological division and was appointed to the faculty at Columbia in 1896. Topics include Boas' work in eastern Asia and his personnel matters
Box 357 Folder 3 to 5
Correspondence between Professor Douglas Wilson Johnson of Columbia University and the provost and secretary of the University. Johnson was Newberry Professor of Geology and executive officer of the Department of Geology. Most of the correspondence relates to the department.
Topics include: faculty appointments and recruiting, staffing needs, budgeting, equipment, and appropriations for research projects. Johnson also seems to have been in charge of studying a dispute between the Department of Music and the chapel music director (ca. 1940). Includes a report regarding the conflict.
Also, correspondence dating from 1929 to 1930 consists of detailed letters from Johnson to Nicholas Murray Butler, president of the University. The letters discuss Johnson's activities during his leave of absence to attend the International Geological Congress in South Africa and conduct research and field work in Australia, New Zealand, Asia, and Hawaii. The letters contain anecdotes regarding the countries which were visited by Johnson and information about geological phenomena and meetings with colleagues. Much of the correspondence dating from 1942 to 1944 relates to Johnson's health and personnel issues
Box 433 Folder 13
Correspondence between Kenneth D. Johnson, dean of the New York School of Social Work, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Johnson was also president of the Greater New York Council for Foreign Students and chairman of the University's Committee on the Harriman Campus. Records relate to Columbia's membership in the council for foreign students (ca. 1954) and the development of the University's Harriman Estate and Arden House conference center (ca. 1950). Includes speeches which were given by Johnson at the New York School of Social Work in 1949 and 1953. Also includes a letter and newspaper clipping regarding Johnson's appointment as a guardian of the children of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg
Box 671 Folder 3
Four issues of Voiceways, a quarterly publication of the New York Telephone Company. Includes an essay that appears to have been prepared for submission to Voiceways by Robert Harron, the assistant to Columbia University president Grayson Kirk
Box 325 Folder 16 to 18
Correspondence between William D. Johnston, librarian of Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the Columbia University Libraries.
Topics include: the libraries' administrative offices, budgeting, the acquisition and management of collections, gifts, and facilities. Includes correspondence regarding the administration of the Law Library. Also, correspondence relating to Johnston's appointment and personnel issues
Box 327 Folder 12 to 14
Correspondence between Adam Leroy Jones, chairman of the Committee on Undergraduate Admissions at Columbia University, and the University's faculty and high level administrators. Contains substantive correspondence regarding the University's admissions criteria. Includes correspondence regarding individual candidates for admission
Box 90 Folder 2
A report on student unrest at Colgate University in 1969 that was forwarded to the Columbia University administration by S. Guernsey Jones
Box 447 Folder 10
Correspondence between Thomas Roy Jones, president of Daystrom, Inc. and chairman of the Graphic Arts Center Program at Columbia University, and University president Grayson Kirk. Includes correspondence between Jones and contributors to the program. Records relate to plans for establishing a center where Columbia's library collections relating to printing and publishing would be available to the graphic arts industry. Most of the records consist of letters acknowledging gifts in support of the center. Includes a copy of the project proposal and copies of newspaper clippings regarding the center
Box 672 Folder 29
Correspondence between Frank E. Joseph and Grayson Kirk, the president of Columbia University. Joseph, who was an alumnus of Columbia College and the University's School of Law, served on the Cleveland Commission on Higher Education. Most of the correspondence relates to President Kirk's suggestions for appointments to the commission. Includes a letter regarding Joseph's appointment to the Columbia College Council
Box 665 Folder 37
Correspondence between Jean J. Jusserand, French ambassador to the United States, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to: visiting French faculty at Columbia and Jusserand's Pulitzer Prize for With Americans of Past and Present Days. Includes an inquiry about industrial and commercial instruction at Columbia
Box 507 Folder 24 to 26
Correspondence between William E. Kahn and high level administrators at Columbia University. Includes correspondence with the University's director of student interests. Kahn served as proctor of the University during the campus disturbances of the late 1960s and early 1970s. Most of the records consist of Kahn's reports to the administration. The reports list and briefly discuss student meetings, events, and demonstrations; disciplinary problems and pranks; security violations and rules infractions; and rumors regarding protests.
These reports provide a partial account of happenings on campus between 1969 and 1971. The records also contain official accounts of demonstrations, including protests that were held in September and November of 1968 and February of 1969. Includes some copies of fliers that were distributed at demonstrations
Box 672 Folder 63
Crank Letters
Box 672 Folder 64
Correspondence between Clara A. Kaiser, acting dean of the New York School of Social Work, and high level administrators at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the school.
Topics include: the relationship between Columbia and the school of social work, faculty affairs in the school, and the selection of Fred DelliQuadri as the new dean of the school
Box 671 Folder 32
Correspondence between John Boynton Kaiser, President of the New York State Library School Association, and the president and provost of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to: financial assistance to Columbia from the association, a study of Columbia's School of Library Service, and Columbia's 1954 Charter Day celebration. Also includes two articles regarding libraries and librarianship
Box 90 Folder 29
Correspondence regarding the honorary degree from Columbia University that was awarded to Petr L. Kapista, a Russian physicist and the designer of the Sputnik I satellite. Correspondence relates to preparations for the honorary degree ceremony. Records include: invitations, programs from the ceremony, newspaper clippings, the draft of an article regarding Kapista, biographical information regarding Kapista, and the text of University president Andrew Cordier's introductory address at the degree ceremony
Box 412 Folder 6 to 9
Correspondence between Marshall Kay, executive officer of the Department of Geology at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the department and to the Lamont Geological Observatory, Columbia's facility for research and instruction in the earth sciences.
Topics include: faculty appointments, equipment, faculty affairs, events, fellowships, and scholarships. Kay also chaired a number of committees which were involved in faculty salaries, fellowships, and scholarships. The records include reports from these committees. Kay also chaired the Summer Session Committee. Includes a report of the committee dating from May, 1958. Also, correspondence regarding the administration of Kay's research projects
Box 427 Folder 17
Correspondence between Carl Kayan professor of mechanical engineering and executive officer of the Department of Mechanical Engineering at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Includes correspondence with the dean of the School of Engineering. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the department.
Topics include: faculty appointments, budgeting, faculty affairs, expenditures, appropriations, facilities, and space needs. Includes correspondence regarding the use of the Sheffield Building as an engineering center. Also, correspondence regarding Kayan's professional activities, travel, and personnel issues
Box 72 Folder 15
Correspondence between Professor Eugene M. Kayden of the University of the South and administrators at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Kayden's gifts of volumes of his translations of Russian poetry and funds to establish the Pushkin Poetry and Literature Fund
Box 661 Folder 20 to 21
Correspondence between William A. Keener and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Keener held appointments as professor of private law, professor of law, Kent Professor of Law, and dean of the School of law. Correspondence relates to the law school.
Topics include: the restructuring of the law school and the revision of its curriculum in 1892 faculty affairs, student affairs, the acquisition of books for the Law Library, and examinations. Includes the dean's report for 1898. Also, correspondence regarding Keener's concern that Columbia's amateur athletics program be kept free of professional athletes. Also includes correspondence regarding thefts from gymnasium lockers
Box 665 Folder 38
Correspondence between Austin B. Keep, a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Political Science at Columbia University, and the clerk of the University's Board of Trustees, the University librarian, and the superintendent of buildings and grounds. Correspondence relates to Keep's dissertation, which included a chapter on the library of King's college; funding to publish the dissertaion; and efforts to provide Keep with University housing
Box 670 Folder 45
Correspondence between Allan H. Keller and Columbia University administrators. Keller was an assistant professor of journalism in Columbia's Graduate School of Journalism and a staff writer for the "New York World Telegram" and "The Sun". Includes Keller's article about Columbia, which was written for the University's bicentennial in 1954
Box 324 Folder 15 to 17
Correspondence between James Furman Kemp, professor of geology in the Department of Geology at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Kemp held a number of posts at the University including secretary of the Faculty of Applied Science, chairman of the Committee on Student Employment, chairman of the Faculty Committee on Athletics, and Secretary of the University Council. Most of the correspondence relates to the Department of Geology or the administration of student organizations and student services. Topics related to the Department of Geology include: the organization of the department, field work, the curriculum, departmental collections, special lectures, fellowships and scholarships, personnel, faculty appointments, evaluations of faculty performance, finances, and budgeting. Topics related to student organizations and services include: student employment services, athletic clubs, and the faculty advisor program.
Includes correspondence regarding policies and public relations related to football and correspondence regarding Columbia's ban on football in 1905. Also, correspondence relating to the Faculty of Applied Science.
Topics include: arrangements for faculty meetings, the agenda of faculty meetings, degree requirements, the granting of degrees, and the curriculum. Also, correspondence regarding Kemp's appointment, personnel issues, and retirement
Box 672 Folder 65
Correspondence between Richard C. Kemp, associate director of residence halls at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to routine issues involving the administration of Columbia's residence halls
Box 18 Folder 2
Correspondence between James L. Kempthorne and the president of Columbia University. Kempthorne, who was a former Columbia College student, solicited the University for an honorary degree
Box 510 Folder 1 to 2
Correspondence between Peter B. Kenen and high level administrators at Columbia University. Kenen held a number of appointments including Wesley Clair Mitchell Professor of Economics, Chairman of the Department of Economics, Provost, and Advisor to the President. Most of the correspondence relates to Kenen's responsibilities as provost.
Topics include: University finances and investment policies, gift and endowment income, fringe benefit funds, and budgeting. Includes a report on research projects and research policies (October, 1971). Much of the correspondence also relates to Kenen's personnel issues and professional activities. Includes: a press release regarding his appointment as chairman of the economics department, his speech on United States monetary policy (May, 1970), his resignation letter (March, 1971), and correspondence regarding the distribution of his files to other administrative offices (February, 1971)
Box 661 Folder 22
Correspondence between John S. Kennedy and Nicholas Murray Butler, the president of Columbia University. Kennedy was a trustee of the University and a member of the trustees' committee on finance. Much of the correspondence relates to Kennedy's gifts to Columbia.
Topics include funding for the construction of Hamilton Hall and plans to use a bequest from Kennedy for the completion of University Hall. Also, correspondence regarding: Butler's priorities for campus construction projects, Butler's plans to merge Columbia's medical school with an established hosptial, and Butler and Kennedy's views regarding Jewish representation on the board of trustees and the threatened withdrawal of support from Jewish donors. Other topics include: Kennedy's election to the board in 1903 the work of the finance committee, and University finances
Box 449 Folder 14
Robert Kennedy served as alumni chairman of the Bicentennial Fund for the Medical Sciences at Columbia University. Mostly newsletters relating to the University's bicentennial development campaign for the medical sciences. Includes copies of the Campaign Reporter and the Medical Scientist. Also includes some correspondence regarding the campaign
Box 670 Folder 46
Correspondence between Harald E. Kenseth and Columbia University administrators. Kenseth was secretary of the University's Council of Medical Affairs and director of the Bicentennial Fund for the Medical Sciences. Correspondence relates to alumni gifts in honor of Columbia's 1954 bicentenniel celebration. Correspondence also relates to the Brydges Act, legislation that affected the practice of medicine by interns and residents in hospitals. Includes newspaper clippings
Box 459 Folder 11 to 15
Correspondence between Frederick P. Keppel and Columbia University presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray Butler. Keppel held a number of administrative posts including assistant secretary of the university, secretary of the university, and dean of Columbia College. Beginning in the 1890s the secretary of the University worked closely with the president. During the early 1900s the secretary became one of Columbia's top administrators. The secretary's responsibilities changed and grew with the University. Correspondence relates to a range of topics involving the University and Columbia College.
Includes budgets, telegrams, notes, and cover letters. Keppel served as assistant secretary under William H. H. Beebe from 1900 to 1902. Most of the correspondence from this period relates to routine administrative duties and the gathering of information and statistics requested by President Low. The correspondence consists of letters that Low sent to the secretary's office from his vacation home in Maine and Keppel's replies. This portion of the records compliments the correspondence files relating to President Seth Low, which are also located in Central Files. Keppel was secretary of the University from 1902 to 1910. Correspondence from this period relates to more substantive issues regarding the administrative and academic affairs of the University.
Topics include: graduation requirements, degrees, scholarships, the administration of academic departments, the curriculum, preparations for events, and the University budget.
Includes correspondence regarding the responsibilities and work load of the secretary's office, University record-keeping, and the business of the President's Office. In addition, Keppel was secretary during a critical period of Columbia's development as a university. The records document the: development of the University's policies, administrative operations, and procedures; government of the University and its organizations; and application and interpretation of the University's policies, statutes, and charter. Keppel served as dean of Columbia College, the University's undergraduate college, from 1910 to 1918. Records from this period consist of correspondence between Keppel and University president Nicholas Murray Butler and between Keppel and his successor as secretary of the University, Frank D. Fackenthal.
Topics include: faculty appointments, faculty affairs, student affairs and advising, prizes and awards, scholarships, endowments, the student body, student academic standing and probation, and the evaluation of faculty performance. Includes correspondence (ca. 1901-1913) regarding enrollment, recruiting, the composition of the student body (in particular Jewish students), and the establishment of a residential college. Specific, related documents include: Keppel's comments (dated October, 1912) on a plan to distribute scholarships throughout the United States and Canada and his comments (dated May, 1913) on a proposal by the Committee on education to require residence at the University.
Also includes correspondence (ca. 1911) regarding the requirements, degrees, and curriculum of the proposed combined course in the School of engineering and Columbia College and correspondence (ca. 1915) regarding scholarships which were endowed by Joseph Pulitzer. Records dating from 1917 to 1918 consist of correspondence regarding University business and Keppel's personnel issues. During this time, Keppel was on leave at the War Department where he served as third assistant secretary of war. Correspondence dating from 1922 relates to Keppel's status as an officer of the University while he was serving as administrative commissioner for the United States at the International Chamber of Commerce in Paris
Box 495 Folder 13 to 14
Correspondence between John M. Kernochan, director of the Legislative Drafting Research Fund at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to routine personnel administration, gifts to the fund, and fund finances. Includes correspondence and a proposal relating to a project to modernize state constitutions (ca. 1957). Also includes correspondence regarding the establishment of a council to promote interdisciplinary approaches to issues involving the development of atomic energy (ca. 1956).
Topics include the purpose, creation, and membership of the council, which later became the Council for Atomic Age Studies
Box 399 Folder 1 to 12
Correspondence between Professor Paul Kerr of Columbia University and University administrators and faculty. Kerr held a number of appointments including professor of minerology, executive officer of the Department of Geology, Newberry Professor of Minerology, and research coordinator for the geology department. He also served as chairman of the Committee on Patents and the Administrative Committee of the James Furhman Kemp Memorial Fund. Most of the records consist of correspondence, financial records, budgets, and proposals relating to the Department of Geology and geological research and instruction at the University. Also, correspondence and reports relating to a number of committees and correspondence regarding Kerr's trip to Libya in 1964.
Topics related to the Department of Geology and geological research and instruction include: faculty appointments, staffing needs, faculty affairs, personnel issues, the performance and professional standing of faculty members, facilities, the curriculum, appropriations, expenditures, equipment, prizes, research funding, and the administration of research projects.
Includes correspondence regarding the management of the James Furhman Kemp Memorial Fund and the K. C. Li fund. Includes correspondence and other records regarding the establishment and development of a program in geophysics (ca. 1946-1950) and the establishment and administration of the Lamont Geological Observatory, Columbia's facility for research and instruction in the earth sciences. Also includes correspondence regarding departmental relations with the Geological Society of America, which had its headquarters at the University. Also, correspondence and reports relating to committees on which Kerr served. Records include the preliminary report of the Columbia Development Plan Committee, which was responsible for conducting a comprehensive evaluation of the University, and the committee's report (October, 1954) on the professional standing of University faculty. Also included are: correspondence relating to the University's policies on inventions and patents, correspondence regarding the Committee on Patents (ca. 1959), and records regarding the establishment and awarding of the James Furhman Kemp Medal for Distinguished Service in Geology
Box 670 Folder 47
A copy of a speech that was given at the Columbia University Engineering Alumni Association's Egelston Medal Award Dinner by Charles Franklin Kettering, the director of General Motors Corporation. The speech is entitled "An Inventor Looks at Technical Education."
Box 327 Folder 15 to 16
Correspondence between Cassius Jackson Keyser, administrative head of the Department of Mathematics at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the Department of Mathematics and the Faculty of Applied Science.
Topics include: faculty affairs, faculty appointments, the evaluation of faculty performance, personnel issues, and staffing needs. Also, correspondence relating to keyser's personnel issues and professional activities.
Box 488 Folder 10
Correspondence between Professor Charles Glen King of Columbia University and University administrators. King was a professor of chemistry and acting director of the University's Institute of Nutrition Sciences. Correspondence relates to his personnel issues. Includes proposals and correspondence relating to the establishment of the Institute of Nutrition Sciences
Box 503 Folder 25
Correspondence between Helen S. King, administrative assistant to the president of Columbia University. The correspondence relates to routine administrative issues in the President's Office and other high level offices.
Box 327 Folder 17 to 18
Correspondence between Willard V. King, president of the Columbia Trust Company and a trustee of Columbia University, and the president of the University.
Topics include: University finances, gifts to the University, and Columbia's fund raising efforts. Includes a detailed report dating from 1928 on the University's fund raising projects and strategies. Much of the more recent correspondence documents the work of the trustee's committee on honors
Box 661 Folder 23
Correspondence between Helen S. Kingsland and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Kingsland's efforts to enroll her son at Columbia and his subsequent withdrawal from Columbia. Correspondence also relates to her gift of a stained glass window for the University's St. Paul's Chapel
Box 669 Folder 38
Correspondence between Elizabeth K. Kinnear, executive secretary of Earl Hall at Columbia University, and the assistant provost of the University. Correspondence relates to Earl Hall, Columbia's nondenominational religious and social center.
Topics include: budgeting, arrangements for conferences, and gifts to Earl Hall
Box 661 Folder 24
Correspondence between Francis P. Kinnicut, Professor of Clinical Medicine at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Most of the correspondence relates to gifts from Mrs. A. A. Anderson in support of medical facilities at Roosevelt Hospital and agreements between the University and the hospital regarding those acilities
Box 329 Folder 2
Correspondence between Gustavus T. Kirby, an alumnus of Columbia University, and the president of Columbia University. Most of the correspondence relates to the work of the Alumni Committee on Athletic Policy.
Topics include: the management of the football team, Columbia's ban on football in 1905 the University's attempts to acquire an athletic field, athletic eligibility requirements, and the affairs of individual student athletes. Includes correspondence regarding the Intercollegiate Athletic Association and the Columbia University Club
Box 329 Folder 3 to 6
Correspondence between George W. Kirchwey, professor of law and, later, dean of the School of Law at Columbia University, and the president and other high level administrators of the University.
Topics include: the reorganization of the School of Law, the revision of the school's curriculum and degree requirements, the establishment of a three-year course in law, and the administration and statutes of the school. Other topics include: faculty affairs, staffing needs, teaching loads, course scheduling, facilities, and the administration of the Law Library. includes correspondence bewteen Kirchwey and President Butler regarding criticism of the school's administration and Kirchwey's resignation
Box 673 Folder 27 to 32
Box 674 Folder 1 to 20
Box 675 Folder 1 to 22
Correspondence between Grayson L. Kirk and high level administrators at Columbia University. Also includes correspondence with trustees, alumni, faculty members, and the public. Other records include: reports, proposals, press releases, and speeches. Kirk held numerous appointments at Columbia including provost, vice president and provost, and president. Records dating from 1947 through 1949 relate to Kirk's terms as acting director of Columbia's School of International Affairs, executive director of the European Institute, chairman of the University Committee on the United Nations, associate provost, and provost.
Records dating from this period also relate to preparations for Columbia's 200th anniversary celebration, which was held in 1954. In addition, records dating from 1948 also relate to Kirk's responsibilities as chairman of the committee that was in charge of planning the inauguration of Dwight D. Eisenhower as President of the University. Records dating from 1950 to 1953 relate to Kirk's duties as vice president and provost of the University under Eisenhower. Records dating from 1953 to 1968 relate to Kirk's term as president of the University. Also, records regarding Kirk's personnel issues, travel arrangements, and honors as well as a number of book reviews that were written by Kirk. Records regarding Kirk's time at the School of International Affairs include reports, proposals and correspondence. Many of these records document Columbia's programs in international affairs as well as University relations with the United Nations.
Records include: a proposal for a University research center to be established in conjunction with the United Nations (December, 1947); reports regarding a project to prepare a series of international relations publications entitled Topical Studies in International Relations (1947 1948 and 1949); correspondence regarding planning and funding for the School of International Affairs; correspondence regarding visiting professors in the school; and correspondence regarding the business of the University Committee on the United Nations. Records relating to the European Institute in the School of International Affairs include: correspondence, lists of course descriptions (February, 1949), and a report regarding the institute (April, 1949). Records dating from 1948 include correspondence and lists regarding the inauguration of Dwight D. Eisenhower as president of Columbia University. Topics relating to the inaugural include: the business of the Inauguration Committee, membership on the committee, preparations for the inaugural and related events, and expenditures for the ceremony.
Records regarding Kirk's terms as associate provost, provost, and vice president and provost include correspondence, statements and announcements, proposals, reports, and speeches. Also includes routine cover letters and invitations. As provost and vice president and provost during the Eisenhower administration, Kirk responded to presidential directives, made inquiries on the president's behalf, and acted as a coordinator to facilitate the operation of the University's administration. Due to Eisenhower's frequent absences from campus, Kirk and a small cadre of other high level administrators handled many presidential duties and were active in making and implementing numerous policy decisions.
The many topics documented in the records include: academic policy issues and policy decisions, the interpretation of University rules and policies, faculty affairs and faculty appointments, the selection and appointment of administrators, planning for the establishment of institutes and programs, alumni and trustee relations, development programs, the mission of committees, committee memberships, preparations for meetings and events, appropriations, ceremonies, gifts to the University, benefits, personnel policies, awards, and honorary degrees.
Although Kirk's responsibilities as assistant provost, provost, and vice president and provost were similar, records dating from his tenure as assistant provost tend to be more routine and are less interesting than later materials. Records of interest from Kirk's terms as assistant provost, provost, and vice president and provost include: a statement on endowed scholarships and discriminatory policies involving scholarships (November, 1949); commencement addresses and numerous other speeches regarding politics, higher education, communism, foreign policy, and a wide range of other topics; citations delivered at honorary degree convocations; Kirk's letters to Eisenhower, which kept the president informed regarding University business while he was away from the campus; and a press release regarding a joint project with the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) to broadcast a series of faculty lectures followed by question and answer sessions with students.
The records also include a number of proposals for programs and projects. These include: a proposal to establish the University Seminar on the Professions (June, 1950), a proposal for the Institute for Research in Industrial Management (November, 1950), and a report regarding the proposed affiliation between Columbia's School of General Studies and the School of Insurance (May, 1951). Records dating from Kirk's administration as president of Columbia University include: correspondence, newspaper clippings, lists, itineraries, newsletters, programs, press releases, statements, invitations, agenda, cover letters, notes, speeches, partial speech texts, and draft speeches. Also includes routine correspondence with office staff and numerous cross-reference memoranda that refer to records in the files. Most of the records dating from 1953 to 1958 relate to: arrangements for events, trips, and speaking engagements. Other records include: correspondence, lists, speeches, and schedules regarding Columbia's 1954 bicentennial celebration; an account of President and Mrs. Kirk's trip to Venezuela (July, 1955); correspondence regarding early planning efforts for the University's project to erect a gymnasium in Manhattan's Morningside Park; and letters that Kirk sent to the University while traveling in Turkey and India (January, 1956). beginning circa 1959 and continuing to the mid 1960s the records become more routine in nature. Many of the records from this period are routine invitations, cover letters, acknowledgement letters, and lists regarding such topics as subscriptions and memberships, honorary degrees, and arrangements for meetings and events. Beginning during this period, the records also include typed notes recording telephone conversations and office visits.
Among numerous other topics, many of these notes relate to development and finances. Records of interest from this period include: Kirk's statement to the House of Representatives' Select Committee on Government Research regarding federal funding for research (November 20, 1963); a note book that appears to be from a trip to Chili; two files of reports, mailing lists, correspondence, and working papers relating to a six year report on University finances and development (1959-1961); a follow-up report to the six year report (May 7, 1965); two files of notes, working papers, and pamphlets relating to Kirk's trip to Africa from December of 1961 to January of 1962 and notes on the African trip that are filed with records dating from the same period. Records dating from the early 1960s also relate to Kirk's routine duties as president of the Council on Foreign Relations and president of the Association of American Universities. Most of these records relate to routine arrangements for events. Almost all of the records dating from 1965 to 1969 deal with campus unrest and related issues. Most of these records consist of press releases, statements, and speeches. Some of the materials are lengthy and detailed.
Topics include: student demonstrations, building takeovers, the state of higher education in the United States, the resumption of military recruiting on the Columbia campus in January of 1968 relations between the students and the administration, and educational and administrative restructuring that resulted from the crisis. Records dating from this period also relate to urban and minority issues and programs as well as the recruiting and hiring of minorities at Columbia. Also includes: a statement regarding Kirk's retirement, a draft of his 1967 commencement address, and a press release on the appointment of Andrew Cordier as acting president of the University
Box 676 Folder 1 to 3
Correspondence between Mrs. Grayson L. Kirk (Marion Sands Kirk), wife of Columbia University president Grayson Kirk, and the president's office staf Correspondence relates to routine issues involving events, social engagements, and employees of the President's House. Also, numerous daily schedules that were forwarded for entry into Mrs. Kirk's calendar
Box 72 Folder 16
Several copies of a letter to S. N. Kirkland from Andrew Cordier, acting president of Columbia University. In the letter, Cordier responds to kirkland's concerns that student demonstrations at Columbia are having a negative impact on University fund raising efforts. Includes a newpaper clipping regarding the campus disturbances
Box 394 Folder 23
Correspondence between Thomas B. Kirkpatrick, professor of physical education at Columbia University, and the acting president and secretary of the University. Correspondence and budgets relate to faculty appointments and faculty affairs in the Department of Physical Education and Kirkpatrick's personnel issues
Box 673 Folder 2 to 3
Correspondence regarding William Kluback, a Columbia University graduate whose degree was revoked for plagerizing material in his dissertation
Box 665 Folder 39
Correspondence between Charles S. Knapp and the president, secretary, and registrar of Columbia University. Includes correspondence with Mason D. Gray of East High School in Rochester, New York, and C. B. Upton of Teachers College. Knapp was a professor in the Department of Classical Philology at Barnard College and chairman of the University's Committee on Public Ceremonies. Correspondence relates to the work of the committee, which oversaw preparations for academic ceremonies and other official events. Includes committee budgets.
Topics include the role of the committee and plans for improving commencement. Also, records relating to the Department of Classical Philology and its needs
Box 500 Folder 18 to 19
Correspondence between Alfred A. Knopf and high level administrators at Columbia University. Knopf was a benefactor of the University. Records dating from 1958 to 1959 relate to Knopf's honorary degree from Columbia and arrangements for events. Includes routine invitations and a newspaper clipping regarding the 1959 commencement ceremony. Records dating from 1966 to 1968 relate to a variety of subjects.
Topics include: personal favors, Knopf's gifts to Columbia, a memorial dinner for Knopf's wife, the establishment of the Blanche Knopf Prize for French Literature, and arrangements for events. Includes a substantive personal letter to Knopf from University president Grayson Kirk in which Kirk discusses the recent takeover of campus buildings by Students for a Democratic Society, police action against the demonstrators, and the faculty's role in campus demonstrations (May, 1968). Also includes many routine invitations, acceptances and regrets, and acknowledgement letters. In 1966 Knopf received the University's Alexander Hamilton medal. The records include the text of his speech at the annual Alexander Hamilton Dinner
Box 329 Folder 7 to 10
Correspondence between Raymond C. Knox, Chaplain of Columbia University, and the president and other high level administrators of the University. Correspondence relates to the administration of the chaplain's office and Saint Paul's Chapel and the work of the Administrative Board of Religious and Social Work. Includes detailed reports (ca. 1909-1910) and a history of the development of religious education, services, and activities at Columbia between 1908 and 1940. Also, correspondence relating to Knox's appointment and professional activities. Includes a detailed report on his trip to Europe in 1932 to study European religious education
Box 447 Folder 21
Correspondence between Bernard Osgood Koopman, executive officer of the Department of Mathematics at Columbia University, and University administrators. The records consist of correspondence and budgets related to the department.
Topics include: faculty affairs, appropriations, faculty appointments, and departmental membership in the American Mathematical Society. Also, correspondence relating to Koopman's personnel issues
Box 667 Folder 8
Correspondence between Horatio S. Kraus, director of the Columbia University Paris Bureau, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the representation of Columbia in the American University Union, a Paris-based organization for the promotion of educational ties between the United States and France during World War I. Correspondence includes discussion of the union's goals and plans for post-war activities. Also, correspondence and notes regarding the war and the participation of Columbia students and alumni in the fighting. Correspondence dating from the post-war period relates to the shipment of a theater model to the University
Box 671 Folder 65
Records relating to an exhibition of works by Kristian Krekovic, a croation-born artist from Peru. Records include: copies of the exhibition program, brochures regarding Krekovic's work and life, and newspaper clippings and publications regarding exhibitions of his work
Box 449 Folder 15
Correspondence between Professor Paul Oskar Kristeller and Columbia University administrators. Correspondence relates to payments to Kristeller's research and clerical assistants and the financial administration of his research projects. Includes a 1953 reprint of his article on the University of Bologna and the Rennaissance. Also, correspondence regarding Kristeller's personnel issues
Box 392 Folder 1 to 18
Box 393 Folder 1 to 8
Correspondence between John Allen Krout and the faculty and administrators of Columbia University. Krout held numerous appointments including executive officer of the Department of History; acting director of the School of General Studies and the Summer Session; dean of the Faculties of Political Science, Philosophy, and Pure Science; associate provost; vice president and provost; and vice president. He also chaired many committees including the Committee on the Eisenhower Installation and the President's Commission on the State of the University. Many of the records relate to the academic affairs and administration of the University during Krout's terms as vice president and provost and vice president of the University. Records also relate to the Department of History, School of General Studies, and the Graduate faculties as well as to numerous special committees and projects. Includes a file of extracts from a history of Columbia University and related correspondence, reports, and notes dating from 1936 to 1946. also includes speeches that were given by Krout on a variety of occasions and a press release regarding the University's Morningside Park gymnasium project. Records relating to the Department of History consist of correspondence and budgets dating from the mid to late 1940s.
Topics include: faculty affairs, faculty appointments, arrangements for courses, the management of special funds, financial administration, research funding, visiting lecturers, and visiting professors. Includes a proposal for a program in American civilization dating from 1944. Also, correspondence, dating from the mid 1940s to the 1950s which relates to disbursements and receipts for publications supported by the Council for Research in the Social Sciences. Records relating to the School of General Studies and the Summer Session consist of correspondence dating from 1948 to 1949.
Topics related to the School of General Studies, which is Columbia's continuing education division, include: faculty affairs, personnel issues, enrollment, financial administration, and the selection of a new director for the school. In addition, Krout was acting director of the school during a period of greatly increased enrollment. Some of the correspondence discusses the effects of this increase on the school. Topics related to the Summer Session include financial administration and the selection of a new director for the summer program. Records relating to the Faculties of Political Science, Philosophy, and Pure Science consist of correspondence, proposals, and other records dating from approximately 1949 to 1953. Many of the records relate to the faculty affairs and financial administration of the Graduate Faculties.
Other common topics include: the authorization of research and travel expenditures, arrangements for faculty members to act as University representatives to other institutions, and faculty appointments to various committees and boards. Other topics include: the scheduling of Ph.D. examinations, faculty salaries, membership in the Graduate Faculties, departmental affairs, policies regarding visiting professors, expenditures for special lectures and seminars, and faculty personnel policies. As vice president and provost and vice president, Krout handled similar tasks on a University-wide basis. Records from this period relate to numerous topics involving the academic affairs and administration of the University. Includes correspondence and statutes (ca. 1954) regarding a review of faculty appointment and faculty job classification policies and correspondence with the Faculty Committee on Honors (ca. 1953-1961) regarding the selection of honorary degree recipients.
Also includes correspondence documenting attempts to establish a center for the fine and performing arts at the University during the mid to late 1950s and reports on the School of Painting and Sculpture dating from the same period. Also, reports (ca. 1950-1952) of the President's Commission on the State of the University. The commission was created to conduct a comprehensive review of the University. Includes reports evaluating Columbia College, the School of General Studies, the School of Library Service, the Graduate School of Journalism, the School of Business, the School of International Affairs, the School of Engineering, the Faculty of Philosophy, and the Faculty of Law
Box 434 Folder 13 to 15
Correspondence between Henry Krumb, an alumnus and trustee of Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Much of the correspondence relates to the University's School of Mines and the proposed establishment of a University engineering center. Includes copies of correspondence with Dwight D. Eisenhower regarding the importance of engineering to national security. Also, correspondence regarding Krumb's gifts to the University, his estate, the Henry Krumb Mining Engineering Fund, the use of his bequest to the University, and his honorary degree from Columbia. Also, correspondence between University administrators regarding these topics and correspondence (ca. 1970-1971) regarding the Henry Krumb Chair in Mining
Box 451 Folder 1 to 8
Correspondence between John M. Krumm, chaplain of Columbia University and executive officer of the religion department, and University administrators. The records consist of correspondence, budgets, and reports relating to the University's religious activities and the business of the religion department. Also, correspondence regarding Krumm's appointment, personnel issues and resignation. Includes correspondence (ca. 1964-1965) relating to Krumm's confilcts with the University administration over political issues.
Topics include: the management of Earl Hall, Columbia's nondenominational religious and social center; the management of St. Paul's Chapel and the chaplain's office; religious instruction and the religion curriculum; routine faculty affairs and budgeting in the religion department; and services and events held at St. Paul's Chapel. Includes reports regarding the religious life of the University and the activities of the chaplain's office. Also includes programs, schedules, clippings, fliers, and brochures documenting chapel services and events
Box 670 Folder 8
Correspondence between Joseph Wood Krutch of the Department of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University and University administrators. Krutch held appointments as an instructor and professor of English and as an associate in journalism. Most of the correspondence relates to faculty affairs in the English department. Krutch also chaired the Advisory Committee on the Brander Matthews Theatre. Includes correspondence regarding the business of the committee and proposals to establish a drama school at the University
Box 671 Folder 33
Correspondence between John Laurence Kulp, associate professor of geochemistry in the Department of Geology at Columbia University, and the president and other high level administrators of the University. Correspondence relates to the department.
Topics include: the opening of the University's new Geochemistry Laboratory, an archaeological study of Manhattan Island, and funding for the department. Includes a program from the opening of the Geochemistry Laboratory. Also, correspondence regarding Kulp's personnel issues
Box 430 Folder 7 to 18
Correspondence between Polykarp Kusch, professor of physics at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Includes correspondence with physics department stafKusch held a number of appointments including executive officer of the Department of Physics, chairman of the Committee on Instruction of the Faculty of Pure Science, chairman of the Advisory Committee on the Ernest Kempton Adams Fund, executive director of the Columbia University Radiation Laboratories, and vice president and dean of the faculties. Records relate to the physics department, academic and faculty affairs in the Faculty of Pure Science, and a variety of topics involving the University and higher education from 1969 to 1971. Also, Kusch's appointments files, which contain invitations and routine acceptances and regrets, and press releases and clippings regarding Kusch's appointment as vice president in 1969. Records relating to the Department of Physics consist of correspondence and budgets.
Topics include: faculty appointments, appropriations, expenditures, fellowships, arrangements for courses, and faculty recruiting. Records relating to the Committee on Instruction of the Faculty of Pure Science consist of correspondence and minutes beginning ca. 1954.
Topics include faculty appointments and the evaluation of departmental budgets. Includes reports and correspondence relating to the Committee on the Boese Fellowships (ca. 1951-1957). Correspondence regarding the Columbia University Radiation Laboratories relates to the administration of sponsored projects. As vice president and dean of the faculties, Kusch corresponded with deans and the president of the University regarding University finances, campus unrest, and other topics. Includes a detailed memorandum (March, 1970) regarding the state of the University; Kusch's statement regarding an environmental teach-in that was held in April, 1970 and his address regarding the problems of social change that was delivered at Case Western Reserve University in May, 1970. Also includes a comprehensive report dating from July, 1970 which evaluates: campus security and unrest, teaching loads, facilities, athletics, the School of Architecture, the School of Engineering and Applied Science, the School of the Arts, Columbia College, and the School of General Studies
Box 395 Folder 17
Correspondence between Victor K. La Mer, professor of chemistry and secretary of the Faculty of Pure Science at Columbia University, and high level University administrators.
Correspondence relates to membership in the Faculty of Pure Science, the administration of sponsored projects in the Chemistry Department, and La Mer's personnel issues. Also, correspondence and a press release, dating from 1958 which relate to La Mer's participation in an exchange program between the United States and Australia
Box 667 Folder 42
Correspondence between the president of Columbia University and Christopher Grant Lafarge of the architectural firm, Lafarge & Son. Lafarge headed the Committee on the Columbia School of Architecture, which was charged with studying and evaluating the school. Includes a report from the committee
Box 672 Folder 66
Correspondence between Patrice LaLiberte, an employee in the printing services department at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the production of University bulletins, programs, and other publications
Box 396 Folder 12 to 13
Correspondence between Emily G. Lambert, bursar of Barnard College, and the secretary of Columbia University. Barnard College is the women's college affiliated with Columbia. Most of the records consist of Barnard College budgets dating from the 1946-1947 1950-1951 and 1952-1953 fiscal years. Includes correspondence regarding retirement benefits for Barnard faculty
Box 330 Folder 1 to 15
Correspondence between Samuel W. Lambert, dean of the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the College and the various medical departments of the University. Includes correspondence regarding the Columbia War Hospital.
Topics include: degree requirements, relations with area hospitals, legislation affecting the medical school, compliance with health codes, the curriculum, the effect of World War I on the school, faculty appointments, faculty affairs, budgeting, the management of special funds, enrollment, fund raising, admissions, and admissions requirements. Includes correspondence regarding the admission of women as well as reports and correspondence regarding revisions to the curriculum. Also, correspondence relating to Lambert's retirement and receipt of an honorary degree
Box 665 Folder 40
Correspondence between Professor K. Lamprecht of the University of Leipzig, Germany, and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the Roosevelt Professorship, which sent an American professor to Germany to lecture and act as an educational and cultural liaison. The correspondence discusses efforts to arrange for the Roosevelt Professor to give annual lectures in Leipzig
Box 420 Folder 1 to 20
Box 421 Folder 1 to 19
Box 422 Folder 1 to 20
Box 423 Folder 1 to 19
Box 424 Folder 1 to 19
Box 425 Folder 1 to 12
Correspondence between William H. Lane, controller of Columbia University, and the chief accountant, manager of the Government Contract Division, and other University administrators. Includes correspondence between Lane and Controller's Office stafThe records consist of correspondence and financial statements. Topics relate to: gifts to the University, check requests, expenditures, appropriations, disbursements, the management of special funds, grants administration, indirect costs, accounting procedures, and faculty and staff benefits.
Box 507 Folder 9 to 15
Correspondence between Professor Serge Lang and high level administrators at Columbia University. Includes correspondence between Lang and professors at other universities and correspondence between Columbia administrators regarding Lang. Lang, who eventually resigned his post in protest over a variety of social and political issues, wrote frequently regarding: relations between students and the administration, academic freedom, the role of faculty in the University, and the effect of research funding on faculty. Includes correspondence regarding Columbia's relations with the Institute for Defense Analysis and a paper on relations between students and the administration. Also includes numerous copies of Lang's lengthy paper explaining his resignation from the University and discussing numerous social and political topics
Box 508 Folder 1
Correspondence between Earle E. Langeland, vice president for business and finance at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence, reports and working papers relating to: University finances, operations, utilities and services, accounting and financial reporting procedures, the preparation of financial reports, retirement plans, and policies and procedures governing student loans. Also, correspondence regarding Langeland's appointment and personnel issues
Box 665 Folder 41
Correspondence between Professor Gustave Lanson of the University of Paris and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Lanson's two appointments as visiting professor of French literature -- one during the 1911-1912 academic year and one during the 1916-1917 academic year
Box 661 Folder 25
Correspondence relates to William G. Lathrop and the president of Columbia University. Lathrop was a Columbia trustee. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects.
Topics include financial issues involving a University athletic field in Williamsbridge and Lathrop's administration of the University's Student Aid Fund
Box 669 Folder 39
Pamphlets, articles, and newsletters regarding the work of Frank C. Laubach, a missionary and literacy teacher. The records were submitted to the Columbia University administration in support of Laubach's candidacy for an honorary degree from the University
Box 329 Folder 11
Correspondence between Benjamin B. Lawrence, a trustee of Columbia University and president of the Alumni Association of the Schools of Mines, Engineering and Chemistry, and the president of the University and clerk of the board of trustees. Correspondence relates to numerous topics regarding the trustees, the School of Mines, and Lawrence's gifts to the University. Also includes a brief exchange of letters with Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia, regarding academic freedom and the dismissal of professors James McKeen Cattell and H. W. L. Dana in 1917
Box 665 Folder 42
Correspondence between William W. Lawrence, professor of English and secretary of the Faculty of Philosophy at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to membership in the Faculty of Philosophy, donations of books to the Carpentier Library, and Lawrence's appointments and personnel issues. includes a letter criticizing the Carnegie Foundation's plan to provide insurance and annuities for college faculty
Box 380 Folder 8 to 16
Correspondence between Professor Paul Felix Lazarsfeld of Columbia University and high level University administrators. Lazarsfeld held a number of appointments including professor of sociology, executive officer of the Department of Sociology, chairman of the Department of Sociology, and Quetelet Professor of Social Science. He was also the director of the Universty's Office of Radio Research, which became the bureau of Applied Social Research. Most of the correspondence relates to the Office of Radio Research.
Includes correspondence regarding the Bureau of Applied Social Research and the Department of Sociology.
Most of the correspondence regarding the Office of Radio Research relates to payments for research staff and office personnel. Other topics include: the financial relationship between the office and the University, income from consulting services performed by the office, finances, grant administration, government contracts, and publications. Includes correspondence and reports regarding the transfer of the Office of Radio Research from Princeton University to Columbia and correspondence regarding research funding from the Rockefeller Foundation, Ford Foundation, and other sources. Also includes correspondence and a report regarding the influence of World War II on the work of the office; a report dating from June, 1947 that relates to a study of radio programs in the New York City; and Lazarsfeld's statement regarding the funding and programming of educational television which was given to the Temporary State Commission on Educational Television in January, 1953
Topics related to the Department of Sociology include: budgeting, faculty appointments, faculty affairs, arrangements for courses, teaching loads, the curriculum, finances, and departmental organization. Includes a proposal for graduate instruction in social theory, social organization, and population theory, which is attached to the department's budget letter from 1951 and a report dating from December, 1950 which relates to the reorganization and expansion of the department. Also, correspondence regarding Lazarsfeld's personnel issues
Box 18 Folder 16
Correspondence between Calvin B. T. Lee and the president and vice president of Columbia University. Lee was an assistant dean and director of the Citizenship Program, Office of King's Crown Activities, and Ferris Booth Hall student center at Columbia. Kings Crown activities were the officially recognized student organizations whose budgets were overseen by the Kings Crown alumni organization. Correspondence relates to the mission and activities of the Citizenship Program, Kings Crown office, and Ferris Booth Hall.
Topics include tutorial programs for neighborhood children and the role of the University in fulfilling the goals of The Great Society. Also, correspondence regarding Lee's internship in the office of the president of Bryn Mawr College
Box 451 Folder 23
Correspondence between Professor Eleanor Lee of the Department of Nursing at Columbia University and University administrators. Lee held appointments as professor of nursing, acting executive officer of the Department of Nursing, and associate dean for nursing in the Faculty of medicine. Correspondence relates to the Department of Nursing.
Topics include: scholarships, development, tuition benefits, and personnel
Box 447 Folder 11
Correspondence between Frank H. Lee, executive officer of the Department of Graphics at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to routine departmental business including faculty appointments and appropriations. Lee also chaired the Committee on the Combined Plan, which was created to study proposals for a combined engineering and liberal arts degree. Includes records relating to conferences the combined degree that were held in 1954 and 1955. Also includes a copy of the Columbia Engineering Quarterly which contains the proceedings of the October, 1954 conference. Also, correspondence regarding Lee's personnel issues
Box 330 Folder 16 to 17
Correspondence between Professor Frederic S. Lee of the Department of Physiology in the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the Department of Physiology.
Topics include: faculty appointments, the management of special funds, budgeting, departmental finances, and personnel. Includes correspondence dating from 1911 regarding Lee's appointment to give the Jesup Lectures, a series of lectures which presented recent scientific advances in a popular format. Also, correspondence regarding Lee's personnel issues and professional activities. Includes a reprint of his article, "The Scope of Modern Physiology".
Box 672 Folder 30
Correspondence between Senator Herbert H. Lehman and administrators at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to a series of lectures that were given by Lehman at the University. Correspondence also relates to Lehman's honorary degree from Columbia
Box 72 Folder 17
Correspondence between Franz S. Leichter and administrators at Columbia University. Leichter was the assemblyman who represented the West Harlem and Morningside Heights neighborhoods adjoining the Columbia campus on Manhattan's upper west side. Correspondence relates to University-community relations.
Topics include: conflicts over Columbia's expansion plans, legislation affecting the University's expansion plans, and invitations to community meetings. Includes a report and meeting notes regarding community relations and related issues. Also includes information regarding a proposal to construct a complex designed by I. M. Pei in the center of the Columbia campus
Box 454 Folder 17 to 20
Correspondence between Robert D. Leigh and high level administrators at Columbia University. Leigh was director of the Russell Sage Foundation Communications Study and chairman of Columbia's University Seminar on Public Communication. Records relate to the seminar, the Bennington Communications Study, the Columbia University Libraries, tuition and fees policies, and the University's School of Library Service. In 1956 Leigh was appointed dean of Columbia's School of Library Service. Most of the records relate to the school between 1954 and 1959. Also, correspondence regarding Leigh's appointment and retirement. Includes correspondence regarding administrative issues involving the University Seminar on Public Communications. The University Seminars were interdisciplinary, inter-institutional meetings which explored current problems and issues. Also, reports on the Bennington Communications Study, which explored the impact of the media on public communication. The reports date from December, 1953 and April, 1956
Topics related to the School of Library Service include: personnel, faculty appointments, salaries, development, expenditures, funding for the school, budgeting, appropriations, faculty affairs, and the revision of the school's curriculum and requirements. Includes correspondence regarding the appointment of a new dean for the school in 1959. Also includes records relating to the facilities and services of the Columbia University Libraries and copies of Columbia Library World, the library staff newsletter. Leigh also chaired the University's Special Committee on Tuitions. Includes minutes and reports to the committee dating from August to September, 1957. Also includes correspondence regarding tuition policies and income from tuition and fees
Box 449 Folder 16
Correspondence between Elliot E. Leuallen, dean of the College of Pharmacy at Columbia University, and University administrators. correspondence relates to the routine business of the school. Includes a report proposing research projects for the school and a program from the college's bicentennial conference, "Pharmacy and the Conquest of Disease", which was held in 1954. Also includes copies of the college newsletters the Bronze Mortar and the Anodyne
Box 670 Folder 48
Correspondence between Howard Levene and Columbia University administrators. Levene's appointments included assistant professor of Mathematical Statistics and Biometrics, chairman of the Committee on Statistical Applications, acting executive officer of the Department of Mathematical Statistics, and acting director of the Institute for the Study of Human Variation.
Correspondence relates to faculty affairs in the Department of Mathematical Statistics. Also, correspondence and budgets relating to the Institute for the Study of Human Variation
Box 671 Folder 3
One copy of Planning for Advanced Training in Social Research: Panel Analysis Workbook by Bernard Levenson
Box 447 Folder 12 to 14
Correspondence between Elizabeth D. Levers, bursar of Columbia University, and University administrators. The records consist of correspondence and cover letters relating to routine financial administration in the president's and secretary's offices. Includes a small amount of correspondence regarding University financial aid programs
Box 508 Folder 18
Correspondence between Julian Clarence Levi and the president of Columbia University. Levi was a benefactor of the University.
Correspondence relates to his gifts to Columbia. In particular, the correspondence relates to his support for the development and care of the Boulton collection of indigenous music. Includes correspondence regarding the recognition of Levi as Columbia's oldest living graduate
Box 672 Folder 14
Correspondence between Howard Levine, director of sports information at Columbia University, and the president of the University.
Correspondence relates to a tribute to Lou Little, the Columbia football coach, who was retiring after 27 years of service. Includes an informational brochure regarding University athletics
Box 478 Folder 18 to 19
Correspondence between Leon Levine, director of the Office of Radio-TV Relations at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence, reports, proposals, and schedules relating to the Office of Radio-TV Relations.
Topics include: equipment, supplies, space needs, and expenditures. includes: correspondence regarding the establishment of the office (1950), Levine's periodic reports on the activities of the office, program schedules, and proposals for television series. Also, records regarding the recording and televising of campus events as well as radio and television appearances by University faculty, administrators, and students. Also, correspondence regarding University public relations and publicity. Includes correspondence relating to publicity for Columbia's bicentennial celebration in 1954
Box 509 Folder 1 to 2
Correspondence between Cyrus Levinthal, chairman of the Department of Biological Sciences at Columbia University, and high level University administrators.
Correspondence relates to the department. Topics include: facilities, committee memberships, and personnel. Much of the correspondence relates to efforts to plan and construct a life sciences building. Other topics include: long-range planning for and the structure of biological science programs (ca. 1971); cooperation between the department and the University's Lamont-Doherty Geological Observatory in order to conduct oceanographic research; the establishment of pre-professional programs for minority students; and coordination between graduate and undergraduate medical programs. Includes a five-year plan for the biological sciences program
Box 672 Folder 15
Correspondence between journalist Howard J. Lewis and the assistant to the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Lewis' proposal for a monthly publication on research at the University
Box 665 Folder 43
Correspondence between Louis Liard, vice-rector of the Sorbonne, and the president and secretary of Columbia University.
Correspondence relates to faculty exchanges between the Sorbonne and Columbia that were interrupted by World War I. Includes Liard's advice on the reorganization the University's Department of Romance Languages and Literatures
Box 661 Folder 26 to 27
Correspondence between N. W. Liggett and the president of Columbia University. Liggett was the registrar and bursar of Barnard College, the women's college affiliated with Columbia.
Correspondence relates to: registration, fees, the administration of examinations, and budgeting, includes budgets and other financial records. Also includes correspondence regarding arrangements between Barnard and Columbia to divide the responsibilities of certain faculty members between the two institutions
Box 670 Folder 49
Correspondence between Harry L. Lindquist, publisher of Stamps: A Weekly Magazine of Philately, and Columbia University administrators. The records consist of correspondence and an article regarding a stamp that was issued in 1954 in honor of Columbia's bicentennial celebration
Box 665 Folder 44
Correspondence between Samuel McCune Lindsay and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Lindsay held an appointment as a professor in the University's Faculty of Political Science and was president of the Academy of Political Science and chief of the Economic and Social Service Corps. Most of the correspondence relates to Lindsay's work as president of the Academy of Political Science and the publication of the Bulletin of Social Legislation. Includes discussion of possible topics for investigation and legislation, such as the humane treatment of children and animals. Includes a letter regarding widow's pension laws in New York State (October 7, 1916)
Box 670 Folder 50
Correspondence between Professor Henry B. Linford of the Department of Chemical Engineering at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to faculty affairs in the department. Includes a legal opinion regarding a dispute between Columbia and New York City regarding sales tax
Box 670 Folder 9
Correspondence between Wendell H. Link, assistant director of the Oral History Research Office at Columbia University, and University administrators. Topics include the origins of the oral history office and issues involving group interviews that documented the San Francisco United Nations Conference
Box 668 Folder 18
Correspondence between Ralph Linton, head of the Department of Anthropology at Columbia University, and the president and provost of the University. Correspondence relates to the department.
Topics include: funding for research, salaries for short-term instructors, and arrangements for courses. Includes the departmental budget for the 1944-1945 fiscal year and correspondence regarding Linton's personnel issues. Also includes a small amount of correspondence regarding Ruth Benedict's personnel issues
Box 667 Folder 36
Correspondence between Walter Lippmann, a journalist with the New York Herald Tribune, and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to an invitation for Lippmann to deliver a public lecture in the University's Institute for Arts and Sciences and to Lippmann's honorary degree from Columbia
Box 670 Folder 10
Correspondence between Seymour Martin Lipset and administrators at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Lipset's International Typographical Union study, which was funded by the Columbia-based Bureau of Applied Social Research. Topics include the financial and personnel administration of the project
Box 670 Folder 11
Correspondence between Sebastian B. Littauer, acting executive officer of the Department of Industrial Engineering at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to administrative issues involving the department. Includes personnel information relating to Professor Seymour Lipset. Also includes a report to the University Council from the Committee on Certificates
Box 412 Folder 10
Correspondence between Lou Little, coach of Columbia University's football team, and University administrators. Topics include: public relations, administrative issues regarding athletics programs, the recruiting of athletes, and the academic affairs of players. Includes a football program dating from November, 1956 which contains a tribute to Little. Also, correspondence regarding Little's retirement
Box 672 Folder 43
Correspondence between Eugene Litwack, assistant professor of sociology at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to Litwack's personnel issues
Box 665 Folder 45
Correspondence between Albert Arthur Livingston, associate professor of Italian at Columbia University, and the president, secretary, and treasurer of the University; clerk of the University's board of trustees; dean of the School of Law; and attorneys representing Livingston and his estranged wife. Correspondence relates to: Livingston's fiscal and legal problems, his failure to make alimony payments, the garnishing of his wages, and his dismissal from the faculty
Box 533 Folder 6 to 7
Box 412 Folder 11 to 14
Correspondence between Robert Tevoit Livingston, executive officer of the Department of Industrial Engineering at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Includes correspondence with the dean of the School of Engineering. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the Department of Industrial Engineering. Also, records regarding the field of industrial operations and Livingston's professional activities. Includes copies of a number of papers and pamphlets authored by Livingston. Also includes letters from Livingston regarding relations between the School of Engineering and Columbia College and the appointment of deans for Columbia College, the School of General Studies, and the School of Engineering
Topics related to the Department of Industrial Engineering include: equipment, staffing needs, appropriations, budgeting, faculty appointments, enrollment, and financial administration. The records also document conditions in the department following World War II. Includes a 1949 report regarding the department. Records related to industrial operations include correspondence (ca. 1949) regarding Livingston's tour of engineering schools in order to study their curricula and to promote industrial management and correspondence regarding operations research and labor relations. Also includes a proposal for an institute for research in industrial management at Columbia (1950) and programs, pamphlets, and correspondence (ca. 1952-1957) regarding utility management workshops which were organized by the University
Box 665 Folder 46
Correspondence between James Duane Livingston, chairman of the Standing Committee of the Alumni Association of Columbia College, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Includes correspondence with the clerk of the University's board of trustees.
Correspondence relates to the preparation of the committee's resolutions and annual reports and the membership of the committee. Includes a letter to Livingston from John B. Pine, clerk of the board of trustees, in which pine warns of a report of the standing committee that could be personaly and publicly damaging to University president Nicholas Murray Butler (October 13, 1910). Also, correspondence regarding military training for columbia undergraduates during World War I
Box 671 Folder 36
Correspondence between Richard Winn Livingstone, president of Corpus Christi College at Oxford University, and the president and vice president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the honorary degree that was awarded to Livingstone at Columbia's 3rd Bicentennial Convocation in 1954. Includes biographical information regarding Livingstone
Box 671 Folder 35
Correspondence between Alberto Lleras Camargo, secretary general of the Organization of American States, and the president and vice president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the honorary degree that was awarded to Camargo at Columbia's 3rd Bicentennial Convocation. Includes biographical information regarding Camargo
Box 668 Folder 53
Correspondence between Professor Karl N. Llewellyn of the School of Law at Columbia University, and the provost and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to Llewellyn's retirement plan and the administration of his research projects
Box 455 Folder 17
Correspondence between Evan B. Lloyd, director of development for the Engineering Development Program at Columbia University, and University administrators. Most of the records consist of routine acknowledgement letters for gifts in support of engineering research and the University's proposed engineering center
Box 668 Folder 11
Correspondence between Armin K. Lobeck and Columbia University administrators. Lobeck was a professor of geology at the University and director of the Geographical Press. Correspondence dating from the 1930s relates to the Department of Geography and Minerology.
Topics include: faculty affairs, financial needs, equipment for the Ore Deposit Laboratory, appropriations, and expenditures. Correspondence dating from 1953 to 1954 relates to Lobeck's personnel issues and the Geographical Press. Includes a pamphlet regarding the press. There is a gap in the records between 1941 and 1953
Box 665 Folder 47
Correspondence between Dean Putnam Lockwood and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Lockwood was an assistant professor in the Department of Classical Philology and served as acting University librarian. Most of the records relate to the Columbia University Libraries between 1915 and 1918.
Topics include: relations between libraries at Columbia, relations with other libraries outside of the University, budgeting for the libraries, the acquisition of collections, gifts of books and collections, and the appointment of library personnel. Includes: letters regarding a collection of Chinese and Tibetan books; letters regarding correspondence by Washington Irving; reports on the allotment of funds for purchasing books; and minutes of the Library Council. Also, some correspondence regarding the routine business of the Department of Classical Philology
Box 426 Folder 1 to 19
Correspondence between Richard H. Logsdon, director of the Columbia University Libraries, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence, statistical reports, budgets, and financial statements relating to the University's libraries. Also, correspondence regarding the membership of the Library Committee and the Library Council as well as reports to the University Council regarding the libraries. Also, two letters from Logsdon regarding his tour of afghanistan in 1953. Topics related to the libraries include: acquisitions, library materials budgets, library privileges, personnel, scheduling, library policies, gifts to the libraries, budgeting, library operations, departmental and special libraries, donor relations, and development. Includes copies of Columbia Library World, the library newsletter. Also includes correspondence regarding the Columbia University Libraries Staff Association and an extensive report on library: equipment, personnel, services, programs, resources, administration, and finances (1957).
Box 665 Folder 48
Correspondence between Warfield T. Longcope and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Includes correspondence with the dean of the University's College of Physicians and Surgeons. Longcope was an associate professor of the practice of medicine and served as a major in the Medical Reserve Corps.
Correspondence relates to Longcope's appointment and his attempts to secure funding for research assistants from the Coolidge Fellowship Fund. Includes a letter in which Longcope voices his opinions on establishing a medical clinic at Presbyterian Hospital in New York City
Box 672 Folder 1
A report on faculty salaries that was forwarded to the Columbia University administration by Herbert E. Longenecker, vice president of Chicago Professional Colleges. The report is entitled "University faculty Compensation Policies and Practices in the United States: A Study of the policies, practices, and problems related to supplemental compensation of university faculty members"
Box 670 Folder 5
Correspondence regarding articles about Columbia that were published in Life and Time in honor of the University's 1954 bicentennial
Box 412 Folder 15 to 19
Correspondence between Melvin Loos, manager of Columbia University's printing office, and the secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the printing of University publications and other University printing jobs. Includes correspondence dating from 1953 that relates to the selection of the University color, Columbia Blue
Box 665 Folder 49
Correspondence between Austin W. Lord, director of the School of Architecture at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates the reorganization of the Department of Architecture as the School of Architecture and the subsequent changes in policies, personnel, and the curriculum. Topics of particular concern include: student dissension in the school, conditions in ateliers, and issues involving the status of the director of the school as a practicing architect and the quality of the school's administration. Includes a budget for the 1912-1913 academic year
Box 497 Folder 1 to 7
Correspondence between Clifford Lee Lord and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Lord, who was the director of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin, was appointed dean of Columbia's School of General Studies in 1958. Correspondence relates to General Studies, Columbia's continuing education division.
Topics include: faculty affairs, lecturers for General Studies courses, development, student affairs, special funds, expenditures appropriations, events, administrative issues involving General Studies programs, gifts to the school, tuition and fees, and administrative procedures. In particular, the records include substantive correspondence regarding the status, future, and role of the School of General Studies. Also, correspondence regarding Lord's personnel issues and his resignation in 1964 to become president of Hofstra University. Most of the records regarding the status, role, and future of General Studies date from 1963 to 1964. Related records include: a letter from University president Grayson Kirk regarding the future role of the school (July, 1963); a letter regarding the status and name of the school (July, 1963); and correspondence regarding the controversy over a proposed minimum enrollment age. Other records include: a copy of History News (Vol XVI, no. 4) containing Lord's address as president of the American Association for State and Local History; an agreement with Jewish Theological Seminary regarding a joint program to be administered through General Studies (April, 1959); dean's reports dating from 1959 to 1960 and 1961 to 1963 statistics regarding the student body (January, 1960); a report regarding the proposed establishment of an honor system in the school (February, 1960); a brochure/report regarding the school (May, 1962); a table of the school's tuition and fees income from the 1950-1951 academic year to the 1961-1962 academic year (September, 1963); correspondence regarding the school's move to Lewisohn Hall (ca. 1963-1964); and Lord's 1964 Dean's Day speech, College for Adults
Box 329 Folder 13 to 14
Correspondence between Herbert G. Lord, professor of philosophy and chairman of the Committee on Student Organizations at Columbia University, and the University's president, secretary, and clerk of the board of trustees. Most of the correspondence relates to the oversight of student organizations and the University's 1905 ban on football. Other topics include: athletic eligibility requirements, rules governing student organizations, University recognition of student clubs, and athletic events. Includes some correspondence regarding the Henry Berg Fund for Humane Education. Also, correspondence regarding Lord's committee memberships and retirement
Box 449 Folder 17
Correspondence between David Loth, director of publicity for the Columbia University bicentennial, and the special assistant to the president of the University. Records relate to bicentennial events and University public relations. Includes press releases regarding bicentennial events and minutes of the Bicentennial Public Relations Policy Group (October, 1953 - May, 1954). Also, a report dating from June, 1953 which discusses the history of Columbia's involvement with the Rockefeller Center site.
Box 426 Folder 20 to 21
Correspondence between Professor John Lotz of the Department of Uralic and Altaic Languages at Columbia University and high level University administrators. Lotz held a number of appointments including associate professor of linguistics and Hungarian studies and professor of linguistics. Most of the correspondence relates to his personnel issues. Includes the agenda for a conference on Uralic and Altaic studies that was held at the University in May, 1956 and a copy of Lotz' paper entitled Linguistics: Symbols Make Humans. Records dating from 1959 to 1961 relate to the department. Includes a report on the department and the development of a related area studies library. Also, correspondence relating to the administration of the Sackler collection of Asian art objects which were donated to the University by Arthur M. Sackler
Box 324 Folder 18
Correspondence between Joseph Florimond Loubat, a benefactor of Columbia University, and the president of the University. Also, correspondence between the president, the secretary of the University, and others regarding Loubat and his gifts to Columbia. Much of the correspondence relates to Loubat's gift to establish a professorship in American archeology and the appointment of Marshall H. Saville, curator of mexican and Central American archeology at the American Museum of Natural History, to the professorship. Includes a detailed report dating from March, 1911 regarding an expedition to southern Mexico. In the report, Saville discusses relations with Mexican government officials and problems with the expedition. Also, correspondence relating to the establishment of the Loubat Prize and Loubat's other gifts to Columbia
Box 357 Folder 6 to 8
Correspondence between Clarence E. Lovejoy, executive secretary of the Alumni Federation of Columbia University, and the University's high level administrators and other alumni club officers. Much of the correspondence is with Frank D. Fackenthal during his tenure as secretary and, later, provost of the University. Correspondence relates to the administration of alumni organizations, alumni involvement in the University, and alumni record keeping
Topics include: gifts to the University, fund raising, alumni events, prizes, scholarship funds, alumni publications, and the financial management of alumni organizations. Includes a report on an analysis of University publicity which was conducted by the Alumni Federation in 1929 and 1930. Also includes correspondence (ca. 1930) regarding a proposed expansion of University Hall. Correspondence also relates to the appointment of alumni to serve as Columbia's representatives to ceremonies at other institutions
Box 670 Folder 52
Correspondence between John M. Lovejoy and Columbia University administrators. Lovejoy seems to have been a University benefactor. Correspondence relates to gifts to Columbia
Box 329 Folder 15 to 16
Correspondence between Earl B. Lovell, head of the Department of Civil Engineering at Columbia University, and the president, secretary, and faculty of the University. Most of the correspondence dating prior to 1910 relates to the administration of summer courses in engineering which were held at the University's Camp Columbia property in Lakeside, Connecticut. Most of the correspondence dating from 1910 to 1918 relates to the curriculum, faculty affairs, and budgeting of the Department of Civil Engineering. Also, correspondence regarding Lovell's personnel issues.
Box 459 Folder 6 to 10
Correspondence between Seth Low, president of Columbia University from 1890 to 1901 and the secretary and assistant secretary of the University. Includes correspondence with trustees, administrators, and University president Nicholas Murray Butler. Records relate to: a range of topics involving the business of the University from 1891 to 1901 Low's resignation from the presidency in 1901 Low's activities as a trustee of the University; and plans for a memorial to Low (ca. 1916 to 1917). Includes invitations, cover letters, telegrams, and reports. Also includes two undated petitions from students. Most of the correspondence documenting Low's presidency dates from 1897 to 1901.
Correspondence from this period consists of letters regarding University business that Low sent to the secretary's office from his vacation home in Maine and copies of the secretary's replies. At Low's request, the secretary's office: collected and prepared information and statistics for a variety of purposes, kept track of projects and committees, researched issues, and interpreted University policies. The correspondence contains a wealth of administrative detail on a wide range to topics during a critical period in Columbia's history -- the transformation of Columbia from a college into a University.
Topics include: the daily administration of the University, University government and organization, the design and construction of Low Memorial Library, the preparation of the president's annual reports, and Columbia's move to Morningside Heights. The correspondence also documents Low's administrative style and some of his concerns regarding the University and shows how the University changed during his term as president.
Correspondence dating from 1900 to 1901 also compliments the correspondence files relating to Assistant Secretary of the University Frederick P. Keppel, which are also located in Central Files. Much of the correspondence dating from 1901 relates to Low's resignation from the presidency in order to campaign for election as mayor of New York City. Includes his official letter of resignation dated October, 1901. Also includes letters regarding Low's resignation that were sent by trustee John B. Pine to other members of the board. Also includes correspondence regarding the selection of Nicholas Murray Butler as president. Low also served as a Columbia trustee from 1881 to 1916. Much of the correspondence that was written after Low's resignation from the presidency in 1901 relates to his activities as a trustee of the University.
Topics include Low's membership on the Special Committee on Agriculture and his interest in proposals for the establishment of a university in China. Also includes correspondence between Low, President Nicholas Murray Butler, and trustees George L. Rives and John B. Pine regarding Low's informal withdrawal from the board in 1911 and formal resignation in 1914. Low's withdrawal resulted from his objections to a plan to allow the General Convention of the Episcopal Church to meet at the University. Low, who felt that Jewish groups should also be accommodated at the University, stopped attending trustee meetings while avoiding the public explanation that would have been necessitated by an immediate, formal resignation. Includes correspondence regarding the bachelor of laws (LL.B.) degree which was conferred on Low upon his resignation.
Correspondence dating from 1916 to 1917 relates to efforts to erect a memorial tablet for Low in Columbia's St. Paul's Chapel. Includes a blueprint of the tablet
Box 449 Folder 4 to 12
Correspondence between Professor Harold E. Lowe and high level Columbia University administrators. Lowe held appointments as professor of physical education, director of University admissions, and director of student interests and assistant to the vice president. Records relate to admissions and Lowe's numerous responsibilities as director of student interests and assistant to the vice president. Most of the correspondence relates to admissions.
Topics include: admissions criteria, the recruiting of admissions candidates, the preparation of University announcements, application and admissions statistics, accreditation, and the administration of the Admissions Office. Also, correspondence between Lowe and the vice president regarding a wide range of University-related subjects.
Topics include: space allocation, residency requirements, student activities, student housing issues and policies, University real estate management and policies, tenants in University-owned buildings, student affairs and discipline, University administrative offices, and development. The records from this period include routine correspondence interspersed with more substantive documents
Box 666 Folder 1
Correspondence between Abbot Lawrence Lowell, president of Harvard University, and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to financial assistance for Chinese students attending American universities and a multi-university agreement to staff a British army hospital during World War I
Box 108 Folder 26
Correspondence between Max Lowenthal and Columbia University administrators. Correspondence relates to Lowenthal's proposed anonymous gift to the University's botany department for the establishment of a phytotron in Israel and Columbia's rejection of the offer
Box 329 Folder 17 to 18
Correspondence between Charles E. Lucke, Stevens Professor of Mechanical Engineering at Columbia University, the president, administrators and faculty of the University, and others outside of the University.
Topics include: the curriculum, appointments, course scheduling, expenditures, gifts, and laboratories in the Department of Mechanical Engineering. Includes a detailed proposal, blueprints, and drawings for an engineering building (ca. 1927). Also, correspondence relating to Lucke's professional activities and committee memberships
Box 668 Folder 5
Two copies of a report entitled The Present Condition of the Law in the State of New York with Respect to Discrimination in Education (August, 1947). Supporting documents are attached to the reports. The records appear to relate to: a lawsuit that brought charges of discrimination in admissions practices against Columbia and an number of other universities, proposals for a state university in New York, and legislation banning discrimination in higher education
Box 672 Folder 31
Correspondence between Otto Luening, professor of Music in the Department of Music at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to funding for Luening's research. Includes a report on experimental music that was submitted to the administration by Luening
Box 378 Folder 10 to 14
Correspondence between Robert Staughton Lynd and the acting president, provost, and secretary of Columbia University; other University administrators; and Columbia faculty. Lynd held numerous appointments including professor of sociology, executive officer of the Department of Sociology, Giddings Professor of Sociology, chairman of the Advisory Board of the Bureau of Applied Social Research, and chairman of the University Radio Committee. He was also a member of the Committee on Student Organizations and Speakers. Most of the materials consist of correspondence and financial records from the Office of Radio Research, which became the Bureau of Applied Social Research in 1944. Records also relate to the Department of Sociology, the oversight of student groups, and academic freedom. Topics related to the Office of Radio Research include: relations between the office and the Rockefeller Foundation, accounting, the receipt of grant payments, research funding, and expenditures. Most of the records dated prior to 1944 consist of bills which were submitted to the office for payment.
Correspondence dating from 1944 to 1946 relates to the office's reorganization as the Bureau of Applied Social Research. Includes correspondence regarding research projects and a history of the Office of Radio Research. Topics related to the Department of Sociology include: faculty affairs, fellowships, personnel, and finances. Includes a report from November, 1945 which evaluates the department and discusses its long-term goals. Also, correspondence documenting the work of the Committee on Student organizations and Speakers. The committee was created to establish policies for overseeing student groups and the selection of speakers by student organizations. Also, individual letters regarding a variety of topics including academic freedom and the rights and responsibilities of students and faculty. Includes a lengthy memorandum dating from April, 1941 in which Lynd discusses American society and politics
Box 331 Folder 1
Correspondence between William G. MacCallum, professor of pathology in the Department of Pathology in the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University.
Topics include: routine departmental business, research conducted in the department, and the management of the Crocker Fund for Cancer Research. Also, correspondence regarding relations between the College of physicians and Surgeons and area hospitals (ca. 1910) and a report on residency requirements as a component of medical education (ca. 1912). Also, correspondence relating to MacCallum's appointment and resignation. Includes a bibliography of his works
Box 661 Folder 28 to 29
Correspondence between Edward MacDowell, professor of music in the Department of Music at Columbia University, and the president of the University. MacDowell was also head of the University's Mendelssohn Glee Club.
Correspondence relates to the department. Topics include: the establishment of the department (1896), staffing needs, the curriculum, student affairs, departmental library collections, and the admission of women. Also, correspondence regarding MacDowell's personnel issues. includes letters and photocopies of clippings regarding his controversial resignation in 1904
Box 670 Folder 53
Correspondence between Robert L. MacGregor, business manager of Georgetown University, and Columbia University administrators. MacGregor appears to have been a candidate for a position at Columbia. Includes his curriculum vitae and brochures regarding Georgetown
Box 351 Folder 17 to 21
Correspondence between Professor Robert M. MacIver and the president, secretary, and provost of Columbia University. MacIver held appointments as Leiber Professor of Political Science, Philosophy and Sociology and executive officer of the Department of Sociology.
Correspondence relates to the Department of Sociology as well as a number of projects with which MacIver was involved. Topics related to the Department of Sociology include: faculty appointments, faculty affairs, budgeting, student affairs, research, personnel, and special lectures. Includes correspondence regarding the grant Squires Prize. Also, correspondence, proposals, and reports documenting two depression-era projects at the University. Includes correspondence documenting the establishment and work of President Butler's Commission on Economic Questions. The commission, which consisted of faculty from Columbia and other institutions, studied a range of economic issues facing the country during the Depression.
Includes a draft of the commission's report, which was released in 1933. Also includes a 1933 proposal by Columbia's Faculty of Political Science for the creation of a national public works commission. Other records include correspondence and a legal document regarding discrimination charges which were brought against the University by the American Jewish Congress (ca. 1944) and reports on the Juvenile Delinquency Project at City College (ca. 1956-1957). MacIver was director of the project. Among other topics, the reports discuss New York City's police department, 600 schools, and the juvenile detention system
Box 447 Folder 15
Correspondence between Ossian R. Mackenzie, assistant dean of the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Most of the correspondence relates to the school.
Topics include scholarships and fellowships. Includes an outline of the school's Consumer Credit Management Program (July, 1953). Also includes a brochure regarding the school's course on the Port of New York, which was offered in 1953. Also, Mackenzie's presentation to a meeting of the New York State Association of Colleges of Business Administration that was held in March, 1953. Also includes correspondence between Mackenzie and Milton Halsey Thomas, curator of the Columbiana Library, regarding a gift of art properties from Lloyd Langston
Box 662 Folder 1
Correspondence between Richard C. MacLaurin, professor of mathematical physics in the Department of Physics at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence, recommendation letters, and biographical information relating to macLaurin's appointment and personnel issues.
Topics include MacLaurin's appointment as Jessup Lecturer to give a series of lectures at the American Museum of Natural History and his resignation from the University to become president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Box 395 Folder 18 to 20
Correspondence between Walter Whittier Macmahon, Eaton Professor of public Administration in the Department of Public Law and Government at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Records dating from 1946 relate to international students. Records dating from 1956 to 1959 relate to the President's Committee on the Educational Future of the University. The committee, which was chaired by Macmahon, was created to evaluate the University and produce a long-range plan. Also, correspondence regarding Macmahon's retirement, personnel issues, and honorary degree from the University.
Records relating to international students include correspondence and an abstract of the proceedings of the Conference on Foreign Student Problems and Policies that was held in Chicago in May, 1946. Also includes the report of the Committee to Study the Responsibility of Columbia University Toward Foreign Students dating from June, 1946. Records relating to the President's Committee on the Educational Future of the University include reports on: the Lamont Geological Observatory, a proposed arts center, and the Summer Session. Also includes the interim report of the committee, dated 1958. Topics relating to the committee include: committee membership, the scope of the study, expenditures, the administration of studies conducted by the committee, and routine committee business
Box 36 Folder 25
Correspondence regarding the honorary degree that was awarded to Harold Macmillan, the former prime minister of Great Britain. Records include: the text of the address that was delivered by University president Grayson Kirk at the honorary degree ceremony; biographical information regarding Macmillan; and correspondence regarding arrangements for the honorary degree ceremony
Box 667 Folder 4
Records forwarded to the Columbia University administration by Cornelia Page Macy, who appears to have served as University recorder. The records consist of a report entitled Statistics Regarding Staff and Salaries from 1928-29 to 1935-36 Inclusive and a budget showing promotions and salary increases that were requested by departments for the 1936-1937 fiscal year
Box 331 Folder 2
Correspondence between V. Everit Macy, chairman of the board of trustees of Teachers College at Columbia University, and the president and other high level administrators of the University.
Topics include: the University Settlement Society and its relations with Columbia, the relationship between Teachers College and Columbia University, and proposals to establish a Carnegie library school at Teachers College. Also, correspondence regarding the work of the buildings and grounds committee of the board of trustees. Correspondence relates to bidding and contracting for campus construction projects and the management of campus buildings.
Box 671 Folder 37
Correspondence between Paul Eugene Magloire, president of Haiti, and the president and other administrators of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Magloire's visit to New York City and his honorary degree from Columbia. Records include: a press kit regarding his visit, a copy of his remarks at the honorary degree ceremony, and a photograph of the ceremony
Box 331 Folder 3
Correspondence between Thomas Main, secretary of the College of Pharmacy in the City of New York, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Most of the correspondence relates to the membership of the board of the College of Pharmacy and relations between the college and Columbia. Includes many cover letters, invitations, and acknowledgement letters
Box 488 Folder 6 to 9
Correspondence between James L. Malfetti, assistant director of the bicentennial at Columbia University, and other University administrators. Correspondence relates to routine administrative issues involving Columbia's 200th anniversary celebration in 1954.
Topics include: expenditures, payroll, preparations for events, events scheduling, the closing of the Office of the Bicentennial, and the closing of the bicentennial celebration's accounts. Includes a summary speech regarding the bicentennial. Also, correspondence regarding a trip to Asia by University president Grayson Kirk (ca. 1955-1956)
Box 455 Folder 15 to 16
Correspondence between Edward J. Malloy, director of the Department of King's Crown Activities at Columbia University, and the secretary and assistant provost of the University. King's Crown was an alumni organization which oversaw certain student groups. The Department of King's Crown Activities administered the student organizations that fell under the jurisdiction of King's Crown.
Topics include: the finances of student groups, event scheduling, space allocation for student clubs, appropriations for student groups, the King's Crown budget, and problems involving student organizations. Includes correspondence regarding the business of the King's Crown Advisory Committee
Box 427 Folder 18
Correspondence between Dumas Malone, professor of history at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. The records consist of correspondence and cover letters relating to a Rockefeller Foundation grant in support of Malone's project to write a biography of Thomas Jefferson.
Topics include payments to his research assistants and other project expenditures. Malone also chaired the Speranza Lecture Committee and the Bancroft Prize Jury. Correspondence dating from 1953 to 1959 relates to the Speranza Lectures, which were established in 1952 to study American traditions and ideas from an historical perspective. Correspondence dating from 1958 to 1959 relates to the selection of the Bancroft Prize recipient. Includes correspondence regarding Malone's personnel issues
Box 72 Folder 18
Correspondence regarding the nomination of Andre Malraux for an honorary degree from Columbia University. Malraux, who was an author and the French minister of state in charge of cultural affairs, declined the degree
Box 492 Folder 18 to 19
Correspondence between Peppino Mangravite, chairman of the School of Painting and Sculpture at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the school. Topics include: exhibitions, scholarships, and the curriculum and programs of the school. Also, correspondence regarding attempts to establish a University arts center; correspondence regarding Mangravite's role as an arts ambassador for the University while he was on leave in Europe; and speeches and correspondence regarding art and art education
Box 667 Folder 19
Correspondence between Clarence Augustus Manning, professor of Slavonic languages at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Correspondence relates to the establishment and organization of the Institute of Czechoslovak Studies and the Institute of Polish Culture
Box 494 Folder 15 to 20
Correspondence between Winifred E. Mannion of the Payroll Department at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates the disbursement of retirement allowances, salary advances, and other types of payments to University employees
Box 666 Folder 5
Correspondence between Charles Halster Mapes and the president, secretary, and treasurer of Columbia University. Mapes, who was secretary of the Mapes Formula and Peruvian Guano Company, chaired the University Committee on Athletics.
Correspondence relates to intercollegiate athletics at Columbia.
Topics include: financial issues related to athletics; sports facilities; the Columbia-Fordham University baseball rivalry; the search for funding to resume football, which had been banned at the University since 1905 and plans to hire Hamilton Fish, Jr. as football coach. Includes a report discussing recommendations that the University resume its football program
Box 510 Folder 3 to 5
Correspondence between Paul A. Marks, dean of the Faculty of Medicine at Columbia University and vice president for medical affairs, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the schools and hospitals of Columbia's health sciences division.
Topics include: faculty affairs, the appointment of faculty and fellows, relations with area hospitals, relations with the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation, funding for medical research, policies governing research funding, budgeting and finances in the Faculty of Medicine, the administration of the Faculty of Medicine and the dean's office, and the business of various health sciences committees. Also, correspondence regarding Marks' appointment and personnel issues. Related records include: a letter regarding the classification of faculty positions and the creation of additional levels of faculty appointments (May 8, 1970), a draft of Marks' first annual report (March, 1971), a speech by Marks on health care education (November, 1970), correspondence regarding the School of Nursing, a report on proposed programs for a school of health sciences (June, 1971), and proposals regarding the revision of faculty tenure policies (April-June, 1971)
Box 396 Folder 14 to 16
Correspondence between Howard Rosario Marraro, executive officer of the Italian section of the Department of Romance Languages at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Most of the records consist of routine correspondence and cover letters. Records relating to the Italian Department consist of correspondence and budgets.
Topics include: payments to research assistants, budgeting, faculty affairs, expenditures, and gifts to the department. Includes announcements of the American Division of the Istituto per la Storia del Rosorgimente Italiano. Also, correspondence regarding Marraro's personnel issues and honorary degree from the University of Bologna. Includes copies of a number of his articles and papers
Box 671 Folder 6
A letter and a report regarding the need for public schools in the Morningside Heights neighborhood adjoining Columbia University. The materials were written and submitted to the University by John E. Marshall, an educational consultant
Box 447 Folder 16
Correspondence between Professor Lowell Arthur Martin, professor of library service and dean of the School of Library Service at Columbia University and high level University administrators. Records relate to the school.
Topics include: budgeting, personnel, and faculty appointments. Includes correspondence regarding the establishment of the degree of Doctor of Library Service. Also, correspondence regarding martin's personnel issues
Box 412 Folder 20
Correspondence between Andre Martinet, professor of linguistics at Columbia University, and the secretary and provost of the University. Martinet was executive officer of the Department of Indo-Iranian and Comparative Linguistics, which became the Department of General and comparative Linguistics. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the department.
Topics include: faculty appointments, the management of special funds, and faculty affairs. includes a proposal to establish a center for language instruction at the University. Also, correspondence regarding Martinet's personnel issues
Box 346 Folder 13
Correspondence between Daniel Gregory Mason, MacDonell Professor of Music at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University.
Correspondence relates to Mason's personnel issues and the Department of Music. Topics related to the department include: personnel, prizes, teaching loads, and arrangements for courses. Includes correspondence and a report (ca. 1917) on the role of music education in a liberal arts curriculum, a report dating from 1929 on the organization and curriculum of the department, and a report dating from 1929 on the University's choirs
Box 36 Folder 17
The records consist of lengthy and detailed correspondence, legal documents, transcripts, and student records documenting a petition from gil Gil Massa that Beatriz Massa de Gil be given credit for doctoral level courses in the School of Library Service. Includes correspondence between attorneys, consular officials, and Columbia administrators
Box 673 Folder 5
Correspondence between Adrian M. Massie, a trustee of Columbia University, and the president of the University. Correspondence relates to the trustees' committee on finance and the sub-committee on investments. Among other topics, the correspondence relates to a disagreement involving the strategies for seeking funding from the Rockefeller Foundation for the University medical center
Box 413 Folder 14 to 19
Correspondence between Troup Mathews, counselor to veterans and foreign student advisor at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Includes correspondence with officials from the United States Immigration and Naturalization Service. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the University's international student program and the Office of the Foreign Student Advisor. Also, correspondence, by-laws, and a report relating to the Greater New York council for Foreign Students (ca. 1949) and correspondence regarding Columbia's relations with the National Association of Foreign Student Advisors (ca. 1949).
Topics include: the establishment of Columbia's international student program, policies regarding international students, financial aid for international students, and immigration and visa issues for visiting students and faculty. Much of the correspondence relates to financial aid, in particular emergency financial aid for Chinese students from 1948 to 1951. Includes international student directories and a proposal for orientation lectures on American life to be given to international students. Topics related to the Office of the Foreign Student Advisor include: finances, budgeting, and programs
Box 331 Folder 4 to 5
Correspondence between Brander Matthews, professor of dramatic literature at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University regarding the Department of English and Comparative Literature and the Brander Matthews Dramatic Museum. Correspondence dated prior to 1908 relates to the conflict between Matthews and Professor George Woodbury over the administration of the department and the subsequent division of the department into the Department of Comparative Literature and the Department of English. Includes some correspondence between Matthews and Woodbury. Much of the correspondence dating from 1908 to 1924 relates to the Brander Matthews Dramatic Museum.
Topics include: the establishment and administration of the museum, gifts to the museum, and the acquisition of theater models. Includes: correspondence regarding arrangements for lectures on literature held during 1909 and 1910 Matthews' 1906 letter to the president of the University regarding the admission of women to his graduate course, and a speech which was given by Matthews in 1909. Also includes correspondence relating to Matthews' personnel issues and professional activities
Box 455 Folder 18
Correspondence between Professor Edwin B. Matzke of Columbia University and high level University administrators. Matzke's appointments included professor of botany and chairman of the Department of Botany. Correspondence relates to the department.
Topics include: faculty appointments, facilities, equipment, gifts to the department, personnel, faculty parking, and appropriations. Includes annual reports regarding research projects in the Laboratory of Plant Morphology during the mid-1950s and a printed copy of a speech that was given by Matzke at the New York Botannical Garden in June, 1959
Box 331 Folder 6
Correspondence between Professor Ralph E. Mayer and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Mayer held numerous appointments including professor of engineering drafting in the Department of Engineering and the Department of Mechanical Engineering, secretary of the Committee on Instruction of the Schools of Mines, Engineering and Chemistry, secretary of the Faculty of Applied Science, and chairman of the Committee on Instruction of the Faculty of Applied Science. Most of the correspondence is routine in nature.
Topics include: admissions, membership in the Faculty of Applied Science, and faculty appointments. Also, correspondence relating to Mayer's appointment and personnel issues
Box 662 Folder 2
Correspondence between Richmond Mayo-Smith, professor of political economy and social science in the Faculty of Political Science at Columbia University, and the president of the University.
Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects. Topics include: the publication of Mayo-Smith's book on statistics, the gathering of statistics on dependent children in New York City, and information regarding the value of currency that was requested by University president Seth Low. Also, correspondence and reports relating to Mayo-Smith's work on the Committee on Special Students. Includes discussions on admitting women graduate and undergraduate students to senior level courses in Columbia College
Box 347 Folder 1 to 7
Correspondence between Professor Howard Lee McBain of Columbia University and the president and secretary of the University. Mcbain held a number of appointments including: professor of municipal science and administration; administrative head of the Department of Public Law; Dean of the Faculties of Political Science, Philosophy and Pure Science; and chairman of the Council for Research in the Social Sciences.
Correspondence dating from 1913 to 1928 relates to the Department of Public Law and to McBain's personnel issues. Topics include: routine departmental business, faculty affairs, faculty appointments, and appointments to named professorships. Also, correspondence documenting the work of the Joint Committee on Graduate Instruction (ca. 1926-1928).
Correspondence dating from 1929 to 1936 relates the Faculties of Political Science, Philosophy, and Pure Science. Topics include the administration of departments in the Graduate Faculties and the evaluation of departmental performance and faculty. Includes correspondence regarding the Department of Fine Arts during the mid 1930s. Other topics include financial aid policies and the administration of fellowships and scholarships. Includes correspondence regarding the Cutting Traveling Fellowships. Additional topics relating to the Graduate Faculties include: faculty appointments, graduate student affairs, tissue involving graduate instruction, research appropriations, the management of the Special Fund for Research, and the 50th anniversary of the Faculty of Political Science. Records from this period also include some items of correspondence regarding the Department of Public Law. Also, reports of the Council for Research in the Social Sciences (ca. 1929-1935), correspondence documenting University relations with the National Institute of Public Administration (ca. 1930-1935), and correspondence and a proposal regarding studies in Asian cultures and the work of the Committee on the Japanese Culture Center (ca. 1929-1930). Includes correspondence relating to McBain's appointment, personnel matters, and death
Box 347 Folder 8 to 9
Correspondence between William H. McCastline and the president and secretary of Columbia University. McCastline was the college physician of Teachers College and, later, Columbia University's health and sanitary officer.
Correspondence relates to the establishment of the University Medical Service. Also, correspondence and reports regarding University health programs, student services, conditions in campus residence halls, and a variety of other health and safety issues. includes correspondence relating to McCastline's personnel issues
Box 673 Folder 4
Correspondence between Sandy McCaw, foreign student advisor at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects involving international students.
Topics include: visas and immigration issues, orientation, and events. Includes correspondence regarding a conflict between the Chinese Students Club and the Chinese Students Association. Also includes two copies of the 1960-1961 international student directory
Box 672 Folder 32
Correspondence between Robert E. McConnell and Columbia University administrators. McConnell was a benefactor of the University who offered funds to increase the number of engineering students in order to further American competition with the U.S.S.R. in the fields of science and engineering. Correspondence relates to his offer of financial assistance for students who transferred to the School of Engineering
Box 329 Folder 19 to 20
Correspondence between Nelson G. McCrea, Anthon Professor of Latin Language and Literature at Columbia University, and the president, secretary, and other high level administrators of the University. Correspondence relates to faculty appointments and personnel in the Department of Latin, which became the Department of Classical Philology. Incudes minutes of departmental meetings. McCrea was chairman of the Committee on Admissions. Topics related to admissions include: admissions requirements and policies, publicity, and the recruiting of candidates for admission. McCrea was also acting secretary of the College Entrance Examination Board. Board-related correspondence deals with committee memberships and the work of the Board in general
Box 329 Folder 21 to 22
Correspondence between Roswell C. McCrea and the president and secretary of Columbia University. McCrea was Hepburn Professor of Economics, head of the Department of Economics, and dean of the School of Business. Topics related to the School of Business include: faculty appointments, scholarships, prizes and awards, gifts, and personnel. Includes some correspondence regarding faculty in the Department of Economics. Correspondence dating from 1908 to 1910 is from McCrea while he was at the School of Philanthropy in New York City. Correspondence relates to the administration of the Henry Berg Foundation for the Promotion of Humane Education, arrangements for lectures sponsored by the foundation, and the preparation of a bibliography of works sponsored by the foundation. Includes reports regarding the foundation. Also, correspondence regarding McCrea's personnel issues and retirement
Box 673 Folder 7
Correspondence between John N. McDonnell and Grayson Kirk, the president of Columbia University. McDonnell was president of the College of Pharmacy of the City of New York, which was affiliated with Columbia.
Topics include: the relationship between the College of Pharmacy and the University, the acquisition of land for a new college building, changes in tuition levels, and fund raising for the college. Records include: several monthly reports on the college, pamphlets, and a report entitled "The Development Plan of the College of Pharmacy of the City of New York, Columbia University" in 1962.
Box 666 Folder 2
Correspondence between Professor Charles T. McFarlane and the president and secretary of Columbia University. McFarlane was a professor of geography and controller of Teachers College. Most of the correspondence relates to the routine financial business of the college.
Topics include: employee bonuses, gift funds, and printing costs. Includes correspondence regarding plans by New York City to acquire college property in the Bronx in order to construct a new road. Includes a blueprint of city plans for the property
Box 509 Folder 3 to 13
Correspondence between William J. McGill, president of Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Also includes correspondence between administrators regarding a variety of topics. The records include numerous subject files regarding various issues and events. Many of the records consist of McGill's speeches and statements. Among other subjects, McGill addressed such issues as: relations between students and the University, the state of higher education, the problems of urban universities, relations between Columbia and the surrounding community, and University finances. The records also consist of correspondence and press releases dating from McGill's term as president-elect.
Topics include: his appointment to the presidency, expenditures, faculty appointments, and publicity. Also: correspondence, lists, acceptance and regret letters, and minutes relating to McGill's inauguration; pages from his calendar, and one file of correspondence regarding McGill's personnel issues while he was on the faculty at Columbia between 1956 and 1965
Box 484 Folder 1 to 20
Box 485 Folder 1 to 20
Correspondence between Thomas A. McGoey and other Columbia University administrators. McGoey held appointments as director of residence halls, assistant business manager, business manager, vice president for business, and special consultant to the president. He also served on the University's Committee on Government Aided Research, which oversaw the administration of sponsored research projects. Most of the records dating from 1938 to 1949 consist of correspondence, budgets, and financial statements relating to Columbia's residence halls. Records dating from 1941 to 1945 also relate to the University during World War II. Records dating from 1949 to 1970 relate to Columbia's facilities, personnel, operations, and other business matters
Topics related to the administration of residence halls include: dormitory staff, budgeting and appropriations, furnishings, residence hall finances and financial planning, social and recreational facilities, dormitory operating costs, income from housing fees, room rates, the renovation of dormitories, and special housing needs and arrangements.
Includes records regarding individual residence hall employees. Also includes information on the John Jay Grill (January, 1939). Topics related to Columbia during and immediately following World War II include: Navy contracts governing housing and services for midshipmen who were enrolled in Columbia's naval training program, the University's post-war housing crisis, housing and services for veterans, and the management of the Shank's Village veterans' housing facility in Rockland County, New York. As business manager, McGoey oversaw the: personnel, buildings and grounds, purchasing, residence halls, food service, and construction offices as well as the University bookstore.
Topics related to Columbia's business affairs include: facilities, personnel administration, and campus services. Other topics include: equipment, the administration of contracts and sponsored projects, labor relations, the renovation and management of special facilities and laboratories, employee benefits, purchasing, the management of the physical plant, and the administration of the Department of Buildings and Grounds. Records include: correspondence regarding the Nevis Laboratories, Columbia's nuclear physics research facility and the site of the Nevis Cyclotron; budgets and correspondence relating to the Department of Buildings and Grounds; correspondence regarding the selection of architects for a proposed arts center (ca. 1955); records regarding the budget and administration of the Lamont Geological Observatory, Columbia's facility for education and research in the earth sciences; and a program from the second annual dinner of Columbia's Twenty-Five Year Club in honor of employees with 25 years of more of service (October, 1955).
In addition, McGoey chaired the Advisory Committee on Non-Academic Personnel Policy. Includes correspondence and some minutes regarding tuition exemption, labor relations, employee wages and benefits, and personnel policies. McGoey was also a member of the Manhattanville Neighborhood Association. Includes correspondence regarding Morningside Park. Only a small portion of the records date from 1967 to 1971. As vice president for business and special consultant to the president, McGoey continued to undertake many of the same responsibilities that he had assumed as business manager. In addition, the records also relate to campus security. includes a brief account of a protest against weapons research at the University and a flier related to the demonstration (September, 1970)
Box 500 Folder 9 to 13
Correspondence between Harold McGuire, president of the Alumni Federation of Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Most of the records relate to planning and funding for the construction of a University gymnasium in Morningside Park as well as the lease of park property from the New York City parks department. Correspondence also relates to the Alumni Federation, alumni relations, and alumni trustees. The records include routine invitations.
Records related to the Morningside Park Gymnasium project include copies of the first and second reports of the gymnasium committee. The reports include photographs of the gymnasium site, plans of the building and its community facilities, and a draft of the lease for land in Morningside Park. Records related to alumni issues include: a lengthy letter regarding the role and status of the Alumni Federation and the financial relationship between other alumni groups and the federation (December, 1958); a lengthy memorandum regarding alumni relations (July, 1959); and correspondence regarding amendments to the by-laws governing alumni trustees (ca. January-February, 1959)
Box 503 Folder 22 to 23
Correspondence between William James McGuire, professor of social psychology in the Department of Social Psychology at Columbia University, and University administrators. Most of the records relate to personnel issues
Box 413 Folder 1 to 13
Correspondence between Millicent C. McIntosh and high level administrators at Columbia University. The records consist of correspondence, budgets, reports, and publications relating to Barnard College, the women's college affiliated with Columbia. McIntosh was appointed dean of the college in 1947 and president of the college in 1952.
Topics include: cooperation between Barnard and Columbia, faculty salaries, college finances, budgeting, and development. Includes minutes of the Barnard College board and correspondence regarding trustee business. Also includes a report regarding the college curriculum (1948); the report on a survey of Barnard faculty, staff, students, and alumni regarding library services and facilities (1954); and correspondence discussing the college's policy regarding communist activities (1953). Also, correspondence regarding McIntosh's committee memberships and retirement
Box 667 Folder 16
Correspondence between Ralph H. McKee, professor of chemical engineering at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Includes correspondence between the president and Emory R. Bruckner, a United States attorney, and William J. Donovan, assistant to the attorney general. Correspondence relates to: McKee's testimony in the case of United States vs. Standard Oil Company, inquiries into McKee's conduct while serving as an engineer for Parmac Porcupine Mines, and questions of witness intimidation involving the case that were raised by the United States Department of Justice
Box 661 Folder 30
Letters from Columbia University president Seth Low to William McKinley. Several of the letters relate to international affairs and several contain Low's recommendations regarding McKinley's appointments of the: ambassador to England, librarian of Congress, and superintendent of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey. Includes one brief letter from McKinely.
Box 376 Folder 1 to 15
Correspondence between Nicholas M. McKnight and the high level administrators of Columbia University. McKnight held numerous appointments including associate dean of Columbia College, acting dean of the college, dean of students in Columbia College, director of the Columbia University Civil Defense Program, chairman of the Committee on Student Loans, chairman of the Committee on Eligibility, and chairman of the Committee on Physical Plans for the Citizenship Center. Most of the correspondence relates to student affairs and the administration of Columbia College, the University's undergraduate college
Topics related to the administration of the college include: housing policies, facilities, scholarships, fellowships, the management of special funds, gifts to the college, and prizes. During World War II, McKnight served as acting dean of the college. Correspondence from this period also relates to faculty affairs, teaching loads, course scheduling, and teaching assignments. Includes correspondence and reports documenting the University's war-related activities and programs including the V-12 naval training program, and the Naval Reserve officers Training Corps. Also includes a report regarding the Committee on Volunteer Participation, which organized student groups to help with the war effort (ca. 1942). Topics related to student life and student organizations include: the supervision and financial administration of student organizations, athletic eligibility, the recruiting of candidates for admission, student social life, and disciplinary issues. Includes correspondence and reports regarding fraternities.
Topics include fraternity housing and the University's policies regarding fraternities' discriminatory membership clauses. Also includes correspondence regarding the need for a student center and a proposal for a citizenship center. These records relate to the establishment of Ferris Booth Hall, the University's student center. In addition, the records include correspondence and reports regarding student loans (ca. 1933-1956). Topics include: fund management, the balance of the student loan fund, and statistics on amounts loaned. Includes a report, dating from 1951 which discusses the University's scholarship and fellowship program
Box 661 Folder 33 to 35
Correspondence between James W. McLane and the president of Columbia University. McLane's appointments included professor of obstetrics, president of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, and dean of the college of Physicians and Surgeons.
Topics include: the merger of the University and the college in 1891 college affiliates, the Sloane hospital for Women and the Vanderbilt Clinic; the construction of new facilities at the college campus on 59th street; plans to establish a dental school (ca. April-May, 1892) and a new hospital (ca. November, 1893); the medical education of women (December, 1898); lobbying efforts involving state legislation governing cadavers (ca. 1892 and 1895) and medical examinations (February, 1896); and fundraising, including relations with the Vanderbilt family (ca. 1885 and 1902)
Box 475 Folder 8 to 18
Box 476 Folder 1 to 10
Correspondence between Edward B. McMenamin and other high level administrators at Columbia University. McMenamin's appointments included associate provost and director of student interests, associate provost, associate provost and director of personnel, and secretary of the University.
Correspondence dating from 1957 to 1961 relates to student organizations, preparations for events and meetings, and the administration of faculty and staff personnel. Includes records related to the University Council. Most of the records date from McMenamin's term as secretary of the University during the 1960s.
Correspondence from this period relates to the numerous responsibilities of the Office of the Secretary.
Also, correspondence regarding McMenamin's personnel issues and appointments. Topics related to student organizations include the recognition of official student organizations and the oversight of finances, events, and other issues involving student groups. Includes correspondence relating to the Committee on Student Organizations. Topics related to faculty and staff personnel include: retirement plans and other benefits for faculty, non-academic staff personnel policies, faculty personnel policies, loans to faculty members, faculty affairs, and procedures for personnel administration. Includes correspondence (ca. 1958) and a report (dated October, 1957) regarding the development of job classifications for departmental research associates.
Records dating from 1957 to 1961 also include correspondence relating to the Committee on Administrative Statistics and the Radiation Safety Office. Most of the records relate to the responsibilities of the secretary's office. The Office of the Secretary is one of the top administrative offices in the University. The secretary and his staff handled numerous, University-wide administrative tasks; issues involving faculty personnel; and trustee business.
Topics include: the administration of the offices that reported to the secretary, the business and membership of numerous University committees, University mailings, the management of the secretary's office, fellowships and scholarships, awards, ceremonies, events, and the issuing of University credentials.
Includes lists of scholarship and fellowship recipients. Topics related to faculty personnel include: procedures for the preparation of faculty appointment letters, tuition exemption, the appointment of professors emeriti, and faculty job classifications. Includes minutes of the Committee on Insurance and Retirement (December 13, 1961). Topics related to trustee affairs include preparations for meetings and routine trustee business. Also, resolutions, agenda, minutes, and working papers relating to the University Council. Topics include council business, council membership, and a variety of subjects related to the academic affairs of the University
Box 666 Folder 3
Correspondence between Emerson McMillin, a benefactor of Columbia University, and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of the University. Includes correspondence with the secretary and chief clerk of the University. Records relate to McMillin's gift in support of a building for Columbia's new business school as well as negotiations and plans for the construction of the building. Includes correspondence regarding the postponement of construction and the re-drafting of the terms of the gift. Also includes project budgets
Box 666 Folder 4
Correspondence between Douglas C. McMurtrie and: the secretary of Columbia University; the treasurer of the "Columbia Daily Spectator", the student newspaper of Columbia College; and Walter Mohr, the University proctor and chief clerk. McMurtrie appears to have been head of the University Printing Office. Correspondence relates to the operation of the printing office between 1915 and 1918. Records include: several memoranda on improving facilities and services in the office, a report on the facilities and services of the Harvard University Press, and a letter describing the adverse working conditions for employees in the office
Box 670 Folder 12
Correspondence between William J. McNamara, executive officer of the Department of Air Science and Tactics at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to administrative issues involving the Air Force Reserve Officers' Training Corps (AFROTC). Includes correspondence regarding awards presented to students in the department
Box 661 Folder 31 to 32
Correspondence between Leonard B. McWhood and the president of Columbia University. McWhood's appointments included assistant in music, tutor in music, and adjunct professor of music. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects.
Topics include: the curriculum and needs of the music department (ca. 1904), the establishment of the Faculty of Fine Arts (1904), the University's glee club, the chapel organist, and public concerts. Also, correspondence (ca. 1898-1901) regarding exhibitions at Omaha, Nebraska, and Buffalo, New York, which were designed to promote the University and recruit students from the west. Also, correspondence regarding McWhood's disagreements with the head of the music department and his subsequent resignation in 1904. Also includes reprints of two articles by McWhood, The Function of Music in the College Curriculum and The Present Status of Music in Colleges. Both articles date from 1907
Box 671 Folder 39
Correspondence between Indian ambassador G. L. Mehta and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the honorary degree that was awarded to Mehta at Columbia's 3rd Bicentennial Convocation. Includes copies of speeches by Mehta
Box 447 Folder 17
Correspondence between Seymour Melman, professor of industrial engineering at Columbia University, and University administrators. Most of the correspondence relates to payments to research and clerical assistants. Includes a copy of a memorandum dated December, 1960 from Melman to Senator John Kennedy regarding arms control and disarmament
Box 396 Folder 17 to 18
Correspondence between Ward Melville, a trustee of Columbia University, and the acting president, secretary, and other trustees of the University. Melville served on the trustee committees on education, buildings and grounds, honors, and finance. Topics include: campus planning, faculty appointments, administrative appointments, nominations for honorary degrees, and trustee business. Includes many cover letters, routine correspondence, and invitations
Box 670 Folder 54
Correspondence between Karl Heinrich Menges, associate professor of Altaic philosophy, and Columbia University administrators. Correspondence relates to the establishment of a department of Uralic and Altaic languages at Columbia.
Topics include faculty affairs, the proposed departmental curriculum, and controversy regarding the selection of an executive officer for the department. Also, correspondence regarding Menges' personnel issues and housing needs. Includes complaint letters from Mrs. Carl Menges regarding living conditions and the activities of students and other tenants in their apartment building. Also includes correspondence regarding an attack on Menges in 1960
Box 662 Folder 3
Correspondence between Augustus C. Merriam, professor of Greek archeology and epigrahpy at Columbia University, and University president Seth Low. Merriam also chaired the Committee on Entrance Examinations. Correspondence relates to University entrance examinations and the departments of Greek and Latin.
Topics include: Merriam's reluctance to accept New York State Board of Regents certificates, administrative issues regarding entrance examinations, Merriam's ideas regarding graduation requirements for Greek and Latin and the types of degrees to be offered by classics departments, and the organization of the departments of Greek and Latin
Box 499 Folder 1 to 20
Box 498 Folder 1 to 19
Box 500 Folder 1 to 8
Correspondence between Hiram Houston Merrit and high level administrators at Columbia University. Merrit's appointments included dean of Columbia's College of Physicians and Surgeons and vice president in charge of medical affairs. Most of the records dating from 1958 to 1964 consist of routine correspondence and form letters.
Topics include personnel issues and appointments for faculty, fellows, and research personnel and the recording of payments on gifts in support of medical research and instruction. Records dating from 1964 to 1970 are somewhat more substantive than the earlier materials.
In addition to faculty, fellows, and research appointments, correspondence from this period relates to: development, relations with area hospitals, appropriations, and the use of special funds. Includes many curriculum vitae and lists of appointees. Also, reports, correspondence and other records relating to the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center (CPMC) and reports, tables, and correspondence on the center's development fund. Also includes correspondence regarding Merrit's personnel issues and retirement. Records of interest include a letter regarding research funding procedures and policies at the CPMC (February, 1964); a report on the history of the administration of the CPMC (February, 1964); and a draft of a promotional report on the medical center (August, 1959).
Among other topics, the report discusses medical care and research at the center. Other records of interest include: a report by Merrit in which he advises a colleague on the planning of a medical school for the University of Central Venezuela (August, 1961); a program from a series of lectures in celebration of the anniversary of the Institute of Cancer Research at the Francis Delafield Hospital (March, 1962); a report on dental education at Columbia (February, 1965); a proposal for the establishment of the International Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction (September, 1965); a photograph of Merrit (December, 1963); a statement regarding the severing of relations between Columbia and Bellevue Hospital (December, 1966); reports and correspondence regarding the Department of Nursing and nursing education (ca. October-November, 1967); and correspondence and a press release regarding relations with Harlem Hospital and the New York City Department of Hospitals
Box 399 Folder 13 to 16
Correspondence between Robert King Merton, professor of sociology and executive officer of the Department of Sociology at Columbia University, and the president, provost and other University administrators. Includes correspondence with funding agencies. Most of the records consist of correspondence and proposals relating to the Bureau of Applied Social Research and the Department of Sociology. Topics related to the Bureau of Applied Social Research include: the administration of grants and research projects, expenditures, awards, and funding for the Bureau and the Council for Research in the Social Sciences. Topics related to the Department of Sociology include: faculty appointments, staffing needs, enrollment, facilities, and personnel issues. Includes proposals, correspondence, and reports documenting actual and proposed programs and studies in the Bureau and the Department.
Topics include: a proposed center for advanced training in sociology (ca. October, 1950), a proposed affiliation with the Rural Settlement Institute (1946), and a proposed health care conference (1954). Also includes correspondence regarding a project to study letters which were sent to Dwight D. Eisenhower regarding his candidacy for president. Includes an abstract of the letters (October, 1949)
Box 455 Folder 19 to 20
Correspondence between Walter P. Metzger, secretary of the Council for Research in the Social Sciences at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. The records consist of vouchers for payments to research and clerical assistants and other expenditures involving council-sponsored projects.
Box 662 Folder 4
Correspondence between Anna E. H. Meyer, secretary of Barnard College, and the secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Barnard College, the undergraduate women's college affiliated with Columbia.
Topics include: faculty appointments, membership on the college's board of trustees and trustee committees, the preparation of the college catalog, prizes, honors, and examination schedules
Box 662 Folder 5
Correspondence between Annie Nathan Meyer and the president of Columbia University. Meyer was a trustee of Barnard College, the undergraduate women's college affiliated with Columbia. She also chaired the committee on education and was a member of the committee on finance. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects.
Topics include: the education of women, trustee affairs, the relationship between Barnard and Columbia, the division of faculty member's teaching responsibilities between Barnard and the University, and Meyer's work on the education and finance committees
Box 331 Folder 7
Correspondence between George L. Meylan, medical director of Columbia University's gymnasium and professor of physical education, and the president and secretary of the University. Topics include: curriculum and programs in physical education and hygiene; the administration of the University's medical services, physical education programs, and gymnasium; the medical examination of students; and advice to students on health and exercise. Includes a brief exchange of letters regarding Meylan's involvement in recreation programs for French soldiers during World War I. Also includes correspondence relating to his appointment and personnel issues
Box 669 Folder 40
Correspondence between Jerome Michael, professor of law at Columbia University, and the vice president and provost of the University. Michael chaired a committee that studied a proposal for an affiliation between The Town Hall theater and Columbia. Includes the committee's report and promotional pamphlets regarding the theater
Box 490 Folder 16 to 17
Correspondence between Phyllis Michelfelder and Columbia University administrators. Michelfelder served as director of public relations for Barnard College, the undergraduate women's college affiliated with columbia. She was later appointed director of college relations for Columbia College, the Univeristy's undergraduate college. Correspondence relates to publicity for conferences and numerous other events, public relations strategy, and alumni relations
Box 679 Folder 27
Correspondence regarding the visit to Columbia University by Mikasa no Miya Takahito, Prince of Japan. Includes correspondence between University faculty members and administrators as well as correspondence with the consul general of Japan
Box 348 Folder 22 to 23
Correspondence between John G. Milburn, a trustee of Columbia University and chairman of the trustee committee on legal affairs, the president of the University, and the clerk of the board of trustees.
Topics include: University government and administration; bequests to the University; the membership of the board of trustees of Barnard College, a women's college affiliated with Columbia; relations with area hospitals; and the creation of Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center. Includes correspondence from President Butler which discusses his views on University government. Also includes a 1923 report on the Pulitzer Prize Fund and correspondence (ca. 1917) regarding the dismissal of Professor James McKeen Cattell
Box 412 Folder 21
Correspondence between Clyde R. Miller, professor of education in Teachers College at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the controversy involving Miller's attempts to rescind the Pulitzer Prize that had been awarded to Frederick Woltman of the New York World Telegram. The records also relate to Miller's dismissal; his involvement in the Methodist Church; and academic freedom
Box 662 Folder 6
Correspondence between Dickinson Sergeant Miller, professor of philosophy at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Much of the correspondence relates to the University chaplain and the chaplain's advisory committee. Includes correspondence regarding the appointment of Chaplain Raymond Knox. Also includes committee minutes. Other records include: correspondence regarding the philosophy curriculum, appointment letters, and a book of philosophy and psychology essays in honor of Professor William James
Box 434 Folder 17
Correspondence between Donald B. Miller, assistant to the dean of the School of Engineering at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Includes correspondence with the dean of the engineering school. Records relate to the school. Topics include: facilities, finances, scheduling, personnel, recruiting, faculty affairs, special funds, and scholarships. Includes correspondence regarding the Jay L. White Student Loan Fund
Box 457 Folder 11 to 12
Correspondence between Edgar J. Miller, dean of the Graduate Faculties at Columbia University, and University administrators. The Graduate Faculties were comprised of the Faculty of Political Science, Faculty of Philosophy, and Faculty of Pure Science.
Topics include: degree requirements, tuition exemption, faculty appointments, arrangements for Ph.D. examinations, fellowships, and expenditures. Much of the correspondence relates to faculty members' travel expenditures. Also, reports (ca. 1954-1955) of the Special Committee on Tuition Exemption for University Personnel
Box 662 Folder 7
Correspondence between Edmund H. Miller, adjunct professor of analytical chemistry and assaying at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Miller also chaired the American Chemical Society and the University's Committee on Admissions to the Schools of Applied Science. Correspondence relates to the Schools of Applied Science.
Topics include: faculty appointments, admissions, and the restructuring of professional and undergraduate science programs and degrees. Includes correspondence relating to meetings of the American Chemical Society.
Box 398 Folder 16 to 20
Correspondence between Frederick R. Miller, director of the Department of Buildings and Grounds at Columbia University, and University faculty and administrators. The records consist of correspondence, budgets, floor plans, and financial records relating to: the maintenance, management, and construction of University buildings; the administration of the Department of Buildings and Grounds; and buildings and grounds services. Includes floor plans and correspondence relating to renovations, daily operations, and maintenance at the University's Nevis Estate (ca. 1950). The estate, which is located in Irvington-on-Hudson New York, was used as a research facility and was the site of Columbia's Nevis Cyclotron
Box 672 Folder 44
Correspondence between Julian M. Miller, associate professor of chemistry at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to Miller's personnel issues
Box 412 Folder 22
Correspondence between J. Marshall Miller, associate professor of planning and director of the Planning and Housing Division of the School of Architecture at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to urban planning work in the School of Architecture. Includes correspondence regarding a conference on community planning that was held at the University in June, 1947. Also includes a proposal to build a parking garage next to Columbia's University Hall. Also, correspondence regarding Miller's personnel issues
Box 668 Folder 55
Correspondence between James Alexander Miller and the acting president and provost of Columbia University. Miller was a University trustee. Correspondence relates to the DuBois Fellowship and honorary degrees. Includes a list of honorary degree nominations for the 1947-1948 academic year
Box 667 Folder 31
Correspondence between Linda R. Miller, a benefactor of Columbia University, and the president of the University. Correspondence relates to Miller's gift to establish the Nathan J. Miller Chair in Jewish History and Culture and the subsequent efforts to find a candidate for the post who was acceptable to both Miller and the University. Includes correspondence between the president of the University and candidates for the post
Box 495 Folder 15
Correspondence between Margaret M. Miller, advisor to women students at Columbia University, and University administrators. Most of the correspondence relates to the administration of the graduate student lounge in room 301 Philosophy Hall.
Topics include: budgeting, expenditures, and gifts. Includes statistical reports on female graduate students at Columbia dating from 1954 to 1955
Box 671 Folder 67
Correspondence between Philip J. Miller, service supervisor in the Department of Physics at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Records relate to the department.
Topics include: salaries, expenditures, facilities, the use of the Pupin Fund, and classroom assignments and scheduling. Includes a statistical analysis of the departmental budget
Box 662 Folder 8
Correspondence between Frank D. Millet, secretary of the American Academy in Rome, and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University. Millet also served on the Columbia University Advisory Committee on Art. Most of the correspondence relates to the American Academy in Rome.
Topics include: Butler's appointment as a trustee of the academy, student affairs, finances, and information on the minutes and by-laws of the academy. Includes a booklet that describes the academy and its origins. Also includes detailed letters from George W Breck, director of the American Academy in Rome, to Millet. The letters discuss students and finances. Also, letters regarding a portrait of butler that was painted by Millet. The only records that relate to the Advisory Committee on Art consist of correspondence regarding Millet's appointment to the committee
Box 412 Folder 23
Correspondence between John David Millett, professor of public administration at Columbia University, and University president Grayson Kirk. Most of the records consist of routine correspondence, cover letters and invitations. Includes correspondence regarding Kirk's address at Millett's inaugural as president of Miami University in Ohio
Box 414 Folder 1
Correspondence between C. Wright Mills, professor of sociology at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the management of Mill's research account.
Topics include payments to research and clerical assistants. Also, correspondence regarding Mill's personnel issues
Box 396 Folder 19
Correspondence between Frederick C. Mills, professor of economics and executive officer of the Department of Economics at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Mills also chaired the Executive Committee of the Council for Research in the Social Sciences. Records include correspondence and budgets.
Topics include degree requirements, faculty appointments, and personnel in the Department of Economics (1945-1946) and Mills' personnel issues (ca. 1947-1954). Also, correspondence and reports regarding research funding. Related topics include a proposed biopsychology project (ca. 1946) and a grant to improve the University's facilities and personnel for research in the behavioral sciences (ca. 1950-1951)
Box 405 Folder 21
Correspondence between Professor Dwight C. Miner of Columbia University and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the Department of History.
Topics include: salaries, appointments, budgeting, personnel, and faculty affairs. In 1946 Miner was appointed to edit the University's bicentennial publications and write a history of the University. Includes plans for the publication of histories which were produced for the University's bicentennial celebration in 1954
Box 668 Folder 24
Correspondence between Leonard L. Minthorne and Columbia University administrators. Minthorne was a Columbia alumnus and benefactor. Correspondence relates to his gift to establish a scholarship in support of one year of graduate study at Columbia for graduates of Pacific College in Oregon. Includes correspondence regarding the selection of a female student to receive a scholarship for the School of Journalism
Box 671 Folder 38
Correspondence between Gabriela Mistral and the president and vice president of Columbia University. Mistral was a writer, Chilean counsel, and recipient of the Nobel Prize for Literature. Correspondence relates to the honorary degree that was granted to Mistral by Columbia University in 1954. Includes biographical information regarding Mistral
Box 662 Folder 9 to 11
Correspondence between Edward Mitchell and the president of Columbia University. Mitchell was a trustee of the University and served as chairman of the trustee committees on finance and education. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects.
Topics include: the merger between Columbia and the College of Physicians and Surgeons, University finances, funding for the construction of Kent Hall, and issues involving degrees and the curriculum. Includes a letter detailing Mitchell's opposition to the appointment of alumni trustees, which provides an historical perspective on the issues of alumni representation on the board (May 6, 1907). Also includes a letter and clippings regarding a hazing incident in which a freshman fired a gun and a letter from a student regarding cheating at the University (January 23, 1905)
Box 662 Folder 12
Correspondence between Professor Henry Bedinger Mitchell and the president of Columbia University. Mitchell held appointments as professor of mathematics and secretary of the Faculty of Columbia College. He also chaired the Committee on Admissions and the Committee on Instruction. Records dating from 1900 to 1904 consist of several letters relating to Mitchell's appointment as a tutor. Records dating from 1905 to 1918 consist of detailed correspondence relating to: entrance examinations, the University's curriculum, admissions requirements, and graduation requirements. Also, correspondence regarding Mitchell's plan to open the University's library and athletic facilities to alumni and correspondence regarding the establishment of a course on the fundamentals of religion
Box 666 Folder 7
Correspondence betweem Samuel A. Mitchell and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Mitchell was an assistant professor in the Department of Astronomy and secretary of the Faculty of Columbia College. Correspondence relates to: membership in the Faculty of Columbia College, the evaluation of the state of astronomy at Columbia and long-range plans for the astronomy department, Mitchell's work at the Yerkes Observatory, and his eventual resignation from the University
Box 667 Folder 34
Correspondence between Wesley Clair Mitchell, professor of economics at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Correspondence relates to the Department of Economics. Topics include: budgeting, the role of the department in the University, and faculty salaries
Box 495 Folder 16
Correspondence between William J. Mitchell, professor of music and acting chairman of the Department of Music at Columbia University, and University administrators.
Correspondence relates to the department and to preparations for a 200th anniversary festival honoring Mozart. Topics related to the department include: the search for a new departmental chairman, finances, and equipment. Topics related to the Mozart Festival include: scheduling, programming, reservations, finances, and membership on the festival committee. Also, routine correspondence regarding the awarding of the Bearns Prize (1963) and correspondence relating to Mitchell's personnel issues
Box 414 Folder 2 to 13
Correspondence between Charles W. Mixer, assistant director of the Columbia University Libraries, and the acting president and provost of the University. Correspondence relates to the administration and operations of the University's libraries.
Topics include: personnel administration, collection management, acquisitions, appropriations, expenditures, the management and renovation of library facilities, development, and financial administration. Includes many routine acknowledgement letters regarding gifts to the libraries. Includes the constitution of the Columbia University Library Staff Association (1948) and correspondence regarding the Edith Elmer Wood library (ca. 1947) and the Bancroft Prize
Box 666 Folder 8
Correspondence between Paul Monroe, professor of the history of education and dean of Teachers College, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Includes correspondence with J. E. Woodbridge, dean of the University's Faculties of Political Science, Philosophy, and Pure Science. Correspondence concerns relations between columbia and Teachers College.
Topics include faculty appointments and financial matters. Records include: a memorandum outlining reasons for continued cooperation between the two institutions (December 12, 1914); letters proposing a Columbia school of political science at Peking University in China; and a memorandum on standardizing course numbers throughout the University
Box 666 Folder 9
Correspondence between William P. Montague, professor of philosophy in Barnard College at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the Hewlitt Lectures in 1912. Also, correspondence relating to Montague's protest over the dismissal of Professor Albert A. Livingston, who appears to have been dismissed from the University in 1917 as a result of his scandalous divorce. Includes a transcript of Montague's comments on academic freedom and pacifism
Box 382 Folder 10 to 20
Correspondence between Douglas Moore, professor of music at Columbia University, and the president, secretary and provost of the University. Correspondence relates to the Department of Music, the University's choirs, and music funds and prizes. Topics related to the Department of Music include: budgeting, appropriations, workshops, equipment, faculty appointments, the curriculum, arrangements for concerts, prizes, faculty affairs, and the purchase of musical scores and recordings. Includes departmental budgets. Includes correspondence documenting the effect of World War II on the department, correspondence regarding Columbia's Core Curriculum, and a report and five year plan (ca. 1954) on the departmental library. Also, correspondence regarding: the Alice M. Ditson Fund, which was established to support musicians and music programs; the Bearns Prize, which supported the publication of American music; and disbursements to musicians and music programs from the Pulitzer Prize Fund. Includes minutes of the Committee on the Alice M. Ditson Fund. Also, correspondence and reports relating to the conflict between the Department of Music and the chapel music director over the administration of the Chapel Choir. Also includes correspondence regarding Moore's personnel issues and professional activities as well as clippings and programs regarding The Ballad of Baby Doe, an operetta which was written by Moore
Box 662 Folder 13
Correspondence between Henry L. Moore, adjunct professor of political economy at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Correspondence relates to Moore's personnel issues. Includes a very brief letter which mentions the Committee on Social Settlements and the issue of University privileges for settlement workers
Box 430 Folder 19
Correspondence between John Alexander Moore, executive officer of the Department of Zoology at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the department. Topics include: budgeting, facilities, appropriations, personnel, faculty appointments and recruiting, prizes, and special funds
Box 331 Folder 8 to 9
Correspondence between John Bassett Moore, Hamilton Fish Professor of international Law and Diplomacy in the School of Political Science at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Much of the correspondence relates to the administration of an international law program in the School of Political Science.
Topics include: faculty appointments, staffing needs, arrangements for courses, and prizes. Also, correspondence and other records regarding the Legislative drafting Research Fund. Includes a 1913 report of the Administrative Board of the Legislative Drafting Research Fund. Also, correspondence regarding Moore's personnel issues and professional activities including correspondence from Moore while he was at the Department of State during the Spanish-American War
Box 495 Folder 17 to 21
Correspondence between Maurice T. Moore, chairman of Columbia University's board of trustees, and high level University administrators. Most of the records consist of correspondence, invitations, and acknowledgement letters relating to trustee business. Related topics include: scheduling meetings and events, membership on trustee committees, the selection of new trustees, and the administration of the Trustees Room in Low Memorial Library. Also, correspondence and other records regarding a variety of topics related to the University and higher education. Records include: correspondence regarding the reform of the University budget system, in particular budgeting for Columbia College; Moore's speech, "The Case for Columbia", which discusses the nature and mission of the University's development program (1959); correspondence and clippings regarding corporate aid to higher education (ca. 1957); and a letter regarding the suspension of military recruiting at Columbia in 1967 (December 27, 1967). Also, routine correspondence and other records regarding a dinner in honor of Moore, his official portrait, his retirement as chairman of the board, the establishment of the Maurice T. Moore Professorship, and his honorary degree from the University (ca. 1967-1968)
Box 385 Folder 17 to 21
Correspondence between Robert Moore and Columbia University administrators. Moore held a number of posts including secretary of appointments, director of the Office of Non-Academic Staff Personnel, and director of the Placement Bureau. The records consist of correspondence, reports, minutes, and proposals relating to student and alumni job placement services, University personnel policies and personnel administration, employee wages and benefits, and the establishment of a five-day work week at the University. The Appointments Office and, later, the Placement Bureau were responsible for job placement services for students and alumni. The Central Personnel Office, which became the Office of Non-Academic Staff Personnel, administered all non-academic employees - except for the buildings and Grounds Department stafThe office also oversaw instructors and visiting scholars. Includes a personnel procedures handbook. Also includes correspondence regarding veterans' affairs and the University Guide Service
Box 386 Folder 9
Correspondence between Pablo Morales Otero, director of the School of Tropical Medicine in Puerto Rico, and the provost and secretary of Columbia University. Most of the correspondence relates to faculty appointments and the preparation of school announcements and reports
Box 430 Folder 20 to 21
Correspondence between Henry G. Moran, professor of naval science at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Records relate to the Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps (NROTC) program at Columbia. Topics include: space needs, student affairs, budgeting, housing, and faculty appointments. Includes a copy of the program's requirements for 1953
Box 331 Folder 10
Correspondence between J. Pierpont Morgan and his staff and Columbia University presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray Butler. Most of the correspondence relates to the purchase and funding of Columbia's Morningside Heights campus and the University's appeals to Morgan for funding
Box 346 Folder 14 to 15
Correspondence between Professor Ora S. Morgan of the Department of Agriculture at Columbia University and the president and secretary of the University. Also includes copies of correspondence between other faculty members in the department. Correspondence relates to agriculture courses which were offered through Extension Teaching, Columbia's continuing education division.
Topics include the administration and funding of the program. Also, correspondence and proposals regarding plans to establish a national agriculture foundation and an institute of rural affairs (ca. 1930) and correspondence (ca. 1930) relating to the University Committee on Rural Affairs. Also includes a proposal for a study of European agricultural policy by Rexford G. Tugwell
Box 666 Folder 10
Correspondence between Thomas Hunt Morgan, professor of zoology at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to Morgan's lecture on heredity and gender, which was given as part of the Jessup Lectures. Includes correspondence regarding the publication of the lecture by Columbia University Press. Also includes a report entitled Provisional Report of the Committee on Promotion of the Appreciation of Research
Box 666 Folder 11
Correspondence between William Fellowes Morgan and the president, secretary, treasurer, and clerk of the board of Columbia University. Morgan was a Columbia alumnus, a trustee of the University, and a member of the Graduate Advisory Committee of the Columbia University Christian Association. Correspondence relates to Morgan's activities as an alumnus and trustee. In particular, the records relate to his support for the Columbia University Christian Association and work on the trustees' library committee. Includes a letter that discusses the need for a committee to oversee religious activities
Box 457 Folder 13 to 14
Correspondence between Richard Brandon Morris, chairman of the Department of History at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to Morris' personnel issues, payments to his research assistants, and the business of the Department of History. Much of the correspondence is routine. Topics related to the department include: faculty affairs, faculty appointments, and appropriations. Includes agenda of the executive committee of the department. Also includes information regarding the John Jay Papers. Morris also chaired the Mayor's Task Force on Municipal Archives. Includes a report of the task force dating from 1967
Box 352 Folder 19
Correspondence between Morton J. Dudley, an associate professor in the Department of Anatomy at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the African Anatomical Expedition, which was sponsored by the University and the American Museum of Natural History. In 1929 the expedition traversed the Congo River in search of gorillas for use as specimens.
Topics include the funding, purpose, and staffing of the expedition. Includes a proposal for the project and a map of the route that was followed by the expedition. Records dating from 1956 consist of proposals for a research project involving physics and genetics
Box 108 Folder 27
Correspondence and a report regarding the demotion, reinstatement, and subsequent resignation of Elly M. Moschides, director of the Harlem hospital blood bank. Records relate to the terms of her demotion and reinstatement as well as charges brought against her for discrimination and falsifying her credentials
Box 434 Folder 18 to 20
Correspondence between Professor Philip E. Mosely of Columbia University and high level University administrators. Mosely held appointments as professor of international relations, director of the University's Russian Institute, and associate dean of the Faculty of International Affairs. Most of records consist of correspondence, budgets, and reports relating to the Russian Institute and related programs. Also, correspondence and a proposal (ca. 1951) regarding plans for a center for the study of labor movements and a small amount of correspondence regarding a variety of topics related to the Faculty of International Affairs (ca. 1968-1969).
Topics related to the Russian Institute include: fellowships, research and publications, personnel, and relations with Eastern European universities and organizations. Includes correspondence documenting the Administrative Committee of the Russian Institute and copies of the institute's alumni newsletter. Other related records include correspondence, financial records, and a proposal regarding a Russian language training program for the United States Air Force that was run by the institute in 1953. Among other topics, the records document the finances and curriculum of the program. Also, correspondence regarding the establishment of an archive of Russian and Eastern European history at the University, which may have been the predecessor of the University's Bakhmeteff Archive. Includes the minutes of the Executive Committee of the Archive of Russian and East European History and Culture
Box 18 Folder 26
Correspondence between Hermann A. Moser assistant professor of biochemistry at Columbia University, and the provost of the University. Includes correspondence with David Rittenberg, chairman of the department of Biochemistry at Columbia's College of Physicians and Surgeons. Correspondence relates to Moser's appointment and a dispute regarding the terms of his resignation
Box 662 Folder 15
Correspondence between Professor Alfred J. Moses and Columbia University president Nicholas Murray Butler. Moses was a professor of mineralogy and chairman of the Division of Geology, Geography, and Mineralogy. Correspondence relates to the division.
Topics include: faculty appointments, courses in mineralogy, and the Egleston Mineralogical museum. Includes correspondence regarding the theft of gold and platinum specimens from the museum. Also, correspondence regarding the construction of Havermeyer Hall and the division's move to the hall as well as correspondence regarding Moses' study abroad in 1896
Box 487 Folder 19 to 22
Correspondence between Robert Moses and high level Columbia University administrators during Moses' term as commissioner of the City of New York Department of Parks. Much of the correspondence is with Grayson Kirk, president of Columbia. Correspondence relates to the development of Morningside Park, which bordered the eastern pedge of Columbia's Morningside Heights campus on the upper west side of Manhattan.
Topics include: Columbia's plans to build a gymnasium in the park, Moses' thoughts on the gymnasium project, and the leasing of park land to the University. Includes a draft of an agreement between the city and the University for the construction of a gym. Also: speeches by Moses; a brief exchange of letters regarding academic freedom, which resulted from a critique of the 1964 World Fair by a Columbia professor; and correspondence regarding urban planning, campus planning, and Columbia's community services
Box 662 Folder 14
Correspondence between Alfred Mosley and Columbia University president Nicholas Murray Butler. Correspondence relates to a study of education in the United States and Germany which was funded by Mosley, who hoped to report the findings to the British public.
Topics include arrangements for English educators to tour the United States. Also, correspondence regarding attempts to arrange an intercollegiate athletic competition. Includes Butler's comments on athletics at Columbia (November 18, 1897)
Box 509 Folder 14
Correspondence between Melvin L. Moss, dean of the School of Dental and Oral Surgery at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the school.
Topics include: staffing needs, personnel, gifts to the school, accreditation, relations with Presbyterian Hospital, relations with the surrounding community, and school finances. Includes correspondence regarding the role of dentistry in public health (ca. 1971). Also, correspondence between administrators regarding the school and Moss as well as correspondence regarding Moss' personnel issues.
Box 451 Folder 24
Correspondence between Harvey S. Mudd, an alumnus and benefactor of Columbia University, and University administrators. Mudd was chairman of the regional alumni fund raising campaign for southern California. The campaign was instituted in honor of the University's bicentennial celebration in 1954. Correspondence relates to Mudd's gifts to the University, development activities, and arrangements for events. Includes correspondence regarding Mudd's death. Also includes routine invitations and acknowledgement letters
Box 497 Folder 22
Correspondence between Seely G. Mudd and high level administrators at Columbia University. Mudd was a benefactor of the University. Correspondence relates to funding and planning for the University's engineering center and the establishment of the Seely W. Mudd Memorial Scholarship Endowment Fund. Includes telegrams
Box 435 Folder 21
Correspondence between Catherine Mullen, associate director of the budget at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to routine financial administration and budgeting.
Topics include: the establishment of accounts, appointments, resolutions of the budget committee, facutly affairs, and appropriations
Box 352 Folder 20
Correspondence between Professor Henri Francois Muller and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Muller was a professor of romance philology and executive officer of the University's Department of Romance Languages and Literatures. Correspondence relates to the department.
Topics include: faculty appointments, faculty recruiting, and budgeting. Includes correspondence regarding the administration of Maison Francais, Columbia's French culture and educational center
Box 435 Folder 1 to 19
Correspondence between John M. Mullins, an administrator at Columbia University, and other University administrators. Mullins held appointments as secretary of the University Advisory Committee on Athletics, chairman of the Space Allocation Committee, registrar of the University, and director of the budget. Most of the records consist of correspondence, budgets, and lists relating to registration.
Topics include: tuition and fees, credits, prizes, tuition remission, veterans affairs, registration procedures, and the administration of the registrar's Office. Includes enrollment statistics. Also includes a small number of minutes from the University Advisory Committee on Athletics
Box 432 Folder 20
Correspondence between Lewis Mumford and the secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Mumford's appointment as Bampton Lecturer for the 1950-1951 academic year.
Topics include: arrangements for the lectures, the subject of Mumford's lecture, and his stipend. Includes a program from the 1950-1951 Bampton Lectures in America, which were held at the University in April and May, 1951
Box 331 Folder 11 to 14
Correspondence between Professor Henry S. Munroe of Columbia University and the president of the University. Munroe held a number of appointments including professor of mining, chairman of the Department of Mining, and, later, Dean of the Faculty of Applied Science. Correspondence relates to the Department of Mining, the School of Mines, and the Faculty of Applied Science. Topics related to the Department of Mining and the School of Mines include: faculty appointments, laboratories, facilities, equipment, arrangements for courses, and gifts. Includes detailed correspondence dating from 1890 to 1896 regarding a proposed reorganization of the Department of Mining and the School of Mines and revisions to the curriculum in the School of Mines and Columbia College. Also includes a report on the George Crocker Summer School of Mines, which was held in Colorado in 1904.
Correspondence dating from Munroe's tenure as dean of the Faculty of Applied Science relates to a variety of topics including faculty appointments, membership in the Faculty of Applied Science, enrollment, and admissions
Box 666 Folder 12
Correspondence between Hugo Munsterberg and the president of Columbia University. Includes correspondence with the dean of the Faculties of Political Science, Philosophy and Pure Science. Munsterberg was a professor of psychology at Harvard University and an exchange professor at the Amerika Institut in Germany. Correspondence relates to Munsterberg's efforts to promote the newly-founded Amerika Institut and to involve various German-American cultural organizations in the institute's activities. Includes press clippings and letters recounting Kaiser Wilhelm's reception of Munsterberg and Charles A. Smith, who was Roosevelt Professor for the 1910-1911 academic year. The Roosevelt Professorship sent an American professor to Germany to lecture and act as an educational and cultural liaison. Includes a 14 page letter in which Munsterberg complains about Smith's behavior
Box 447 Folder 18 to 19
Correspondence between Joseph M. Murphy, director of the Columbia Scholastic Press Association, and high level University administrators. Founded in 1925 the Columbia Scholastic Press Association sponsors annual conventions for the staffs of high school publications. The association is run by the Columbia University Press. The records consist of correspondence, press releases, and programs relating to the association.
Topics include: personnel, events, appointments, and the development of scholarship funds. Includes correspondence regarding the association's annual convention and response letters from participants. Also, correspondence regarding Murphy's personnel issues
Box 670 Folder 55
Correspondence between Clyde E. Murray and Columbia University administrators. Murray was executive director of the Manhattanville Neighborhood Center and the University's advisor on community projects. Correspondence relates to: Columbia's relations with the surrounding community, the establishment of a community relations office at the University, and a study of relations between universities and the communities of New York City
Box 666 Folder 13
Correspondence between Gilbert Murray, professor of classics at Oxford University, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to lectures on Greek religion and the study of Greece and Rome that were given at Columbia by Murray. Includes a letter from Murray to the president of Columbia in which Murray recommends a number of British classics professors for a position at Columbia
Box 490 Folder 18
Correspondence between Roger Murray, associate dean of the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the school.
Topics include: faculty appointments, budgeting, gifts to the school, finances, job placement services, personnel, and scheduling. Includes a small number of records regarding the elimination of the school's evening program
Box 36 Folder 18
Correspondence regarding the appointment of Ernest Nagel, John Dewey Professor of Philosophy at Columbia University, as university professor. Includes biographical information on Nagel and a newspaper clipping regarding his appointment as university professor
Box 476 Folder 11 to 18
Box 477 Folder 1 to 17
Box 478 Folder 1 to 14
Correspondence between John McLean Nash, treasurer of Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Includes correspondence from Nash's staf Correspondence relates to University finances. Prevalent topics include: gifts to the University, bequests, endowments, personnel appointments, salaries, and student loan funds. includes correspondence authorizing disbursements; correspondence regarding trustee actions on financial issues; letters, which Nash sent to the president, regarding the University's finance committee; and correspondence between Nash and President Seth Low on financial policies and other issues. Correspondence dating from 1910 to 1916 when Nash corresponded mostly with the secretary of the University, is more routine. Includes a copy of a memorandum (April 15, 1911) from Trustee Willard V. King to Trustee George L. Rives. In the memorandum, King suggests that Nash be removed as treasurer and appointed as a trustee, complains about commissions received by Nash, and proposes to replace Secretary Frank D. Fackenthal
Box 662 Folder 16
Correspondence between Stephen P. Nash and the president of Columbia University. Nash was a Columbia trustee and also chaired the trustees' committee on education. Correspondence relates to the work of the committee on education, University president Seth Low's involvement in educational issues, and a range of other subjects.
Topics include: Nash's advice to Low regarding the president's prerogatives and University procedures; matters pertaining to the New York State Board of Regents, including Low's membership on a committee to advise the board regarding colleges in New York State, Columbia's practice of not allowing the board to inspect the campus, and other jurisdictional issues; the merger of Columbia with the College of Physicians and Surgeons; and issues regarding significant changes to the teaching method in the School of Law and the establishment of the Master of Laws degree
Box 671 Folder 68
Correspondence between Lucia Neare and high level administrators at Columbia University. Neare served as assistant dean of the Faculties of Political Science, Philosophy, and Pure Science. Correspondence relates to routine expenditures and memorials for deceased professors. Includes a list of faculty members in the Faculties of Political Science, Philosophy, and Pure Science. Also includes a memorandum regarding the international Education Exchange Service and International Cooperation Administration. Also, correspondence regarding Neare's personnel issues
Box 457 Folder 15
Correspondence between Peter J. Negri, professor of naval science in the Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps (NROTC) at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the NROTC program and the Department of Naval Science.
Topics include: facilities, appointments, budgeting, admissions, and policies regarding the appointment of Naval personnel. Includes a proposal for an NROTC armory
Box 679 Folder 21
Correspondence regarding the awarding of an honorary degree to Jawaharlal Nehru by Columbia University. Much of the correspondence relates to the selection of guests to attend the degree ceremony. Other topics include arrangements for the ceremony and other scheduled events. Includes the text of the citation that was read at the degree ceremony by Provost Albert Jacobs and two copies of Nehru's address at the ceremony
Box 672 Folder 33
Correspondence between Clifford C. Nelson, vice president of the American Assembly, and the secretary of Columbia University. The American Assembly was a national conference and discussion program that was based in Columbia's Graduate School of Business. Correspondence relates to: Nelson's appointment, the use of special funds, arrangements for meetings of the University's board of trustees, and other routine topics
Box 436 Folder 1 to 13
Correspondence between Henry K. Nelson, director of purchasing at Columbia University, and University administrators. Routine correspondence and cover memoranda regarding requisitions for equipment and supplies
Box 668 Folder 34
Correspondence between John M. Nelson, professor of chemistry at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to Nelson's personnel issues and retirement
Box 670 Folder 13
Correspondence between Professor Franz L. Neumann of the Department of Public Law and Government at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence dating from 1952 to 1953 relates to an exchange program with the Freed University of Berlin and the Adenaur Scholarship for study in Germany. Includes student records. Records dating from 1953 to 1954 relate to routine administrative issues involving the department. Includes a memorandum regarding the report of the University Committee on Foreign and Comparative Law
Box 670 Folder 56
Correspondence between Richard Joseph Neutra and Columbia University administrators. Neutra, who was an architect, dedicated his book, Survival through Design, to the University. Correspondence relates to the dedication of Neutra's book and the possibility of donating architects' papers to the University. Also, ballots nominating Neutra for a honorary degree from the University
Box 379 Folder 7 to 13
Correspondence between Allan Nevins, DeWitt Clinton Professor of American History at Columbia University, and University administrators. Much of the correspondence relates to Nevin's research and writing projects and to writing projects in the Department of History. Correspondence also relates to library and manuscript collections, the Department of History, and the University's Oral History Research office. Nevins was involved in a number of projects to research and write biographies or corporate histories. Related topics include: arrangments and agreements regarding projects, project funding through grants and gifts, publishing arrangements, and the payment of research assistants. includes a few brief project proposals. Projects which are documented in the records include: Nevin's biographies of John D. Rockefeller and Hamilton Fish; a proposed biography of University president Seth Low; a proposed history of the airplane industry; histories of Ford Motor Company, Weyerhauser, and United States Steel; a volume of Alexander Hamilton's writings; and Nevin's history of the Civil War, which was entitled Ordeal of the Union. Also, correspondence and financial records documenting Nevins' professional activities.
Topics include: financial and travel arrangements for Nevins' tenure as Harmsworth Professor of American History at Oxford University and for his trip to South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand for the Office of War Information (ca. 1943-1944). In both cases, there is no correspondence from Nevins while he was abroad. Includes one letter dating from February, 1944 in which Nevins summarizes his trip to Australia and New Zealand and comments on the journey and on institutions of higher education in each country. Also, correspondence regarding the acquisition or proposed acquisition of numerous library, manuscript, and personal papers collections.
Topics include: the papers of University president Seth Low, the library of Professor Ely, and the diary of George Templeton Strong. Also includes correspondence regarding the papers of long-time University president Nicholas Murray Butler and a biography of Butler (ca. 1948-1949 and 1955-1959 respectively). Beginning ca. 1944 much of this correspondence relates to the estate of Professor Frederick Bancroft, the establishment of the Bancroft Prize, and the work of the Bancroft prize Committee. Also, correspondence, financial records, and reports regarding the Oral history Research Office during the mid to late 1950s.
Topics include: the establishment of the office, accounting and financial administration, and funding for the office. Includes a report dating from January, 1956 which documents the mission and activities of the office and discusses the importance of oral history. Also, correspondence relating to the business of the Department of History during the 1940s and 1950s.
Topics include: the management of special funds, graduate students, faculty affairs, payments for research assistance, and Nevins' efforts to find employment for former graduate students. Correspondence dating from 1958 relates to Nevins' retirement. Most of the correspondence dating from 1964 to 1970 relates to three topics: Nevins' gift to establish the Allan Nevins Professorship of American Economic History, negotiations regarding a proposed biography of Adlai Stevenson, and University support for Nevins' work on Ordeal of the Union. Other topics include: Nevins' gift of papers to the library, his receipt of the Columbia University Libraries Citation for Distinguished Service, and his death and estate
Box 662 Folder 17
Correspondence between John S. Newberry, professor of geology and paleontology at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence dating from 1889 to 1891 relates to a variety of subjects. Includes correspondence with University president Seth Low regarding the demolition of the geology department's building and the difficulties involved in moving to new facilities. Also includes a copy of a letter from Newberry to A. Schermerhorn that discusses departmental needs in terms of facilities and stafRecords dating from 1901 consist of several letters, which were written after Newberry's death, regarding a portrait and bronze relief of Newberry
Box 662 Folder 18
Correspondence between Ernest Nichols, professor of experimental physics at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Nichols also chaired the Ernest Kempton Adams Fellowship in Physical Research Committee. Correspondence relates to the Department of Physics and the University's physics laboratories. Records related to the department include detailed letters regarding the department's needs.
Topics include: staffing, finances, and facilities. Topics related to physics laboratories include the Pheonix Laboratories in Fayerweather Hall and Nichols' proposal to use the Pheonix Fund to establish a physics lab in the Riverdale section of the Bronx. Also, correspondence regarding Nichols' appointment as president of Dartmouth College in 1909.
Box 666 Folder 14
Correspondence between William H. Nichols, a benefactor of Columbia University, and the president of the University. Correspondence relates to chemistry research and education at Columbia.
Topics include: a gift from Nicholas for laboratory improvements in Havermeyer Hall and the renaming of the chemistry laboratory as the Nichols Laboratory of General Chemistry in his honor, proposals for donations to the Department of Chemistry, the recruiting of chemistry faculty, and the chandler Lectures. Nichols also served as president of the Eighth International Congress of Applied Chemistry. Includes correspondence regarding the use of Columbia facilities by the congress
Box 379 Folder 17 to 22
Correspondence between Professor Marjorie Hope Nicolson and the high level administrators of Columbia University. Nicolson was the first woman to be appointed to a full professorship in the University's Graduate Faculties. She held a number of appointments including professor of English, William Peterfield Trent Professor of English and Comparative Literature, chairman of the Department of English and Comparative Literature, and chairman of the Committee on Instruction of the Faculty of Philosophy. Most of the records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the Department of English and Comparative Literature and correspondence, budgets, and reports regarding faculty and departmental affairs in the Faculty of Philosophy.
Much of the correspondence is with provosts Grayson Kirk and Albert C. Jacobs and Vice President and Provost John Krout. Other correspondents include the president, acting president, secretary, and dean of the Graduate faculties. Topics related to the Department of English and Comparative Literature include: faculty appointments, faculty affairs, graduate students and graduate instruction, teaching and work loads, faculty recruiting, budgeting, and departmental personnel. Includes correspondence regarding conditions in the department during the late 1940s and the early 1950s. The letters discuss: increased enrollment in the department, overcrowding, staffing needs, the quality of instruction and graduate work in the department, teaching and work loads, faculty and secretarial salaries, and the department's standing in comparison to departments at other Universities.
Also includes correspondence regarding the Brander Matthews Library and the Miron Cristo-Louveneau Prize. Records related to the Faculty of Philosophy often discuss departmental affairs. Related topics include: the organization of departments, departmental budgets, faculty salaries, and departmental rankings and reputations. Includes reports and correspondence regarding the Italian Department (1944), the Department of Near East and Middle East Languages (1954), the Department of Fine Arts and Archeology (1955), the Department of Mathematics (1958), and the Department of Philosophy (1960).
Other topics related to the Faculty of Philosophy include: faculty appointments, the powers of the University administration in relation to the affairs of the Faculty of Philosophy, and issues involving research funding. Also, a proposal for publications to be produced in honor of Columbia's bicentennial (1950) and correspondence (ca. 1941-1945) proposing candidates for appointment as dean of Barnard College, the women's college affiliated with Columbia. Also, correspondence regarding Nicolson's appointment and professional activities. Includes a 1957 pamphlet and bibliography honoring Nicolson. Most of the correspondence dating from 1961 to 1963 relates to the death of long-time departmental secretary Adele Mendelsohn. Includes correspondence regarding Nicolson's retirement and honorary degrees
Box 669 Folder 1
Correspondence between Shunji Nishi, acting chaplain of Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to religious activities and issues at the University.
Topics include: the religion curriculum, the search for a new University chaplain, budgeting for religious activities, the administration of St. Paul's Chapel, and issues involving Union Theological Seminary
Box 332 Folder 1 to 21
Correspondence between Henry Lee Norris, the director of buildings and grounds at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Topics include: construction and renovation projects, building maintenance, the University's power plant, student housing, landscaping on Columbia's Morningside Heights campus, arrangements for events, security, government-sponsored research contracts, and the management of the Department of Buildings and Grounds and its employees
Box 435 Folder 20
Correspondence between A. Warren Norton, director of Columbia University's bicentennial celebration, and the vice president and trustees of the University. Correspondence relates to preparations for Columbia's bicentennial, which took place in 1954. Topics include nominations for bicentennial honorary degrees and medals. Includes a detailed proposal for the celebration. Also, correspondence regarding the business of the committee on honors of the University's board of trustees
Box 669 Folder 16
Correspondence between Matthew Norton and other Columbia University administrators. Norton was an assistant to the director of admissions and appears to have overseen the admission of international students. Correspondence relates to the admission of international students, admission requirements for international students, and the recognition of Columbia degrees by foreign universities
Box 500 Folder 23
Correspondence between Lois D. Novas, foreign student advisor at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to international students.
Topics include: funding for international students, orientation programs, student affairs, the status of international students at the University, and immigration and visa issues. Includes: a report on the status of Hungarian students at Columbia (December, 1958); a table of enrollment statistics for the 1957-1958 and 1958-1959 academic years; and the foreign student directory for the 1958-1959 and 1959-1960 academic years
Box 672 Folder 45
Correspondence between James Nugent, manager of Columbia University's apartment house properties, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to University apartments
Box 405 Folder 22
Correspondence between Arthur Nussbaum, a visiting research professor of public law at Columbia University, and the secretary of the Council for research in the Social Sciences. Correspondence relates to payments to Nussbaum's research and clerical assistants
Box 454 Folder 9 to 16
Correspondence between Joseph P. Nye, director of university residence halls at Columbia University, and University administrators. Records relate to housing issues and the administration of Columbia's residence halls and apartments.
Topics include: faculty and student housing policies, dormitory administration, damages and repairs to dormitories, the inspection of residence halls, housing requirements, maintenance and renovations, and the administration of residence hall staf
Includes occupancy statistics. Nye was also chairman of the University's Committee on Public Safety. Includes a limited amount or correspondence regarding the business of the committee. Records related to resident halls and housing include: a proposal for a graduate residence hall dating from 1958 reports on the repair and renovation of residence halls and the status of the Residence Hall Reserve Fund for the furnishing and upkeep of dormitories; and a letter from students dated March, 1964 which protests an increase in housing rates. Also, correspondence (ca. 1963-1964) regarding the conversion of the Arizona Hotel into student housing and the eviction of the building's tenants
Box 428 Folder 1 to 5
Correspondence between Ewald B. Nyquist, director of admissions at Columbia University, and University administrators and Admissions Office stafThe records consist of correspondence, reports, and budgets relating to admissions.
Topics include: the admissions process, the operation of the Admissions Office, admissions policies, admissions examinations, the admission of international students, and application and enrollment trends. Includes correspondence with applicants and their families regarding admissions, complaints, and appeals. Also, correspondence (ca. 1948-1950) regarding charges of discrimination in University admissions policies and procedures. Includes related correspondence regarding the format of the University's application for admission form
Box 500 Folder 24
Correspondence between Justin O'Brien, chairman of the French section of the Department of Romance Languages at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the department. Most of the records are routine. Topics include: faculty appointments, assembling committees to study nominations for faculty appointments, and faculty affairs
Box 672 Folder 17
Correspondence between Donald W. O'Connell, assistant dean of the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the Institute of Advanced Management. The institute was part of Columbia's Institute of Arts and Sciences, which was a program of public lectures and short courses. Also, correspondence regarding O'Connell's personnel issues
Box 662 Folder 19
Correspondence between George Clinton Densmore Odell, professor of English at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. Odell was in charge of admissions for special students. Correspondence relates to Odell's personnel issues and the admission of candidates who were classified as special students. Includes correspondence regarding the admission or rejection of candidates based on compositions (exercise books) which were submitted in lieu of entrance examinations
Box 331 Folder 15
Correspondence between George N. Olcott, professor of Latin at Columbia University, and the president and other high level administrators of the University. Most of the correspondence relates to Olcott's appointment and personnel issues as well as his bequest to the University
Box 662 Folder 20
Correspondence between George Ashton Oldham, acting chaplain of Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates: to arrangements for religious services at the University, difficulties involving the search for a new chaplain, and the move to the University's new St. Paul's Chapel
Box 672 Folder 67
Correspondence between Glenn A. Olds, president of Springfield College, and Robert Harron, assistant to the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the search for a director of public affairs at Springfield College and arrangements for Harron to visit the college
Box 662 Folder 21
Correspondence between Frederick Law Olmsted, son of landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted, and administrators and faculty at Columbia University. Includes correspondence between Olmsted, Columbia administrators, and Charles McKim. Correspondence relates to the planning, design, and landscaping of Columbia's new Morningside Heights campus on Manhattan's upper west side. Few items date from 1893 and 1898. Most of the records date from 1904 and 1906
Box 504 Folder 5 to 9
Correspondence between Robert G. Olmstead, vice president of business and finance at Columbia University, and University administrators. As vice president, Olmstead oversaw the University's financial operations, facilities, and non-academic services. The records consist of correspondence, financial reports, proposals, and budgets.
Topics include: tax issues, the administration of grants and contracts, income and expenditures, the annual audit of University accounts, development funds, insurance, retirement plans, and issues involving the offices that reported to Olmstead. Includes a statistical report with information on the University's non-academic employees (September, 1964)
Box 346 Folder 16 to 20
Correspondence between Professor Frederico de Onis and high level administrators at Columbia University, University faculty, and persons at other universities in Spain and South America. Onis was head of the Department of Romance Languages and director of the Hispanic Institute at Columbia. Correspondence relates to the Department of Romance Languages; the Spanish Institute in the United States, which became the Hispanic Institute; and Casa Hispanica, Columbia's center for education in Central American, South American, and Spanish languages and cultures
Topics related to the Department of Romance Languages include: faculty appointments, staffing needs, faculty affairs, enrollment, curriculum, and budgeting. Includes proposals (ca. 1932) to add instruction in Spanish culture to the curriculum. Topics related to the Hispanic Institute include: the establishment of the institute, its programs and goals, the administration of the institute, finances, gifts to the institute, budgeting, and the institute's endowment. Includes correspondence which documents the relationship between the Hispanic Institute and Casa Hispanica. Also includes reports, budgets, and a brochure. Also, correspondence documenting relations with cultural and educational institutions in Spain and Latin America. Includes correspondence regarding methods for publicizing the University in Latin America. Also, correspondence relating to Onis' efforts on behalf of Hispanic faculty members at Columbia as well as correspondence regarding his appointment and professional activities
Box 671 Folder 40
A copy of a radio address that was given by J. Robert Oppenheimer, nuclear physicist and director of the Institute of Advanced Study at Princeton University. Oppenheimer's address was part of a series of broadcasts that were made in honor of Columbia University's bicentennial celebration. Also, newspaper clippings regarding a dispute between Oppenheimer and the University of Washington
Box 406 Folder 15 to 19
Correspondence between John E. Orchard, acting dean of the School of Business at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the school and to the search for a new dean. Orchard also chaired the Faculty Steering Committee for Arden House and the American Assembly. Arden house, which was the former Harriman mansion, was donated to the University in 1950 by W. Averill Harriman. The house was used as a conference center and housed the American Assembly. The American Assembly, which was affiliated with the University, sponsored semi-annual conferences on national problems. Includes records (ca. 1954) regarding committee meetings and the agenda, funding, and membership of the American Assembly
Topics related to the School of Business include: budgeting, faculty appointments, salaries, personnel issues, the administration of research projects, and faculty affairs. Records documenting the school include school budgets as well as correspondence, announcements, and pamphlets documenting programs and fellowships in the school. Also includes the school's annual report for 1947. Among other topics, the report discusses the curriculum of the school and the elimination of undergraduate courses in the school
Box 671 Folder 41
Correspondence between anthropologist Fernando Ortiz and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the honorary degree that was awarded to Ortiz at Columbia's 3rd Bicentennial Convocation in 1954. Includes biographical information regarding Ortiz
Box 670 Folder 59
Correspondence between Lawrence M. Orton and Columbia University administrators. Orton was executive director of Morningside Heights Inc., an urban renewal and community development organization that included Columbia and other area institutions. The records consist of correspondence and reports regarding relations between Columbia and the surrounding community as well as public safety, civic improvement, and other issues involving the Morningside Heights neighborhood on Manhattan's upper west side
Box 670 Folder 58
Correspondence between Fairfield Osborn, president of the Conservation Foundation and the New York Zoological Society, and Grayson Kirk, president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to a variety of events. Includes an outline for a conference on the ethics of science in its relationship to natural resources and population that was held in Windsor Great Park, England. Also includes routine invitations
Box 331 Folder 16 to 21
Correspondence between Henry Fairfield Osborn, Da Costa Professor of Biology at Columbia University, and the president, secretary, provost, and others at the University. Osborn held appointments in the departments of zoology and biology at Columbia. He also held a number of appointments at the American Museum of Natural History including research professor of zoology, curator of the Department of Vertebrate Paleontology, and president of the Museum
The correspondence documents relations between Columbia and the American Museum of Natural History as well as relations between the departments of zoology and biology and other departments at the University. The correspondence relates to the business of the various departments of the Museum and the University with which Osborn was associated. Topics include: faculty appointments, laboratories, equipment, collections, student affairs, departmental organization, and activities in the departments. Includes correspondence regarding the appointments of Franz Boas and William King Gregory. Also, correspondence regarding Osborn's personnel issues, professional activities, and committee memberships
Box 662 Folder 22
Correspondence between Herbert L. Osgood, professor of history at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects. Topics include: Osgood's opinions on changes to the curriculum of Columbia College (1891) and the acquisition of materials from Great Britain for the University's library. Includes a letter regarding Osgood's need to travel to Great Britain in order to conduct research. The letter also discusses resources on American history that the United States lacks. Also, a report entitled "Report to the President of Columbia College on the Condition and Needs of the College Library in the Department of History". At least one page is missing from the end of the report
Box 670 Folder 57
Correspondence between William J. O'Shea of the law firm of Saxe, Bacon, O'Shea & Bryan and Columbia University administrators. The records consist of correspondence and legal documents relating to a variety of legal issues involving the University. Also, correspondence regarding gifts to the University
Box 502 Folder 1 to 5
Correspondence between William Owens, director of the Summer Session at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the Summer Session.
Topics include: faculty appointments, expenditures, faculty affairs, enrollment, salaries for instructors, personnel issues involving visiting instructors, finances, accounting, events, and facilities. Related records include director's annual reports for 1961 1962 1964 and 1966 as well as correspondence and a syllabus (September, 1962) for an advanced placement program in history. Also, correspondence regarding the Administrative Board of the Summer Session. Includes a report on a board meeting (October, 1959). Also, two typed manuscript stories by Walter Webb that were sent from Owens to University president Andrew Cordier (February, 1969)
Box 352 Folder 5 to 8
Correspondence between Alfred Owre, dean of the School of Dental and Oral Surgery at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Most of the records consist of correspondence and reports regarding the affiliation between the School of Dental and Oral Surgery and Columbia University and Owre's work to establish closer ties between dentistry and medicine. Includes a report on the state of dental education that was written by Owre in 1929. Also, correspondence, reports, and proposals regarding the School of Dental and Oral Surgery
Topics related to the School of Dental and Oral Surgery include: faculty appointments, faculty affairs, appropriations, expenditures, budgeting, fund raising, staffing needs, salaries, research funding, personnel, and the management of clinics. Includes a proposal for research on tooth decay, which dates from 1930 as well as correspondence and reports relating to other research projects. Also, correspondence regarding Owre's appointment and resignation
Box 662 Folder 23
Correspondence between Curtis Hidden Page, professor of romance languages and literatures at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Page served as secretary of the University's Division of Modern Languages and Literatures. Correspondence relates to the division.
Topics include: appointments, faculty affairs, the distribution of announcements, and a proposed exchange professorship. Also, correspondence regarding Page's personnel issues. Includes correspondence regarding his plans to concentrate on writing rather than teaching
Box 490 Folder 19 to 21
Correspondence between William S. Paley, chairman of the board of the Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS), and high level administrators at Columbia University. Paley was a trustee of the University and chairman of the Special Committee on the Duties and Responsibilities of the Trustees. Most of the records consist of substantive correspondence regarding the role, government, and structure of the University's board of trustees and the relationship between the board and the University. Includes a copy of the Paley Report on the work and findings of the special committee. The report also contains a history of the board of trustees. Also, correspondence regarding honors, prizes, and trustee business
Box 501 Folder 1 to 4
Correspondence between John G. Palfrey, dean of Columbia College, and high level administrators at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Columbia College. Topics include: faculty affairs, student affairs and discipline, administrative issues involving academic departments, development, gifts to the college, procedural and administrative issues regarding the college, prizes, scholarships and the management of scholarship funds, appropriations, alumni relations, long-range planning involving facilities and class size, and academic policies governing grading and other issues.
Also, some correspondence (ca. February, 1959) regarding the project to build a University gymnasium in Morningside Park. Also includes correspondence (September, 1961) regarding the Columbia Daily Spectator, the college's student newspaper. records include: correspondence regarding funding for the Citizenship Center (Ferris Booth Hall student center); correspondence and a report regarding the oversight and independent status of the "Columbia Daily Spectator", the college's student newspaper (September, 1961); extracts from the dean's report for 1959 a report on income from fees for the 1957-1958 academic year (filed November, 1958); a memorandum regarding disciplinary action for raids in the women's residence halls at Barnard College (May, 1959); Palfrey's address to alumni and benefactors (April, 1960); and the text of Palfrey's remarks regarding the role of the college and the relation of the college to graduate programs (October and December, 1960)
Box 672 Folder 68
Correspondence between Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit, high commissioner of India to the United Kingdom, and the president of Columbia University. correspondence relates to a lecture that was given by Pandit at the University and a dinner in Pandit's honor. Includes guest lists and invitations. Also includes correspondence between the secretary of the University and others regarding Pandit's visit
Box 679 Folder 2
correspondence regarding a lecture that was given at Columbia University in 1968 by Andreas George Papandreou, a Greek cabinet minister. Includes political fliers and a press release.
Box 501 Folder 25
Correspondence between Rosemary Park, president of Barnard College, and high level administrators at Columbia University. Much of the correspondence relates to routine administrative and faculty affairs in Barnard College, the women's college affiliated with Columbia. Also, routine correspondence regarding Park's personnel issues and professional honors
Box 668 Folder 35
Correspondence between Roberta B. Parker and the secretary of Columbia University. Parker served as assistant to University president Nicholas Murray Butler. Correspondence relates to the appointment of a new secretary for Butler upon his retirement and the disposition of his books and papers
Box 662 Folder 24
Correspondence between George R. Parkin of The Rhodes Scholarship Trust and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the Rhodes Scholarships.
Topics include: preparations to begin the scholarship program, which was established in 1902 in the United States; plans for a conference on the scholarships in New York State; Columbia president Nicholas Murray Butler's reservations regarding the scholarships and the inclusion of a representative from the New York State Board of Regents at a conference on the scholarships; and the selection of Rhodes Scholarship recipients from New York State
Box 667 Folder 9
Correspondence between Thomas I. Parkinson, professor of legislation and acting dean of the School of Law at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the question of admitting women to the school and maintaining the academic quality of the school's summer program. Other topics include faculty appointments and routine administrative issues
Box 662 Folder 25
Correspondence between James Russell Parsons, director of the Examinations Department of the University of the State of New York, and Columbia University presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray Butler. Much of the correspondence between Parsons and Low relates to statistical information which was collected for annual reports. Includes lengthy letters (e.g., December 23, 1898) from Low describing his conception of the relationship between Columbia's colleges, professional programs, and graduate schools and the appropriate means for reporting University statistics to the state. Much of the correspondence between Parsons and Butler relates to entrance requirements and entrance examinations. In particular, the letters discuss requirements and examinations for the college of Physicians and Surgeons
Box 333 Folder 1 to 9
Correspondence between William Barclay Parsons, chairman of Columbia University's board of trustees, the president and secretary of the University, and the clerk of the board of trustees. Parsons was also chairman of the trustee committees on education and honors. The correspondence covers a range of topics related to the University.
Topics include: campus facilities, student housing, construction projects, nominations for honorary degrees, faculty affairs, faculty appointments, gifts, University finances, donor relations, and relationships with other institutions. Includes correspondence dating from the 1920s which relates to the affiliation of Columbia University and Presbyterian Hospital; the mission, organization and administration of the medical school; and relations between the University, Presbyterian Hospital, and other area hospitals. Also includes a brief exchange of letters between Parsons and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University, regarding academic freedom and the dismissal of professors James McKeen Cattell and Henry W. L. Dana in 1917.
Box 331 Folder 22
Correspondence between Wilhelm Paszkowski of the Prussian ministry of culture and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University. Topics include: the Roosevelt Professorship, which sent an American professor to Germany to lecture and act as an educational and cultural liaison; the appointment and activities of the Roosevelt Professor; other cultural exchanges between Columbia and German universities; Deutches Haus, Columbia University's German cultural and educational center; and the American Institute in Berlin. Includes correspondence discussing relations between the United States and Germany during World War I and American public opinion regarding Germany and German cultural institutions. Some of the correspondence is in German
Box 352 Folder 21
Correspondence between Charles V. Paterno, a benefactor of Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to efforts by Charles Paterno and his brother to solicit gifts in support of Casa Italiana, Columbia's Italian culture and educational center. Includes correspondence between Joseph Paterno, Michael Paterno, and University administrators
Box 671 Folder 4
Correspondence between Morehead Patterson, chairman of the United States Committee for United Nations Day, and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to a meeting of the Executive Committee of the United States Committee for the United Nations that was held in 1954. Includes minutes of the meeting. Also includes a copy of the September, 1954 issue of United Nations Day Bulletin
Box 488 Folder 19
Correspondence between Richard C. Patterson, commissioner of the New York City Department of Commerce and Public Events, and Columbia University administrators. Correspondence relates to routine issues involving the work of the United Nations Committee of the City of New York and the Policy Committee of the Department of Commerce. Includes invitations
Box 488 Folder 20
Correspondence between Winston Paul, chairman of the board of the General Aniline and Film Corporation, and high level administrators at Columbia University. Paul served as chairman of the Columbia College Council and the Budget Committee of the Columbia College Council. Correspondence relates to Columbia College, the undergraduate college of Columbia University.
Topics include college budget procedures and the college budget within the context of the overall University budget. Other topics include: planning for the University's Citizenship Center (the Ferris Booth Hall student center), admissions office services, the location of the admissions office, alumni relations, and gifts to the college. Includes invitations
Box 662 Folder 27
Correspondence between George Foster Peabody, a benefactor of Columbia University, and the president of the University. Correspondence relates to Peabody's gifts to fund: the purchase of the South Field extension to Columbia's Morningside Heights campus, the purchase of an organ for the University's St. Paul's Chapel, and the University chaplain's salary. Much of the correspondence relates to: the selection of a chaplain, the selection of an organist, and the acquisition of an organ for the chapel. Much of the correspondence also relates to Professor William P. Dunning's efforts to secure a fellowship for Clara Mildred Thompson of Atlanta, Georgia, to study the Reconstruction in Georgia. Includes correspondence regarding Columbia president Nicholas Murray Butler's appeals to Peabody to help think of a way to fund the fellowship
Box 662 Folder 26
Correspondence between George L. Peabody, professor of materia medica and therapeutics at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Most of the correspondence is with President Seth Low. Much of the correspondence relates to routine subjects such as: scheduling appointments to meet with the president, arranging leaves, and personnel in the Faculty of Medicine. Other topics include: Peabody's complaints about the condition of portraits in the library (1890), changes to policies governing the classification of special students and conditional students (March 14, 1890), the medical curriculum and courses, and physical education and the need for a gymnasium on the University's Morningside Heights campus. Includes a letter from Morgan Dix, who was the rector of the Parish of Trinity Church and a Columbia trustee, condemning research involving animal vivisection and Peabody's response to President Nicholas Murray Butler regarding Dix's views (November 26, 1893)
Box 496 Folder 1 to 2
Correspondence between Carlton Pearl, director of the School of Engineering development program at Columbia University, and University administrators and donors. Most of the records consist of routine acknowledgement letters for contributions to the Columbia University Engineering Fund
Box 333 Folder 1 to 14
Correspondence between Harry Thurston Peck, Anthon Professor of Latin and English Literature and, later, chairman of the Division of Classical Philology at Columbia University, and the president and trustees of the University. Most of the correspondence dating from 1890 to 1909 relates to the business of the Department of Latin.
Topics include: faculty appointments, financial aid, special lectures, and personnel. Correspondence dating from 1909 to 1916 relates to Peck's dismissal and his lawsuit against the University. Correspondence from this period is between Peck and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University; George Rives, chairman of the University's board of trustees; and Edward Bloe, chairman of the trustee committee on education. Also includes correspondence between Butler and University trustees, the clerk of the board of trustees, and faculty members regarding Peck's dismissal and lawsuit
Box 496 Folder 3 to 7
Correspondence between Lawton P. G. Peckham and high level administrators at Columbia University. Peckham's appointments included executive officer of the French section of the Department of Romance Languages and dean of the Faculties of Political Science, Philosophy, and Pure Science. Correspondence relates to the department and the faculties.
Topics include: faculty appointments, expenditures, prizes and awards, gifts, degree requirements, scheduling, the administration of Ph.D. examinations, personnel, events, and faculty affairs. Includes a report on the University's international student exchange program in 1960. Also includes invitations and Ph.D. examination schedules
Box 666 Folder 15
Correspondence between Professor Robert Peele of the Department of Mines at Columbia University and the president of the University. Includes correspondence with Earle R. Pembroke and Assistant Professor Edward L. Kurtz. Correspondence relates to budgeting and faculty affairs in the Department of Mines. Includes correspondence regarding relations with Kurtz and problems resulting from the elimination of his position in 1915. Includes a departmental budget for the 1918-1919 fiscal year
Box 334 Folder 1 to 20
Box 335 Folder 1 to 17
Box 336 Folder 1 to 10
Correspondence between George Braxton Pegram and the administrators and faculty of Columbia University, military personnel, and other persons outside of the University. During more than 50 years at Columbia, Pegram held numerous appointments and was a key figure in the administration of Columbia's engineering programs and the development of government-sponsored research at the University during and after World War II. Pegram's appointments included professor of physics, dean of the Faculty of Applied Science, dean of the Graduate Faculties (the Faculties of Political Science, Philosophy, and Pure Science), vice president of the University, and chairman of the Committee on Government Aided Research. The records consist of correspondence, budgets, and reports relating to the development and administration of the science, engineering and research arms of the University. Records relate to the development and administration of sponsored research, especially government-sponsored research, at Columbia. They also document the growing importance of government funding at the University. Topics related to sponsored research include: cooperation between the University and government agencies during World War I and World War II, the administration of research projects, the negotiation and oversight of research contracts, research funding, personnel, faculty appointments, facilities, patent policies, security, and the financial management of research projects.
Includes correspondence regarding the University's Division of War Research and the Committee on Government Aided Research. Also, Pegram's files of correspondence, reports, and other records relating to the establishment and administration of Associated Universities, a research consortium which operated the Brookhaven national Laboratory. Includes records regarding the administration of Columbia's science and engineering departments. Related topics include: personnel, budgeting, appropriations, fellowships, equipment, laboratories, research projects, facilities, expenditures, special lectures, publications, staffing needs, teaching loads, and the management of special funds. also, records regarding the development and administration of schools and faculties in the sciences and engineering. Related topics include: the curriculum, the organization and government of schools, professorships, relations with other institutions and with corporations, expenditures, faculty appointments, budgeting, the management of special funds, faculty affairs, personnel, facilities, and degree requirements. individual topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following: the government and membership of the Radium Institute of America (ca. 1912); funding from the National Research Council for research in submarine detection by the Committee on Submarine Detection Research and the New York Committee on Submarine Defense (ca.1917-1918); the work of the Committee of American Universities on Exchange with France of Professors of Engineering and Applied Science during the 1920s early nuclear physics research at Columbia beginning ca. 1935 and the award of the William Bayard Cutting Travelling Fellowship.
Includes: proposals to establish a cyclotron at Columbia dating from the 1930s a report of the Committee on the Administrative Reorganization of the Faculty of Political Science dating from 1946 and a report of the emergency Committee in Aid of Displaced Foreign Scholars dating from 1952. Also includes a list of over 1000 Columbia employees and faculty who were involved in war research during World War II. Also, correspondence relating to Pegram's appointment, personnel issues, and professional activities. Correspondents include University presidents Nicholas Murray Butler and Grayson Kirk and University provosts Frank D. Fackenthal and Albert Jacobs. Pegram's appointments include: chairman of the department of Physics, dean of the Schools of Mines, Engineering and Chemistry, dean of the Faculty of Applied Science, dean of the School of Engineering, dean of the Faculties of Political Science, Philosophy and Pure Science, chairman of the University's Division of War Research, chairman of the Columbia University Committee on War Research, chairman of the Columbia University Committee on Government Aided Research, and vice president of the University.
Box 509 Folder 15 to 18
Correspondence between I. M. Pei and high level administrators at Columbia University. Records relate to Pei's design for new University buildings. Includes renderings and proposals for Pei's campus plan
Box 447 Folder 1 to 8
Correspondence between Mark L. Peisch and Columbia University administrators. Peisch served as foreign student advisor and was later appointed director of admissions and financial aid. Correspondence relates to international students.
Topics include financial aid, visa, immigration, and tax issues involving international students. Many of the letters relate to students from Asia. Includes a directory of international students for the 1954-1955 academic year. Also, correspondence and reports regarding admissions and financial aid. Includes information on University admissions standards, financial aid funds, and financial aid policies. Also includes a copy of the 1953 Hatch Report on alumni relations
Box 662 Folder 28
Correspondence between Charles E. Pellew, assistant professor of chemistry at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Correspondence relates to the Department of Chemistry and its predecessor, the Department of Chemistry and Physics.
Topics include: departmental finances, staffing needs, equipment, and the departmental library. Also: letters describing Pellew's experiences while serving as a member of the Balloon Corps in Cuba during the Spanish-American War; correspondence regarding an accident in the Chemistry Laboratory (February 20, 1904); and Pellew's work at the Susquehanna Dye Works
Box 375 Folder 13
Correspondence between Henry C. Pelton of the Henry C. Pelton architectural firm and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Pelton was an alumni trustee of the University. He also chaired the Special Committee on Residence Halls and Restaurants and the Advisory Committee on Residence Halls. The records consist of correspondence, minutes, and reports relating to Columbia's housing problems and the administration of University dormitories.
Topics include: the repair and renovation of dormitories, services for faculty and students, University properties, and faculty housing. Includes minutes of the Advisory Committee on Residence Halls and a proposal (ca. 1933) for housing junior administrators in University properties. Also, correspondence regarding gifts and donor relations
Box 662 Folder 29
Correspondence between Albrecht Penck, Kaiser Wilhelm Professor at Columbia University, and University president Nicholas Murray Butler
The Kaiser Wilhelm Professorship brought a German professor to the United States. Correspondence relates to Penck's term as Kaiser Wilhem Professor. Includes congratulatory letters and correspondence regarding travel arrangements. Also includes correspondence regarding problems arising from Yale University's efforts to schedule Penck's first stop at Yale
Box 90 Folder 30
Correspondence between Senator Charles H. Percy and Andrew Cordier, president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the University's urban center and proposed new programs in ethnic and urban studies. Also, a copy of the Congressional Record that contains a tribute to Charles Abrams
Box 670 Folder 14
Records regarding William Perl, a former graduate student and instructor in physics at Columbia University who was incarcerated in a federal prison in Indiana. Prison officials requested Perl's student records
Box 333 Folder 15 to 16
Correspondence between Professor Edward Delaven Perry and the president and other high level administrators of Columbia University. Perry held numerous appointments at the University including professor of Sanskrit, Jay Professor of Greek, head of the Department of Greek, and dean of the faculty of Philosophy. Topics related to the Department of Greek include: faculty appointments, prizes, personnel, lectures, and arrangements for courses. Topics related to the Faculty of Philosophy include: degree requirements, admissions, honorary degrees, and faculty appointments. Also, correspondence relating to the establishment of the Earle Memorial Prize in Classics in memory of Professor Mortimer Lamson Earle. Also includes correspondence regarding Perry's personnel issues
Box 662 Folder 30
Correspondence between John P. Peters and the president of Columbia University. Peters was rector of St. Michael's Church, which was located at 225 West 99th Street in New York City. Much of the correspondence relates to efforts to stop a project to construct a railway line on Amsterdam Avenue and Columbia's participation in the campaign to prevent the railway. Other topics include: the University Settlement Society, the University chaplaincy, and Columbia president Nicholas Murray butler's proposal to include knowledge of the Bible as literature as a part of college entrance examinations
Box 662 Folder 31
Correspondence between W. H. G. Peters, assistant bursar of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, and high level administrators at Columbia University. The records consist of routine correspondence regarding purchasing and student fees
Box 508 Folder 7 to 8
Correspondence between William E. Petersen and high level administrators at Columbia University. Peterson, who was president of the Irving Trust Company, served as chairman of the University's board of trustees and chairman of Columbia's National Alumni Major Gifts Committee. The records consist of correspondence and newspaper clippings relating to a variety of subjects.
Topics include: development, trustee business and the membership of trustee committees, the work of the Major Gifts Committee, Columbia's relations with the surrounding community, and the student demonstrations of the 1960s. Includes a transcript of a closed circuit television conference during which Petersen and University administrators discussed various topics with alumni (1968). Also includes routine acknowledgement letters regarding Petersen's gifts to Columbia
Box 72 Folder 19 to 20
Correspondence regarding Minna Post Peyser, associate director of the center for Research and Education in American Liberties in Teachers College at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to: Peyser's conflicts with Alan Westin, the director of the center; her dismissal; and her subsequent reappointment
Box 488 Folder 21
Correspondence between Claudius C. Phillippe, vice president of the Waldorf Astoria hotel, and Columbia University administrators. Most of the records consist of invitations and acknowledgement letters relating to events. Includes correspondence regarding gifts to Maison Francaise, columbia's French culture and educational center
Box 488 Folder 1 to 5
Correspondence between Ellis L. Phillips and Columbia University administrators. Phillips served as assistant dean of the School of Law and was later appointed director of the budget for the University. Records relate to the School of Law and to University budgeting and finance. Most of the correspondence relates to the routine business of the School of Law. Includes correspondence regarding planning for Jerome Greene Hall. Also includes a report entitled Educational Objectives of the Columbia University School of Law. The report discusses the development of the school since 1920 its relationship to New York City, the significance of studying the law, the expansion of graduate work in the school, the curriculum of the school, and training for the legal profession. Topics relating to University budgeting and finances include budget policy and appropriations. Includes a report entitled "A Description of the Budget Procedure at Columbia University" (1962)
Box 672 Folder 1
Correspondence between Harlan B. Phillips, head of the Oral History Research Office at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The records appear to consist of requests for payments for oral history office employees and project personnel. Includes information regarding a financial crisis in the office
Box 399 Folder 17 to 19
Correspondence between Margaret Pickel, dean of university women at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Includes correspondence with the University's director of student interests. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to issues involving women students and international students.
Topics include: the social life and morals of women students; financial aid for women students; the management of residence halls and other facilities for women; the management of services for women students; Pickel's involvement in international student affairs; and the administration of the Office of the Dean of University Women. Includes individual letters regarding Pickel's thoughts on women students and the responsibilities of the dean of University women
Box 667 Folder 10
Correspondence between Frank H. Pike, professor of physiology in the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to Pike's personnel issues and workload. Includes correspondence regarding Pike's desire to be treated as a scientist rather than a medical educator and his requests for transfer to the Faculty of Pure Science
Box 414 Folder 14 to 15
Correspondence between James A. Pike, chaplain of Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to religious instruction and activities, the chaplain's office, and the University's religion department. Includes correspondence regarding the chaplain's responsibilities towards the religion department and a 1951 proposal which reconsiders that relationship. Also, correspondence regarding pike's appointment and installation as well as correspondence regarding the appointment of his successor, John Krumm. Records dating from the 1950s and 1960s include correspondence between the University and Pike during Pike's term as dean of the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City
Box 479 Folder 1 to 18
Box 480 Folder 1 to 17
Correspondence between John B. Pine and high level administrators at Columbia University. Pine was a Columbia trustee and served as clerk of the board of trustees and University attorney. Most of the correspondence is between Pine and University presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray Butler. Correspondence relates to: Pines' work on a number of committees (ca. 1890-1919); the development of Columbia's Morningside Heights Campus (ca. 1894-1919); Pine's responsibilities as clerk of the board (ca. 1891-1922); the alliance between Columbia's medical school and Presbyterian Hospital, which resulted in the creation of the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center in 1928 (ca. 1917-1919); and the legal affairs of the University (ca. 1917-1922).
Also, several letters (ca. 1911-1916) regarding a controversy involving the Roosevelt Professorship. The Roosevelt Professorship sent an American professor to Germany to lecture and act as an educational and cultural liaison. The letters discuss the dispute between University benefactor James Speyer and the University administration over an informal agreement to appoint a Jewish professor to the Roosevelt Professorship and the proposed return of Speyer's gift in support of the professorship. As a trustee, Pine served on committees on the School of Law, the School of Philosophy, salaries, education, buildings and grounds, the library, and the University's curriculum and statutes. Most of the records relate to the buildings and grounds committee. Pine was an influential member of the committee during a period of tremendous physical growth for the University.
In 1897 Columbia moved to a new campus at Morningside heights on Manhattan's upper west side. Pine helped to locate the site for the new campus and took a leading role in supervising construction on the site.
Topics include: Pine's thoughts on the plans and models for the campus, which was designed by the architectural firm of McKim, Mead & White (April, 1894), and the construction of Low Memorial Library (ca. 1895-1897), St. Paul's Chapel (1904), and other campus buildings. Most of the correspondence relating to Pine's responsibilities as clerk of the board is routine in nature.
Topics include the preparation and correction of the trustees minutes and the publication of the University's General Catalogue. During the period covered by the records, the clerk was also responsible for maintaining the University's important historical records. Pine responded to requests for information, records and photographs from University administrators and external researchers. Includes one file of correspondence relating to reference requests and the University's records and history. The file also includes an inventory of the historical records that were left to the University when Pine died in 1922
Box 667 Folder 11
Correspondence between Polly Piper, Walter C. Piper, and the treasurer and superintendent of buildings and grounds at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Walter Piper's request for restitution for items that were stolen from Polly Piper's dormitory room and disputes regarding the details of the case
Box 666 Folder 16
Correspondence between Professor Walter B. Pitkin of the School of Journalism at Columbia University and the president of the University, director of the journalism school, and dean of Teachers College. Pitkin headed the school's Division of Intelligence and Publicity. Correspondence relates to the school.
Topics include equipment and the curriculum. Includes a report to the director of the school that discusses the poor writing and reporting skills of students (1914). Correspondence also relates to a project by the Division of Intelligence and Publicity to print and distribute the Columbia War Papers, pamphlets on America's entrance into and role during World War I. Includes budgets for the war papers project
Box 669 Folder 17
Correspondence between Louis W. Pitt, visiting chaplain at Columbia University, and the secretary and provost of the University. Correspondence relates to: the business of the Chaplain's Office; the administration of St. Paul's Chapel; and the administration of Earl Hall, the University's nondenominational religious and social center. includes a report on the chaplain's activities for the 1948-1949 academic year and a copy of Pitt's baccalaureate sermon. Also includes correspondence regarding the search for a new chaplain and the installation of Dwight D. Eisenhower as president of the University
Box 491 Folder 17 to 19
Correspondence between Professor Jeanne V. Pleasants and high level Columbia University administrators. Pleasants was a professor of French in the Department of Romance Languages and was later appointed director of the University's Language Laboratory. The records consist of correspondence, budgets, and proposals relating to foreign language instruction at Columbia and the establishment and administration of the Language Laboratory. Includes the text of a presentation by faculty members on the curriculum of the Language Laboratory and language teaching tools. Also, correspondence regarding Pleasants' personnel issues
Box 333 Folder 17
Correspondence between George A. Plimpton, treasurer of Barnard College, and Columbia University presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray Butler. Barnard College is a women's college affiliated with Columbia University. Related topics include: the purchase of the Barnard site, the funding of construction projects at the college, gifts to the college, fund raising, college finances, housing, policies regarding faculty salaries, and relations between the college and the University. Includes a brief exchange of letters regarding candidates for the post of dean of Barnard
Box 670 Folder 15
Correspondence between Karl Polanyi, adjunct professor of economics at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the financial administration of Polanyi's research project
Box 491 Folder 23
Correspondence between Arthur W. Pollister, executive officer of the Department of Zoology at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the department.
Topics include: faculty appointments, expenditures, staffing needs, recruiting, facilities, and personnel. Also, correspondence regarding Pollister's personnel issues
Box 668 Folder 36
Correspondence between Eugene H. Pool and the acting president of Columbia University. Pool was a University trustee. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects regarding the administration of the University
Box 333 Folder 18 to 19
Correspondence between Professor Charles Lane Poor of the Department of Astronomy at Columbia University and the president of the University. Includes correspondence between Poor and Howard Patterson, president of the New York Nautical College. Correspondence relates public lectures in navigation offered by the Columbia.
Topics include: the curriculum, admissions, and faculty. Includes proposals for a school of nautical science at the University. Also includes an inventory and brochure from the New York Nautical College. Includes a report evaluating problems in the Department of Astronomy as well as departmental research and instruction from 1908 to 1909. Correspondence dating from 1931 relates to Poor's retirement allowance. There is a gap in the records
Box 667 Folder 12
Correspondence between Professor Lucius Chapin Porter of the Department of Chinese at Columbia University and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to: the development of the department and its library, support for the department from University benefactor Horace Carpentier, and the establishment of the Dean Lung Professorship of Chinese through a gift from Carpentier
Box 662 Folder 32 to 33
Correspondence between Henry C. Potter and the president of Columbia University. Potter was an Anglican bishop and a University trustee. He was also a member of the Board of Mediation and Conciliation, which appears to have negotiated a labor dispute for the University during the construction of Columbia's Morningside Heights campus.
Records relate to a variety of subjects. Many of the records consist of routine introduction and recommendation letters and routine correspondence regarding arrangements for lectures and meetings. Other topics include: the proposed establishment of a college of fine arts, the development of musical instruction at Columbia, and relations with the Metropolitan College of Music (ca. 1891-1895); a debate over whether to call the neighborhood surrounding Columbia Morningside Heights or Cathedral Heights (June 2, 1896); labor disputes, including one which delayed the development of Columbia's new campus at Morningside Heights; University president Seth Low's official portrait (1899); plans for the University's St. Paul's Chapel; the chapel organ and chapel services; arrangements for the Archbishop of Canterbury to visit Columbia to receive and honorary degree, participate in the chapel benediction, and attend Columbia's 150th anniversary celebration; potter's support to the appointment of alumni trustees; and his involvement in an organization to promote education in India
Box 384 Folder 1 to 18
Correspondence between Russell Potter and the high level administrators of Columbia University. Potter held a number of positions including director of the University's Institute of Arts and Sciences, director of radio, and director of the Office of Community Affairs. He also served as chairman of the University Committee on Radio. Most of the records relate to the Institute of Arts and Sciences and its successor, the office of Community Affairs. The institute provided public lectures and short adult education courses under the auspices Columbia's continuing education division. The records also relate to Columbia's involvement in the field of radio and the use of radio as an educational tool. Records relating to the Institute of Arts and Sciences consist of correspondence, reports, pamphlets, and posters.
Topics include: lectures, concert series, films, educational programs, and campus tours. The records also document visits by dignitaries, educators, and performers. Includes a history of the institute (1943) and a proposal for a program in criminology (1948). Also includes correspondence and a proposal regarding the establishment of the Office of Community Affairs. These records also document the shift from the institute's focus on educational programs to the public relations- and entertainment-oriented activities of the Office of Community Affairs. Also, correspondence, minutes, and reports (ca. 1945-1950) documenting Columbia's involvement in the field of radio and the use of radio as a educational tool. Includes reports from the Committee on Radio and proposals for educational programs. Also, correspondence relating to the work of the Committee on Public Ceremonies.
Topics include: commencement, opening exercises, commemoration services, and convocations. Also includes lists, invitations, correspondence, and programs relating to the exhibition of paintings by Peppino Mangravite that was held at the University in October, 1958
Box 672 Folder 34
Correspondence between Philip Pouncey, visiting professor of fine arts in the Department of Prints and Drawings at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to Pouncey's travel arrangements and other personnel issues
Box 400 Folder 1 to 16
Correspondence between Richard R. Powell, Dwight Professor of Law and director of Columbia University's bicentennial celebration, and University administrators and faculty. Includes correspondence between Powell and Arthur H. Sulzberger, publisher of the New York Times and chairman of the University's Bicentennial Organization Committee. Records dating from 1950 to 1954 relate to Columbia's 200th anniversary celebration, Man's Right to Knowledge and the Free Use Thereof, which took place in 1954. The records consist of correspondence, reports, proposals, minutes, newsletters, and pamphlets relating to planning for the celebration, the selection of themes for the bicentennial, financial and administrative issues involving the anniversary, and events during the bicentennial year. Includes copies of the Bicentennial Bulletin, a newsletter and schedule of the celebration
Box 666 Folder 17
Correspondence between Thomas Reed Powell and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Powell was an associate professor of constitutional law and secretary of the Faculty of Political Science. Most of the records consist of correspondence regarding membership in the Faculty of Political Science between 1914 and 1917
Box 669 Folder 2
Dallas Pratt was chairman of Columbia University's development committee. The records consist of a list of proposals for development projects on behalf of the Columbia University Libraries. One copy of the report A List of Proposals for Library Development
Box 505 Folder 18 to 19
Correspondence between George R. Pratt, director of personnel at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence, reports, and tables relating to faculty and non-academic personnel.
Topics include: retirement plans, insurance, tuition remission, procedures for personnel administration, payroll, and the business of the Advisory Committee on Personnel policies. Some of the records dating from 1967 relate to affirmative action programs that were established at the University in response to the Civil Rights Act of 1964
Box 383 Folder 17 to 19
Correspondence between Edmund A. Prentis, an alumni trustee of Columbia University, and the president, provost, and secretary of the University. Prentis was chairman of the trustee's committee on buildings and grounds and a member of the Alumni Fund Committee and the Alumni Federation Budget Committee. Much of the correspondence relates to campus facilities and the Buildings and Grounds Department. Correspondence also relates to University budgeting and finance.
Topics include: campus design, the use of campus facilities, funding for construction projects, building maintenance, policies for selecting architects, wages for Buildings and Grounds staff, and the administration of the Buildings and Grounds Department. Includes correspondence regarding University Hall, the rotunda of Low Memorial Library, and the Columbiana Library. Also, correspondence and minutes regarding the Nevis Estate in Irvington-on-Hudson, New York. The estate was donated to the University in 1935 by Alice duPont. Columbia used the property as housing, a research facility, and the site of the Nevis Cyclotron.
Topics include: the donation of the estate to the University, the development and use of the property, descriptions of the site, and the business of the Nevis Committee. Also, correspondence regarding the painting that was commissioned to commemorate the visit of King George the VI and Queen Elizabeth to Columbia in 1939
Box 662 Folder 34
Correspondence between Virgil Prettyman, principal of the Horace Mann School at Teachers College, and the president of Columbia University. Much of the correspondence relates to entrance examinations and requirements. Includes: a letter from University president Seth Low in which Low instructs Prettyman on the proper terms to describe the divisions of the University (May 23, 1901); a report entitled "Report of the Special Committee Appointed to Consider the Establishment of Closer Relations between Horace Mann School and the Colleges and Schools of Columbia University" (December 11, 1908); and routine recommendation letters
Box 357 Folder 9 to 10
Correspondence between Professor Giuseppe Prezzolini, director of the Casa Italiana at Columbia University, and Frank D. Fackenthal, who held a number of high level administrative posts at the University. Correspondence relates to the funding and administration of Casa Italiana, Columbia's Italian culture and educational center. Includes correspondence regarding fellowships, in particular the Eleonora Duse exchange Fellowship. Correspondence dating from the 1930s and 1940s also relates to the controversy that resulted from the relationship between Casa Italiana and the Italian government. Includes a report which outlines the history of Prezzolini's relations with Columbia, the Italian government, and the Facist Party from the 1920s to the 1940s
Box 90 Folder 31
Correspondence regarding the nomination of Leontyne Price to receive an honorary degree from Columbia University. Correspondence relates to preparations for the degree ceremony and Price's inability to accept the invitation due to scheduling conflicts
Box 663 Folder 1 to 2
Correspondence between Thomas R. Price, professor of English at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the Department of English and the merger of the department with the Department of Comparative Literature. Correspondence also relates to English courses in Barnard College, the women's college affiliated with Columbia. Includes a letter regarding University architecture and the design of Columbia's Morningside Heights campus
Box 333 Folder 20
Correspondence between Professor John Dyneley Prince of the Department of Slavonic Languages and the Division of Oriental Languages at Columbia University and the president and secretary of the University.
Topics include: faculty appointments, facilities, departmental collections, fellowships, and personnel. Includes a report on the first year of the Department of Slavonic Languages (ca. 1916). Also, correspondence relating to Prince's personnel issues and professional activities
Box 338 Folder 1 to 4
Correspondence between Henry S. Pritchett and President Nicholas Murray Butler of Columbia University, other high level University administrators, and Columbia trustees. Pritchett was president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and, later, president of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. Most of the correspondence dating from 1904 is between Pritchett and Butler while Pritchett was president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Presidents Pritchett and Butler exchange brief opinions and ideas regarding a variety of topics and share information on procedures and policies for the management of their respective institutions. This type of correspondence between Pritchett and Butler continued after Pritchett became president of the Carnegie Foundation. Correspondence dating from Pritchett's tenure as president of the Carnegie Foundation relates primarily to: retirement benefits for faculty, benefits policies, and grants to the University. Also, correspondence regarding the financial, administrative, and educational relationship between Columbia University and two New York City hospitals - Presbyterian Hospital and Lenox Hill Hospital
Box 357 Folder 11 to 19
Box 358 Folder 1 to 11
Correspondence between Charles G. Proffitt, director of the Columbia University Press, and numerous University faculty members and administrators. Correspondence relates to administrative, financial, and editorial issues involving the press, the University's printing department, and the preparation of scholarly and University publications. Correspondence also relates to the financial relationship between the University and Columbia University Press. Also, correspondence and minutes documenting the work of the Trustees of the Columbia University Press. Includes a history of the press from 1893 to 1933.
Box 492 Folder 1 to 9
Correspondence between Henry W. Proffitt and high level administrators at Columbia University. Proffitt was an alumni trustee of the University and was later appointed counsel for the University. Correspondence relates to trustee affairs and the University's legal affairs. Topics related to trustee affairs include: committee memberships, honors, trustee nominations, and arrangements for meetings. Includes some correspondence on the role of the trustees and trustee relations with University faculty and alumni.
Topics related to legal affairs include: bequests; litigation; the incorporation of the Spectator, the student newspaper of Columbia College; and the agreement between Columbia and New York City for the construction of a gymnasium in Morningside Park, the lease of park land from the city, and planning for the Morningside Park Gynmansium. Also, minutes of the trustees' committee on buildings and grounds and correspondence and budgets regarding the administration and finances of University facilities and residence halls. Includes routine cover letters, invitations, and acknowledgement letters
Box 663 Folder 3
Correspondence between Professor T. Mitchell Prudden of the Department of Pathology in the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University and the president and secretary of the University. Prudden was the director of the college's Pathological Laboratory. Correspondence relates to the department.
Topics include: the growth of the department, enrollment, equipment, facilities, appropriations, and the curriculum
Box 333 Folder 21
Correspondence between Joseph Pulitzer and Columbia University presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray Butler. Much of the correspondence is between Pulitzer's estate and Butler. Correspondence relates to Pulitzer's gift to establish the University's School of Journalism and the funding and organization of the school
Box 347 Folder 10
Correspondence between Ralph Pulitzer and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the creation of the Pulitzer Prize, the establishment of the School of Journalism, and the construction of the Journalism Building. Includes correspondence regarding Joseph Pulitzer's will and the family's gifts to the University of a bust of Joseph Pulitzer and a statue of Thomas Jefferson. Also, correspondence between University administrators regarding donor relations strategy and Pulitzer's gifts to Columbia
Box 333 Folder 22
Correspondence between Professor Michael Idvorsky Pupin of the Department of Physics at Columbia University and the president and secretary of the University.
Topics include: faculty appointments, fellowships, personnel, teaching loads, and the department's Electro-Mechanics Laboratory. Also, correspondence relating to Pupin's personnel issues and professional activities
Box 336 Folder 11 to 17
Correspondence between Albert W. Putnam, a trustee of Columbia University, and the trustees and high level administrators of the University. Putnam was chairman of the trustee committees on buildings and grounds, finance, and legal affairs between the 1920s and the 1950s.
Topics include: construction projects, campus planning, fund raising, the administration of the Department of Buildings and Grounds, the maintenance of campus buildings, the University's financial reporting methods, facilities for students, and the University's space needs. Includes correspondence discussing a proposal to erect a student hall on Columbia's South Field and Putnam's memorandums to the committee on buildings and grounds. Also includes cover letters and invitations as well as correspondence regarding Putnam's appointment and committee memberships. Much of the correspondence regarding legal affairs relates to agreements between Columbia and St. Luke's Hospital in New York and between Columbia and Barnard College. Correspondence dating from 1896 to 1913 relates to the University Committee on Athletics. Related topics include athletic facilities and the management of athletic departments
Box 663 Folder 4 to 5
Correspondence between Emily James Putnam (nee Emily James Smith) and Seth Low, president of Columbia University. Includes correspondence with Nicholas Murray Butler during his term as dean of the Faculty of Philosohpy. Putnam was dean of Barnard College, the women's college affiliated with Columbia. Correspondence relates to the college.
Topics include: relations between Barnard and Columbia, enrollment, operations, faculty, cross-registration between Barnard and the University, facilities, student discipline, and the curriculum
Box 663 Folder 6
Correspondence between John Quackenbos, professor of Rhetoric at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Includes correspondence with the clerk of the board of trustees and University trustees. Correspondence relates to rhetoric and composition instruction at Columbia and disputes between Quackenbos and the administration over teaching methods. Includes documents supporting Quackenbos' dismissal and correspondence regarding his appeal to the Committee on Education and eventual resignation. Other records include letters regarding Quackenbos' use of his former University title in conjunction with his work on hypnosis and requests that he resign his emeritus status. Includes a report from the Committee on Education to the trustees regarding the dispute with Quackenbos
Box 338 Folder 8
Correspondence between Cornelius Rubner, who held a professorship in music at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Also, correspondence between the president and faculty members, their spouses, and others regarding Rubner. Most of the correspondence relates to preparations for a recital which was given by Rubner in 1904. Other topics include: commencement preparations, the administration of the Department of Music, the University's orchestra, and the men's chorus. Also, correspondence relating to Rubner's appointment and personnel issues. Some of the letters are in German
Box 393 Folder 9 to 12
Correspondence between Isidor Isaac Rabi, professor of physics and executive officer of the Department of Physics at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Most of the records consist of correpspondence, budgets, and reports relating to the Department of physics. Records dating from 1950 to 1965 consist of correspondence and clippings regarding Rabi's honors, professional activities, and appointment as Columbia's first University Professor. Includes minutes of a meeting of the Initiatory University Group that was held in April, 1946. The minutes discuss plans to develop a nuclear physics research facility in the New York area. Also includes letters sent to the University from Rabi while he was on leave at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Topics related to the Department of Physics include: faculty appointments and recruiting, research facilities and laboratories, budgeting, and staffing needs. Includes reports, dating from 1945 which discuss research staff and facilities. Also includes correspondence regarding physics instruction for optometry and pharmacy students
Box 489 Folder 21
Correspondence between Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, vice president of the Indian Union and chancellor of the University of Dehli, and Columbia University administrators. Radhakrishnan was Gabriel Silver Lecturer for the 1957-1958 academic year. Correspondence relates to arrangements for the lecture. Includes the text of his lecture. Also, correspondence regarding the honorary degree that was awarded to Radhakrishnan at Columbia's Charter Day exercises in 1954
Box 495 Folder 1 to 2
Correspondence between John R. Raggazzini, executive officer of the department of Electrical Engineering at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the department. Topics include: personnel, student affairs, facilities, and finances. Also, correspondence regarding the Columbia University Amateur Radio club
Box 672 Folder 46
Correspondence between L. O. Ramer and various persons within and outside of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Ramer's efforts to fund his research on the coming ice age
Box 673 Folder 16
Correspondence between Columbia University administrators, the University chaplain, the bishop of New York, and the staff of the archbishop of Canterbury. Correspondence relates to the honorary degree from Columbia that was granted to Arthur Michael Ramsey, the archbishop of Canterbury. Topics include arrangements for the degree ceremony and a reception in honor of the archbishop. Records include a program, invitations, newspaper clippings, the text of the citation that was read at the degree ceremony by University president Grayson Kirk, and the text of Ramsey's address
Box 72 Folder 21
Correspondence between Orest A. Ranum of the Department of History at Columbia University and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the destruction of Ranum's research notes, dissertation, and other papers by vandals who set them on fire. Topics include: a description of damages, plans to reimburse Orest for his losses, and the preservation of the water-damaged materials. Includes an envelope containing the original notes and student papers that were damaged by fire and water. Also, correspondence regarding Ranum's appointment to a post at Johns Hopkins University
Box 362 Folder 13 to 21
Box 363 Folder 1 to 20
Box 364 Folder 1 to 20
Box 365 Folder 1 to 18
Box 366 Folder 1 to 19
Box 367 Folder 1 to 20
Box 368 Folder 1 to 20
Box 369 Folder 1 to 18
Box 370 Folder 1 to 17
Box 371 Folder 1 to 18
Correspondence between Willard C. Rappleye and the administrators and faculty of: Columbia University, the University's College of Physicians and Surgeons, and hospitals in the New York City area. Rappleye held numerous appointments including: dean of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, director of the New York Post-Graduate Medical School, dean of the Faculty of Dental and Oral Surgery, vice president in charge of medical affairs, and dean of the Faculty of Medicine. He also served on a number of committees, including the Administrative Board of post-Graduate Studies in Medicine and the Advisory Board of the Institute for Cancer Research, and chaired the Board of Directors of the health Insurance Plan of Greater New York. Most of the correspondence relates to the administration of Columbia's medical school and its affiliated hospitals, clinics, and schools
Topics related to the medical school include: budgeting, research funding, faculty appointments, fellowships, faculty affairs, the management of special funds, and gifts to the school. Includes correspondence regarding the administration of grants, contracts, and research projects. Much of the correspondence dating from the 1940s to the 1950s is routine in nature and documents numerous appointments, grant payments, and the receipt of gift checks. Includes correspondence and a transcript of testimony regarding charges of discimination involving the admissions policies of the College of Physicians and Surgeons (ca. 1946-1947). Also, correspondence documenting Columbia's relations with numerous affiliated institutions including: the Delemar Institute of Public Health, St. Luke's Hospital in New York City, The School of Tropical Medicine in Puerto Rico, the New York Psychiatric Institute, the Neurological Institute of New York, and Bellevue Hospital. In particular, the correspondence relates to the University's relationship with Presbyterian Hospital and the establishment, daily operations, and programs of the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center (CPMC).
Includes reports dating from 1937 1944 1947 and 1948 which document the mission, goals, activities, and future needs of the CPMC. Also includes correspondence, brochures, and clippings (ca. 1953) regarding the 25th anniversary of the CPMC. Also, minutes and other records relating to the courses, organization, requirements, and degrees of the New York Post-Graduate Medical School during the 1930s. Correspondence dating from the mid-1940s through the 1950s also document public health projects, including the New York Public Health Center (ca. 1945), and Rappleye's involvement with issues surrounding insurance, medical education, and the state of medical care. includes correspondence regarding Rappleye's retirement
Box 666 Folder 18
Correspondence between Professor Walter Rautenstrauch and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Includes correspondence with the dean of the School of Mines, Engineering and Chemistry. Rautenstrauch was a professor of mechanical engineering and secretary of the Committee on Instruction of the School of Mines, Engineering and Chemistry. records include: correspondence regarding plans to endow the school of engineering (1913), a report proposing the establishment of industrial development laboratories at the school (1916), and a letter proposing more cooperation between Columbia and New York City's manufacturing industries
Box 336 Folder 18
Correspondence between Henry S. Redfield, professor of law and secretary of the Faculty of Law at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Topics include: faculty appointments, membership in the faculty, and scholarships. Includes a letter dating from November, 1903 which discusses the curriculum of the School of Law. Also, correspondence relating to Redfield's appointment, personnel issues, and retirement
Box 668 Folder 56
Correspondence between Arthur G. Redpath and the acting president and secretary of Columbia University. Redpath was a University trustee. Correspondence relates to trustee business and the work of the University's Radio Committee
Box 663 Folder 7 to 8
Correspondence between John K. Rees, professor of astronomy at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. correspondence relates to faculty appointments and other administrative issues in the Department of Astronomy. Also, correspondence relating to Rees' work as chairman of the University Council
Box 72 Folder 22
Correspondence between Ogden R. Reid, a member of the House of Representatives for New York State, and Andrew Cordier, president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to funding for higher education. Also, a press release regarding the higher education bill of rights, legislation in support of student financial aid programs that was introduced by Reid
Box 670 Folder 60
Correspondence between Daniel J. Reidy and Columbia University administrators. Reidy was a Columbia alumnus and general counsel of The Guardian Life Insurance Company of America. Correspondence relates to alumni affairs and reunions
Box 108 Folder 28
Correspondence and other records related to the decision to deny tenure to Henry B. Reiling of the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University. Records include: course evaluations, numerous recommendation letters, and a report regarding the search for a candidate for his post
Box 336 Folder 19
Correspondence between Paul Samuel Reinsch of the University of Wisconsin and Nicholas Murray Butler, President of Columbia University, regarding Reinsch's appointment as Roosevelt Professor for 1911 to 1912. Also, correspondence between Butler and Charles Van Hise, President of the University of Wisconsin, regarding Reinsch's appointment. The Roosevelt Professorship sent an American professor to Germany to lecture and act as an educational and cultural liaison. Correspondence relates to Reinsch's lecture topics, his travel and lecturing arrangements, and his activities while in Germany. Includes a brief report on his work as Roosevelt Professor
Box 18 Folder 17
Correspondence between Curt H. Reisinger and high level administrators at Columbia University. Reisinger was chairman of the Advisory Committee on the Arts Center, which assisted in the planning and funding of a proposed arts facility and arts programs for Columbia. Includes information regarding potential donors, building sites, and possible affiliations in New York City. Includes correspondence with Davidson Taylor, the director of the Arts Center Program
Box 663 Folder 9
Correspondence between Arthur J. Remy, Villard Professor of Germanic philosophy in the Department of Germanic Languages at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to Remy's appointments and retirement
Box 358 Folder 12
Correspondence between Jackson E. Reynolds, a trustee of Columbia University, and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of the University. correspondence relates to the lease of Columbia's Upper Estate (the site of Rockefeller Center), donor relations, the revision of the University's by-laws, and Reynold's resignation from the board of trustees
Box 336 Folder 20
Correspondence between Rush Rhees, president of the University of Rochester, and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University. Topics include: candidates for admission and scholarships, recommendations for appointments, advanced placement, and admissions requirements. In the correspondence, Rhees and Butler also exchange information on policies and procedures at their respective institutions. Also, correspondence on the work of the Association of the Colleges of the State of New York relating to financial aid legislation. Also includes correspondence regarding Rhees' appointment as Roosevelt Professor for 1916 to 1917. The Roosevelt Professorship sent an American professor to Germany to lecture and act as an educational and cultural liaison. It appears as though Rhees did not serve as Roosevelt Professor due to World War I
Box 496 Folder 8 to 9
Correspondence between Peter M. Riccio, director of Casa Italiana at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence and reports relating to Casa Italiana, columbia's Italian culture and educational center. Topics include: personnel, events, development, and gifts to the center. Includes annual reports of the center dating from 1958 to 1959. For the most part, the reports discuss Casa events, associations, scholarships, and awards. Also includes invitations, acceptances and regrets, and acknowledgement letters
Box 668 Folder 25
Correspondence between Otis R. Rice, acting chaplain of Columbia University, and the acting president of the University. Correspondence relates to a variety of administrative issues. Records include: a budget for the religion program (1946); an amendment to the statues concerning campus religious activities; and an agreement between Columbia and the YMCA of Greater New York regarding the administration of Earl Hall, Columbia's nondenominational religious and social center
Box 668 Folder 37
Correspondence between John C. Richards, professor of Greek and Latin at Columbia University, and the acting president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the Department of Greek and Latin. Includes reports that contain information on the student body and courses in the department
Box 668 Folder 26
Correspondence between John K. Richards, commander of the Naval Reserve Officers Training Center at Columbia University, and the president and provost of the University. Correspondence relates to the center and to the closing of the Midshipman's School that had been operated at the University during World War II. Also, correspondence regarding Richards' honorary degree from Columbia
Box 669 Folder 18
Correspondence between Jack K. Rimalover and other members of the Committee on the Installation, which oversaw the installation of Dwight d. Eisenhower as president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to preparations for the installation ceremony. Includes minutes of committee meetings
Box 376 Folder 18
Correspondence between Angel del Rio, assistant professor of Spanish, and the provost, secretary, and other administrators of Columbia University. Del Rio became a full professor in 1953 and director of the Hispanic Institute in the United States in 1954. Correspondence relates to the Hispanic language section of the Department of Romance Languages.
Topics include: faculty appointments, visiting lecturers, renovations in the department, publications, prizes, and events. Also, a report dating from March, 1937 which relates to the organization, activities, personnel, and finances of the Hispanic institute. The report also discusses the short- and long-term goals of the Institute. Professor del Rio also chaired the committee which was in charge of administering the Italian Department and served as acting executive officer of the department from 1956 to 1957. Includes a brief report which discusses the staffing needs and administration of Casa Italiana, the University's Italian culture and educational center
Box 663 Folder 10
Correspondence between William Zebina Ripley, a lecturer in anthropology at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. Includes correspondence with Professor Edwin R. A. Seligman. Correspondence relates to Ripley's personnel issues. Correspondence also relates to a bibliography entitled, "A Selected Bibliography of the Anthropology and Enthography of Europe". Includes an excerpt from the bibliography
Box 337 Folder 1 to 6
Correspondence between George Lockhart Rives, a trustee of Columbia University, and Columbia presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray Butler, other University administrators, Columbia faculty, alumni, and trustees. Rives served as chairman of the University's board of trustees and chairman of the trustee committee on finance. The correspondence documents the work of the finance committee as well as several special committees of the trustees. The correspondence also documents Rive's long-standing relationship with the University and his role as President Butler's advisor on a variety of issues.
Topics related to University finances include: financial planning and reporting, debt service, investments and investment policies, donor relations, fund raising, real estate purchases, funding for building projects, policies regarding the management of special funds, budget policies, gifts to the University, appropriations and expenditures, and the oversight of the University treasurer's office. Specific topics include: funding for the purchase of the Morningside Heights campus, the work of the Committee on Salaries to establish faculty salary policies, and lobbying by the University in response to inheritance tax legislation (ca. 1910). Also, correspondence relating to a range of other topics including: the controversy over the establishment of a three year course at the School of Law (ca. 1891), relations between Columbia University and Teachers College, University relations with Presbyterian Hospital, and the organization and management of the Medical School. Also includes correspondence relating to the board of trustees. Topics include: alumni representation on the board (ca. 1907), trustee appointments, arrangements for meetings, and Rives' resignation from the board
Box 670 Folder 61
Correspondence between Lionel Charles Robbins and Columbia University administrators. Robbins, who was an economist, received an honorary degree from Columbia during the University's bicentennial celebration in 1954. Correspondence relates to Robbins' honorary degree and commencement day events
Box 491 Folder 20
Correspondence between Henry L. Roberts, director of the Russian Institute at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the institute. Includes the institute's alumni newsletter and a report on the institute's research and publications
Box 670 Folder 62
Correspondence between Denis Holme Robinson and Columbia University administrators. Correspondence relates to Robinson's honorary degree from Columbia and his participation in one of Columbia's bicentennial year conferences. Includes biographical information on Robinson
Box 398 Folder 21 to 22
Correspondence between Professor Geroid Tanquary Robinson of Columbia University and the acting president, provost, and secretary of the University. Robinson held appointments as professor of history, Seth Low Professor of History, and director of the Russian Institute. He also served on the Administrative Board of the Russian Institute. Most of the records consist of correspondence, budgets, and reports relating to the Russian Institute and its board.
Topics include: the establishment of the institute, faculty appointments, finances, funding for the institute, gifts to the institute, publicity, the student body, enrollment, membership on the board of the institute, fellowships, and scholarships. Includes a copy of the institute's announcement for 1946 and reports regarding the institute's research and publications (ca. 1946-1949)
Box 338 Folder 5
Correspondence between James Harvey Robinson, professor of history in the School of Political Science at Columbia University and Barnard College and acting dean of Barnard College, and the president and secretary of the University. Most of the correspondence relates to the Department of History.
Topics include: faculty appointments, equipment, personnel, and appropriations. Also, correspondence relating to Robinson's appointment, personnel issues, and resignation. correspondence dating from 1900 to 1901 relates to Robinson's tenure as acting dean of Barnard College, a women's college affiliated with Columbia.
Topics include: personnel, faculty appointments, admissions, equipment, and appropriations. Includes some correspondence documenting women administrators at Barnard
Box 338 Folder 6
Correspondence between James L. Robinson, president of the Columbia College Class of 1904 and the treasurer of Columbia University. Correspondence consists of the cover letters which accompanied checks sent to the University for the Class of 1904 50th anniversary gift
Box 452 Folder 22
Correspondence between David Rockefeller and high level administrators at Columbia University. In the correspondence, Rockefeller declines his nomination to the University's board of trustees. Also includes correspondence regarding Rockefeller's involvement in Morningside Heights Inc., an urban renewal and community development organization which was comprised of representatives from Columbia University and other Morningside Heights area institutions. Includes many invitations
Box 338 Folder 7
Correspondence between John D. Rockefeller and President Seth Low of Columbia University. Correspondence dating from 1898 to 1903 documents Low's attempts to solicit the Rockefeller family for donations to the University and Rockefeller's gifts to Columbia. Also includes a brief exchange of correspondence (ca. 1928) between Rockefeller and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University, regarding the lease of Columbia's Upper Estate property to the Rockefeller's for development
Box 668 Folder 38
Correspondence between Nelson A. Rockefeller and the acting president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the Community Committee of New York and the committee's support for the United Jewish Appeal campaign to raise funds for Holocaust survivors
Box 108 Folder 29
Correspondence between Frederick Rand Rogers, an alumnus of Columbia University, and William McGill, president of the University. Correspondence relates to a variety of topics
Box 663 Folder 11
Correspondence between Howard J. Rogers and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Rogers was first assistant commissioner in the New York State Education Department and the director of congresses at the 1904 St. Louis Exposition. Correspondence relates to issues involving higher education. Topics include Rhodes Scholarships and revisions of the required medical school curriculum
Box 358 Folder 13 to 14
Correspondence between James Gamble Rogers and President Nicholas Murray Butler of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the design of University buildings and the administration and funding of University building projects. Rogers designed Columbia's Butler Library and worked on a number of other projects for the University.
Topics include: medical school dormitories, University Hall, South Hall (Butler Library), and a fine arts building. Includes correspondence regarding the selection of the names which are inscribed on Butler Library. Also, correspondence regarding the medieval tapestries which were given to the University by Emily Buch
Box 358 Folder 15 to 18
Correspondence between Professor Lindsay Rogers of Columbia University, the president and secretary of the University, and the secretary of the council for Research in the Social Sciences. Rogers was Burgess Professor of Public Law, executive officer of the Department of Public Law and Jurisprudence, a member of the Council for Research in the Social Sciences, and a member of the Administrative Board of the institute for Public Administration. The records consist of correspondence, budgets, and reports relating to instruction and research in public law, public administration, international law, and international affairs. Correspondence dating from 1961 to 1962 relates to Roger's research on the administration of Nicholas Murray Butler, who was president of the University from 1902 to 1947.
Includes correspondence, budgets, and reports regarding faculty and finances in the Department of Public Law and Government; correspondence regarding the Parker Institute of International Affairs (ca. 1929); and correspondence and reports on the state of instruction and research in international affairs and the social sciences at the University during the 1930s. Also includes correspondence and reports which document the government of the Institute of Public Administration and the institute's relationship with Columbia during the 1940s
Box 382 Folder 9
Letters from Phillip Talbot to the Institute of Current World Affairs. The letters were forwarded from the institute to Columbia University by Walter Rogers. Talbot was a journalist who was sent to India between 1938 and 1941 by the institute in order to test the success of a proposed training program for American foreign correspondents. The letters discuss his training in London; voyage to India via Japan, China, Singapore, and Rangoon; his travels in India; and Indian culture and politics
Box 663 Folder 12 to 13
Correspondence between Ogden N. Rood, professor of physics at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Includes correspondence with Mrs. Ogden N. Rood. Correspondence relates to science and engineering at the University. Topics include: the purchase and maintenance of scientific equipment, fellowships, Fayerweather Hall, and the need for mining studies. Includes correspondence regarding facilities at Columbia's old 49th Street campus and the erection of a subway near the campus. Also, correspondence regarding Rood's collection of Near and Far Eastern antiquities and the educational value of the collection.
Box 501 Folder 5 to 6
Correspondence between Leo Roon and high level administrators at Columbia University. Roon was chairman of the board of trustees at the College of Pharmacy. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects. Includes a proposal for the types of research to be done by the school (1958) and a report on furthering the relationship between the College of Pharmacy and Columbia (1959). Also, records regarding campus unrest and political activities. These materials were forwarded to the University administration by Roon. Records include: materials from the 3rd Annual Conference of Socialist Educators, which took place in New York in September of 1967 and correspondence and fliers regarding campus disturbances at Columbia in 1968 and 1969. Also, correspondence regarding Roon's gifts to the University
Box 663 Folder 14
Correspondence between Theodore Roosevelt and the president of Columbia University during Roosevelt's time as governor of New York State. Correspondence relates to education laws and politics. Includes correspondence regarding an honorary degree for Roosevelt and Columbia's Loubat Prize
Box 662 Folder 35
Correspondence betwen Elihu Root and the president of Columbia University. Root served as secretary of war under William McKinley and secretary of war and secretary of state under Theodore Roosevelt. Correspondene relates to a variety of subjects.
Topics include: an agreement between Columbia and Roosevelt Hospital (1893), the reform of the political primary system (1898); Columbia's offer to Root to become a trustee of Barnard College, the undergraduate women's college affiliated with the University (1903); Root's honorary degree from Columbia (1904); and the Pan-American Scientific Conference, which was held in Chile in 1908. Includes a letter regarding issues involving the separation of Panama from Colombia and a request to Root from the president of the University to furnish a Columbia professor who was traveling abroad with a recommendation letter
Box 491 Folder 21 to 22
Correspondence between James N. Rosenberg, a benefactor of Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to a project to publish a history of American painting. Topics include the scope of the project and planning and funding for the project. Also, correspondence regarding development, gifts of paintings, and donor relations
Box 457 Folder 16
Correspondence between Hans Rosenhaupt, associate director of the admissions office at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to admissions and degree requirements. Many of the letters relate to individual candidates for admission. Includes admissions statistics. Also includes an abstract of a meeting regarding the New York School of Social Work and its relationship to the University. Some of the correspondence is in German
Box 504 Folder 10
Correspondence between Harold A. Rousselot and high level administrators at Columbia University. Rousselot was president of the Alumni Federation of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to alumni events and the routine business of alumni organizations. Includes a report of the Committee on University Development (April, 1960). The report discusses development strategy and the organization of Columbia's development program. Also includes a statement of support for the University administration from the Alumni Federation (March, 1962) and routine acknowledgement letters
Box 672 Folder 18
Correspondence between Edwin Charles Rozwenc, professor of American studies in the Department of American Studies at Amherst College, and the secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the appointment of a jury to award the Bancroft Prize for 1956 and the selection of prize recipients
Box 670 Folder 16
Correspondence between Theodore S. Ruggles, chairman of Columbia University's Bicentennial Committee on Public Relations, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to publicity and preparations for Columbia's 1954 bicentennial celebration. Includes the committee's first report, which contains recommendations regarding publicity for the bicentennial
Box 336 Folder 21 to 23
Correspondence between Henry Hurd Rusby, dean of the College of Pharmacy of the City of New York and, later, dean of Columbia University's College of Pharmacy, and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the merger of the College of Pharmacy of the City of New York with Columbia University and various topics regarding the administration, curriculum, and faculty of the school. Also, correspondence relating to Rusby's professional activities, including his work on behalf of the Department of Agriculture to enforce the Pure Drug Law, and controversy regarding his activities. Correspondence dating from 1928 to 1929 relates to nominations for honorary degrees in commemoration of the College of Pharmacy's centennial anniversary
Box 670 Folder 63
Correspondence between Ralph L. Rusk, a professor of engineering at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to Rusk's retirement. Includes a letter in which Rusk recommends Fritz Ernst for appointment as a visiting professor of medieval and modern history
Box 670 Folder 64
Correspondence between James E. Russell, chairman of Columbia University's fourth bicentennial conference, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the fourth conference in a series of conferences honoring Columbia's 1954 bicentennial. Topics include: plans for the conference, which focused on national policies for education, health and social services. Includes correspondence regarding plans for Eleanor Roosevelt to speak at the conference's opening banquet
Box 337 Folder 7 to 13
Correspondence between James E. Russell, professor of education and dean of Teachers College, and Columbia University presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray Butler. Teachers College is a affiliate of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the administration of Teachers College and its relationship with Columbia. Topics related to the administration of Teachers College include: the curriculum, admissions cases and admissions requirements, budgeting and appropriations, personnel, faculty appointments, faculty affairs, women faculty and students, scholarships and fellowships, tuition and fees, salary policies, preparation of the school's catalog, degree requirements, and the administration of the Horace Mann School. Correspondence also reflects the administrative and financial relationship between Teachers College and Columbia University.
Topics include: relations between Russell and James Chidester Egbert, director of the University's Summer Session; questions regarding the administration of Summer Session and Extension Teaching, Columbia's continuing education division; the role of Columbia's president in the government of Teachers College; and amendments to the statutes of Teachers College. Also, correspondence regarding Russell's personnel issues, professional activities, and resignation
Box 449 Folder 18
Correspondence between John B. Russell, chairman of the department of Electrical Engineering at Columbia University, and University administrators. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the department and the Electronics Research Laboratories. Topics include: faculty appointments, facilities, faculty affairs, enrollment, and departmental income from fees
Box 352 Folder 9 to 15
Correspondence between William Russell and high level administrators at Columbia University. Russell was Dean of Teachers College and later became president of the school. Most of the correspondence relates to the administration and government of Teacher's College and the school's relationship with Columbia University. Includes correspondence between Russell and University presidents Nicholas Murray Butler, Dwight D. Eisenhower, and Grayson Kirk. Also includes correspondence between Russell and Acting President Frank D Fackenthal. Topics related to Teachers College include: fellowships, personnel, faculty affairs, gifts to the school, faculty appointments, and finances. Includes correspondence regarding the revision of the Teachers College charter in 1941 the revision of the school's statutes in 1947 and changes to the agreement between the College and the University in 1948. Also includes a draft of the school's charters and statutes and a draft of the revised agreement between Teachers College and Columbia University. Also, reports and proposals regarding the curriculum, programs, and educational methods of Teachers College. These include: a proposal to study the effects of Depression-era social and economic changes on teaching methods (1931), a report on the Department of Nursing Education (1926), and a proposal for a program in American citizenship (1949). Also includes a report, dating from 1948 which discusses German culture and education. The report was produced by Russell as part of his consultant services for the American military government in post-World War II Germany
Box 663 Folder 15
Correspondence between Julius Sachs, professor of education and chairman of the Department of Secondary Education in Teachers College at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to issues involving primary and secondary education. Topics include: the Horace Mann School at Teachers College, an alumni scholarship program, and a teacher exchange between the United States and Germany
Box 507 Folder 2 to 8
Correspondence between the Sackler family and the president of Columbia University. Includes correspondence with Arthur, Else, and Raymond Sackler. The records consist of correspondence, lists, and exhibition catalogs relating to the Sacklers' gifts to Columbia. In particular, the records relate to the Sackler Collection of Asian antiquities. Includes inventories describing items in the collection. Records also relate to the Sacklers' gift in support of Asian studies
Box 672 Folder 35
Correspondence between David Alan Safer and the assistant to the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Safer's proposals for creating an office of public affairs at the University and his search for a job
Box 666 Folder 19
Correspondence between Cornelia B. Sage, director of the Albright Art Gallery at the Buffalo Fine Arts Academy, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to an exhibition of the works of Constantin Meunier that was held at Columbia and at the Albright Gallery in 1914.
Topics include attendance and sales figures from both locations.
Box 349 Folder 16 to 18
Correspondence between Dean Sage, president of the Board of Managers of Presbyterian Hospital, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the affiliation between Columbia University and Presbyterian Hospital, fund raising for the hospital, and medical center finances. Includes correspondence and a proposal regarding the establishment of a school of nursing [ca. 1930]. Correspondence dating from 1940 to 1943 relates to faculty and research appointments at Columbia-affiliated hospitals
Box 491 Folder 1 to 16
Correspondence between Stanley Salmen and high level administrators at Columbia University. Salmen held appointments as coordinator of University planning; executive secretary of Columbia Associates, a group of benefactors who contributed regularly to Columbia's general fund; and associate director of the Office of Contracts and Special Gifts. Salmen appears to have served as Columbia's principle development officer and to have been involved in the formation and interpretation of development policies, the evaluation of funding proposals, and the physical planning of the University. The records consist of correspondence, working papers, proposals, financial statements, and financial reports.
Also, correspondence and reports [ca. 1958-1967] regarding relations between Columbia and the neighboring community and correspondence regarding funding for sponsored research projects during the mid 1960s. Topics related to University development and planning include: University finances, relations between alumni associations and the University, building programs, campus planning, gifts to Columbia, the administration of prizes and awards, urban renewal on Manhattan's upper west side, and the business of the University's development committees.
Includes minutes of the regular meetings of the development and finance committee. Also includes: correspondence and proposals regarding the reorganization of the School of Painting and Sculpture and the School of Dramatic Arts, the creation of an arts program at Columbia, and attempts to establish a University arts center [ca. 1957-1958]; financial records [ca. 1959] regarding the construction of the University's Citizenship Center, which became the Ferris Booth Hall student center; a report on crime and public safety in the Morningside Heights neighborhood surrounding Columbia [September, 1961]; a report evaluating the recommendations of the Committee on the Educational Future of the University, which had conducted a comprehensive study of the University in 1957 [December, 1960]; a report on space needs and enrollment [July, 1960]; a report on the overhaul of the University's accounting and reporting system that took place in 1960 [July, 1960]; a report on the history of the relationship between Columbia University and Presbyterian Hospital, the administration of the Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center [CPMC], and proposed revisions to the administration of the CPMC [September, 1963]; minutes of a meeting regarding the University's Sackler Collection of Asian art objects [October, 1960]; and a draft of a report on the educational needs and plans of the University [December, 1961]
Box 507 Folder 27
Correspondence between Arnold Saltzman and high level administrators at Columbia University. Saltzman was an alumnus of Columbia College, chairman of the Columbia College Council, and chairman of the Board of directors of the Columbia College Fund. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects.
Topics include: plans to erect a University gymnasium in Morningside Park, Saltzman's gifts to Columbia College, relations between Columbia and the surrounding community, and University relations with New York City. Includes the by-laws of the Columbia College Council
Box 414 Folder 16
Correspondence between Walter H. Sammis, president of Ohio Edison and a Columbia University trustee, and high level University administrators. Much of the correspondence relates to routine trustee business. Includes correspondence regarding faculty salaries and salary policies. Also includes correspondence and proposals [ca. 1956] relating to the construction of a University engineering center. Also, correspondence regarding the Bicentennial Medal which was awarded to Sammis in 1954 in honor of Columbia's 200th anniversary. Includes many invitations
Box 673 Folder 25
Correspondence regarding the appointment of William Samolin to the art history department at Columbia University. Includes letters that express opinions regarding Samolin and his work on the art of Central Asia
Box 663 Folder 16
Correspondence between Benjamin Aymar Sands and the president of Columbia University. Sands was a trustee of the University. Correspondence relates to fund raising and the business of the board of trustees.
Topics include: funding for the construction of University Hall, Kent Hall [the law school], and a proposed alumni memorial hall. other topics include: a portrait of Columbia president Seth Low by Frank D. Millet, membership in the University Club, and Andrew Carnegie's nomination to the board of trustees
Box 670 Folder 17
Correspondence between George Bailey Sansom, professor emeritus of Japanese and director of the East Asian Institute at Columbia University, and University administrators. Records relate to Japanese studies at Columbia and events at the East Asian Institute. Also, correspondence regarding Sansom's personnel issues
Box 71 Folder 43
Correspondence between Jean Sarrailh, rector of the University of Paris, and high level administrators at Columbia University. Most of the correspondence relates to the honorary degree that was awarded to Sarrailh at Columbia's 3rd Bicentennial Convocation. Includes biographical information regarding Sarrailh
Box 36 Folder 19 to 20
Correspondence regarding the awarding of a Columbia University honorary degree to Sato Eisaku, prime minister of Japan. Records include: the text of the address that was delivered at the honorary degree ceremony by Grayson Kirk, the president of Columbia University; the text of Eisaku's address at the ceremony; the text of Dean Andrew Cordier's introduction for Eisaku; guest lists; correspondence regarding preparations for the ceremony; newspaper clippings; and biographical information on Eisaku
Box 663 Folder 17
Correspondence between Herbert Livingston Satterlee and the president of Columbia University. Satterlee was a trustee of Barnard College, the women's college affiliated with Columbia. Correspondence relates to the campus gates at 119th Street and Amsterdam Avenue, which were a gift from the class of 1883. Correspondence also relates to fund raising for Columbia's statue of Alexander Hamilton
Box 371 Folder 19
Correspondence between Howard J. Savage, secretary of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Most of the correspondence relates to retirement plans for individual faculty members and their spouses as well as general issues regarding retirement benefits. Also, correspondence regarding athletics and the University's role in supervising athletic activities
Box 663 Folder 18
Correspondence between Watson L. Savage, director of the Columbia University gymnasium and the University's physical training adviser, and the president of the University. Correspondence relates to physical education at Columbia and the administration of the gymnasium
Box 666 Folder 20
Correspondence between Marshall Howard Saville, Loubat Professor of American Archeology at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to: Saville's appointment as the first Loubat Professor, his professional activities, and his various expeditions in the United States and Mexico. Includes a report on the Loubat Exhibition to southern Mexico [March, 1911]
Box 353 Folder 1 to 17
Box 354 Folder 1 to 15
Correspondence between John Godfrey Saxe, general counsel for Columbia University, and the high level administrators of the University. Correspondence dating from the late 1940s through the 1950s also includes letters from Saxe's partners. Correspondence relates to a range of issues including: interpretation of the University's charters and statutes, revisions to the charters and statutes, University policies, wills, the management of estates, taxation, agreements, patents, contracts, and copyright of the University name. Includes correspondence regarding agreements with Presbyterian Hospital [ca. 1946], New York Psychiatric Institute [ca. 1948], and the Institute of Public Administration [ca. 1942]. Also includes correspondence and reports regarding discrimination charges which were brought against the University and other schools by the American Jewish Congress [ca. 1946-1947]. Also, correspondence documenting the work of the board of trustee's committee on legal affairs
Box 18 Folder 18
Correspondence between Meyer Schapiro and the president and provost of Columbia University. Schapiro held numerous appointments during his more than forty-year career at Columbia. During 1965 the period covered by these records, Schapiro was appointed University Professor. Correspondence relates to Schapiro's appointment and personnel issues
Box 447 Folder 20
Correspondence between Henry Scheffe, executive officer of the Department of Mathematical Statistics at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the department. Topics include: faculty appointments, budgeting, and faculty salaries. Includes correspondence regarding a statistical consulting service that was run by the department
Box 18 Folder 36
Correspondence regarding travel arrangements for Alexander von Schelting, a lecturer in sociology at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Schelting's attempts to return to the United States from Geneva in 1940. Because von Schelting held a German passport, the University corresponded with Pan American Airways representatives and officials of the British embassy regarding problems with his travel arrangements
Box 339 Folder 4 to 5
Correspondence between Augustus Schermerhorn, a trustee of Columbia University, and University presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray Butler. Correspondence relates to trustee business and Schermerhorn's gifts to Columbia and touches on faculty affairs and College finances. Includes a brief exchange [ca. 1908] between Schermerhorn and Butler regarding the political activities of professors and instruction in socialism and communism at the College
Box 339 Folder 1 to 3
Correspondence between William C. Schermerhorn, chairman of the board of trustees of Columbia University, and University presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray Butler. The correspondence documents Columbia's administrative changes and physical growth during a crucial period in its history - the purchase of the Morningside Heights property and the beginnings of the College's transformation into a university. Much of the correspondence relates to the purchase, planning, and early development of Columbia's Morningside Heights campus. Includes correspondence regarding Schermerhorn Hall. Other topics include: Columbia's government and administration, finances and financial policies, debt service, tuition and fees, gifts to the College, real estate purchases, and trustee affairs
Box 338 Folder 18
Correspondence between Jacob H. Schiff, a benefactor of Columbia University, and University presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray butler. Correspondence relates to Schiff's gifts to Columbia including: scholarships, travel awards, proposed buildings, and professorships. Other topics include University finances and debt service and the finances of Barnard College, a women's college affiliated with Columbia. Also, correspondence and reports regarding the exclusion of three Jewish students from the Horace Mann School at Teachers College in 1899 and letters to presidents Low and Butler urging the appointment of a Jewish trustee to the University's board of trustees
Box 427 Folder 19
Correspondence between Arthur A. Schiller, professor of law at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to routine administrative matters involving research projects in Roman law and Indonesian law
Box 427 Folder 20
Correspondence between Professor Jan Schilt and Columbia University administrators. Schilt held appointments as Rutherford Professor of Astronomy and director of the University's Rutherford Observatory. Records relate to the Department of Astronomy and the Rutherford Observatory. Topics include: research funding, equipment, and budgeting. Includes a letter, dating from 1950 which discusses Schilt's views on the purpose of scientific research at the University. Also, records [ca. 1948] regarding the Yale-Columbia Southern Station observatory and its proposed move from South Africa to Australia
Box 387 Folder 1 to 19
Correspondence between Henry McAlpin Schley, comptroller of Columbia University, and the provost, director of buildings and grounds, and other high level University administrators. The position of comptroller was created in 1942 in order to oversee the University's business operations and facilities. The records consist of correspondence, budgets, financial records, architectural plans, legal documents, reports, and proposals relating to Columbia's financial administration, labor relations, and facilities.
Topics include: the renovation and maintenance of buildings, campus planning, equipment purchases, service contracts, classroom scheduling and space assignments, personnel administration, employee wages and benefits, gifts of property, and real estate purchases. Most of the correspondence dating from 1942 to 1946 relates to the unionization of Columbia's buildings and grounds employees and to the University's labor relations policies.
The records, which include notes regarding meetings, document negotiations with the Columbia University Maintenance Employees Association, the National War Labor Board, Industrial Relations Counselors, and the Transport Workers Union of America [TWU]. Includes correspondence and statements regarding a 1946 strike against the University by the TWU. Also, Schley's reports to the trustees' committee on buildings and grounds; reports regarding a number of accidents and fires at the University; correspondence, drawings and reports relating to a campus study and building plan; and correspondence regarding the establishment of the Central Personnel Office. Also, correspondence regarding the administration of government contracts and sponsored research during World War II and correspondence relating to a naval midshipmen's school that was operated by the University during the war
Box 667 Folder 35
Correspondence regarding the murder of Columbia anthropology student Henrieta Schmerler and the investigation of the case. Schmerler was killed while doing field work on the White River Apache Indian Reservation in Arizona. Correspondence relates to the circumstances of the murder, Schmerler's living and working arrangements, the collection of her personal effects and the return of her body to New York, and federal investigation of the crime and the arrest of suspects. Correspondents include: the secretary of Columbia University; William Donner, Superintendent of the Fort Apache Agency of the Indian Field Service in the United States Department of the Interior; Franz Boas, professor of anthropology at Columbia University; Charles VanBergen, curator of archaeology in the Los Angeles Museum of History, Science and Art; Elias Schmerler; C. J. Rhoads, Commissioner of Indian Affairs in the United States Department of the Interior; George W. P. Hunt, Governor of Arizona; and Jesse L. Nusbaum, director of the Laboratory of anthropology
Box 338 Folder 9
Correspondence between Friedrich Schmidt of the Prussian cultural ministry and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the appointment of the Roosevelt Professor and the Kaiser Wilhem Professor. The Roosevelt Professorship sent an American professor to Germany to lecture and act as an educational and cultural liaison. The Kaiser Wilhelm Professorship brought a German professor to lecture in the United States. The correspondence also deals with administrative matters related to the Roosevelt and Kaiser Wilhelm professorships and to Deutches Haus, Columbia's German cultural and educational center
Box 386 Folder 16
Correspondence between Professor Herbert W. Schneider and the high level administrators of Columbia University. Schneider held appointments as professor of religion, professor of philosophy, and executive officer of the Department of Philosophy. Correspondence and budgets relate to the department. Topics include: faculty appointments, faculty affairs, budgeting, salaries, lectures, and prizes. Includes minutes [September, 1949] relating to the endowment of a chair in religion and the administration and policies of a proposed religion program. Also, correspondence [ca. 1946-1950] regarding instruction in religion, correspondence [ca. 1947] regarding the appointment of a University chaplain, and correspondence regarding Schneider's personnel issues and professional activities
Box 673 Folder 8
Correspodnence between Russ Schoch, associate director of the American Press Institute, and Columbia University administrators. Correspondence relates to Schoch's personnel issues and housing
Box 407 Folder 18 to 19
Correspondence between Franz Schrader, executive officer of the Department of Zoology at Columbia University, and University administrators. Includes correspondence with funding agencies. The records consist of correspondence, budgets, and reports relating to the Department of Zoology.
Topics include: equipment, staffing needs, budgeting, funding for research projects, faculty appointments, research in the department, and faculty affairs. Includes a report dating from November, 1948 regarding the undergraduate science curriculum
Box 414 Folder 17
Correspondence between Robert L. Schulz, aid to Dwight D. Eisenhower, and high level administrators at Columbia University. Prior to Eisenhower's inaugural as president of the University, Schulz corresponded with University administrators on Eisenhower's behalf regarding preparations for Eisenhower's move to Columbia and routine administrative issues. The correspondence also relates to the transition between the administrations of President Eisenhower and his successor, President Grayson Kirk
Box 669 Folder 19
Correspondence between Professor Henry H. L. Schulze and the associate provost of Columbia University. Schulze was a professor of Germanic languages and president of the Columbia University chapter of the Deutscher Verein. Correspondence relates to Schulze's appointment and personnel issues as well as recognition of the Columbia chapter of the Deutscher Verein
Box 338 Folder 10
Correspondence between Jacob Gould Schurman, president of Cornell University, and the president and secretary of Columbia University regarding education-related subjects. Topics include: Rhodes Scholarships, university government, and the routine business of the college Entrance Examination Board. Includes two letters regarding Schurman's service on the United States Philippine Commission
Box 427 Folder 21
Correspondence between Robert L. Schuyler, Gouverneur Morris Professor of History and executive officer of the Department of History at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the department. Topics include: budgeting, course scheduling, personnel, faculty appointments, gifts to the department, visiting professors, and faculty affairs. Includes a reprint of a lecture that was given by Schuyler in November, 1948. Also, correspondence between Schuyler and the University [ca. 1953-1959] regarding his honorary degree from the University and other topics
Box 670 Folder 18
Correspondence between Allen T. Schwab, assistant to the dean of the School of Engineering at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to reimbursements for routine expenditures and the placement of engineering graduates in small companies
Box 508 Folder 9
Correspondence between Arnold Schwartz and Henry L. Schwartz of the Brookdale Foundation and Columbia University administrators. Correspondence relates to gifts to the University and University appeals for funding from the foundation. Includes correspondence regarding funding for the construction of a University gymnasium in Manhattan's Morningside Park and funding for the library of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. Includes correspondence between administrators regarding donor relations with the Brookdale Foundation. Other correspondence from Arnold Schwartz is filed with correspondence from Henry L. Schwartz in Subseries 1.1.657
Box 508 Folder 2 to 3
Correspondence between Henry L. Schwartz and Arnold Schwartz of the Brookdale Foundation and high level administrators at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to gifts to the University and appeals for funding from Columbia. Includes correspondence regarding the project to erect a University gymnasium in Manhattan's Morningside Park. Also includes routine acknowledgement letters. Other correspondence from Henry L. Schwartz is filed with correspondence from Arnold Schwartz in Subseries 1.1.661
Box 506 Folder 1 to 15
Correspondence between George W. Schwer, controller of Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Most of the records consist of routine notification forms for gifts, grants, and bequests. Includes: correspondence regarding fringe benefit costs, an organizational chart for the Controller's Office, and a financial report for the 1965-1966 fiscal year
Box 663 Folder 19
Correspondence between James Brown Scott, professor of international law at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Includes correspondence between the president and University faculty, trustees, and donors. Correspondence relates to Scott's brief employment at Columbia and the controversy involving his possible return to the University after serving in the United States Department of State. Includes: letters favoring and opposing his re-appointment; a newspaper article about the issue; and a negative review of his book, The Hague Conferences of 1899 and 1907 from the Columbia Law Review
Box 338 Folder 11
Correspondence between Henry R. Seager, professor of political economy and secretary of the Faculty of Political Science at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Topics related to the Faculty of Political Science and the School of Political Science include: faculty appointments, the curriculum, membership in the Faculty, and preparation of the catalog. Also, correspondence regarding finances and personnel in the Department of Economics. Also contains correspondence relating to Seager's appointment and personnel issues, including his leave of absence during World War I. Correspondence dating from 1928 to 1930 deals primarily with arrangements for the 50th anniversary celebration of the School of Political Science and Seager's retirement
Box 666 Folder 21
Correspondence between Joseph D. Sears and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Sears was a captain in the Photographic Division of the United States School of Military Cinematography and secretary of the Committee on Internment of the National Committee on Prisons and Prison Labor. Records relate to the School of Military Cinematography and the use of University property for housing and training enlisted men in 1918. Includes reports on health conditions at the camp
Box 500 Folder 25
Correspondence between Professor William H. Sebrell and high level administrators at Columbia University. Sebrell's appointments included professor of public health and nutrition and director of the University's Institute of Nutrition Sciences. Correspondence relates to the institute's board of advisors. Topics include events and board business. Includes minutes and agenda from board meetings. Also includes a draft mission statement for the institute [March, 1959]
Box 338 Folder 12 to 16
Correspondence between Edwin Robert Anderson Seligman, McVikar Professor of Political Economy at Columbia University, and University presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray Butler, Columbia faculty, and others. Seligman also served briefly as acting dean of the Faculties of Political Science, Pure Science and Philosophy. Correspondence relates to the School of Political Science, the Faculty of Political Science, and the Department of Economics.
Topics include: faculty appointments, staffing needs, arrangements for courses, teaching loads, fellowships, budgeting and appropriations, personnel, and publications. Seligman was chairman of the University Committee on Settlement Work. Related topics include a proposed program of social work education at the University [ca. 1903] and the organization of the committee. Also, correspondence documenting Columbia's relations with various social service organizations. Related topics include: plans to establish a school of public health in conjunction with the Training School of Public Service of New York City's Bureau of Municipal Research [ca. 1914], work to establish programs with the city's Bureau of Social Service, and Columbia's relations with the School of Philanthropy. Also includes some correspondence regarding the dismissal of Columbia University professors James McKeen Cattell and H. W. L. [Henry Wadsworth Longfellow] Dana in 1917 and correspondence regarding Seligman's personnel issues and retirement
Box 338 Folder 17
Correspondence between Isaac N. Seligman, a benefactor of Columbia University and brother of Professor Edwin Seligman, and University administrators.
Topics include: Isaac Seligman's gifts to Columbia, University finances, and the University's requests for donations. includes correspondence regarding the Carl Schurz Memorial Fund and the Felix Adler Professorship Fund
Box 663 Folder 20
Correspondence between Charles H. Senff and the president of Columbia University. Senff was a benefactor of the University. Correspondence relates to gifts for: equipment, books, faculty salaries, and academic journals
Box 672 Folder 2
Correspondence between Oscar N. Serbein, associate professor of statistics in the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. Serbein served as secretary of the University's Committee on Retirement and Insurance, which oversaw University pension plans and other benefits. Most of the records consist of retirement committee minutes. Also, correspondence regarding Serbein's personnel issues
Box 669 Folder 29
Correspondence between Stephan T. Serghiesco and the dean of the Faculties of Political Science, Philosophy and Pure Science at Columbia University. Serghiesco was a lecturer in mathematics and University mathematics librarian. Correspondence relates to Serghiesco's personnel issues and retirement. Includes a 14 page memoir of his life and several supporting documents
Box 663 Folder 21 to 22
Correspondence between George Sever, professor of electrical engineering and secretary of the Faculty of Applied Science at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the Department of Electrical Engineering and the Faculty of Applied Science.
Topics include: facilities, furnishings, equipment, faculty appointments, student grades and discipline, and commencement lectures. Includes correspondence regarding a plan to test electric meters for New York City. Also includes a University pamphlet on student organizations for the 1905-1906 academic year
Box 414 Folder 18
Correspondence between Aura A. Severinghaus, associate dean of the college of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University and secretary of the Faculty of Medicine, and high level University administrators. Severinghaus also served on a number of committees including the college's Committee on Admissions and the Committee on Administration of the Medical Faculty.
Topics include: admissions, faculty appointments, personnel administration, and gifts to the college. Includes his 1961 speech on the contributions of the College of Physicians and Surgeons and correspondence regarding his retirement
Box 36 Folder 26
Two items of correspondence regarding a gift in support of Columbia University's medical library from Elizabeth Shafer
Box 669 Folder 2
Correspondence between Phillip Shannon, counsellor to veterans at Columbia University, and the provost of the University. Correspondence relates to veterans' affairs, compliance with federal regulations regarding veterans' education, and the Office of the Counsellor to Veterans. Includes a statistical report regarding University veterans' services and a transcript of testimony regarding Shannon's alleged communist activities
Box 108 Folder 30
Correspondence regarding efforts to find employment for James C. Shanteau, a Columbia University student who was studying at the University of Michigan [Ann Arbor] on a National Science Foundation and National Institute of Mental Health fellowship in experimental psychology. Includes Shanteau's application for a post-doctoral fellowship and recommendation letters to potential employers from the president of Columbia University
Box 679 Folder 23
Correspondence regarding plans to award a Columbia University honorary degree to Lal Bahadur Shastri, the prime minister of India. Includes correspondence between the president of the University and University administrators as well as correspondence with the Indian ambassador to the United States, B.K. Nehru. The degree ceremony was cancelled due to Shastri's death. Includes newspaper clippings
Box 496 Folder 11
Correspondence between James Shearer, executive officer of the Hispanic languages section of the Department of Romance Languages at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the department.
Topics include: awards, personnel, faculty appointments, and arrangements for events. Also, correspondence regarding Shearer's personnel issues
Box 54 Folder 24
Correspondence between Paul V. Sheehan and administrators and faculty at Columbia University. At the time that the correspondence was written, Sheehan was the oldest person to receive a Master's degree from Columbia. Includes correspondence between administrators regarding Sheehan. Much of this correspondence relates to strategies for encouraging Sheehan to make a gift to the University
Box 447 Folder 22
Correspondence between Eugene J. Sheffer, director of the Maison Francais at Columbia University, and University administrators. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to Maison Francais, Columbia's French culture and educational center. Topics include: finances, gifts to the center, development, and events. Also, correspondence relating to Sheffer's personnel issues.
Box 338 Folder 20
Correspondence between Edward W. Sheldon, secretary of Barnard College and chairman of the Barnard's committee on finance, and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University. Barnard College is the women's college affiliated with Columbia University. Topics related to Barnard include: finances, budgeting, gifts to the college, and college statutes and government. Includes correspondence regarding the selection of a dean for Barnard [ca. 1909] and probate [ca. 1918] of the estate of Horace W. Carpentier, an important benefactor of the University
Box 672 Folder 47
Correspondence between James P. Shenton and Columbia University administrators. At the time, Shenton held an appointment as an assistant professor of history. Most of the correspondence relates to expenditures for Shenton's research. Includes a reprint of his article, "The Coughlin Movement" and the "New Deal", from the Political Science Quarterly [September, 1958]
Box 338 Folder 19
Correspondence between William R. Shepherd, professor of history in the Department of History at Columbia University, and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of the University. Correspondence relates to Shepherd's appointment as Hewitt Lecturer for 1908 and his professional activities including: a research trip to South America in 1907 his attendance, as Columbia's representative, at the 1908 Pan-American Scientific Congress in Santiago, Chile; and a trip to Asia and India in 1914. Shepherd also served as secretary of the Faculties of Political Science, Pure Science and Philosophy and, briefly, as acting dean of the faculties. Includes limited correspondence on the routine business of the Faculties. Also includes correspondence regarding Shepherd's appointment and personnel matters
Box 663 Folder 23
Correspondence between Frank Dempster Sherman, professor of graphics in the School of Architecture at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Correspondence relates to Sherman's appointment and personnel issues
Box 359 Folder 17 to 18
Correspondence between Henry C. Sherman, executive officer of the Department of Chemistry at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the Department of Chemistry.
Topics include: faculty affairs, faculty appointments, teaching loads, budgeting, equipment, research funding, and the management of special funds. Includes correspondence regarding teaching and research activities in the department and correspondence regarding the Borden Research Fund. Also, Sherman's paper on nutrition and food chemistry, which was presented to the American Chemical Society in September, 1933
Box 505 Folder 20
Correspondence between Robert O. Shipman, assistant dean of the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University, and University administrators. Most of the correspondence relates to administrative issues involving travel services and expenditures
Box 666 Folder 22
Correspondence between Paul Shorey and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Shorey was a professor of classical philology at the University of Chicago and a visiting professor at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Shorey's lectures at Columbia in 1911 and 1916
Box 339 Folder 6 to 8
Correspondence between James Thomson Shotwell, professor of history and secretary of the Faculty of Political Science at Columbia University, and the president of the University, clerk of the board of trustees, faculty members, and persons outside of the University. Correspondence dating from 1900 to 1918 relates to Shotwell's professional activities and his work on Records of Civilization and other publications. Also, correspondence regarding faculty affairs and faculty appointments and correspondence and course outlines documenting the curriculum in the Department of History. Also includes correspondence regarding the Special Committee on Library Policy and administrative issues relating to the University's libraries. Records dating from 1952 consist of correspondence from Columbia's vice president and provost to the Nobel Prize Committee regarding efforts to have Shotwell nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. Includes a bibliography of Shotwell's works and a mailing list
Box 400 Folder 17 to 18
Correspondence between Carl Sumner Shoup, professor of economics and executive officer of the Department of Economics at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Most of the records dating from 1948 to 1949 relate to payments to Shoup's research assistants. Other records dating from the 1940s consist of correspondence and a report regarding membership in the Council for Research in the Social Sciences. Most of the records dating from the 1950s consist of correspondence regarding research funding by the Council for Research in the Social Sciences and correspondence and budgets relating to the Department of Economics. Topics related to the Department of Economics include: expenditures, payments to research assistants, enrollment, personnel, fund raising, research funding, faculty appointments, and budgeting. Includes a proposal to establish an institute for public finance [1946] and a report of the committee that was created to evaluate instruction in geography at the University [1956]. Also includes correspondence regarding the Ford Foundation Research Professor in Economics
Box 496 Folder 12
Correspondence between David L. Sills and high level administrators at Columbia University. Includes correspondence with funding agencies and correspondence with Sills' stafSills served as director and director of research in the Bureau of Applied Social Research, which was based at Columbia. The records consist of correspondence and routine cover letters relating to the administration the bureau.
Topics include: personnel, facilities, research projects, and budgeting. Other records include: information on the staff and organization of the bureau [1959], a proposal for research in group behavior [1957], and policies for the selection of research proposals to be funded by the bureau
Box 669 Folder 3
Correspondence between Henry M. Silver and the secretary and provost of Columbia University. Silver was manager of King's Crown Press, a division of the Columbia University Press. Correspondence relates to: managing and updating alumni records, publishing teaching materials, fees for services at the University Mailing Center, and equipment for the press. Includes a report on the University Mailing Center [1947] and a 1947-1948 budget for the center
Box 667 Folder 32
Correspondence between Mary K. Simkhovitch, director of Greenwich House, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Includes correspondence with Vladimir Simkhovitch. Correspondence concerns relations between Columbia and Greenwich House, a neighborhood development and educational center. Topics include: the composition of the board of Greenwich House, Columbia's role in decisions regarding the center, the possibility of allowing Greenwich House to use the University's Camp Columbia property in Connecticut, and funding for the center from the Rockefeller Foundation
Box 340 Folder 1 to 2
Correspondence between Vladimir Simkhovitch of the Columbia University Libraries and the University's librarian, clerk of the board of trustees, and secretary. Correspondence dating from 1901 to 1917 relates to the Columbia University Libraries. Topics include: acquisitions, the management of library holdings, administrative issues, and the work of the Library Council. Correspondence dating from 1940 to 1944 documents payments to Simkhovitch's research assistants and his retirement
Box 402 Folder 1 to 6
Correspondence between Ernest Joseph Simmons, professor of Russian literature and executive officer of the Department of Slavic Languages at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Most of the records consist of correspondence, budgets, and reports relating to the Department of Slavic Languages. Simmons was also a member of the Committee on Instruction of the Faculty of Philosophy. Includes correspondence regarding membership in the Faculty during the 1950s. Also, correspondence and a report regarding the Department of General and Comparative Linguistics [ca. 1953], correspondence relating to the President's Committee on the Future of the University [ca. 1955], and correspondence regarding Simmons' personnel issues.
Topics related to the Department of Slavic Languages include: staffing needs, faculty appointments, visiting lecturers and professors, scholarships, the recruiting and retention of faculty members, grants, research projects, budgeting, appropriations, and the appointment of faculty representatives to events at other institutions. Includes correspondence and reports regarding the administration of the American Slavic and East European Review and a letter dating from August, 1948 which discusses red-baiting and anti-communist criticism of the department. Includes correspondence regarding funding for named professorships from Eastern European governments.
Topics include the Thomas Mazaryk Chair of Chzechoslovak Studies and the Adam Mickiewicz Chair of Polish Studies. Also includes correspondence and course descriptions, dating from 1946 which relate to his appointment as executive officer and his plans for the reorganization of the department. Topics include: degree requirements, enrollments, the curriculum, graduate and undergraduate instruction, and the evaluation of faculty performance and professional standing
Box 673 Folder 17
Correspondence between Clifford L. Simpson, staff assistant in the Gymnasium Building Fund office at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to fund raising efforts on behalf of Columbia's project to construct a gymnasium in Manhattan's Morningside Park. Records include: a working paper describing the proposed gymnasium; the minutes of a meeting at which Columbia University and Barnard College policies regarding the proposed gymnasium were discussed; the minutes of a meeting of the Advanced Gifts Committee of the Columbia Gymnasium Building Fund; and a lengthy statement regarding the history of neighborhood programs in the Morningside Heights neighborhood adjoining Columbia
Box 495 Folder 22
Correspondence between Hoke S. Simpson, director of executive programs in the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University, and University administrators. Most of the records consist of routine invitations and cover letters. Includes a press release regarding the school's Transportation Management Program, an Executive Program in business Administration bulletin dating from the 1956-1957 academic year, and correspondence relating to Simpson's personnel issues
Box 347 Folder 11
Correspondence between Walter B. Simpson, clerk and registrar of the College of Pharmacy at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to routine business matters
Box 666 Folder 23
Correspondence between Wilfred S. Skeats, treasurer of Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to individual faculty member's salaries, gifts to the University, and the sale of stock
Box 666 Folder 24
Correspondence between Walter I. Slichter, professor of electrical engineering at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Includes correspondence with the dean of Columbia's School of Mines, Engineering and Chemistry. Correspondence relates to the Department of Electrical Engineering.
Topics include: faculty affairs, faculty appointments, and budgeting. Includes a report on departmental activities during the 1916-1917 academic year. Also, correspondence regarding religious activities at Columbia
Box 666 Folder 25
Correspondence between William Sloan, president of the Board of Managers of the Presbyterian Hospital, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Most of the correspondence relates to the routine administration of Columbia's medical school and relations between the University and Presbyterian Hospital. Includes several documents regarding proposals to establish a new medical center and the possibility of uniting the medical schools at Columbia and Cornell University
Box 666 Folder 26
Correspondence between William Milligan Sloan, Seth Low Professor of History at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. The records relate to Sloan's term as Roosevelt Professor for the 1912-1913 academic year and to social and political issues in pre-World War I Germany. The Roosevelt Professorship sent an American professor to Germany to lecture and act as an educational and cultural liaison. Sloan's letters include detailed discussions of: Kaiser Wilhelm; Sloane's concerns for peace; plans for expanding the influence of the International Olympic Committee; and the controversial public criticisms of Germany by Professor Paul Shorey of the University of Chicago, who served as Roosevelt Professor during 1913 and 1914. includes letters from Columbia University president Nicholas Murray Butler regarding: problems involving the Kaiser Wilhelm Professorship, which brought German professors to lecture at American Universities; Butler's advice on handling the controversy involving Professor Shorey; and the future of the Roosevelt Room at Koniglichen Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universitat
Box 666 Folder 27 to 29
Correspondence between Alexander Smith, professor of chemistry and administrative head of the Department of Chemistry at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Includes correspondence with the dean of the School of Mines, Engineering and chemistry. Correspondence relates to the Department of Chemistry. Topics include: faculty appointments, budgeting, the curriculum, facilities, equipment, and the Chandler Medal. Includes a report on the department [November, 1913] and departmental budgets [1914 and 1918-1919]
Box 339 Folder 9
Correspondence between C. Alphonso Smith, professor of English at the University of North Carolina and Roosevelt Professor from 1910 to 1911 and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University. The Roosevelt Professor lectured in Germany and acted as a cultural and educational emissary to German officials and educators.
Topics include: Smith's appointment, his travel and lecture preparations, and his activities while in Germany. Also, correspondence between Smith and Butler and copies of correspondence between Smith, the American ambassador to Germany, and German officials regarding a controversy over the presentation of Smith and his wife at the German court
Box 385 Folder 2
Clay Rice Smith was a member of a committee which was established to evaluate Columbia University's School of Business. The file contains multiple copies of the committee's report dating from March, 1941. Among other topics, the report discusses the enrollment, admissions, curriculum, graduate studies, and administrative organization of the school and the selection of a dean
Box 504 Folder 11 to 12
Correspondence between David S. Smith and high level administrators at Columbia University. Smith held a number of appointments in international affairs including director of the International Fellows Program, associate dean and coordinator of international studies, director of the International Center, and executive secretary of the coordinating Committee on International Affairs. Topics related to the International Fellows Program include: budgeting; policies regarding requirements, enrollment and other issues involving international fellows; funding for the program; and events.
Also, correspondence regarding the organization of professors who taught in the University's international affairs programs and regional institutes into an official faculty of international affairs [ca. October, 1961 - February, 1962]. Also, correspondence regarding the business of the Advisory Council of the School of International Affairs. Related records include: a bulletin from the International Fellows Program for the 1961-1962 academic year, a syllabus for courses on the United States in world affairs [January, 1963], a proposal to establish a research center to study communist block countries [March, 1961], and a proposal to fund research in comparative politics [May, 1962]
Box 666 Folder 30
Correspondence between Edward R. Smith, a reference librarian in the Avery Library at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Includes correspondence with the dean of the Faculty of Fine Arts. Correspondence relates to the acquisition of the Avery Library and the preparation of library facilities. Includes correspondence on an exhibition of the works of Constantin Meunier that was held at Columbia in 1914. Also includes correspondence regarding the Nelson and Avery medals
Box 666 Folder 31
Correspondence between Emma P. Smith, secretary for women graduate students at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to proposals to increase opportunities for female graduate students at the University. Correspondence also relates to the need for a women's residence hall. Includes minutes of the University Committee for Women Graduate Students and a petition from female students demanding a residence hall
Box 492 Folder 10 to 17
Correspondence between Gilbert P. Smith and high level administrators at Columbia University. Smith served as associate dean of the University's School of Dental and Oral Surgery and was later appointed dean of the school. Correspondence relates to the school.
Topics include: gifts to the school, awards, personnel, budgeting, development, and funding for the school. Includes some correspondence regarding the accreditation of the dental and oral surgery program at Presbyterian Hospital and a small number of letters [ca. 1960] regarding the relationship between the School of Dental and Oral Surgery and the University's science departments. Also, correspondence regarding Smith's personnel issues
Box 379 Folder 14 to 16
Correspondence between Horatio Smith, executive officer of the French department at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the French section of the Department of Romance Languages.
Topics include: staffing needs, teaching loads, faculty appointments, arrangements for courses, budgeting, scholarships, and fellowships. Includes correspondence regarding Maison Francaise, Columbia's French culture and educational center. Also includes some items of correspondence documenting the effects of World War II on the department and departmental participation in the University's V-12 naval training program. Also, correspondence between the department and Mrs. Henry A. Todd [Miriam Gilman Todd], widow of Professor Henry A. Todd. The correspondence relates to Mrs Todd's gifts to the department and documents her relations with the department. Smith was also chairman of the Committee on Area Studies, which was established to evaluate Columbia's international studies programs and define the University's goals in terms of area studies. Includes a report of the committee dating from December, 1943. Also, correspondence regarding Smith's personnel issues and correspondence with Ernestine Smith [his widow] regarding his death and annuity plan
Box 457 Folder 17
Correspondence between Professor Kenneth A. Smith of Columbia University and University administrators. Smith's appointments included: professor of architecture, associate dean of the School of Architecture, and acting dean of the school. Correspondence relates to the School of Architecture.
Topics include: prizes, fellowships, honorary degrees, and personnel. Includes a statement, dating from 1968 which relates to the powers of the students and faculty in the government of the school. Also includes routine cover letters and acknowledgement letters. Also, correspondence regarding Smith's personnel issues
Box 670 Folder 66
Correspondence between Lee Thompson Smith, president of the Committee of New York City's 300th Anniversary Celebration, and Columbia University administrators. Most of the records consist of invitations, acceptances, and regrets for events in honor of New York City's 300th Anniversary
Box 447 Folder 23
Correspondence between Milton Smith and high level Columbia University administrators. Smith served as director of the University's Brander Matthews Theater and was later appointed director of the School of Dramatic Arts. Records relate to the School of Dramatic arts, Columbia Theater Associates, the Columbia University Players, and campus theater facilities. Topics related to the School of Dramatic Arts include: relations between the school and the University, long-range planning, faculty appointments, degrees, facilities, and personnel. Includes memoranda regarding the closing and history of the school
Box 339 Folder 10 to 11
Correspondence between Professor Munroe Smith of the School of Political Science at Columbia University and the president and secretary of the University. Smith held a number of appointments including head of the Department of Public Law and secretary of the Faculty of Political Science. Correspondence relates to the Faculty of Political Science, the School of Law, and the Department of Public Law.
Topics include: degree requirements and the establishment of new degrees, the admission of women to graduate courses and to the School of Law, prizes, and teaching assignments. Also, a proposal for the development of courses in legal science including legal history and jurisprudence. Also includes correspondence relating to the work of the University's Committee on the Program of Studies [ca. 1905] and the business of the Committee on the Aim and Scope of the Association of American Colleges and Universities. Also, correspondence regarding Smith's personnel issues and professional activities
Box 402 Folder 7 to 9
Correspondence between Paul A. Smith, executive officer of the Department of Mathematics at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the department.
Topics include: staffing needs, faculty recruiting and appointments, financial aid, scholarships, visiting lecturers, financial administration, faculty affairs, and the administration of the Mathematics Library. Includes correspondence and reports regarding the Department of Mathematical Statistics and the Advisory Committee for Mathematical Statistics [ca. 1952]. Also, correspondence regarding Smith's personnel issues
Box 671 Folder 44
Correspondence between Phillip E. Smith, professor emeritus of anatomy in the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Correspondence relates to the honorary degree that was awarded to Smith at Columbia's 3rd Bicentennial Convocation in 1954. Includes biographical information regarding Smith
Box 18 Folder 19
Correspondence between Richard S. Smith, proctor of Columbia University, and the vice president of the University. Correspondence relates to the regulation of student activities and student discipline. Includes correspondence regarding the University's regulation requiring fraternities to repeal discriminatory membership clauses and correspondence regarding a theft at the President's House
Box 673 Folder 9
Correspondence between Robert L. Smith, assistant dean of Columbia College, and Columbia University administrators. Much of the correspondence relates to scholarships and prizes. Includes lists of prize recipients. Also, correspondence regarding the academic standing of individual students and other student affairs. Also includes a draft of regulations governing student demonstrations [1962] and a list of the members of the Columbia College Council [1962]
Box 490 Folder 23
Correspondence between Walter D. Smith, administrative assistant to the dean of the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the school. Topics include expenditures and faculty appointments. Also, correspondence regarding Smith's personnel issues
Box 355 Folder 1 to 19
Correspondence between Young B. Smith and the president, other high level administrators, and faculty of Columbia University. Includes correspondence with University presidents Nicholas Murray Butler and Dwight D. Eisenhower. Smith was dean of the University's School of Law. Most of the correspondence, budgets, and reports relate to the academic affairs of the School of Law. Also, correspondence, a proposal, and legal documents [ca. 1949] regarding the establishment of the Parker Institute of International Affairs. Topics related to the School of Law include: faculty appointments, staffing needs, teaching assignments, professorships, special lectures, admissions, entrance requirements, scholarships, student affairs, and special programs. Other topics related to the school include: fund raising, budgeting, personnel, and facilities. Includes the dean's annual reports. The reports discuss the faculty, programs, finances, and curriculum of the school. Also includes a long-range development plan [ca. 1948] and correspondence, articles, lists, and other records regarding Smith's resignation
Box 672 Folder 4
Records relating to an honorary degree that was awarded to President Soekarno of the Republic of Indonesia by Columbia University. Includes correspondence with University president Grayson Kirk. Also includes letters and newspaper clippings protesting against Soekarno's honorary degree
Box 670 Folder 67
Correspondence regarding the cancellation of George Sokolsky's engagement to speak at Columbia University. Sokolsky, who was a Columbia alumnus and conservative columnist, had been scheduled to speak in honor of Columbia's bicentennial celebration. Includes clippings containing Sokolsky's comments regarding freedom of speech and his comments regarding the address on freedon of speech that was given at Columbia's bicentennial convocation by Chief Justice Earl Warren
Box 669 Folder 24
Crank letters from Harry P. Sorensen to the president, associate provost, and registrar of Columbia University. Sorensen appears to have been an alumnus of the University
Box 671 Folder 45
Correspondence between Paul J. Southard, general manager of the Columbia University Bookstore, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to a variety of routine subjects. Includes correspondence regarding a newspaper clipping on communism and the Columbia bookstore
Box 428 Folder 6 to 9
Correspondence between Vera Southard, the recorder of Columbia University, and University administrators. The records consist of routine correspondence and memoranda regarding appointments, routine administrative issues, and the business of various committees
Box 108 Folder 31
Correspondence between Michael I. Sovern and Columbia University administrators. Correspondence dates from Sovern's tenure as dean of the School of Law. The file does not include correspondence from Sovern's term as president of the University. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects.
Topics include: Sovern's financial support for tennis courts at Columbia's Baker Field athletic facility, a gripe session at which student grievances were aired, the proposed naming of a Law School building after William C. Warren, and requests to grant professor emeritus status to professors Schiller and Hays
Box 671 Folder 46
Correspondence between Paul-Henri Spaak and high level administrators at Columbia University. Spaak was the Belgian foreign minister, president of the First Assembly of the United Nations, and president of the European Organization for Economic Cooperation [Belgium]. Correspondence relates to the honorary degree that was awarded to Spaak during Columbia's 1954 bicentennial celebration. Includes biographical information regarding Spaak. Also, correspondence regarding the World brotherhood Organization
Box 663 Folder 24
Correspondence between Clara B. Spence, headmistress of Miss Spence's School in New York City, and the president of Columbia University. Topics include: relations between the school and the University, enrollment of students from the school at Barnard College and Teachers College, and the possibility of appointing Spence to be dean of Barnard college
Box 54 Folder 25
Correspondence between William C. Spencer, associate dean of the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Spencer served as a special assistant to the president in connection with the Columbia Campaign fund drive. Includes correspondence regarding development activities. Also, recommendation letters on behalf of Spencer that were sent from University president Grayson Kirk to administrators at other colleges and universities. Includes correspondence regarding Spencer's election as president of Western College for Women
Box 663 Folder 25
Correspondence between Carlo L. Speranza, professor of Italian in the Department of Romance Languages at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to faculty affairs and courses in the Italian language program
Box 679 Folder 22
Correspondence between James Speyer, Columbia University presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray Butler, and the dean of Teachers College. Speyer was a trustee of Teachers College, chairman of the finance committee of the college's board of trustees, and treasurer of the University Settlement Society of New York.
Topics include: investments, University finances, the development of the Morningside Heights area and the Columbia campus, and the purchase of South Field as an addition to Columbia's Morningside Heights campus. Also, correspondence [ca. 1905-1915] regarding the Roosevelt Professorship, which sent an American professor to Germany to lecture and act as a cultural and educational liaison, and the Kaiser Wilhelm Professorship, which brought German faculty to lecture in the United States. In particular, the correspondence relates to the terms of Speyer's gift in support of the Roosevelt Professorship, controversy over the selection of nominees, and the subsequent refund to Speyer. Controversy regarding the professorship arose when Speyer charged that the University had not fulfilled the terms of his gift which required that, on occasion, a Jewish professor be appointed to the post. Also includes correspondence [ca. 1907] regarding Jewish representation on Columbia's board of trustees
Box 663 Folder 26 to 27
Correspondence between Joel Elias Spingarn, professor of comparative literature at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University as well as the dean of the Faculty of Political Science. Includes correspondence between the president and trustees and faculty members regarding Spingarn. Correspondence relates to Spingarn's objections to the merger of the Department of English and the Department of Comparative Literature and his eventual dismissal from the University. Includes a monograph entitled, "A Question of Academic Freedom".
Correspondence also relates to: the establishment of undergraduate writing prizes, plans for the development of the Department of Comparative Literature, and Spingarn's appointment and personnel issues. Includes correspondence mentioning his United States congressional campaign
Box 508 Folder 22
Correspondence between Stephen J. Spingarn and high level administrators at Columbia University. Spingarn was the son of Columbia University Professor J. E. Spingarn, who had been dismissed from the University in 1911. Correspondence relates to the dismissal of J. E. Spingarn and other issues. Includes copies of "The Crisis" newsletter
Box 671 Folder 4
Correspondence between Armand Spitz, director of Spitz Laboratories, and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to a presentation regarding the Spitz Planetarium that was given to Columbia. Includes a booklet discussing the planetarium
Box 448 Folder 1
Correspondence between Philip Sporn, former president of the American Electric Power Company, and the president and other high level administrators of Columbia University. Sporn was a benefactor of the University and the School of Engineering. Correspondence relates to gifts from Sporn and relations between Sporn and the University. Includes correspondence regarding the establishment of the Philip Sporn Educational Trust and the Philip and Sadie Sporn Loan Fund. Also includes articles and reports on the future of nuclear power and a report [March, 1951] urging cooperation between the electric power industry and the Atomic Energy Commission. Includes many routine letters and invitations
Box 496 Folder 10
Crank letters
Box 672 Folder 3
Correspondence between Boris M. Stanfield, associate professor of economics at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to Stanfield's retirement under the University's mandatory retirement policy. Includes a petition requesting that Stanfield not be forced to retire
Box 493 Folder 1 to 14
Correspondence between Louis Morris Starr of the Oral History Research Office at Columbia University, and University administrators. Most of the records consist of correspondence and invoices relating to oral history project expenditures and accounting. Also, correspondence and reports regarding oral history projects and funding for projects. Includes annual and monthly reports. Also includes the proceedings of the First National Colloquium on Oral History, which was held at Lake Arrowhead, California, in September of 1966
Box 663 Folder 28
Correspondence between M. Allen Starr, professor of diseases of the mind and nervous system at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to Columbia's medical school.
Topics include: relations with St. Mary's Free Hospital for Children, Manhattan State Hospital, and other area hospitals; the curriculum of the school; and budgeting. Includes budget worksheets from the 1902-1903 academic year
Box 663 Folder 29
Correspondence between Ernest Stauffen, secretary of the Association of the Alumni of Columbia College, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to: alumni affairs, international alumni clubs, class reunions, and the Alumni Prize
Box 496 Folder 13 to 14
Correspondence between Isobel L. Steele, administrative assistant to the dean of the School of General Studies at Columbia University, and University administrators. The correspondence relates to the routine business of the school
Box 669 Folder 4
Correspondence between Harrison R. Steeves, professor of English at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to Steeves' personnel issues. Also, correspondence regarding prizes and medals in the Department of English and Comparative Literature
Box 670 Folder 68
Correspondence between Professor Jack Madison Stein of the Department of Germanic Languages at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects.
Topics include the Deutscher Verein Prize in German and the issue of the Germanic Review that was published in honor of Columbia's 1954 bicentennial. Includes a report from the German, French, and Spanish departments regarding the scope and role of foreign language instruction as part of a general eduation program. Also, correspondence regarding Stein's personnel issues
Box 450 Folder 21
Correspondence between David B. Steinman, an alumnus of the School of Engineering at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to Steinman's professional activities and honors, his gifts in support of the School of Engineering and the University's engineering center project, and his honorary degree from the University. Includes Steinman's curriculum vitae and a list of his publications
Box 670 Folder 69 to 70
Correspondence, reports, and transcripts relating to Bernard Joseph Stern, who taught sociology in the Summer Session and School of General Studies at Columbia University. Records relate to Stern's political and ideological beliefs and teaching activities. Includes correspondence from alumni, students, and other individuals demanding Stern's termination. Also includes copies of Counterattack, an anti-communist newsletter
Box 54 Folder 26
Records regarding a bequest to Columbia University from the estate of Ettie Stettheimer, an author and University alumna. Includes reports and financial records regarding the estate. Also includes information regarding the establishment of a memorial grant to the Graduate School of Journalism that was made in Stettheimer's name
Box 507 Folder 28
Correspondence between Denis Stevens, professor of music at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to Steven's personnel issues and health, his complaints regarding noise on campus, and his criticisms of the music department
Box 671 Folder 1
Correspondence relates to the honorary degree that was presented to Adlai Stevenson during Columbia University's 1954 bicentennial celebration and Stevenson's address at the honorary degree convocation. Includes a clipping from the New York Times regarding Stevenson's bicentennial address
Box 668 Folder 19
Correspondence between Walter M. Stevenson and Columbia University administrators. Stevenson was a Columbia College alumnus and a reporter for the Puerto Rico World Journal. Correspondence relates to his application for a position in Columbia's public relations department
Box 663 Folder 30
Correspondence between Langdon C. Stewardson, president of Hobart College, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the dedication ceremony for the University's St. Paul's Chapel. Stewardson participated in the ceremony. Correspondence also relates to Stewardson's candidacy for the post of University chaplain. Includes several recommendation letters
Box 671 Folder 2
Correspondence between Professor Ernest I. Stewart and the secretary of Columbia University. Stewart's appointments included professor of health education and assistant dean of Columbia College. Correspondence relates to his personnel issues and appointments. Correspondence also relates to the University Community Cooperation Project and tuition exemption for lecturers
Box 671 Folder 48
Correspondence between Herman T. Stichman, commissioner of housing in the New York State Division of Housing, and administrators at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to a variety of topics, including crime and housing projects. Includes a report entitled State-aided Public Housing Projects and Community Facilities
Box 671 Folder 3
Correspondence between George Joseph Stigler, professor of economics at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to funding from the Rockefeller Foundation and Stigler's personnel issues. Includes an annual report of the Council for Research in the Social Sciences [December, 1953]
Box 672 Folder 48
Correspondence between Leon Stilman and Columbia University administrators. Stilman was an associate professor of Russian Language and Literature and chairman of the Department of Slavic Languages. Correspondence relates to faculty appointments and faculty affairs in the department
Box 663 Folder 31
Correspondence between Anson Phelps Stokes, secretary of Yale University, and the secretary and treasurer of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to: a comparison of presidential and faculty salaries at Yale and Columbia, issues involving the taxation of universities, Yale's bicentennial, and a guest sermon by Stokes in Columbia's St. Paul's Chapel
Box 339 Folder 12 to 18
Correspondence between Harlan Fiske Stone, dean of the School of Law at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Much of the correspondence consists of Stone's letters to President Nicholas Murray Butler. Primary topics related to the School of Law include: degree requirements, curriculum revisions, and policies regarding the curriculum. Other topics include: tuition and fees, personnel, faculty affairs, scholarships, teaching assignments, budgeting, faculty appointments and the administration of the Law library. Includes a brief exchange of letters [ca. 1914] regarding the admission of women to the School of Law. Also includes correspondence and a memorandum of law [ca. 1911-1913] regarding requirements for admission to the New York bar
Box 663 Folder 32
Correspondence between Bradley Stoughton and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Stoughton held an appointment as adjunct professor in the Department of Metallurgy in the University's School of Mines. Correspondence relates to the department and Stoughton's personnel issues
Box 666 Folder 33
Correspondence between Ellery C. Stowell, associate professor of international law at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Includes correspondence with Dean George Pegram, chairman of committee of Conference. Correspondence relates to Stowell's efforts to secure appointments for exiled Belgian professors during World War I and his resignation over issues of academic freedom and free speech. Includes an undated, twenty-page statement from Stowell concerning his resignation
Box 502 Folder 6
Correspondence between Arthur Newell Strahler, professor of geomorphology and chairman of the Department of Geology at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the geology department. Topics include: budgeting, faculty appointments, faculty affairs, enrollment, equipment, research funding, the management of special funds, and facilities. Includes a floor plan of proposed offic space for the department (April, 1961).
Box 496 Folder 15 to 17
Transcripts of radio broadcasts on station YMCA in New York. The transcripts were sent to the vice president and provost of Columbia University by Nathan Straus, the president of the station. The transcripts relate to a range of subjects. Transcripts of editorial radio broadcasts made by Nathan Straus, president of WMCA
Box 395 Folder 21
Correspondence between William Duncan Strong, Loubat Professor of anthropology and executive officer of the Department of Anthropology at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Most of the records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the Anthropology Department. Topics include: faculty appointments, faculty affairs, staffing needs, and personnel issues. Also, correspondence regarding Strong's personnel issues and professional activities
Box 666 Folder 34
Correspondence between Frederick Sturges, president of the Board of Managers of the Presbyterian Hospital, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to University nominations for appointments to the medical school faculty and the approval of appointments by the hospital's board of managers
Box 407 Folder 1 to 14
Correspondence between Arthur Hays Sulzberger and high level administrators at Columbia University. Sulzberger was publisher of the New York Times and a trustee of the University. Correspondence relates to trustee business and to Sulzberger's gifts to the University. Includes many invitations, cover letters, and routine letters
Sulzberger also chaired the University's bicentennial committee. The committee was created to oversee plans for the University's 200th anniversary celebration in 1954. Correspondence dating from 1950 to 1954 relates to preparations for the celebration. Includes reports and minutes regarding the bicentennial. Includes: a letter from University president Dwight D. Eisenhower regarding the controversial funding of professorships by Eastern European governments [July, 1948]; a memorial pamphlet and minutes in honor of Sulzberger; and correspondence [ca. March, 1952] regarding the nomination of Millicent McIntosh, the first woman to serve on the University's board of trustees. Also includes correspondence and Sulzberger's statement regarding charges of discrimination in University admissions policies [ca. September, 1946]
Box 508 Folder 10
Correspondence between Arthur Ochs Sulzberger and high level administrators at Columbia University. Sulzberger was publisher of the New York Times and a University Trustee. Correspondence relates to trustee business and Sulzberger's gifts to Columbia. Includes a letter from University president Andrew Cordier in which Cordier addresses Sulzberger's concerns regarding the role of the Advisory Board to the Counselor for Jewish Students and the reorganization of religious activities at Columbia [1969]
Box 673 Folder 11
Correspondence between Francis X. Sutton of the Ford Foundation's Overseas Development Program and Grayson Kirk, president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Kirk's trip to Africa to visit universities and attend a conference on higher education
Box 108 Folder 17
Correspondence between Donald A. Swan, a former Columbia University graduate student, and University administrators. Swan, who was expelled from the University in 1959 petitioned to have his case reconsidered. Includes correspondence between University administrators regarding Swan
Box 668 Folder 2
Correspondence between John J. Swan, comptroller of Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the development of a University labor relations policy and Swan's views that such a policy was unnecessary at a non-profit institution. Includes a report entitled Preliminary Report on Jobs, Wages, and Working conditions of Operating and Maintenance Personnel of the Units of Columbia University [March, 1937]
Box 54 Folder 27
Correspondence regarding a gift to Columbia University from Caroline and Erwin Swann. The Swann's donated artworks and funds in support of the proposed Caroline and Erwin Swann theatre at the University. Includes a partial inventory and appraisel of the Swann's art collection
Box 414 Folder 19
Correspondence between Professor Emerson H. Swift of the Department of Fine Arts and Archeology at Columbia University and the acting president and secretary of the University. Swift served as acting executive officer of the department and was later appointed chairman. Most of the records relate to plans for a University art museum and a donation of paintings from the New York Historical Society. Also, correspondence and budgets relating to the department. Topics include faculty appointments and budgeting
Box 669 Folder 30
Correspondence between Herbert Bayard Swope and the president, dean of the Graduate School of Journalism, and dean of the Graduate Faculties at Columbia University. Records relate to the establishment of the Rosenstiel awards
Box 664 Folder 1 to 2
Correspondence between Frederick H. Sykes, director of Extension Teaching at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to Extension Teaching, Columbia's continuing education division.
Topics include: faculty appointments, lecturers, and the curriculum. Includes correspondence with the dean of Teachers College regarding faculty appointments in Extension Teaching
Box 668 Folder 6
Correspondence between William B. Symmes and the provost of Columbia University. Symmes was a University trustee. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects. In particular, the correspondence relates to the by-laws governing various University committees. Other topics include: the awarding of the Van Amrindge Prize Medal, the statutes concerning University libraries, and the role of the New York School of Social Work in the educational system of the University
Box 671 Folder 4
Correspondence between Professor Percival Mallon Symonds of Teachers College at Columbia University and the secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to expenditures and other administrative issues regarding Symonds' Adolescent Fantasy Follow-up Study research project
Box 667 Folder 20
Correspondence between Rikichiro Taguchi, a Columbia University student, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to Taguchi's proposal to establish a Japanese house or Asian culture center at Columbia. Includes a detailed proposal as well as a sketch of the proposed building and a budget for the project
Box 427 Folder 1 to 12
Correspondence between Professor Frank Tannenbaum, chairman of the Sub Committee on the University Seminars, and high level Columbia University administrators. Most of the records consist of correspondence, reports, minutes, and invitations relating to the University Seminars. The seminars, which were held at Columbia, promoted interdisciplinary discussion on a range of topics. Includes a report on the 20th anniversary of the seminars. Also, reports regarding the Center of Latin American Economic and Historical Studies, which developed out of the University Seminars. Includes a report on the first 20 years of the Latin American Seminars from 1944 to 1963. Also, correspondence dating from 1968 regarding changes in teaching methods at Columbia College
Box 502 Folder 7 to 24
Correspondence between Davidson Taylor and high level administrators at Columbia University. Taylor was director of Columbia's Arts Center Program, a project to plan a University arts facility and arts programs and to seek funding for the construction of the arts facility. He also served as director of the School of the Arts and was later appointed dean of the school. The records consist of reports, proposals and correspondence related to the arts center project and correspondence related to the School of the Arts. Topics related to the school include: the establishment and organization of the school, administrative issues involving the various divisions in the school, and student affairs and discipline. Includes correspondence regarding a performance at the school by Lillian Gish [May, 1969]. Also, correspondence regarding Taylor's appointment as dean
Box 427 Folder 15
Correspondence between Floyd A. Taylor, director of the American Press Institute in the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The American Press Institute was a professional development and education program for journalists which was run by the journalism school. The records relate to budgeting and preparations for events and seminars. Includes seminar programs. Also includes a letter regarding the purpose of the institute [April, 1951]
Box 399 Folder 20
Correspondence between Professor Horace Taylor of the Department of Economics at Columbia University and the acting president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to faculty appointments and faculty affairs in the Department of Economics. Includes correspondence regarding the Caroline Phelps Stokes Prize. Also includes correspondence regarding a copyright dispute between Taylor and the Pabst Brewing Company
Box 671 Folder 49
Works on heredity, chromosomes, and botany by James Herbert Taylor. includes a copy of Brittonia that contains an article regarding Taylor's research [November 12, 1945]
Box 671 Folder 50
Correspondence between Lily Ross Taylor, dean of the graduate school at Bryn Mawr College, and high level administrators at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to an honorary degree that was awarded to Taylor at Columbia's 3rd Bicentennial Convocation. Includes biographical information regarding Taylor and a copy of her classical studies newsletter
Box 493 Folder 15
Correspondence between William T. Taylor and high level administrators at Columbia University. Taylor was a University trustee and chairman of the Columbia College Council. Correspondence relates to development, gifts, committee appointments, and the appointment of University administrators. Includes routine invitations and acknowledgement letters
Box 108 Folder 32
Correspondence between John D. Telfer, assistant vice president for physical planning at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to University tax exemptions, planning and budgeting for building projects, and reviews of projects involving South field and the University medical center. Includes a planning report for campus buildings
Box 386 Folder 17 to 21
Correspondence between Professor Arthur W. Thomas and the high level administrators of Columbia University. Thomas held appointments as professor of chemistry, executive officer of the Department of Chemistry, and chairman of the Committee on Instruction of the Faculty of Pure Science. Most of the records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the Department of Chemistry. Correspondence dating from 1955 to 1959 relates to the management of the Chandler Fund, the appointment of the Chandler Lecturer, and the awarding of the Chandler Medal. Also, a small amount of correspondence regarding faculty affairs and appointments in the Faculty of Pure Science and correspondence regarding Thomas' personnel issues and professional activities. Topics related to the Department of Chemistry include: faculty appointments, faculty affairs, staffing needs, fellowships, appropriations, arrangements for courses, personnel issues, research and development grants, equipment, student affairs, and the management of the Falk-Plaut Fund
Box 340 Folder 3 to 4
Correspondence between Calvin Thomas, professor of Germanic languages and literatures at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Calvin was also chairman of the Committee on Admissions and secretary of the University Council. Most of the correspondence relates to routine business involving admissions and the University Council. Includes correspondence regarding the work of the Council to establish and oversee degree requirements. Also, correspondence [ca. 1914-1917] documenting the effect of World War I on the Department of Germanic Languages and course materials from a military interpreters training course which was offered by Columbia in 1917. Also includes correspondence relating to Calvin's appointment and personnel issues
Box 385 Folder 3 to 4
Correspondence between Milton Halsey Thomas, the curator of the Columbiana Library at Columbia University, and the provost and secretary of the University. The Columbiana Library houses University-related publications and emphemera. Topics include: collection management, conservation, acquisitions, donor relations, the Columbiana Society, deposits of records from the University administration, and Columbia's history
Box 666 Folder 35
Correspondence between J. David Thompson, law librarian at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Includes correspondence with the University librarian. Correspondence relates to changes in the administration of the Law Library during 1912 and 1913 as well as Thompson's efforts to improve relations with the Committee on the Library and other University libraries. Includes a report on the Law Library and a budget for the 1913-1914 fiscal year
Box 340 Folder 5 to 6
Correspondence between Ashley Horace Thorndike, professor of English and comparative literature and head of the Department of English at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University.
Topics include: budgeting and appropriations, facilities, faculty appointments, personnel, faculty affairs, teaching assignments, staffing needs, the preparation of dissertations, scholarships, fellowships, and prizes. includes correspondence [ca. 1909-1910] regarding the merger of the Department of English and the Department of Comparative Literature, a report [ca. 1918] on the undergraduate English curriculum, and correspondence and proposals [ca. 1917] regarding the Journalism Program. Also includes correspondence relating to Thorndike's appointment and personnel issues
Box 666 Folder 45
Correspondence between Edward L. Thorndike, professor of educational psychology in Teachers College at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to a variety of topics. Records include a letter regarding Columbia's exhibit at the 1904 St. Louis Exposition [March, 1903]. The letter briefly describes each of the University's displays. Also includes a letter supporting the appointment of Frederick P. Keppel as dean of Columbia College [November, 1909]. In addition, the records include statistics, working papers, correspondence, and minutes relating to the work of a committee of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. The committee studied the distribution of students in certain courses and the career choices of certain college graduates [1909]
Box 664 Folder 3
Correspondence between Lynn Thorndike, chief clerk of Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Many of the records consist of routine memoranda concerning instructions for completing information forms for the University's 1906 directory. Other records include: reports on classes held during the Summer Session, financial reports for the president, clippings regarding Summer Session, a comparison of courses in Columbia's history department with courses offered in departments at other Universities, and a letter discussing Thorndike's views on the purpose of summer classes for students applying to Columbia University or Barnard College. The records appear to relate to the same Lynn Thorndike who received a Ph.D. from Columbia in 1905 and who was appointed a professor at the University in 1924. However, the files do not contain any records dating from his time as a professor
Box 347 Folder 12 to 17
Correspondence between W. V. S. Thorne and the dean of Columbia University's College of Physicians and Surgeons, the University treasurer, and other University administrators. Includes correspondence to and from Thorne's assistant. Thorne was treasurer of Presbyterian Hospital in New York. Correspondence relates to an agreement between Columbia University and Presbyterian Hospital regarding the use of the Harkness Fund for certain types of educational and research programs. Includes financial statements showing expenditures which were charged to the Harkness Fund
Box 667 Folder 13
Correspondence between Frederick Tilney, professor of neurology at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Correspondence relates to: the development of programs in neurology and psychiatry at Columbia, a proposed merger between Columbia's medical school and the Polyclinic Hospital in New York City, and the proposed establishment of an institute of neurology and psychiatry at the hospital
Box 340 Folder 7
Correspondence between Henry A. Todd, professor of romance philology in the Department of Romance Languages at Columbia University, and the faculty and high level administrators of the University. Correspondence relates to faculty appointments and faculty affairs in the Department of Romance Languages and to the business of the Library Committee. Includes a brief exchange of correspondence [ca. 1916] regarding the reorganization of the department. Also, correspondence relating to Todd's appointment and personnel issues
Box 340 Folder 8 to 15
Correspondence between Rudolf Tombo, registrar of Columbia University, and the president, secretary, and other high level administrators of the University. Correspondence dating from 1900 to 1910 documents administrative issues related to: registration, tuition and fees, athletic eligibility, scholarships, examinations, degree requirements, and the preparation of the University's catalog and the Columbia University Quarterly. Includes statistical reports on enrollment and many letters regarding individual students. Also, correspondence [ca. 1910-1911] regarding Tombo's tour of Germany and correspondence relating to Deutches Haus, Columbia's German cultural and educational center
Box 409 Folder 2 to 4
Correspondence between Norman L. Torrey, executive officer of the French section of the Department of Romance Languages at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the French department. Topics include: faculty affairs, faculty appointments, budgeting, staffing needs, faculty exchanges, and visiting professors. Includes correspondence regarding the administration of Maison Francais, Columbia's French culture and educational center, and the Romanic Review, which was published by the French department. Also includes correspondence regarding the University's language laboratory
Box 673 Folder 10
Records relate to renovations of Columbia University buildings. Includes meeting notes regarding the Starr East Asian Library in Kent Hall and building conversion schedules for 1962
Box 448 Folder 2
Correspondence between Charles H. Townes, executive officer of the Department of Physics at Columbia University, and University administrators. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the department. Topics include: faculty appointments, equipment, personnel, faculty affairs, the appointment of research associates and research fellows, facilities, and visiting professors. Also, correspondence regarding the routine business of Columbia's radiation laboratory
Box 669 Folder 5
Correspondence between Arnold Joseph Toynbee and the acting president and secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Toynbee's appointment to give the Bampton Lectures in America. Includes his lecture, "The Prospects of Western Civilization". Also, correspondence regarding Toynbee's honorary degree from Columbia
Box 664 Folder 4
Correspondence between Spencer Trask, president of the Teachers College board of trustees, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the construction of a new residence hall at Teachers College. Topics include: the purchase of lots at 121st Street and Amsterdam Avenue and the cost of constructing and renting a dormitory on the site. Includes correspondence with Grace Dodge, a founder and benefactor of Teachers College, regarding subscriptions for the funding of the dormitory project. Also, correspondence regarding a misunderstanding between Teachers College and Columbia over a faculty appointment and correspondence regarding the opening of Milbank Hall
Box 285 Folder 5 to 7
Correspondence between Sam Trelease, Torrey Professor of Botany at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the Department of Botany. Topics include: faculty appointments, equipment, staffing needs, budgeting, graduate assistantships and fellowships, faculty affairs, facilities, and the organization of the department. Also, correspondence regarding nominations to the Board of Managers of the New York Botannical Garden; correspondence regarding flowers on the Columbia campus; and proposals, papers, and correspondence relating to research on selenium
Box 419 Folder 13 to 15
Correspondence between Clifford L. Treleaven, executive officer of the Department of Optometry at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the department and the Columbia University Optometry Laboratory. Topics include: faculty appointments, equipment and supplies, budgeting, financial aid, research, and personnel. Includes correspondence and reports [ca. 1948-1949] relating to the establishment of an optometry research program; a report [December, 1952] evaluating the department's curriculum, budget, requirements, and facilities; and records regarding the closing of the department in 1955
Box 340 Folder 16
Correspondence between William Peterfield Trent, professor of English literature at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Most of the correspondence relates to Trent's personnel issues, professional activities, and publications. Also, correspondence regarding faculty appointments and faculty affairs in the Department of English and Comparative Literature. Includes correspondence [ca. 1912] regarding the appointment of a woman to a fellowship; a report of the Special Committee on the Library, dated 1909 and scattered correspondence regarding the libraries
Box 108 Folder 19
Correspondence relates to the appointment of Lionel Trilling as University Professor at Columbia University. Records include a form recording the names and votes of the members of the committee that nominated Trilling and a report of the Committee on Education regarding Trilling's appointment and professional history
Box 673 Folder 18
Most of the records consist of forms that list Columbia University alumni who were available to represent the University at various academic ceremonies and events
Box 666 Folder 36
Correspondence between Charles C. Trowbridge, professor of physics at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Trowbridge also administered the Ernest Kempton Adams Precision Laboratory. Correspondence relates to the laboratory. Includes reports on the laboratory that date from 1913 to 1917
Box 108 Folder 18
Correspondence regarding the nomination of Canadian prime minister Pierre Trudeau to receive an honorary degree from Columbia University. Correspondence relates to preparations for the ceremony and Trudeau's inability to accept due to scheduling conflicts
Box 496 Folder 18 to 24
Correspondence between David Bicknell Truman and the high level administrators of Columbia University as well as persons outside the University. Truman held a number of appointments including professor of government, chairman of the Department of Public Law and Government, dean of Columbia College, and vice president and provost of the University. The records relate to the Department of Public Law and Government during the late 1950s and Columbia College during the 1960s.
Correspondence dating from 1967 to 1968 relates to Truman's appointment as vice president and provost, the origins of the office, and the responsibilities of the post. Records from this period also relate to the recruiting and retention of faculty members and the appointment of University administrators. Truman served as Columbia College dean and as vice president and provost of the University during the campus disturbances of the 1960s. The records include Truman's memoranda regarding the handling of student protests [March and December, 1967] and his message to the faculty and teaching staff regarding solutions to campus unrest [June, 1968].
Topics related to the Department of Public Law and Government include: staffing needs, faculty recruiting and appointments, faculty affairs, and budgeting. The records dating from 1957 to 1958 include correspondence with University president Grayson Kirk in which Truman is recruiting Kirk as a sponsor of the Trinity School's 250th Anniversary. Correspondence from this period also relates to the administration of Truman's research project. Records dating from the late 1950s to 1960 also include: a proposal to re-establish the affiliation agreement between Columbia and the Institute of Public Administration [March, 1960], a report on the Ford Foundation research program for the 1959-1960 academic year, and correspondence regarding the William Radner lectures. Truman also chaired the President's Committee on Contemporary Civilization Courses in Columbia College. The committee evaluated the Contemporary Civilization portion of the college's Core Curriculum. The records include the committee's report [October, 1960], which discusses curriculum, staffing, and other issues related to the Core Curriculum.
Topics related to Columbia College include: gifts to the college, development, faculty appointments, tuition and fees, faculty affairs, student affairs, scholarship funds, membership in the Faculty of Columbia College, membership on the Columbia College Council, housing, events, and committee nominations and memberships. The records include correspondence between President Grayson Kirk, Vice President Lawrence B. Chamberlain, and Truman regarding Truman's proposed appointment as dean. In the letters, Truman expresses his thoughts on the role of the college and his feelings about assuming the post. The records also include substantive letters in which Truman discusses: the changing nature of higher education and the role of the liberal arts college, the relationship between Columbia College and the University, and other issues involving the college. Other records of interest include: a brief exchange of letters on college policies regarding female guests in undergraduate dormitories [1963]; college faculty meeting agendas [ca. 1964-1966]; Truman's Dean's Day address dating from February, 1964 correspondence regarding the Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps [NROTC] at Columbia [ca. 1965]; a University Senate report on the Columbia College Council [filed with materials from August, 1966]; correspondence [ca. 1964] regarding a controversy involving editorials in the Columbia Daily Spectator, the Columbia College student newspaper; and a letter from college students regarding an increase in the residence hall room rate [February, 1964]
Box 672 Folder 19
Correspondence between Ray E. Trussell, dean of the School of Public Health and Administrative Medicine at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Most of the correspondence relates to individual candidates for admission. Includes proposals to expand medical school facilities at the University. Also includes a request for tuition exemption for Trussell's daughter
Box 673 Folder 14
Records regarding an Asian convocation that was held to celebrate the opening of a new Asian studies center at Columbia University. Records also relate to the honorary degree that was awarded to Ryusaku Tsunoda, the former curator of the University's Japanese Collection. Records include: correspondence, a press release, and an invitation list
Box 18 Folder 27
Correspondence between T. James Tumulty and the president and administrators of Columbia University. Tumulty was director of the legal department of Jersey City, New Jersey. Correspondence relates to a scholarship for students from Jersey City that was established in 1812 and abolished in 1872
Box 664 Folder 5
Correspondence between George M. Tuttle, secretary of the faculty in the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects involving the University's medical school.
Topics include: faculty appointments, faculty affairs, the curriculum, the distribution of diplomas, lecturers, the use of special funds, administrative salaries, and scholarships. Also, a letter regarding Tuttle's resignation
Box 348 Folder 1 to 18
Correspondence between Levering Tyson, an alumnus of Columbia College, and the president, secretary, clerk of the board, and other administrators of Columbia University. Tyson was active in alumni affairs and held numerous posts in alumni organizations including: secretary of the Alumni Federation of Columbia University, managing editor of Columbia Alumni News, chairman of the Alumni Bicentennial Committee, assistant to the president for alumni relations, secretary pro tempore of the University Council, and, briefly, associate director in charge of Home Study. Most of the correspondence, reports, and other records document relations between alumni and the University and the activities of alumni groups.
Topics include: administrative issues and long range planning involving the Alumni Federation and alumni publications, the powers of alumni trustees, planning for Columbia's bicentennial celebration, and the oversight of student organizations by the King's Crown organization. Also, correspondence regarding alumni relations activities and the establishment of a University development program during the 1950s and 1960s. Also, correspondence, proposals, and budgets documenting a home study program which was offered by the University Extension, Columbia's continuing education division.
Topics include program finances, administration, and course offerings. Includes a report on radio correspondence courses [ca. 1929]. Also, correspondence regarding administrative issues involving the University Council and Council agenda [ca. 1960-1961]. Tyson was also a member of the National Committee for a Free Europe, Inc. The records include correspondence and reports regarding politics and communist activities in Europe [ca. 1953-1956]
Box 664 Folder 6
Correspondence between Lucien M. Underwood, professor of botany at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the Department of Botany. Topics include: facilities, budgeting for furniture and equipment, funding for the department during its relocation to Columbia's new Morningside Heights campus, the development of the botany curriculum, and faculty appointments. Includes floor plans of the department's facilities in the Schermerhorn building
Box 358 Folder 19
Correspondence between David M. Updike, superintendent of buildings and grounds at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the maintenance, design, construction, and renovation of University facilities. Includes correspondence regarding appropriations and expenditures for equipment and correspondence regarding the Department of Buildings and Grounds. Correspondence dating from 1932 to 1933 documents the investigation of Updike's involvement in contractor overcharges and other violations at the University's power plant. Includes correspondence regarding his resignation
Box 666 Folder 37
Correspondence between Clifford B. Upton, secretary of Teachers College at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to: the School of Practical Arts, press coverage of Teachers College, and faculty pension plans
Box 385 Folder 8
Correspondence between Harold Clayton Urey and the provost and secretary of Columbia University. Urey was a professor of chemistry and executive officer of the Department of Chemistry. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the department. Topics include: faculty appointments, payments to research and laboratory assistants, expenditures, equipment, faculty affairs, fellowships, research funding, and the administration of government contracts
Box 54 Folder 28
Correspondence between Alfonso Valdes, president of the Columbia University Club of Puerto Rico, and the president of the University. Correspondence relates to arrangements for events and other routine business of the club. Includes minutes of meetings of the board of directors of the club as well as a copy of the club by-laws. Also, newspaper clippings and an article regarding Valdes.
Box 341 Folder 1 to 8
Correspondence between John Howard Van Amrindge, Dean of Columbia College, and the high level administrators of Columbia University. Columbia College, then known as the School of the Arts, is Columbia University's undergraduate college. Topics related to the school include: entrance examinations, degree requirements and the awarding of degrees, discipline and hazing, course scheduling, teaching assignments, privileges of the school, admissions, and facilities. Also, correspondence [ca. 1915-1920] between members of the Van Amrindge Memorial Committee, the clerk of the board of trustees, and the architectural firm of McKim, Mead & White regarding the planning, funding, and construction of the Van Amrindge Memorial. Van Amrindge also served as superintendent of printing. Includes correspondence relating to the preparation and distribution of catalogs, announcements, and other University publications
Box 358 Folder 20
Correspondence between Frederick T. van Beuren, associate dean of the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Most of the correspondence dating from 1930 relates to the appointment of Willard Rappleye as dean of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. Includes minutes regarding the selection of the dean. Correspondence also relates to fees, scholarships, prizes, and admissions at the College of Physicians and Surgeons
Box 664 Folder 9 to 10
Correspondence between George R. Van De Water, chaplain of Columbia University, and University presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray butler. Correspondence relates to the religious affairs of the University and the chaplain's activities.
Topics include: religious services, the construction of St. Paul's Chapel, the establishment of a Bible study class, and the appointment of an organist. Includes reports on the chaplain's activities. Also, correspondence regarding religious services for the YMCA of Greater New York and correspondence regarding Van De Water's service as a chaplain with the 71st Regiment during the Spanish American War. Includes descriptions of conditions in the military
Box 449 Folder 19 to 21
Correspondence between Professor James Grote Van Derpool of Columbia University and University administrators, the director of the Columbia University Libraries, and donors. Van Derpool held a number of appointments including professor of architecture, Avery Librarian, and acting dean of the Faculty of Architecture. The records consist of correspondence and reports relating to the Avery Library, the School of Architecture, and the appearance of the University's Morningside Heights campus. Also, correspondence regarding the establishment of the Committee on Artistic Properties, which was created to oversee the selection and placement of University art works and to administer Columbia's art properties. Topics related to the Avery Library include budgeting and acquisitions.
Topics related to the School of Architecture include: financial aid, development, the curriculum, faculty affairs, prizes, awards, staffing needs, and faculty activities. Includes a proposal for a study of school building types [August, 1957] and a small amount of correspondence [ca. March, 1961] regarding a program in honor of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Walter Gropius, and Le Corbusier. Also, correspondence regarding the appraisal, acquisition, and management of University art, book, and manuscript collections
Box 454 Folder 21
Correspondence between Mark Van Doren, professor of English in the department of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Van Doren's personnel issues and retirement. Includes the text of Van Doren's University oration, which was given in January, 1954. Also includes the text of his remarks at the Barnard-Columbia dinner, which was held at the University Club in Chicago in April, 1959. Also includes a program from the April, 1959 Alexander Hamilton Dinner at which Van Doren was presented with the University's Alexander Hamilton Medal
Box 406 Folder 20
Correspondence between Henry P. Van Dusen, president of Union Theological Seminary in New York City, and the high level administrators of Columbia University. Much of the correspondence relates to the Bampton Lectures in America. Includes correspondence regarding the selection of Arnold Toynbee and Karl Barth as Bampton lecturers. Correspondence dating from 1947 to 1949 relates to the establishment of the Morningside Heights Development Plan, which was created to foster cooperation between area institutions regarding community issues. Correspondence dating from 1955 to 1956 relates to Van Dusen's honorary degree from the University
Box 72 Folder 23
Correspondence between Frederick T. Van Dyk, vice president for public affairs at Columbia University, and Andrew Cordier, president of the University. Correspondence relates to Van Dyk's appointment to the newly-created post of vice president for public affairs as well as his personnel issues and the management of the vice president's office. Also: correspondence regarding a proposed reorganization of the University's administration; correspondence regarding the campus disturbances of 1968 and Van Dyk's letter of resignation due to personal and political differences with the University administration
Box 671 Folder 5
Correspondence between Professor Thurman W. Van Metre and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the honorary degree that was granted to Van Metre during Columbia's 1954 bicentennial celebration
Box 664 Folder 11
Correspondence between Howard Van Sinderen and Columbia University president Nicholas Murray Butler. Van Sinderen was a trustee of Teachers College and secretary of the Alumni Council. Correspondence relates to events and alumni affairs.
Topics include expenditures for commencement ceremonies and the distribution of invitations to alumni for various events, including the openings of St. Paul's Chapel and Hamilton Hall. Includes a report on Van Sinderen's tour to meet with local alumni groups across the country. Also, correspondence regarding the establishment of a professorship in memory of Hall J. Howe and correspondence discussing the teaching methods of the School of Mines
Box 664 Folder 7
Correspondence between Cornelius Vanderbilt and Columbia University president Seth Low. The records appear to include correspondence from Vanderbilt's son, Cornelius Vanderbilt III. Correspondence relates to the Vanderbilt family's gifts to the University for the development of the campus and the construction of buildings.
Topics include: the purchase of lots at Columbia's Morningside Heights campus; the construction of a number of buildings, including Schermerhorn Hall and two buildings at the College of Physicians and Surgeons; and funding for a botanical garden
Box 672 Folder 49
Correspondence between William H. Vanderbilt and Grayson Kirk, president of Columbia University. Vanderbilt was president of Research on Self-Government, Inc. Records include: a report regarding two studies of political contributions that were funded by the foundation [September, 1958], minutes of a meeting of the foundation [March, 1959], and routine correspondence regarding foundation business and meetings
Box 664 Folder 8
Correspondence between William K. Vanderbilt and Columbia University president Nicholas Murray Butler. Vanderbilt was a benefactor of the University. Correspondence relates to Vanderbilt's gifts to purchase lots and construct buildings at Columbia's medical school
Box 670 Folder 19
Correspondence between Clara E. Velting, assistant to the dean of the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to routine expenditures and the University telephone directory
Box 671 Folder 51
Correspondence between Italian art critic Lionello Venturi and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Venturi was appointed to give the Bampton Lectures in America for 1955. Correspondence relates to: his appointment as Bampton lecturer, visa and travel arrangements, and payments for stipends and expenditures. Includes two summaries of his lectures and copies of the program from the lecture series
Box 427 Folder 22
Correspondence between Professor William S. Vickery, secretary to the Executive Committee of the Council for Research in the Social Sciences, and the secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Council-sponsored projects. Topics include: project expenditures, payments to research assistants, space needs, and other administrative issues
Box 664 Folder 12
Correspondence between the Villard family and Columbia University president Seth Low. The records consist of letters from various family members including Oswald Garrison Villard, Fanny J. Villard, and Mrs. Henry Villard. Correspondence relates to: funding for the purchase of the South Field extension to Columbia's Morningside Heights campus, attempts to recruit President Low to give a series of lectures at Harvard, and funding for a study of the Alsea Tribe
Box 664 Folder 13 to 14
Correspondence between Marvin Richardson Vincent, president of Union Theological Seminary in New York City, and Columbia University presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray Butler. Includes correspondence with the secretary of the University. Vincent served on Columbia's Committee on Honors and Prizes. Most of the correspondence relates to nominations for honorary degrees. Also, correspondence regarding courses that were given at the seminary and the seminary's degree requirements
Box 427 Folder 13 to 14
Correspondence between William Shafer Vincent, executive officer of the citizenship Education Planning Project in Teachers College at Columbia University, and the dean of the University's Graduate Faculties. The records consist of proposals and reports. The project was established to develop a program of internships and educational programs for high school students. Includes correspondence, dating from 1951 which responds to criticism of the project. Also includes a number of project newsletters
Box 669 Folder 31
Correspondence between Colonel Arthur Vollmer and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to Vollmer's efforts to secure an appointment in a proposed University peace institute. Includes copies of recommendation letters and a copy of his monograph, "How to Become an Officer"
Box 671 Folder 52
Correspondence between John Von Neumann, professor of mathematical physics in the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton University, and high level administrators at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the honorary degree that was awarded to Von Neumann at Columbia's 3rd Bicentennial Convocation in 1954. Includes biographical information regarding Von Neumann
Box 664 Folder 15 to 16
Correspondence between James D. Voorhees and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Voorhees held a number of appointments in obstetrics at the College of Physicians and Surgeons and also served as secretary of the college faculty. Most of the correspondence relates to the college's summer session curriculum, admissions requirements, and fees for various courses. Includes letters regarding individual exemptions from entrance requirements for admissions candidates. Also includes correspondence regarding faculty appointments and salaries in the Faculty of the College of Physicians and Surgeons
Box 665 Folder 12
Correspondence between Professor Huge de Vries of the University of Amsterdam and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to unsuccessful attempts to appoint de Vries to the University's Torrey Professorship. Includes correspondence regarding the responsibilities of the Torrey Professor
Box 671 Folder 6
Correspondence between Professor Charles Wagley, executive officer of the Department of Anthropology at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the department.
Topics include: the reorganization of the department, faculty affairs, and faculty salaries. Includes correspondence regarding the appointment of Dr. Cora Dubois to the department and plans for Margaret Mead to teach courses in the department. Also includes correspondence regarding the Conference on Responsible Freedom, which was held in 1954 as part of columbia's bicentennial celebration. Correspondence also relates to Wagley's personnel issues, appointments, and professional activities
Box 490 Folder 22
Correspondence between Robert Wagner, mayor of New York City, and high level administrators at Columbia University. Most of the records consist of routine correspondence regarding committees and invitations. Includes correspondence regarding the expansion of Columbia's Morningside Heights campus across Amsterdam Avenue and the creation of the University's East Campus
Box 664 Folder 17
Correspondence between Frederick S. Wait, president of Barnard College, and Columbia University presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray Butler. Correspondence relates to Barnard College, the undergraduate women's college affiliated with Columbia.
Topics include: the college's uncertain economic future; the construction of Milbank Hall; a conflict between New York City and the University over the University's desire for Barnard to control the property between 116th and 118th streets and the city's proposal to construct a park; a large bequest to Columbia and Barnard; and the awarding of a Barnard degree to a blind student. Also, correspondence from Wait protesting the construction of a sanitarium at Ray Brooke, New York
Box 457 Folder 18 to 19
Correspondence between William W. Waite, executive officer of the Department of Industrial Engineering at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the department.
Topics include: budgeting, finances, faculty appointments, salaries, faculty affairs, and personnel. Includes correspondence, dating from 1958 which relates to curriculum and staffing changes that resulted from departmental budget problems. Also includes correspondence regarding an industrial operations teaching program at the New York Naval Shipyard in 1956 and correspondence and a proposal [ca. 1955-1957] relating to an industrial operations training program for the United States Department of Labor Office of International Labor Affairs
Box 669 Folder 6
Correspondence between Abraham Wald, Professor of Mathematical Statistics at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to visiting professorships and special lecturers in the department. Includes a departmental budget [November, 1947]. Also, correspondence regarding Wald's personnel issues
Box 666 Folder 38
Correspondence between Charles Waldstein and the president of Columbia University. Waldstein was a benefactor of the University. Correspondence relates to efforts to establish lectures on foreign policy and international relations. Correspondence also relates to a proposed prize for graduate students in the Department of Public Law and issues involving Belgian refugees during World War I. Includes correspondence regarding a professor who was referred to as Professor Carnoy
Box 666 Folder 39
Correspondence between Professor Arthur L. Walker and the president, secretary, and treasurer of Columbia University. Walker held appointments as professor of metallurgy and head of the Department of Metallurgy in the University's School of Mines. Correspondence relates to the department. Includes correspondence regarding a proposal to remove a German inscription from the school building during World War I
Box 669 Folder 20
Correspondence between Samuel R. Walker and high level administrators at Columbia University. Walker was a vice president of City Investing Company and a benefactor of the University. Correspondence relates to Walker's gifts to the Crew Fund and lists other donors to the fund. Also, correspondence regarding Ernest McKinley Fisher, professor of Urban Land Economics in the Graduate School of Business at Columbia
Box 388 Folder 1 to 19
Correspondence between Schuyler C. Wallace and the high level administrators of Columbia University. Includes correspondence with the Carnegie, Rockefeller, and Ford foundations. Wallace held numerous appointments including professor of government, Ruggles Professor of Public Law and Government, executive officer of the Department of Pubic Law and Government, Director of the Naval School of Military Government and Administration, director of the International Administration Training Program, director of the School of International Affairs, director of the European Institute, director of the Near and Middle East Institute, and dean of the Faculty of International Affairs. Most of the records consist of correspondence, reports, budgets, and proposals relating to Columbia's School of International Affairs and its affiliated institutes [ca 1944-1964]. Also, correspondence, budgets, and course materials relating to military and international affairs training programs which were offered by the University during World War II. Also includes some correspondence regarding Columbia's relations with the United Nations during the late 1940s.
Topics related to the School of International Affairs and its institutes include: the establishment and organization of the school, the curriculum and programs of the school, budgeting, faculty affairs, faculty recruiting and appointments, visiting professors, exchange students, grant and research administration, financial administration, fellowships, staffing needs, fund raising, lectureships, facilities, and degree requirements. Includes correspondence regarding the Parker Fund, which supported a number of international affairs programs, and the Gabriel Silver Lectureship. Topics related to the Training Program in International Administration and the Naval School of Military Government and Administration include: budgeting, the curriculum, facilities, personnel issues, faculty affairs, faculty appointments, commencement, and financial administration
Box 672 Folder 69
Correspondence between Henry G. Walter of the G. Unger Vetlesen Foundation and high level administrators at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the establishment and awarding of the Vetlesen Prize in science and a gift to the University from the Ambrose Monell Foundation
Box 669 Folder 21
Correspondence between Margot Walther and the secretary and provost of Columbia University. Walther advised University faculty members on the placement of their children in primary and secondary schools. Correspondence relates to placing children in schools, scholarships, and the routine administration of the advisor's office
Box 501 Folder 7 to 10
Correspondence between Clarence C. Walton and high level administrators at Columbia University. Walton's appointments included Philip Young Professor of Business, associate dean of the Graduate School of Business, and dean of the School of General Studies. Records dating from 1958 to 1964 relate to the business school.
Topics include academic policies and arrangements for courses. Records dating from 1964 to 1969 relate to the School of General Studies, Columbia's continuing education division. Topics include: faculty appointments, the status and role of the school, gifts to the school, events, faculty affairs, and candidates for admission, and school finances. Includes: reports and correspondence regarding the reorganization, government, and status of the school [ca. 1968-1969]; a long-range planning report [July, 1965]; and correspondence with students regarding complaints, academic progress, and other issues. Walton also chaired the President's Committee on Urban Minority Problems. Related records include: a substantive report from the committee [1967], correspondence regarding Columbia's Office of University Relations, and correspondence regarding relations with community boards and organizations
Box 676 Folder 11
Correspondence between Frank E. Ward, chapel organist in St. Paul's Chapel at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to his appointment, the acquisition of hymnals for the chapel, and the management of the chapel choir. Includes correspondence with University president Nicholas Murray Butler, in which Ward responds to Butler's comments regarding chapel services
Box 340 Folder 17 to 20
Correspondence between William R. Ware, professor of architecture at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University, clerk of the University's board of trustees, and others. Includes correspondence with Charles McKim, architect of Columbia's Low Memorial Library. Correspondence relates to the Department of Architecture, the design of Columbia's Morningside Heights campus, and the McKim Travelling Fellowships. Much of the correspondence related to the Department of Architecture deals with the development of the architecture curriculum. Other department-related topics include: faculty appointments, staffing needs, and library facilities. Also, correspondence regarding the planning, design, and construction of buildings on the Morningside Heights campus as well as campus planning in general. Ware's letters often include his opinion of designs for campus buildings. Correspondence relating to the McKim Travelling Fellowships often deals with specifications for design contest entries
Box 671 Folder 10
Correspondence between Manny Warman, a photographer employed by Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to photographic services and billing for those services
Box 670 Folder 20
Correspondence between Aaron W. Warner and Columbia University administrators. Warner was the executive secretary of the University Seminar on Labor. Correspondence relates to the routine financial administration of a project to publish a book in honor of the chairman of the University Seminar on Labor
Box 671 Folder 7
Correspondence regarding the invitation for Chief Justice Earl Warren to give the principal address at Columbia University's first bicentennial convocation in 1954. Includes 2 copies of Warren's speech at the Bicentennial Alexander Hamilton Dinner, which was held in January of 1954. Also includes correspondence between Warren's staff and the University
Box 459 Folder 16 to 18
Correspondence between George E. Warren and Columbia University administrators and trustees. Warren was clerk of the Columbia University board of trustees and chairman of the Committee on Wills and Special Gifts. Correspondence relates to the business of the committee, development, gifts to the University, and routine trustee business. Includes routine invitations and acknowledgement letters
Box 676 Folder 12
Correspondence between Joseph Warren, assistant secretary of Harvard University, and the secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the move of the Association of American Universities from Columbia to Harvard. Topics include: the disposition of the records of the association, procedures for administering the association, and the routine business of the association. Includes an inventory of association property
Box 450 Folder 1 to 18
Correspondence between William Clements Warren, dean of the School of Law at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence, budgets, and reports relating to the academic and administrative affairs of the school.
Topics include: appropriations, prizes, student affairs and housing, faculty affairs, the management of special funds, the Law Library, budgeting, degree requirements, development, faculty appointments, gifts to the school, space requirements, finances, financial aid, tuition and fees, admissions, seminars, programs, research projects, and the administration of the dean's office and stafAlso, correspondence regarding Warren's appointment, gifts to the school, and retirement. includes: proposals and correspondence regarding planning and funding for a new law school building and the development of Columbia's East Campus [ca. 1953-1959] and detailed reports evaluating the mission and resources of the school and the need for a new building [December, 1953 and December, 1954]. Also includes: an accreditation report from the American Bar Association [April, 1958] and a proposal for the selection and training of African American lawyers and civil rights lawyers [1963]
Box 669 Folder 22
Correspondence between R. Gordon Wasson and the provost of Columbia University. Wasson, who was vice president of J. P. Morgan & Company, chaired the Committee for the Promotion of Advanced Slavic Cultural Studies. Correspondence relates to Slavic studies programs at Columbia.
Topics include: concerns regarding the loyalty and political beliefs of faculty members who were involved in Slavic studies programs, charges of communist activities that were brought against University faculty, and the controversy surrounding the funding of named professorships by communist governments. Includes correspondence regarding Ernest J. Simmons, who was a professor of Russian, and Professor Roman Jakobson. also includes a pamphlet on the Committee for the Promotion of Advanced Slavic Cultural Studies
Box 408 Folder 1 to 21
Box 409 Folder 1
Correspondence between Morris Watkins, secretary of the Alumni Federation of Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Watkins also served as director of student interests from 1968 to 1971. Correspondence relates to alumni relations, development, arrangements for alumni programs, gifts to the University, and the activities of regional alumni clubs. Includes a survey regarding alumni relations with the University [ca. 1952-1954] and correspondence documenting alumni involvement in Columbia's 1954 bicentennial celebration. Also includes Watkins' address entitled The Promotion of Alumni Activities which was given before the American Alumni Council in January, 1948
Box 455 Folder 21
Correspondence between Goodwin Watson, professor of education in Teachers College at Columbia University, and University administrators. most of the records consist of invoices for expenditures involving Watson's research. Also, correspondence relating to his personnel issues. Includes records regarding accusations that Watson was involved in communist activities
Box 389 Folder 16
Correspondence between Thomas J. Watson Junior, president of IBM and son of Columbia University trustee Thomas J. Watson, and University president Grayson Kirk. Most of the records consist of invitations and routine correspondence. Records relate to the business of the board of IBM, on which Watson and Kirk served. Also, notes regarding the development strategy which was used to approach Mrs. Thomas J. Watson [Jeanette Watson] regarding gifts to the University and letters from President Kirk to Mrs Watson.
Box 389 Folder 14 to 15
Correspondence between Thomas John Watson, president of IBM, and the high level administrators of Columbia University. Watson was a trustee and benefactor of Columbia University. Most of the correspondence dating from 1944 to 1948 relates to the establishment of the Watson Scientific Computing Laboratory. Most of the records dating from the 1950s consist of invitations and cover letters
Box 478 Folder 15 to 17
Correspondence between Robert W. Watt of the Seaboard Surety Company and high level administrators at Columbia University. Watt was a trustee of the University. He served as vice chairman of the board and was a member of a number of trustee committees, including the committee on buildings and grounds. The records consist of correspondence and clippings relating to a range to subjects.
Topics include: academic freedom, a proposed University engineering center, research funding, campus architecture and planning, urban planning, and funding for building projects. Includes a report of the Special Committee Appointed to Investigate the Government Aided Research Program of the University [March, 1956]. Also, correspondence between trustees and benefactors. The correspondence, which includes routine acknowledgement letters, relates to trustee affairs, donor relations, and gifts to the University. Also, clippings and articles which were forwarded to the University by Watt. Includes copies of "CounterAttack", an anti-communist newsletter
Box 668 Folder 20
Correspondence between Professor Leuman M. Waugh and the provost and secretary of Columbia University. Waugh was a professor of dentistry in the University's School of Dental and Oral Surgery and director of the school's Orthodontic Clinic. Correspondence concerns relations between the dental school and Columbia's medical school. Also, correspondence regarding Waugh's retirement
Box 493 Folder 16
Correspondence between Robert K. Webb, secretary of the Council for Research in the Social Sciences at Columbia University, and University administrators. Most of the records consist of routine cover letters and correspondence relating to expenditures for council-sponsored projects. Includes a small number of minutes from the Council for Research in the Social Sciences, memoranda regarding research grants, and records regarding the establishment of the Brebner Fund to purchase research materials for use in history courses.
Box 676 Folder 13 to 15
Correspondence between Ella Weed and Seth Low, president of Columbia University. Weed chaired the committee that oversaw the academic affairs of Barnard College, the undergraduate women's college affiliated with Columbia. Much of the material relates to admissions and registration in Barnard College and the Collegiate Course for Women, a program which allowed women to take graduate level University courses. Weed often corresponded with President Low regarding the credentials of admissions candidates and the approval of applications for masters and doctoral degrees. Other topics include: student affairs and issues involving individual students; the management of entrance examinations, finals, and other examinations; the recording of exam results; the interpretation of academic policies governing Barnard students; and arrangements for University faculty members to teach courses at Barnard
Box 666 Folder 40
Correspondence between Raymond Weeks, professor of romance languages at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondece relates to the Department of Romance Languages. Topics include: faculty appointments, the acquisition of library books, and educational issues
Box 672 Folder 20
The records consist of minutes from the University Seminar on Higher Education. The minutes were submitted to the Columbia University administration by William Weifenbach. The University Seminarrs promote interdisciplinary, inter-instituional discussion and study of a range of issues
Box 672 Folder 36
Correspondence between Uriel Weinreich, executive officer of the department of General and Comparative Linguistics at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects. Topics include: departmental appropriations and budgeting, faculty affairs, and funding for guest speakers in Weinreich's language planning course. Also, correspondence regarding a conference on Yiddish studies that Weinreich was organizing
Box 54 Folder 29
A book regarding the reform of the New York State constitution. The book was written by United State District Court Judge Jack Weinstein and was forwarded to the Columbia University administration by him
Box 676 Folder 16
Correspondence between Robert Weir, professor of surgery in the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University, and University administrators. Among other topics, the correspondence relates to routine faculty appointments and faculty affairs in the Department of Surgery
Box 409 Folder 6
Correspondence between Timothy Wellings, professor of naval science at Columbia University, and the provost and other University administrators. Correspondence relates to the Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps [NROTC] at Columbia.
Topics include: relations between the NROTC and the University, program facilities, admissions, and program stafIncludes records regarding the curriculum and requirements of the program
Box 673 Folder 12
Records related to John Wellington, assistant director of college admissions at Columbia University. The records consist of schedules for recruiting trips to high schools and Wellington's appointment letter
Box 676 Folder 17
Correspondence between James S. C. Wells, an instructor and adjunct professor at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Correspondence relates to Wells' personnel issues, research, health, and retirement
Box 671 Folder 8 to 9
Records regarding the personnel issues and dismissal of Gene Weltfish, a lecturer in the Department of Anthropology at Columbia University. Weltfish was dismissed for her membership in the communist party and her refusal to testify at Senate hearings. Records include correspondence from attorneys, students, professors, and the public.
Topics include communism , Weltfish's dismissal, and related issues. Records include: a petition from students requesting Weltfish's reinstatement, correspondence regarding University strategies relating to the case, and newspaper clippings and articles regarding the case
Box 669 Folder 7
Correspondence between Roger L. Wensley and the secretary and acting president of Columbia University. Wensley was chairman of the Columbia Fund. Correspondence relates to the Columbia Fund development campaign
Box 671 Folder 53
Correspondence between Hermann Weyl, a mathematician in the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton University, and high level administrators at Columbia University. Correspondence relates to the honorary degree that was awarded to Weyl at Columbia's 3rd Bicentennial Convocation in 1954. Includes biographical information regarding Weyl
Box 341 Folder 9
Correspondence between Benjamin Ide Wheeler, president of the University of California at Berkeley, and Columbia University presidents Seth Low and Nicholas Murray Butler. Low, Butler, and Wheeler exchanged opinions on a variety of administrative and educational issues in their correspondence. Also includes routine invitations, correspondence, and acknowledgement letters
Box 341 Folder 10
Correspondence between Professor James Rignall Wheeler of Columbia University and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the routine business of the Department of Classical Philology and to Rignall's personnel issues and professional activities. Rignall also served as acting dean of the Faculty of Fine Arts. Related topics include the reorganization of the Faculty and the evaluation of art, design, architecture, and music education at Columbia [ca. 1911]
Box 54 Folder 30
Correspondence between John N. Wheeler, a journalist who was affiliated with United Feature Syndicate, and the president of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to news features, social arrangements, and the donation of Wheeler's editor-letters collection to the Columbia University Libraries. The collection included correspondence with presidents, authors, politicians, and other public figures. Includes a partial list of Wheeler's collection of photographs, autographed books, sketches, and correspondence
Box 503 Folder 1 to 9
Correspondence between John W. Wheeler and the trustees and high level administrators of Columbia University. Wheeler appears to have served as counsel for the University. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects involving the legal affairs of the University, University development projects, and relations with other institutions and with New York City government. Includes records regarding plans to construct a University gymnasium in Morningside Park, correspondence regarding discipline and other issues involving the campus disturbances of the late 1960s and minutes of the Committee on Legal Affairs
Box 664 Folder 18
Correspondence between L. H. Wheeler, recorder of the faculty of medicine in the College of Physicians and Surgeons, and the secretary and chief clerk of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to: faculty affairs, faculty appointments, the publication and distribution of the president's reports, scholarship recipients, and the payment of fees due to lecturers who taught courses in the Summer Session
Box 666 Folder 41
Correspondence between Charles Wheelock, assistant commissioner for secondary education in the New York State Education Department, and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Correspondence relates to state scholarships for college students and procedures for the administration of the state regents examinations
Box 664 Folder 19
Correspondence between George G. Wheelock and the president of Columbia University. Wheelock was a trustee of the University and registrar of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. Most of the correspondence relates to scholarships and faculty appointments in the College of Physicians and Surgeons and the selection and appointment of trustees. Also, correspondence regarding Wheelock's gift to fund the statue of Sophocles that is in Columbia's Low Memorial Library. Also includes correspondence regarding the selection of a contractor to build Low Memorial Library and insurance for the library
Box 666 Folder 42
Correspondence between Milton C. Whitaker, professor of chemical engineering at Columbia University, and the president and other University administrators. Correspondence relates to the Department of Chemical Engineering.
Topics include fellowships, faculty appointments, laboratory maintenance, equipment, and the administration of departmental research projects. Includes records regarding research involving the American Brake Shoe and Foundry Company
Box 666 Folder 43
Correspondence between Alfred Tredway White and the president and secretary of Columbia University. White was a buyer for the Central Museum of the Brooklyn Institute. Correspondence relates to the purchase of bronze reproductions from an exhibition of the works of Constantin Meunier that was held at Columbia in 1914
Box 390 Folder 1 to 18
Box 391 Folder 1 to 9
Correspondence between Carl M. White, dean of the School of Library Service and director of the libraries at Columbia University, and high level administrators of the University. Records relate to the administration, finances, and personnel of the Columbia University libraries and the academic and financial affairs of the School of Library Service. Includes White's speeches on librarianship and university libraries, correspondence regarding the Bancroft Bequest [ca. 1946], and correspondence regarding the University's committee on Motion pictures [ca. 1944-1945]. Records relating to the Columbia University Libraries consist of correspondence, budgets, reports, floor plans, and newsletters.
Topics include: budgeting, staff salaries and benefits, library costs, library operations, facilities, personnel policies, staffing needs, library privileges, exhibitions, and fund raising. Includes records regarding the appraisal and acquisition of books and collections. Also includes correspondence regarding the administration of special collections libraries including the Brander Matthews Dramatic Museum [ca. 1949] and the Library of the American Mathematical Society [ca. 1950-1951]. Also, correspondence and other records relating to the establishment and powers of the Library Staff Association [ca 1948-1950]. Also, correspondence regarding the post-World War II development of Columbia's international affairs libraries. Records relating to the School of Library Service consist of correspondence, budgets, reports, and proposals.
Topics include: faculty appointments, faculty affairs, arrangements for courses, budgeting, scholarships and financial aid, student affairs, degrees, fund raising, staffing needs, and the curriculum and programs of the school. Includes information regarding women faculty members in the school. Also includes correspondence, proposals, and reports [ca. 1944-1948] regarding the revision of the school's curriculum and proposals and procedures relating to the creation of a job placement service in the school. Includes White's communications to the Library Council and its successor, the Library Committee of the University Council, regarding a variety of topics
Box 452 Folder 1 to 13
Correspondence between William J. Whiteside of the Department of Buildings and Grounds at Columbia University and high level University administrators. Whiteside held appointments as assistant director and, later, director of the department. The records consist of correspondence, budgets, and floor plans relating to University facilities and the Department of Buildings and Grounds. Facilities-related topics include: building renovation, building management, campus space needs, facilities budgets, utilities, security, and construction projects. Includes photographs of a demonstration at the ground-breaking ceremony for Uris Hall. Also includes correspondence with architects regarding campus projects, in particular the Citizenship center [Ferris Booth Hall]
Box 497 Folder 19
Correspondence between Jean L. Whitnack, editor-in-chief of the Department of University Publications at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the preparation and printing of handbooks, announcements, bulletins, the academic calendar, and other University publications. Includes the draft of an entry for the student handbook regarding the University's administrative structure [1957] and the draft of a promotional brochure for the Lamont Geological Observatory, Columbia's facility for research and education in the earth sciences [July, 1961]
Box 508 Folder 4 to 5
Correspondence between Lawrence A. Wien and high level administrators at Columbia University. Wien served as a trustee of the University. Correspondence relates to a variety of subjects.
Topics include Wien's gifts to Columbia and an agreement with Columbia regarding the leasing of the Empire State Building. Includes a brief exchange of correspondence with University president William McGill regarding a demonstration that took the form of a housing crimes trial as well as a flier from the demonstration [December, 1970]. Also includes routine acknowledgement letters.
Box 448 Folder 3 to 5
Correspondence between Clarence Martin Wilbur and Columbia University administrators. Wilbur was an associate professor of Chinese History and held appointments as the assistant director and director the University's East Asian Institute. The records consist of correspondence, reports, and budgets relating to the institute.
Topics include: faculty appointments, appropriations, faculty affairs, expenditures, personnel, finances, facilities, the East Asian Library, Asian exchange students, staffing needs, lectures, and development. Includes annual reports which discuss the institute's mission, programs, student body, activities, and stafAlso includes correspondence and a report regarding the Chinese Oral History Project and a copy of a paper on the Communist movement in China that was edited by Wilber in 1960. Also, correspondence regarding Wilbur's personnel issues
Box 72 Folder 24
Correspondence between Franklin H. Williams, director of the Center on Urban Community Affairs at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to urban and minority affairs, relations between Columbia and the surrounding community, and the University's need to recruit minority students.
Topics include: the lack of Black and Puerto Rican students at Columbia, the need for courses with relevance for Black students, the University's lack of contributions to local businesses and banks, proposals to recruit employees from Harlem and to increase the use of businesses and services from the Harlem area, and scholarship programs for minority students. records include: two speeches in which Williams addresses urban and minority issues, a mission statement from the Center for Urban Community Affairs, newspaper clippings on related topics, a report detailing the urban center's efforts to recruit Black students, and a letter in which Williams expresses his disappointment at Columbia's failure to recruit and encourage the education of Black, Puerto Rican, and other minority students
Box 670 Folder 21
Records forwarded to the Columbia University administration by Gordon Williams, special representative of the International Monetary Fund. The records consist of two reports by the International Monetary Fund: Monetary Policy in Postwar Years and Recent Fiscal Developments in Canada
Box 671 Folder 11
Correspondence between Professor Howard R. Williams of the School of Law at Columbia University and University administrators. Correspondence relates to a study of courses in real estate that were offered in the University's Institute of Arts and Sciences. Williams appears to have chaired the committee which was appointed to evaluate the courses. Includes a report [the Burns Report ] on the courses
Box 666 Folder 44
Correspondence between John S. Williams and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Williams, who was a United States senator, was appointed Blumenthal Lecturer for 1912. Correspondence relates to arrangements for the lectures, the payment of William's honorarium, and the publication of the lectures
Box 371 Folder 20
Correspondence between Linsly R. Williams, director of the New York Academy of Medicine and an alumni trustee of Columbia University, and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of the University. Correspondence relates to the affiliation between the University and the New York Post-Graduate Medical School [ca. 1930]. Includes a report regarding the affiliation and graduate education in medicine. Also, correspondence, clippings, and reports relating to University athletics programs. Topics include: training, facilities, scholarships, and a controversy over the management of the football team. Includes correspondence relating to the Special Committee on Athletics
Box 349 Folder 19 to 21
Correspondence between Stephen G. Williams and Nicholas Muray Butler, president of Columbia University. Williams was an alumni trustee and a trustee of the University. Correspondence relates to a range of subjects involving the University. Topics include: alumni relations, financial support for University athletic programs, and the design, maintenance, and renovation of campus facilities. Includes a letter dated October, 1927 regarding Jewish representation on the University's board of trustees
Box 667 Folder 1 to 2
Correspondence between Talcott Williams and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Williams held appointments as professor of journalism and director of Columbia's School of Journalism. Correspondence relates to the establishment of the School of Journalism and Williams' appointment as its first director.
Topics include: the recruiting and appointment of a faculty for the new school, publicity, funding for the school, budgeting, the development and revision of the school's curriculum, special lectures, and the creation of a school library. Includes: correspondence regarding the Pulitzer Prizes, a school budget for the 1918-1919 academic year, and a report from the Administrative Board of the School of Journalism. Also, correspondence regarding anti-war sentiment during World War I. In particular, the correspondence relates to the anti-war position of James W. Danaly
Box 356 Folder 1 to 20
Box 357 Folder 1 to 2
Correspondence between Charles C. Williamson, director of the libraries and dean of the School of Library Service at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Most of the correspondence and reports relate to the Columbia University Libraries. Also includes correspondence and reports regarding the School of Library Service. Topics related to the Columbia University Libraries include: appointments, budgeting, appropriations, library personnel, library fees, library privileges, facilities, the management of special libraries and collections, equipment, acquisitions, and fund raising. Includes correspondence documenting the administrative structure of the libraries and the relationship between the director of the libraries and the University librarian. Correspondence dating from the 1930s also relates to the design of Butler Library, then known as South Hall; the establishment of the rare books library; and the proposed creation of an international affairs library. Topics related to the School of Library Service include: budgeting, appropriations, faculty appointments, facilities, teaching assignments, scholarships, and fund raising. Includes correspondence and a report [ca. 1937-1938] regarding: the relationship between the School of Library Service and the University Libraries, the educational method of the school, and the organization of the University's library system. Also includes a report, dating from 1935 which discusses the curriculum of the school. Also, correspondence [ca. 1941] regarding the selection of a new dean to succeed Williamson
Box 341 Folder 11 to 13
Correspondence between Edmund B. Wilson, head of the Department of Zoology at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Topics related to the department include: faculty appointments, faculty affairs, expenditures, budgeting, curriculum, special lectures, laboratories and equipment, gifts to the department, personnel, publications, fellowships, and the administration of research projects. Includes correspondence [ca. 1903] regarding the revision of the undergraduate science curriculum. Also, correspondence relating to Wilson's personnel matters and professional activities
Box 664 Folder 20
Correspondence between John H. Winser and the secretary of Columbia University. Winser was the secretary and assistant treasurer of the American Museum of Natural History. Correspondence relates to routine matters. Topics include the salary of Franz Boas and the relationship between Cornelius Vanderbilt and the museum
Box 428 Folder 10 to 11
Correspondence between Carl R. Wise, university medical officer at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence, budgets, and reports relating to University medical services.
Topics include: the administration of the Medical Office, policies regarding medical services, medical facilities, the mission of the University's health services, statistics regarding medical services, and medical fees. Includes correspondence regarding the mental and physical health of individual students and employees. Also includes budgets and proposals for the reorganizations of Columbia's medical services that took place in 1949 and 1953. Also, correspondence regarding Wise's appointment
Box 669 Folder 41
Correspondence between James DeCamp Wise and high level administrators at Columbia University. Wise was president of Columbia Associates, a group of University benefactors who made contributions to Columbia's general fund. Correspondence relates to luncheons in honor of General William J. Donovan and New York Times publisher Arther Hays Sulzberger
Box 664 Folder 21
Correspondence between Clark Wissler, lecturer in anthropology in Teachers College at Columbia University, and the secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to Wissler's appointment
Box 493 Folder 20
Correspondence between Rudolph Wittkower, chairman of the Department of Fine Arts and Archeology at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to the department.
Topics include: expenditures, faculty appointments, arrangements for events, loans of paintings, facilities, and equipment. Includes the departmental constitution and correspondence regarding the expansion of the curriculum and programs of the department. Also includes a memorandum regarding the departmental committee that was established to evaluate Arthur Sackler's offer to donate his collection of Asian art objects to the University. Also, letters evaluating art objects which were offered to the University and a proposal for the establishment of a visual arts center at the University
Box 457 Folder 20
Correspondence between Harris L. Wofford, assistant dean of the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University, and University administrators. Correspondence relates to the school.
Topics include gifts to the school and events. Includes issues of the school's newsletter dating from 1954. Also includes acknowledgement letters, correspondence regarding individual candidates for admission, and invitations
Box 671 Folder 54
Records regarding the planning and funding of Columbia University's Citizenship Center, which became the Ferris Booth Hall student center. Wolf appears to have been a potential donor to the project or associated with an agency that was being solicited in support of the project. Includes a booklet, entitled Men of Public Spirit in the Making, which details plans for the center
Box 671 Folder 12
Correspondence between Max Wolff, community consultant for the Institute of Adult Education at Teachers College, and administrators at Columbia University. Most of the correspondence relates to arrangements for meetings. Includes: a copy of a grant application for funding for community projects, copies of articles and a proposal by Wolff, and a copy of the special edition of the Jounral of Educational Sociology that was edited by Wolff [November, 1952]
Box 669 Folder 23
Correspondence between Jacob Wolfowitz, professor of mathematical statistics and acting executive officer of the Department of Mathematical Statistics at Columbia University, and the provost and vice president of the University. Correspondence relates to routine administrative matters involving the department. Includes the departmental budget for the 1948-1949 fiscal year. Also, correspondence regarding the academic standing and mental health of a veteran student in the department
Box 451 Folder 19
Correspondence between Leo Wolman, professor of economics at Columbia University, and University administrators. Wolman was also a researcher for the National Bureau of Economic Research. The records consist of routine correspondence regarding Wolman's personnel issues, sponsored research projects, and committee appointments. Includes reprints of articles regarding the United States Steel strike. Also includes a paper on wage trends from 1914 to 1953
Box 341 Folder 14 to 15
Correspondence between Professor Francis Carter Wood and the president, secretary, and faculty of Columbia University. Wood was professor of clinical pathology in the Department of Pathology at Columbia University's College of Physicians and Surgeons and, later, the director of the University's Institute for Cancer Research. Much of the correspondence relates to the institute.
Topics include: facilities, budgeting, expenditures, personnel, equipment, publications, and staffing needs. Includes correspondence and reports regarding research activities and long range planning. Topics related to the Department of Pathology include faculty appointments and faculty affairs.
Box 503 Folder 10 to 12
Correspondence between Neal Wood, secretary of the Council for Research in the Social Sciences, and high level University administrators. Records relate to the council, which was based at Columbia. Most of the records consist of correspondence and notes regarding expenditures for sponsored research projects. The records also include a small number of minutes and agenda for council meetings and a bibliography of publications by council-sponsored projects between 1956 and 1961
Box 341 Folder 16
Correspondence between Thomas D. Wood, professor of clinical education in the Department of Physical Education at Teachers College, and the president and secretary of the Columbia University. Teachers College is an affiliate of Columbia University. Most of the correspondence relates to the University's gymnasium and to physical education instruction and the physical education departments at Teachers College and the University.
Topics include: faculty appointments, equipment, gymnasium policies, personnel, and the preparation of the University's catalog. Includes proposals for the establishment of a department of hygiene and the creation of the post of university medical officer. Also, cover letters and acknowledgement letters as well as correspondence relating to Wood's appointment and professional acitivities
Box 503 Folder 13 to 16
Correspondence between William A. Wood, director of the Office of Radio and Television Relations at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence, budgets, and reports relating to: the office, the administration of the University's radio and television programs, radio and television coverage of faculty and administrators, and relations with the media. Topics related to the office and University broadcasts include: expenditures, studio facilities, equipment and supplies, budgeting, and finances. Related records include: correspondence regarding WKCR, the columbia radio station; annual reports of the office; records [ca. 1962] regarding Columbia Lectures in International Studies, a series of half-hour television lectures regarding world affairs; and records [ca. 1962-1963] regarding educational television
Box 664 Folder 22 to 24
Correspondence between Professor George E. Woodberry, head of the Department of Comparative Literature at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Correspondence relates to the department and to Woodberry's personnel issues. Most of the correspondence relates to arrangements for courses to be given in the department. The records also include many letters regarding the conflict between Woodberry and Professor Brander Matthews and the resulting establishment of separate departments -- the Department of English and the Department of Comparative Literature. Includes correspondence with President Seth Low, in which Woodberry complains of his treatment, and correspondence regarding relations between the two departments. Also, correspondence regarding protests over the reduction in the number of courses to be given by Woodberry.
Box 342 Folder 1 to 8
Correspondence between Professor Frederick James Eugene Woodbridge of Columbia University and University president Nicholas Murray Butler, the secretary of the University, faculty members, and trustees. During his long career at Columbia, Woodbridge held numerous appointments including: professor of philosophy, Johnsonian Professor of Philosophy; dean of the Faculties of Political Science, Philosophy, and Pure Science [the Graduate Faculties]; and Roosevelt Professor. Correspondence relates to a wide range of topics involving the Department of Philosophy and Psychology, the Graduate Faculties, and the University's organization, academic affairs, and finances. Topics related to the Department of Philosophy and Psychology. Include: faculty appointments, staffing needs, and teaching assignments. Topics related to the administration of the Graduate Faculties include: tuition and fees, prizes and awards, fellowships and scholarships, the organization and government of schools and departments, degrees, budgeting, faculty affairs, and the management of special funds. includes correspondence regarding the University Research Fund. Also, correspondence between Woodbridge and President Butler on a range of University-related topics including University finances and the organization of schools and faculties. Woodbridge also seems to have assumed some of Butler's responsibilities during the president's absences. Includes Woodbridge's remarks to the University Council regarding the dismissal of professors James McKeen Cattell and Henry W. L. Dana and the relationship between faculty members and the University. Also, correspondence regarding the nomination of candidates for the butler Medal and the selection of medal recipients. Also, correspondence [ca. 1931-1932] regarding Woodbridge's tenure as Roosevelt Professor. The Roosevelt Professorship sent an American professor to Germany to lecture and act as a cultural and educational emissary.
Topics include: Woodbridge's activities as Roosevelt Professor, administrative issues regarding the professorship, the appointment of his successor, and inter-war politics. Includes his inaugural address, "Nature of Man", which was given in Berlin in November, 1931. Also, correspondence [ca. 1936-1937] documenting the work of the president's Committee on the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Woodbridge was chairman of the committee, which evaluated and revised the requirements for the Ph.D. Includes the committee's initial report, dated 1937. Also includes correspondence [ca. 1939] regarding Woodbridge's retirement
Box 664 Folder 25
Correspondence between Professor John Woodhull of Teachers College at Columbia University and the president of the University. Woodhull was in charge of overseeing buildings and supplies at Teachers College. Related topics include college maintenance and the construction of Milbank Hall. Woodhull also chaired the State Science Teachers Association. Related correspondence deals with the New York State high school physics curriculum. Also, correspondence regarding Woodhull's personnel issues. includes a journal of his trip through the West
Box 667 Folder 3
Correspondence between William W. Woods, director of the Department of Information at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the Department of Information and its role as a liaison with the press and a publicity office for the University. Includes a report on the department's goals and activities [February, 1918] and a memorandum regarding press coverage of Professor charles Beard's resignation from the University in 1917
Box 664 Folder 26
Correspondence between Benjamin D. Woodward of the Department of Romance Languages at Columbia University and the president of the University. Much of the correspondence relates to Woodward's personnel issues, his appointment as a commissioner to the Paris Exposition in 1900 and resignation to pursue a business career in France
Box 342 Folder 9
Correspondence between Professor Robert Simpson Woodward and the president and secretary of Columbia University. Woodward was a professor of mechanics and mathematical physics in the Department of Mechanics at Columbia University and, later, dean of the University's Faculty of Pure Science. Most of the correspondence relates to the Department of Mechanics.
Topics include: the curriculum, examinations, faculty affairs, research funding, expenditures, staffing needs, and equipment. also, correspondence relating to the Faculty of Pure Science. Topics include: faculty appointments, faculty affairs, privileges, student affairs, and the preparation of the Faculty's catalog. Correspondence dating from 1904 to 1905 relates to Woodward's resignation
Box 341 Folder 17
Correspondence between Robert Sessions Woodworth, professor of psychology and administrative head of the Department of Philosophy and Psychology at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University.
Topics include: fellowships, faculty appointments, faculty affairs, preparation of the catalog, lectureships, budgeting, appropriations and expenditures, and staffing needs. Woodworth was also secretary of the Social Science Research Council. Correspondence dating from 1926 to 1930 documents routine Council payments for research grants to the University. Also, correspondence relating to Wood's appointment and personnel matters
Box 664 Folder 27
Correspondence between Mary Schenck Woolman, director of the Manhattan Trade School of Girls, and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University. Most of the records consist of Woolman's invitations to Butler to visit the school. Also, correspondence regarding the division of Woolman's time between her work at Teachers College and the trade school and correspondence regarding her trips to Europe to observe women who were working in various trades
Box 664 Folder 28
Correspondence between Ira H. Woolson and the president of Columbia University. Woolson held appointments as instructor in the department of Mechanical Engineering and secretary of the Faculty of Applied Science. Most of the correspondence relates to his research regarding fire-proof building materials. Correspondence also relates to his personnel issues and resignation. Includes a report on recognition for his students' research in Engineering News
Box 18 Folder 28
Correspondence regarding an exchange visitor visa for Curt Wormann, a library science instructor at Columbia University
Box 457 Folder 21
Correspondence between Felix E. Wormser, assistant secretary of the United States Department of the Interior, and Columbia University administrators and stafWormser was an alumni trustee of the University. Correspondence relates to routine trustee business and arrangements for meetings. Includes correspondence regarding a controversy involving an agreement between the University and the Polish government to establish a chair in Polish studies. Also includes correspondence regarding criticism of faculty members in Columbia's Teachers College.
Box 507 Folder 17 to 19
Correspondence between John Lamar Worzel and high level administrators at Columbia University. Worzel served as acting and associate director of the Lamont Geological Observatory, Columbia's facility for research and education in the earth sciences.
Topics include: faculty affairs, the management of special funds, the administration of grants and government contracts, research funding, relations between the University and the observatory, and facilities. Includes correspondence regarding the funding and management of the observatory's ocean floor core sample project and core sample laboratory [1965]. Also includes a report regarding Lamont facilities, personnel, faculty, research programs, and finances. The report also includes an account of a descent to the bottom of the Puerto Rico Trench by Lamont scientists
Box 379 Folder 1 to 5
Correspondence between Professor Ernest Hunter Wright of Columbia University and high level University administrators. Wright was a professor of English, executive officer of the Department of English and Comparative Literature, and chairman of the Committee on Instruction of the Faculty of Philosophy. Most of the records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the Department of English and Comparative Literature. Topics related to the English department include: faculty affairs, staffing needs, visiting professors, faculty appointments and recruiting, budgeting, finances, and the organization of the department. Correspondence and budgets often discuss faculty activities and evaluate the performance and professional standing of departmental faculty members.
Includes a transcript of the May, 1944 departmental dinner. The transcript contains poems satirizing the department and the University. Also, correspondence regarding the Brander Matthews Dramatic Museum, which was operated by the English department, and theater arts at the University. Also, correspondence. dating from the 1940s which documents the work of the Committee to Reconstitute the Department of Greek and Latin. The committee was established to evaluate and reorganize the department. Also, correspondence with Frank D. Fackenthal, whose appointments included provost and acting president of the University. The correspondence discusses a variety of University-related issues.
Topics include the establishment of library fees for visiting scholars and graduate students [ca. 1942] and proposals to develop a long-range plan for the University's graduate schools. Also, correspondence regarding Wright's personnel issues
Box 503 Folder 17 to 21
Correspondence between Helen T. Wright of the Faculty Records Division at Columbia University and University administrators. The records consist of routine correspondence and memoranda relating to retirement, the filing of loyalty oaths, mailings, address updates, and other issues
Box 671 Folder 13
Correspondence between Searle Wright, organist and choir master of St. Paul's Chapel at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Correspondence relates to a variety of topics involving the chapel organ, the choir, and Wright's personnel issues
Box 672 Folder 21
Correspondence between Henry Merritt Wriston, director of the American Assembly, and the president of Columbia University. The American assembly was a national conference and discussion program that was affiliated with Columbia's Graduate School of Business. Correspondence relates to the hiring of an assistant director for the American Assembly. Includes an essay entitled, Diplomacy in a Democracy
Box 449 Folder 1 to 3
Correspondence between John H. Wuorinen, executive officer of the Department of History at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. The records consist of correspondence and budgets relating to the department.
Topics include: staffing needs, faculty affairs, faculty recruiting and appointments, gifts to the department, salaries, visiting professors, lectures, expenditures, and appropriations. Also, correspondence relating to Wuorinen's personnel issues
Box 489 Folder 1 to 20
Personnel records which were forwarded to the Columbia University administration by Thomas W. Yerzley, aid to the chairman of Columbia's committee on Government Aided Research. Most of the records relate to the division of faculty members' time between grants and University work and salary adjustments for faculty involved in sponsored research projects. Includes a few lists of sponsored projects which summarize project proposals
Box 664 Folder 29
Correspondence between Abraham Yohannan, lecturer in oriental languages at Columbia University, and the president of the University. Correspondence relates to Yohannan's personnel issues. Also, correspondence regarding his ancestry and knowledge of Persian and Syrian dialects
Box 669 Folder 42
Correspondence between the president and trustees of Columbia University. Correspondence consists of numerous copies of a form letter proposing a honorary degree for Shigeru Yoshida, the premier of Japan
Box 342 Folder 10 to 12
Correspondence between Clarence H. Young, chairman of the University committee on Entrance Examinations and chairman of the Department of Classical Philology at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Correspondence relates to the administration of entrance examinations, policies and requirements for entrance examinations, and revisions to examination policies. Includes correspondence regarding the routine business of the Department of Greek and the Department of Classical Philology
Box 501 Folder 11
Correspondence between James H. Young and high level administrators at Columbia University. Young was director of community activities for the Columbia-Community Athletic Field, which was located in Manhattan's Morningside Park. Records relate to community relations and to softball leagues and other community athletic programs that were organized by the University
Box 428 Folder 12 to 20
Correspondence between Philip Young, dean of the School of Business at Columbia University, and high level University administrators. Includes correspondence with the director of the School of General Studies, Columbia's continuing education division. During Young's administration as dean, the business school established graduate courses and became the Graduate School of Business. The records consist of correspondence, budgets, and reports relating to the School of Business and correspondence and reports [ca. 1949-1951] relating to graduate and undergraduate business courses in the School of General Studies. Also, correspondence, floor plans, and reports [ca. 1950-1952] relating to Columbia's Arden House conference center and brochures, announcements, and reports regarding conferences and programs held at the University and at Arden House. Includes records relating to the American Assembly, the Real Estate Round Table, a University-sponsored course on the Port of New York, and the Institute of Urban Land Use and Housing
Topics related to the School of Business include: faculty affairs, appropriations, the administration of the dean's office and staff, prizes, development, faculty and staff salaries, and programs in the school. Includes: brochures regarding fellowships in the school, brochures and lists relating to the Executive Program in Business Administration [ca. 1952-1953], and a number of reports and papers relating to conferences which were held at the school. Also includes correspondence [ca. 1948] regarding the creation of graduate degrees in business and the termination of the BS degree is business. Records related to graduate instruction in business include: a report of the Special Committee on Graduate Evening Instruction dating from May, 1949 a report of the Special Committee on the Undergraduate Major in Business in the School of General Studies; and reports [ca. 1949] regarding relations between the Graduate School of Business and the School of General Studies
Box 360 Folder 1 to 3
Correspondence between Professor J. Enrique Zanetti, associate provost of Columbia University, and the president, secretary, and provost of the University. Most of the correspondence relates to Zanetti's routine activities as associate provost from 1948 to 1950.
Topics include: faculty affairs, faculty appointments, departmental appropriations and expenditures, and student affairs. Includes correspondence regarding Zanetti's personnel issues. Also, correspondence, dating from 1929 to 1930 which relates to the committee on Public Ceremonies and the Committee on Campus Appearance. Zanetti was chairman of both committees. The Committee on Public Ceremonies organized academic ceremonies, visits from dignitaries, and other public events. The Committee on Campus Appearance was created to evaluate the University's landscaping and plantings. Includes a report of the committee. Also, records dating from 1951 relate to the Columbia Civil Defense Council, which was chaired by Zanetti. Includes a report which outlining the University's civil defense procedures
Box 667 Folder 4
Correspondence between Hans Zinsser, professor of bacteriology at Columbia University, and the president and secretary of the University. Includes correspondence with the dean of Columbia's College of Physicians and Surgeons. Correspondence relates to the Department of Bacteriology.
Topics include: personnel issues, budgeting, and cooperation with other departments. Includes a lengthy letter regarding plans for the growth of the department [April 18, 1917]. Also, correspondence regarding Zinsser's leave to work for the army during World War I
Subseries consisting of records to, from, or about a corporation filed under the corporation's name. If a desired corporate name does not appear in this sub-series, or if the name is found but the time period of interest falls outside the date range given for the folder, it may still be possible to find relevant materials in Series I.1 General Alphabetical, through the use of the Central Files card index, or by confining the search to a very specific date range.
Box 653 Folder 1
Box 583 Folder 25
Box 658 Folder 8
Box 645 Folder 14
Box 514 Folder 3
Box 646 Folder 1
Box 634 Folder 9 to 10
Box 614 Folder 5 to 28
Box 615 Folder 1 to 11
Box 639 Folder 3
Box 614 Folder 3 to 4
Box 618 Folder 15
Box 542 Folder 35
Box 629 Folder 5 to 9
Box 514 Folder 7
Box 514 Folder 6
Box 514 Folder 11 to 22
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Box 515 Folder 23
Box 604 Folder 1 to 24
Box 605 Folder 25 to 30
Box 586 Folder 40
Box 580 Folder 28
Box 580 Folder 10 to 24
Box 591 Folder 24
Box 595 Folder 23
Box 595 Folder 24
Box 581 Folder 1 to 8
Box 621 Folder 27 to 29
Box 594 Folder 1
Box 576 Folder 21 to 25
Box 577 Folder 1 to 24
Box 578 Folder 1 to 24
Box 579 Folder 1 to 24
Box 580 Folder 1 to 9
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Box 594 Folder 7
Box 606 Folder 20
Box 514 Folder 1
Box 595 Folder 25
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Box 639 Folder 10
Box 633 Folder 1 to 8
Box 589 Folder 19 to 21
Box 645 Folder 15
Box 550 Folder 22
Box 607 Folder 16
Box 590 Folder 1 to 22
Box 591 Folder 1
Box 591 Folder 4 to 17
Box 646 Folder 2 to 3
Box 584 Folder 3 to 14
Box 599 Folder 12 to 20
Box 600 Folder 1 to 19
Box 601 Folder 1 to 3
Box 601 Folder 4 to 21
Box 602 Folder 1 to 14
Box 582 Folder 1 to 6
Box 582 Folder 7 to 22
Box 576 Folder 30
Box 606 Folder 11
Box 513 Folder 2
Box 529 Folder 21
Box 639 Folder 12
Box 529 Folder 20
Box 626 Folder 26
Box 549 Folder 15
Box 592 Folder 14 to 17
Box 621 Folder 4
Box 530 Folder 1 to 20
Box 531 Folder 1 to 27
Box 516 Folder 1 to 21
Box 517 Folder 1 to 20
Box 518 Folder 1 to 18
Box 639 Folder 13 to 14
Box 633 Folder 9 to 10
Box 549 Folder 16
Box 594 Folder 8
Box 594 Folder 28
Box 639 Folder 15
Box 527 Folder 16 to 20
Box 629 Folder 1
Box 606 Folder 28
Box 586 Folder 7 to 10
Box 595 Folder 26
Box 607 Folder 18
Box 594 Folder 9
Box 594 Folder 10
Box 593 Folder 16 to 23
Box 541 Folder 24
Box 533 Folder 12 to 14
Box 646 Folder 14 to 15
Box 574 Folder 23
Box 553 Folder 7 to 23
Box 596 Folder 1 to 22
Box 597 Folder 1 to 3
Box 520 Folder 1 to 22
Box 521 Folder 1 to 2
Box 551 Folder 1 to 21
Box 645 Folder 17
Box 594 Folder 16 to 18
Box 644 Folder 5
Box 633 Folder 11 to 15
Box 618 Folder 17 to 20
Box 645 Folder 16
Box 640 Folder 23
Box 548 Folder 21 to 22
Box 548 Folder 20
Box 624 Folder 24
Box 549 Folder 14
Box 610 Folder 12 to 21
Box 611 Folder 1 to 17
Box 640 Folder 10 to 16
Box 594 Folder 11
Box 644 Folder 6 to 7
Box 580 Folder 27
Box 606 Folder 23
Box 627 Folder 1 to 12
Box 510 Folder 6 to 17
Box 621 Folder 3
Box 594 Folder 14 to 15
Box 594 Folder 12
Box 521 Folder 3 to 22
Box 607 Folder 1 to 3
Box 626 Folder 1 to 9
Box 514 Folder 8
Box 642 Folder 25
Box 510 Folder 23 to 25
Box 511 Folder 1 to 191
Box 512 Folder 1 to 27
Box 513 Folder 1
Box 607 Folder 19
Box 536 Folder 9 to 10
Box 531 Folder 8 to 15
Box 522 Folder 1 to 23
Box 523 Folder 1 to 17
Box 594 Folder 13
Box 644 Folder 9 to 10
Box 630 Folder 17 to 22
Box 589 Folder 24
Box 605 Folder 19
Box 626 Folder 25
Box 549 Folder 32
Box 529 Folder 23
Box 620 Folder 14
Box 652 Folder 25
Box 623 Folder 17
Box 620 Folder 16 to 22
Box 524 Folder 1 to 19
Box 525 Folder 1 to 2
Box 525 Folder 3 to 21
Box 526 Folder 1 to 20
Box 527 Folder 1 to 6
Box 646 Folder 17
Box 606 Folder 29
Box 541 Folder 4 to 6
Box 658 Folder 3
Box 568 Folder 1 to 10
Box 652 Folder 23 to 24
Box 514 Folder 9 to 10
Box 548 Folder 17
Box 594 Folder 6
Box 623 Folder 10 to 16
Box 541 Folder 21 to 22
Box 648 Folder 6 to 7
Box 653 Folder 23 to 24
Box 619 Folder 2
Box 595 Folder 27
Box 553 Folder 24
Box 553 Folder 25
Box 618 Folder 22 to 24
Box 521 Folder 24
Box 631 Folder 16 to 19
Box 619 Folder 3 to 6
Box 549 Folder 11
Box 549 Folder 12
Box 595 Folder 18 to 20
Box 574 Folder 14 to 18
Box 642 Folder 20
Box 649 Folder 17 to 18
Box 676 Folder 18
Box 629 Folder 16 to 17
Box 629 Folder 18 to 19
Box 676 Folder 21
Box 622 Folder 13 to 15
Box 637 Folder 3
Box 646 Folder 12
Box 644 Folder 11 to 12
Box 644 Folder 18
Box 644 Folder 19
Box 574 Folder 11
Box 639 Folder 19 to 20
Box 513 Folder 22
Box 633 Folder 24
Box 620 Folder 15
Box 628 Folder 17 to 18
Box 573 Folder 22
Box 594 Folder 23
Box 591 Folder 2
Box 586 Folder 13
Box 619 Folder 1
Box 637 Folder 11 to 18
Box 586 Folder 12
Box 603 Folder 15
Box 629 Folder 22
Box 631 Folder 21 to 22
Box 602 Folder 16
Box 592 Folder 19 to 20
Box 587 Folder 1 to 18
Box 615 Folder 12 to 13
Box 513 Folder 15 to 18
Box 540 Folder 21 to 22
Box 582 Folder 24
Box 555 Folder 1
Box 631 Folder 23 to 24
Box 616 Folder 1
Box 679 Folder 7
Box 629 Folder 14 to 15
Box 606 Folder 24
Box 597 Folder 4 to 22
Box 598 Folder 1 to 21
Box 599 Folder 1 to 11
Box 594 Folder 26 to 27
Box 621 Folder 17
Box 619 Folder 7 to 15
Box 594 Folder 5
Box 619 Folder 17 to 23
Box 632 Folder 17
Box 628 Folder 19
Box 644 Folder 16 to 17
Box 607 Folder 4
Box 543 Folder 15
Box 607 Folder 5 to 6
Box 554 Folder 7 to 8
Box 607 Folder 7 to 11
Box 626 Folder 10 to 15
Box 646 Folder 28
Box 555 Folder 22
Box 646 Folder 13
Box 607 Folder 20
Box 607 Folder 21 to 22
Box 638 Folder 25
Box 616 Folder 4 to 6
Box 616 Folder 7 to 8
Box 529 Folder 1 to 18
Box 528 Folder 1 to 9
Box 582 Folder 25
Box 634 Folder 17
Box 595 Folder 1 to 3
Box 580 Folder 25
Box 634 Folder 16
Box 581 Folder 19 to 20
Box 626 Folder 16 to 20
Box 548 Folder 18 to 19
Box 549 Folder 13
Box 639 Folder 26
Box 628 Folder 22
Box 574 Folder 22
Box 653 Folder 9
Box 644 Folder 20
Box 586 Folder 24
Box 632 Folder 18 to 20
Box 605 Folder 7
Box 543 Folder 19
Box 617 Folder 21 to 26
Box 609 Folder 5 to 20
Box 610 Folder 1 to 10
Box 632 Folder 1 to 10
Box 639 Folder 2
Box 557 Folder 8 to 20
Box 558 Folder 1 to 21
Box 559 Folder 1 to 21
Box 560 Folder 1 to 29
Box 616 Folder 9
Box 549 Folder 7 to 8
Box 606 Folder 25
Box 643 Folder 9
Box 622 Folder 18
Box 515 Folder 3 to 17
Box 594 Folder 29
Box 617 Folder 12 to 20
Box 638 Folder 14 to 23
Box 549 Folder 19
Box 645 Folder 1
Box 628 Folder 20 to 21
Box 632 Folder 21
Box 645 Folder 6
Box 646 Folder 18
Box 580 Folder 29
Box 605 Folder 8 to 14
Box 621 Folder 19 to 20
Box 639 Folder 18
Box 580 Folder 26
Box 595 Folder 22
Box 595 Folder 21
Box 636 Folder 14
Box 567 Folder 14 to 20
Box 607 Folder 24
Box 513 Folder 19 to 21
Box 649 Folder 23
Box 623 Folder 18
Box 649 Folder 13 to 14
Box 606 Folder 1 to 3
Box 623 Folder 20
Box 541 Folder 1 to 3
Box 622 Folder 19
Box 634 Folder 25 to 28
Box 533 Folder 8
Box 542 Folder 22
Box 625 Folder 2 to 14
Box 625 Folder 15 to 16
Box 640 Folder 1 to 9
Box 543 Folder 22
Box 542 Folder 4
Box 542 Folder 17 to 19
Box 651 Folder 3 to 12
Box 628 Folder 23 to 25
Box 619 Folder 25 to 27
Box 632 Folder 28
Box 629 Folder 20
Box 592 Folder 4 to 7
Box 592 Folder 1 to 3
Box 628 Folder 14 to 16
Box 606 Folder 26
Box 645 Folder 9
Box 527 Folder 7 to 15
Box 645 Folder 29
Box 624 Folder 26
Box 536 Folder 25 to 26
Box 536 Folder 14 to 24
Box 622 Folder 20
Box 606 Folder 5 to 10
Box 586 Folder 11
Box 605 Folder 15
Box 619 Folder 28
Box 581 Folder 9 to 14
Box 586 Folder 1
Box 585 Folder 20
Box 584 Folder 23
Box 585 Folder 24
Box 585 Folder 21
Box 586 Folder 2 to 4
Box 638 Folder 3
Box 676 Folder 24
Box 580 Folder 30
Box 644 Folder 4
Box 607 Folder 23
Box 573 Folder 20
Box 616 Folder 26
Box 638 Folder 4 to 5
Box 564 Folder 1 to 24
Box 565 Folder 1 to 23
Box 566 Folder 1 to 22
Box 567 Folder 1 to 13
Box 574 Folder 21
Box 642 Folder 22
Box 574 Folder 20
Box 623 Folder 35
Box 605 Folder 16
Box 605 Folder 17
Box 606 Folder 4
Box 554 Folder 23 to 26
Box 595 Folder 4 to 8
Box 574 Folder 12
Box 574 Folder 1 to 10
Box 18 Folder 34
Box 595 Folder 9
Box 605 Folder 18
Box 549 Folder 9
Box 649 Folder 15
Box 575 Folder 16 to 23
Box 612 Folder 1 to 21
Box 613 Folder 1 to 21
Box 614 Folder 1 to 2
Box 648 Folder 8 to 18
Box 549 Folder 17
Box 606 Folder 27
Box 644 Folder 13
Box 621 Folder 21
Box 594 Folder 3
Box 542 Folder 20
Box 542 Folder 23 to 24
Box 561 Folder 1 to 6
Box 606 Folder 12
Box 638 Folder 7
Box 621 Folder 22
Box 581 Folder 15 to 18
Box 636 Folder 15
Box 531 Folder 23
Box 574 Folder 13
Box 638 Folder 6
Box 616 Folder 10 to 25
Box 676 Folder 22 to 23
Box 635 Folder 1 to 17
Box 644 Folder 22 to 23
Box 658 Folder 19 to 26
Box 631 Folder 1 to 5
Box 634 Folder 1 to 8
Box 634 Folder 24
Box 636 Folder 17
Box 619 Folder 16
Box 542 Folder 12
Box 629 Folder 23
Box 642 Folder 26
Box 542 Folder 34
Box 677 Folder 20
Box 513 Folder 3 to 14
Box 658 Folder 17
Box 636 Folder 22 to 23
Box 621 Folder 11 to 15
Box 594 Folder 30
Box 622 Folder 2 to 5
Box 653 Folder 8
Box 636 Folder 18
Box 629 Folder 24
Box 605 Folder 20 to 21
Box 648 Folder 21 to 22
Box 622 Folder 21 to 26
Box 652 Folder 21 to 22
Box 632 Folder 11 to 16
Box 651 Folder 23
Box 640 Folder 22
Box 541 Folder 23
Box 643 Folder 20 to 22
Box 631 Folder 15
Box 551 Folder 22 to 29
Box 552 Folder 1 to 22
Box 553 Folder 1 to 6
Box 542 Folder 25
Box 624 Folder 23
Box 676 Folder 20
Box 575 Folder 13
Box 623 Folder 23
Box 605 Folder 22 to 24
Box 618 Folder 1 to 14
Box 573 Folder 4 to 15
Box 602 Folder 17 to 24
Box 603 Folder 1 to 15
Box 555 Folder 2 to 18
Box 633 Folder 17 to 22
Box 528 Folder 10 to 28
Box 602 Folder 15
Box 644 Folder 14 to 15
Box 646 Folder 29
Box 561 Folder 7 to 21
Box 562 Folder 1 to 21
Box 563 Folder 1 to 19
Box 622 Folder 6 to 12
Box 536 Folder 11 to 13
Box 625 Folder 23
Box 574 Folder 19
Box 645 Folder 4 to 5
Box 581 Folder 21 to 24
Box 638 Folder 11
Box 645 Folder 3
Box 536 Folder 3 to 8
Box 620 Folder 8
Box 629 Folder 2
Box 549 Folder 10
Box 541 Folder 7 to 15
Box 541 Folder 7
Box 540 Folder 23
Box 595 Folder 10 to 11
Box 607 Folder 12 to 13
Box 533 Folder 1 to 3
Box 607 Folder 14
Box 567 Folder 21
Box 587 Folder 19 to 21
Box 588 Folder 1 to 22
Box 589 Folder 1 to 12
Box 645 Folder 24 to 25
Box 651 Folder 19 to 21
Box 610 Folder 11
Box 650 Folder 10
Box 653 Folder 7
Box 555 Folder 19 to 21
Box 605 Folder 25
Box 646 Folder 23
Box 634 Folder 23
Box 621 Folder 7 to 10
Box 534 Folder 1 to 22
Box 535 Folder 1 to 20
Box 545 Folder 8 to 22
Box 546 Folder 1 to 22
Box 547 Folder 1 to 9
Box 545 Folder 7
Box 646 Folder 10 to 11
Box 643 Folder 24
Box 543 Folder 2
Box 605 Folder 26
Box 542 Folder 36
Box 537 Folder 1 to 22
Box 538 Folder 1 to 22
Box 539 Folder 1 to 24
Box 540 Folder 1 to 20
Box 653 Folder 25
Box 632 Folder 25
Box 637 Folder 1 to 2
Box 592 Folder 21
Box 571 Folder 16 to 19
Box 589 Folder 13 to 18
Box 649 Folder 1 to 5
Box 543 Folder 23
Box 543 Folder 24 to 35
Box 544 Folder 1 to 23
Box 571 Folder 20
Box 556 Folder 1 to 23
Box 557 Folder 1 to 7
Box 592 Folder 8 to 13
Box 651 Folder 18
Box 563 Folder 20 to 23
Box 619 Folder 24
Box 571 Folder 1 to 15
Box 636 Folder 12
Box 582 Folder 23
Box 645 Folder 8
Box 543 Folder 4 to 5
Box 650 Folder 15 to 20
Box 589 Folder 22
Box 583 Folder 26
Box 575 Folder 15
Box 591 Folder 18 to 23
Box 621 Folder 1 to 2
Box 640 Folder 18
Box 623 Folder 24
Box 586 Folder 6
Box 595 Folder 12 to 14
Box 618 Folder 21
Box 586 Folder 22
Box 638 Folder 13
Box 620 Folder 9
Box 636 Folder 7 to 11
Box 606 Folder 13 to 19
Box 573 Folder 21
Box 649 Folder 22
Box 549 Folder 20 to 31
Box 594 Folder 4
Box 625 Folder 24
Box 595 Folder 15
Box 645 Folder 27
Box 620 Folder 10
Box 595 Folder 16
Box 575 Folder 1
Box 575 Folder 2 to 6
Box 575 Folder 7 to 12
Box 550 Folder 1 to 21
Box 652 Folder 1 to 12
Box 533 Folder 4 to 5
Box 620 Folder 11
Box 542 Folder 26
Box 653 Folder 3 to 4
Box 595 Folder 17
Box 629 Folder 3 to 4
Box 639 Folder 8
Box 646 Folder 25
Box 611 Folder 18
Box 611 Folder 19
Box 644 Folder 1 to 3
Box 611 Folder 20
Box 592 Folder 20
Box 607 Folder 15
Box 625 Folder 25
Box 533 Folder 26
Subseries consisting of records relating to a particular subject filed under a topical heading. If a desired subject does not appear in this sub-series, or if the subject is found but the time period of interest falls outside the date range given for the folder, it may still be possible to find relevant materials in Series I.1 General Alphabetical, through the use of the Central Files card index, or by confining the search to a very specific date range.
Box 625 Folder 26
Box 624 Folder 1 to 22
Box 636 Folder 25
Box 658 Folder 14 to 15
Box 639 Folder 9
Box 574 Folder 24 to 27
Box 643 Folder 23
Box 634 Folder 19 to 22
Box 531 Folder 19 to 22
Box 543 Folder 21
Box 594 Folder 24 to 25
Box 634 Folder 18
Box 514 Folder 4
Box 515 Folder 1
Box 515 Folder 2
Box 542 Folder 31
Box 542 Folder 29
Box 679 Folder 12 to 14
Box 573 Folder 16 to 19
Box 650 Folder 11 to 12
Box 529 Folder 22
Box 515 Folder 18 to 22
Box 589 Folder 25
Box 646 Folder 4
Box 629 Folder 25
Box 583 Folder 1 to 16
Box 519 Folder 1
Box 620 Folder 25
Box 529 Folder 19
Box 607 Folder 17
Box 606 Folder 21
Box 658 Folder 9
Box 658 Folder 13
Box 658 Folder 10 to 12
Box 606 Folder 22
Box 677 Folder 22
Box 608 Folder 1 to 24
Box 609 Folder 1 to 4
Box 519 Folder 2 to 22
Box 649 Folder 20
Box 676 Folder 27
Box 637 Folder 6
Box 636 Folder 26
Box 642 Folder 27
Box 637 Folder 7 to 10
Box 645 Folder 10
Box 617 Folder 1 to 11
Box 648 Folder 19 to 20
Box 637 Folder 21 to 22
Box 637 Folder 23
Box 652 Folder 13 to 18
Box 652 Folder 20
Box 629 Folder 10
Box 533 Folder 15
Box 676 Folder 25
Box 533 Folder 16
Box 519 Folder 23 to 24
Box 533 Folder 9
Box 639 Folder 6
Box 630 Folder 1 to 16
Box 536 Folder 27
Box 629 Folder 11 to 13
Box 620 Folder 13
Box 631 Folder 20
Box 549 Folder 18
Box 636 Folder 16
Box 586 Folder 14
Box 635 Folder 18
Box 679 Folder 11
Box 514 Folder 5
Box 621 Folder 6
Box 647 Folder 1
Box 679 Folder 8
Box 646 Folder 22
Box 679 Folder 17 to 20
Box 623 Folder 9
Box 626 Folder 21 to 24
Box 655 Folder 1 to 20
Box 656 Folder 1 to 18
Box 657 Folder 1 to 18
Box 658 Folder 1 to 2
Box 513 Folder 23
Box 652 Folder 19
Box 651 Folder 2
Box 633 Folder 23
Box 638 Folder 1 to 2
Box 594 Folder 19 to 22
Box 321 Folder 8
Box 646 Folder 26
Box 679 Folder 9
Box 639 Folder 1
Box 583 Folder 23 to 24
Box 554 Folder 11 to 22
Box 620 Folder 24
Box 514 Folder 2
Box 554 Folder 1
Box 649 Folder 6 to 12
Box 584 Folder 1 to 2
Box 542 Folder 27
Box 542 Folder 30
Box 649 Folder 21
Box 627 Folder 24
Box 639 Folder 11
Box 523 Folder 18 to 20
Box 591 Folder 3
Box 521 Folder 25
Box 622 Folder 16
Box 650 Folder 13 to 14
Box 678 Folder 1 to 11
Box 643 Folder 4
Box 639 Folder 24
Box 638 Folder 10
Box 645 Folder 18 to 23
Box 646 Folder 27
Box 658 Folder 16
Box 634 Folder 15
Box 643 Folder 1 to 2
Box 679 Folder 1
Box 636 Folder 1 to 6
Box 616 Folder 3
Box 615 Folder 23 to 24
Box 615 Folder 14 to 18
Box 542 Folder 32
Box 615 Folder 19 to 22
Box 616 Folder 2
Box 521 Folder 23
Box 642 Folder 16 to 18
Box 642 Folder 12 to 15
Box 541 Folder 18 to 20
Box 527 Folder 21
Box 549 Folder 6
Box 653 Folder 19 to 22
Box 643 Folder 16 to 17
Box 622 Folder 17
Box 542 Folder 13
Box 543 Folder 18
Box 637 Folder 19 to 20
Box 554 Folder 2
Box 638 Folder 24
Box 554 Folder 3
Box 589 Folder 23
Box 533 Folder 17 to 25
Box 586 Folder 23
Box 542 Folder 16
Box 543 Folder 10 to 13
Box 635 Folder 20
Box 641 Folder 23
Box 622 Folder 1
Box 527 Folder 23
Box 649 Folder 16
Box 554 Folder 6
Box 643 Folder 5
Box 647 Folder 2 to 21
Box 639 Folder 4
Box 542 Folder 37
Box 527 Folder 22
Box 648 Folder 23
Box 639 Folder 17
Box 531 Folder 25
Box 651 Folder 1
Box 676 Folder 19
Box 639 Folder 7
Box 646 Folder 19
Box 543 Folder 14
Box 624 Folder 25
Box 636 Folder 13
Box 653 Folder 26 to 27
Box 654 Folder 1 to 27
Box 592 Folder 22
Box 542 Folder 28
Box 653 Folder 5 to 6
Box 643 Folder 10
Box 586 Folder 25
Box 542 Folder 38
Box 521 Folder 26
Box 621 Folder 18
Box 542 Folder 21
Box 636 Folder 24
Box 653 Folder 15 to 16
Box 586 Folder 15 to 20
Box 531 Folder 26
Box 643 Folder 13 to 15
Box 620 Folder 1 to 7
Box 677 Folder 1 to 4
Box 639 Folder 16
Box 533 Folder 28
Box 542 Folder 2 to 3
Box 653 Folder 11 to 14
Box 640 Folder 24
Box 528 Folder 29
Box 623 Folder 21
Box 679 Folder 10
Box 625 Folder 37
Box 650 Folder 1 to 5
Box 535 Folder 21
Box 678 Folder 12 to 16
Box 643 Folder 6 to 7
Box 651 Folder 14 to 17
Box 543 Folder 17
Box 637 Folder 4 to 5
Box 677 Folder 5 to 17
Box 651 Folder 13
Box 629 Folder 21
Box 636 Folder 21
Box 639 Folder 21 to 23
Box 531 Folder 16 to 18
Box 627 Folder 13 to 23
Box 653 Folder 17 to 18
Box 639 Folder 26
Box 646 Folder 21
Box 640 Folder 19 to 21
Box 649 Folder 19
Box 642 Folder 28
Box 593 Folder 7 to 15
Box 572 Folder 1 to 19
Box 573 Folder 1 to 3
Box 542 Folder 14
Box 585 Folder 13 to 19
Box 642 Folder 21
Box 642 Folder 23
Box 650 Folder 21 to 23
Box 514 Folder 23
Box 632 Folder 23
Box 533 Folder 27
Box 645 Folder 12
Box 625 Folder 17 to 22
Box 642 Folder 19
Box 623 Folder 1 to 8
Box 532 Folder 18 to 23
Box 549 Folder 1 to 5
Box 533 Folder 29 to 30
Box 594 Folder 2
Box 642 Folder 24
Box 644 Folder 8
Box 676 Folder 26
Box 620 Folder 23
Box 543 Folder 20
Box 677 Folder 21
Box 554 Folder 10
Box 542 Folder 5
Box 653 Folder 2
Box 480 Folder 18
Box 638 Folder 8
Box 640 Folder 17
Box 586 Folder 21
Box 542 Folder 15
Box 658 Folder 7
Box 542 Folder 6
Box 658 Folder 4
Box 658 Folder 5 to 6
Box 643 Folder 18 to 19
Box 638 Folder 9
Box 644 Folder 21
Box 621 Folder 23 to 26
Box 615 Folder 25 to 28
Box 547 Folder 10 to 22
Box 548 Folder 1 to 16
Box 632 Folder 22
Box 542 Folder 40
Box 634 Folder 11 to 12
Box 650 Folder 6 to 9
Box 545 Folder 1 to 6
Box 554 Folder 9
Box 542 Folder 9
Box 542 Folder 39
Box 636 Folder 20
Box 643 Folder 8
Box 678 Folder 17 to 28
Box 679 Folder 2 to 6
Box 677 Folder 18 to 19
Box 542 Folder 1
Box 645 Folder 11
Box 594 Folder 31
Box 632 Folder 27
Box 593 Folder 1 to 6
Box 575 Folder 14
Box 533 Folder 10 to 11
Box 648 Folder 1 to 2
Box 631 Folder 6 to 14
Box 532 Folder 1 to 17
Box 554 Folder 5
Box 542 Folder 8
Box 536 Folder 1 to 2
Box 531 Folder 24
Box 636 Folder 19
Box 641 Folder 19 to 22
Box 554 Folder 4
Box 543 Folder 1
Box 568 Folder 11 to 22
Box 569 Folder 1 to 19
Box 570 Folder 1 to 22
Box 648 Folder 3 to 5
Box 645 Folder 7
Box 633 Folder 16
Box 618 Folder 16
Box 621 Folder 16
Box 543 Folder 7 to 9
Box 646 Folder 5 to 9
Box 632 Folder 26
Box 646 Folder 20
Box 555 Folder 23
Box 542 Folder 7
Box 638 Folder 12
Box 643 Folder 12
Box 541 Folder 16 to 17
Box 651 Folder 22
Box 641 Folder 8 to 9
Box 642 Folder 9 to 11
Box 641 Folder 10 to 18
Box 642 Folder 1 to 8
Box 641 Folder 1 to 5
Box 641 Folder 7
Box 641 Folder 5 to 6
Box 543 Folder 3
Box 575 Folder 24
Box 645 Folder 13
Box 542 Folder 33
Box 531 Folder 27
Box 653 Folder 10
Box 542 Folder 10
Box 646 Folder 24
Box 645 Folder 2
Box 646 Folder 30
Box 635 Folder 19
Box 645 Folder 28
Box 533 Folder 31
Box 543 Folder 16
Box 628 Folder 1 to 13
Box 658 Folder 18
Box 621 Folder 5
Box 643 Folder 11
Box 643 Folder 3
Box 646 Folder 16
Box 679 Folder 15 to 16
Box 634 Folder 13 to 14
Box 542 Folder 11
Box 620 Folder 12
Box 543 Folder 6
This series of Central Files is the continuation of records found in Series I covering the year July 1, 1971 to June 30, 1972. They start after the administrative transitional period between Presidents Andrew Cordier (1968-70) and William McGill (1970-80). Individually named and general alphabetical files are arranged in one alphabetical sequence. Important subjects addressed in the general alphabetical files are noted parenthetically.
Photographs found in this series have been removed to the Historical Photograph Collection. A photocopy of the photograph has been left in place of the original. The folders labeled "Miscellaneous" contain various letters regarding the student protests of the late 1960s to early 1970s. Most correspondence regarding student unrest is interspersed throughout the General Alphabetical files for 1971-1972 under the name of the sender.
Box 682 Folder 1
(Subjects: Academic Affairs; Academic appointments; Academic positions; Academic renewal; Academic year; Accelerated degree program)
Box 682 Folder 2
Box 682 Folder 3
Box 682 Folder 4
(Subjects: Administrative Council; Adjunct professorships; Advisory Council; Administrative affairs; Administrative assistants; Administrative committees; Administrative staff; Admissions officers)
Box 682 Folder 5
(Subjects: Affirmative action)
Box 682 Folder 6
Box 682 Folder 7
(Subjects: African Studies; Air Dome Running Track ; Air Travel Cards)
Box 682 Folder 8
Box 682 Folder 9
Box 682 Folder 10
Box 682 Folder 11
Box 682 Folder 12
Box 682 Folder 13
Box 682 Folder 14
Box 682 Folder 15
Box 682 Folder 16
Box 682 Folder 17
Box 682 Folder 18
Box 682 Folder 19
Box 682 Folder 20
Box 682 Folder 21
(Subjects: 11th Edition of "American Universities and Colleges")
Box 682 Folder 22
Box 682 Folder 23
(Subjects: Anti-Semitism)
Box 682 Folder 24
(Subjects: Appointments)
Box 682 Folder 25
(Subjects: Gifts - Libraries)
Box 683 Folder 1
Box 683 Folder 2
Box 683 Folder 3
(Subjects: Committee on the Arts; Gift-Art objects)
Box 683 Folder 4
Box 683 Folder 5
Box 683 Folder 6
(Subjects: Assistant Delegates)
Box 683 Folder 7
Box 683 Folder 8
Box 683 Folder 9
Box 683 Folder 10
Box 683 Folder 11
Box 683 Folder 12
Box 683 Folder 13
Box 683 Folder 14
(Subjects: Auditorium-International Affairs Building)
Box 683 Folder 15
Box 683 Folder 16
Box 683 Folder 17
(Subjects: Bard Haven Apartments)
Box 683 Folder 18
(Subjects: Art History and Archaeology, Department of)
Box 683 Folder 19
(Subjects: Academic Appointments-Barnard, July 1971-Oct 1971 Joint Columbia-Barnard Trustees Committee)
Box 683 Folder 20
(Subjects: Academic Appointments-Barnard, Nov 1971-Jan 1972 Richmond-Hutchinson-Pirasteh Task Force Report. Nov 1971-Jan 1972 Joint Columbia-Barnard Trustees Committee, Nov 1971-Jan 1972 Joint Columbia-Barnard Trustees Committee, Feb 1972-March 1972)
Box 683 Folder 21
(Subjects: Academic appointments-Barnard, Feb 1972-March 1972)
Box 683 Folder 22
(Subjects: Joint Columbia-Barnard Trustees Committee, April 1972-June 1972)
Box 684 Folder 1
Box 684 Folder 2
Box 684 Folder 3
(Subjects: Low Library-Battering Ram Cases Doors)
Box 684 Folder 4
(Subjects: Beer Lecture Fund; Belveder Park and Playground)
Box 684 Folder 5
(Subjects: Bequests)
Box 684 Folder 6
Box 684 Folder 7
(Subjects: Bergen Pines Children Center)
Box 684 Folder 8
Box 684 Folder 9
(Subjects: Beer and Chips Sessions; Biomedical Sciences Support Grant; Legislation-U.S.)
Box 684 Folder 10
Box 684 Folder 11
(Subjects: Black Faculty and Administrators of Columbia; Black and Puerto Rican Student-Faculty Org)
Box 684 Folder 12
(Subjects: Ferris Booth Hall-Board of Managers)
Box 684 Folder 13
(Subjects: Boston, Mass.-McGill's visit to)
Box 684 Folder 14
Box 684 Folder 15
(Subjects: Broadcast Journalism)
Box 684 Folder 16
(Subjects: Gymnasium)
Box 684 Folder 17
Box 684 Folder 18
(Subjects: Building Closing Hours)
Box 684 Folder 19
Box 684 Folder 20
Box 684 Folder 21
Box 684 Folder 22
(Subjects: Office of Bursar)
Box 684 Folder 23
Box 684 Folder 24
(Subjects: Business and Development Center; Business and Professional Women's Clubs)
Box 684 Folder 25
Box 685 Folder 1
(Subjects: School of Business Dean Search, 1971-Jan 1972)
Box 685 Folder 2
(Subjects: School of Business Dean Search, Feb 1972-Dec 1972 President's Luncheon, Feb 1972-Dec 1972)
Box 685 Folder 3
(Subjects: Amendments to Trustees-By-Laws; Butler Hall; Butler Library-Air-conditioning; Buttonwood Lectures)
Box 685 Folder 4
(Subjects: Hofstadter, Albert)
Box 685 Folder 5
(Subjects: Loeb, Peter K.)
Box 685 Folder 6
(Subjects: "Cambodia Spring;" Camp Columbia)
Box 685 Folder 7
Box 685 Folder 8
(Subjects: Center for Community Health Systems)
Box 685 Folder 9
(Subjects: Caraley Paper-Tenure Procedures)
Box 685 Folder 10
(Subjects: Admissions Officers)
Box 685 Folder 11
(Subjects: CBS Helicopter)
Box 685 Folder 12
Box 685 Folder 13
Box 685 Folder 14
Box 685 Folder 15
Box 685 Folder 16
Box 685 Folder 17
Box 685 Folder 18
Box 685 Folder 19
(Subjects: W.K. Kellogg Foundation)
Box 685 Folder 20
(Subjects: Changes in title)
Box 685 Folder 21
Box 685 Folder 22
Box 685 Folder 23
(Subjects: Chess Team; Childcare program)
Box 685 Folder 24
(Subjects: Christmas Tree; Crew-Christening of Shells)
Box 685 Folder 25
(Subjects: Citations-Undue length and inelegance)
Box 685 Folder 26
(Subjects: Cancellation of Classes)
Box 685 Folder 27
Box 685 Folder 28
(Subjects: Cocktail Party, April 1972 Coeducational Dorms)
Box 685 Folder 29
(Subjects: College enrollment)
Box 686 Folder 1
(Subjects: Columbia Band; Columbia-Barnard Course Guide ; Columbia Community Chest; Columbia Employees Bowling League; Columbia Football; Columbia Glassware; Columbia-Harlem community controversy; Columbia Health Service; Columbia History of the World; Columbia Jewish Bayit)
Box 686 Folder 2
(Subjects: Columbia University Financial Report; Columbia University Men's Glee Club)
Box 686 Folder 3
(Subjects: Academic Appointments)
Box 686 Folder 4
Box 686 Folder 5
Box 686 Folder 6
Box 686 Folder 7
Box 686 Folder 8
(Subjects: Publications-Columbia University)
Box 686 Folder 9
Box 686 Folder 10
Box 686 Folder 11
(Subjects: Community Board #5; Community Board #9; Columbia Community Chest; Community Facilities; Community Planning Boards and Districts; Community Relations; Community School Districts; Comparative performance of undergraduates)
Box 686 Folder 12
Box 686 Folder 13
Box 686 Folder 14
Box 686 Folder 15
(Subjects: Honorary Degrees)
Box 686 Folder 16
(Subjects: Honorary Degrees)
Box 686 Folder 17
(Subjects: Honorary Degrees)
Box 686 Folder 18
(Subjects: Honorary Degrees)
Box 686 Folder 19
(Subjects: Honorary Degrees)
Box 686 Folder 20
(Subjects: Honorary Degrees)
Box 686 Folder 21
(Subjects: Honorary Degrees)
Box 686 Folder 22
(Subjects: Honorary Degrees; University Medal for Excellence)
Box 686 Folder 23
(Subjects: Honorary Degrees)
Box 686 Folder 24
(Subjects: Honorary Degrees)
Box 686 Folder 25
(Subjects: Honorary Degrees)
Box 686 Folder 26
(Subjects: Honorary Degrees)
Box 686 Folder 27
Box 686 Folder 28
Box 686 Folder 29
Box 686 Folder 30
Box 686 Folder 31
Box 686 Folder 32
Box 686 Folder 33
Box 687 Folder 1
(Subjects: Computer Center; Computer Policy and Usage)
Box 687 Folder 2
(Subjects: Concerned Seniors Against the War; Conferences; Congressional Record; Congressman Badillo; Construction; Contempt Proceedings; Convocations)
Box 687 Folder 3
Box 687 Folder 4
Box 687 Folder 5
Box 687 Folder 6
Box 687 Folder 7
(Subjects: Corporate Holdings; Corporate Responsibility; Corporate Solicitation)
Box 687 Folder 8
(Subjects: School of International Affairs)
Box 687 Folder 9
(Subjects: Course Guide)
Box 687 Folder 10
Box 687 Folder 11
(Subjects: Crew Dinner)
Box 687 Folder 12
(Subjects: Curl-Structure)
Box 687 Folder 13
(Subjects: Dalhousie Student Union; Danforth fellowship)
Box 687 Folder 14
(Subjects: Dawn patrol; Day care; Day Care Center)
Box 687 Folder 15
(Subjects: Dean's Day; Death; Death notification forms; Deficits)
Box 687 Folder 16
Box 687 Folder 17
Box 687 Folder 18
(Subjects: Delacorte Gates)
Box 687 Folder 19
Box 687 Folder 20
Box 687 Folder 21
Box 687 Folder 22
(Subjects: School of Dentistry boycott; Department of Dermatology; Deputy Vice President for Academic Affairs)
Box 687 Folder 23
Box 687 Folder 24
(Subjects: Department of the Air Force; Department of the State)
Box 687 Folder 25
(Subjects: Affirmative action; Educational Opportunity Grants Programs; National Defense Student Loan; Work Study)
Box 688 Folder 1
Box 688 Folder 2
Box 688 Folder 3
(Subjects: Directory of Directors; Director of libraries for medical sciences; Directory-Columbia University; Disciplinary actions; Disciplinary charges; Disciplinary Tribunal; Discrimination based on sex; Division of Human Rights)
Box 688 Folder 4
(Subjects: Dogs on campus)
Box 688 Folder 5
Box 688 Folder 6
Box 688 Folder 7
(Subjects: Draft counselors)
Box 688 Folder 8
Box 688 Folder 9
Box 688 Folder 10
(Subjects: Economics, Department of; Early retirement program)
Box 688 Folder 11
Box 688 Folder 12
(Subjects: Assistant Commissioner for Education Statistics; Committee on Educational Evaluation; Education Amendments; Richard Eells)
Box 688 Folder 13
Box 688 Folder 14
(Subjects: Financial Planning)
Box 688 Folder 15
(Subjects: Elections; Electrical vaults expansion; Emergency loans; Emeriti designations; Employee awards; Employee Training Office; Employee benefit costs; Employee training programs; Employment of non-U.S. citizens)
Box 688 Folder 16
(Subjects: Admissions; Committee on Instruction; Engineering Council)
Box 688 Folder 17
(Subjects: Admissions; Committee on Instruction; Engineering Council)
Box 688 Folder 18
Box 688 Folder 19
(Subjects: Cyrus Levinthal)
Box 688 Folder 20
Box 688 Folder 21
(Subjects: Equal Employment Opportunities Act; Equal Opportunity Day Dinner; Equipment)
Box 688 Folder 22
(Subjects: Ethics Committee (Ad Hoc); Executive Committee Meeting; Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs; Extended payment options; Externally Funded Research; External grant/contract information; "Eyewitness Exclusive")
Box 689 Folder 1
Box 689 Folder 2
(Subjects: Fall Reunion Day)
Box 689 Folder 3
(Subjects: Faculty children; Faculty clubs on campus; Faculty assignments; Faculty Association; Commission on Faculty Clubs; Faculty Field Instructors; Faculty Handbook; Faculty Room; Faculty salaries; Faculty Student Technical Assistance Program)
Box 689 Folder 4
Box 689 Folder 5
Box 689 Folder 6
Box 689 Folder 7
(Subjects: Fellows; Federal student aid; Federal Assistance Programs)
Box 689 Folder 8
Box 689 Folder 9
(Subjects: Fencing team; Ferris Booth Hall)
Box 689 Folder 10
(Subjects: Film Division; Financial aid; Finn-Anderson room assignments; Fire drills)
Box 689 Folder 11
Box 689 Folder 12 to 13
Box 689 Folder 14
Box 689 Folder 15
(Subjects: Five year plans; 5xx Riverside Drive; 515-520 Tenants Association; Fiscal control)
Box 689 Folder 16
Box 689 Folder 17
Box 689 Folder 18
(Subjects: 400 W. 118th Street ; 411 Hamilton – Plaque; 423 W. 118th Street; Food Service Sanitary Code Violation; Football; Foster care; Football - Ticket sales)
Box 689 Folder 19
Box 689 Folder 20
Box 689 Folder 21
Box 689 Folder 22
Box 689 Folder 23
Box 689 Folder 24
(Subjects: Publications-Columbia University)
Box 689 Folder 25
(Subjects: Fraternities)
Box 689 Folder 26
Box 690 Folder 1
(Subjects: Freshman Orientation dessert hour; French Department)
Box 690 Folder 2
(Subjects: Friends of the Libraries)
Box 690 Folder 3
(Subjects: Furnald Undergraduate Dormitory Council; Future of Higher Education in New York State; Conference on Future of International Studies)
Box 690 Folder 4
Box 690 Folder 5
(Subjects: Tenure)
Box 690 Folder 6
(Prime Minister of India) Special Convocation, November 6, 1971
Box 690 Folder 7
(Subjects: Garrett, Paul; Garrett Luncheon; Gathering for Peace and Justice; Gates (117th Street); Painting of Gates (116th Street))
Box 690 Folder 8
Box 690 Folder 9
(Subjects: Gay People at Columbia)
Box 690 Folder 10
(Subjects: Gay People at Columbia)
Box 690 Folder 11
(Subjects: Gehrig, Mrs. Lou)
Box 690 Folder 12
(Subjects: Geology, Department of; General Purpose Funds; Geography, Department of)
Box 690 Folder 13
Box 690 Folder 14
Box 690 Folder 15
Box 690 Folder 16
(Subjects: Department of Germanic Languages; German Information Center; German-American Conference on Eastern Europe; German Academic Exchange)
Box 690 Folder 17
(Subjects: Gifts; G.I. Bill amendments)
Box 690 Folder 18
Box 690 Folder 19
Box 690 Folder 20
(Subjects: Golf Advisory Committee)
Box 690 Folder 21
Box 690 Folder 22
(Subjects: Graduate Student Support and Enrollment Forecasts; Grappler's Dinner (Wrestling))
Box 690 Folder 23
(Subjects: Graduate Faculties Alumni)
Box 690 Folder 24
(Subjects: "Great Decisions-1972"; Green and Quie Bills; Great Teacher Awards)
Box 690 Folder 25
Box 690 Folder 26
Box 690 Folder 27 to 28
Box 691 Folder 1
(Subjects: Hackensack Public Schools)
Box 691 Folder 2
(Subjects: Alexander Hamilton Award)
Box 691 Folder 3
Box 691 Folder 4
(Subjects: Harkness Fellowships; Harlem)
Box 691 Folder 5
Box 691 Folder 6
Box 691 Folder 7
Box 691 Folder 8
(Subjects: Havemeyer Security)
Box 691 Folder 9
(Subjects: Health Service; HELP (Human Environment League on Priorities)
Box 691 Folder 10
Box 691 Folder 11
Box 691 Folder 12
Box 691 Folder 13
Box 691 Folder 14
(Subjects: Higher Education General Information Survey; Higher Education Panel; High intensity lightning project)
Box 691 Folder 15
Box 691 Folder 16
Box 691 Folder 17
Box 691 Folder 18
Box 691 Folder 19
(Subjects: "Historia Natural y Pro Natura"; Historic photographs; Department of History)
Box 691 Folder 20
(Subjects: Holiday system)
Box 691 Folder 21
Box 691 Folder 22
Box 691 Folder 23
(Subjects: Honorary Degrees)
Box 691 Folder 24
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 691 Folder 25
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 692 Folder 1
(Subjects: Housing Office; Johns Hopkins University)
Box 692 Folder 2
(Subjects: Huxley, Hugh E.)
Box 692 Folder 3
Box 692 Folder 4
Box 692 Folder 5
(Subjects: Human Rights Law Review; Human genetics and development; Human Factors Society; Human Environment League on Priorities (HELP))
Box 692 Folder 6
Box 692 Folder 7
Box 692 Folder 8
(Subjects: Hypertension Center)
Box 692 Folder 9
Box 692 Folder 10
(Subjects: Independent Public Accountants; Income executions; Ilikai Tower (Honolulu); India Club of Columbia University; Information Services and University Librarian; Institutional Funding; Instructional Staff)
Box 692 Folder 11
Box 692 Folder 12
(Subjects: Institutes and Regional Institutes-Statutes)
Box 692 Folder 13
Box 692 Folder 14
Box 692 Folder 15
Box 692 Folder 16
(Subjects: Interchurch Center; Interim Affirmative Action Program; Inter-Fraternity Alumni Council; Intercollegiate Athletics; Intercultural Program; Interim Rules)
Box 692 Folder 17
Box 692 Folder 18
(Subjects: Honorary degrees; Vietnam Post-war contract)
Box 692 Folder 19
(Subjects: Vietnam Post-war contract; Honorary degrees)
Box 692 Folder 20
Box 692 Folder 21
(Subjects: Academic exchange programs)
Box 692 Folder 22
(Subjects: Committee on Investment Policy)
Box 692 Folder 23
(Subjects: Giurescu, Constantin C.; Romanian and Southeast European Studies)
Box 692 Folder 24
(Subjects: Italy; Italian-American cultural relations; Department of Italian; Village of Irvington; Iran; Iran Center; Iranian graduates; Ivy League Handbook)
Box 692 Folder 25
Box 692 Folder 26
(Subjects: John Jay Hall; John Jay Dining Rooms; Japanese visitors; Japan Documentation Center)
Box 692 Folder 27
(Subjects: Jewish High Holy Days; Jewish Organization; Jewish Campus Life Fund)
Box 692 Folder 28
Box 692 Folder 29
(Subjects: Job Classification Questionnaire; Job Information List; Johnson Hall)
Box 692 Folder 30
Box 692 Folder 31
Box 692 Folder 32
Box 693 Folder 1
(Subjects: Journalism, School of)
Box 693 Folder 2
(Subjects: Junior faculty salaries; Jumel Place)
Box 693 Folder 3
Box 693 Folder 4 to 5
Box 693 Folder 6
Box 693 Folder 7
Box 693 Folder 8
Box 693 Folder 9
Box 693 Folder 10
Box 693 Folder 11
(Subjects: Geology, Department of)
Box 693 Folder 12
(Subjects: Kitchen Cabinet)
Box 693 Folder 13
Box 693 Folder 14
Box 693 Folder 15
(Subjects: Krumb School of Mines Student Chapter; Legislative conference)
Box 693 Folder 16
Box 693 Folder 17
Box 693 Folder 18
Box 693 Folder 19
Box 693 Folder 20
Box 693 Folder 21
Box 693 Folder 22
Box 693 Folder 23
(Subjects: Lateness in reporting grades; Latin American Student Organization; Latin Studies)
Box 693 Folder 24
Box 693 Folder 25
(Subjects: Leadership role of the Trustees; Lease; Legal Aid Society Ball; Legal expenses; Legal Bill; Legislation discriminatory against homosexuals)
Box 693 Folder 26
Box 693 Folder 27
Box 694 Folder 1
Box 694 Folder 2
(Subjects: Lewisohn Hall)
Box 694 Folder 3
Box 694 Folder 4
(Subjects: Licensing Services; Librarians; Libraries; Licensed lending; Life Magazine; Lighting for C.U. area; Library Service)
Box 694 Folder 5
(Subjects: Department of Linguistics; Lion's Den; Listening Post; Litigation; Living trusts)
Box 694 Folder 6
(Subjects: Loan Program for Minority Students; Lounge space-Puerto Rican and Latin American students; London's Sunday Times; Local 241; Local 105 – ILGWU)
Box 694 Folder 7
Box 694 Folder 8
(Subjects: Luncheons)
Box 694 Folder 9
(Subjects: Office of University Development)
Box 694 Folder 10
(Subjects: McBain Hall)
Box 694 Folder 11
Box 694 Folder 12
Box 694 Folder 13
(Subjects: Health, Education, and Welfare, Department of (HEW); U.S. Legislation)
Box 694 Folder 14
Box 694 Folder 15
Box 694 Folder 16
Box 694 Folder 17
Box 694 Folder 18
Box 694 Folder 19
Box 694 Folder 20
Box 694 Folder 21
Box 694 Folder 22
Box 694 Folder 23
Box 694 Folder 24
Box 694 Folder 25
Box 694 Folder 26
Box 694 Folder 27
Box 694 Folder 28
Box 694 Folder 29
Box 694 Folder 30
Box 694 Folder 31
Box 694 Folder 32
Box 694 Folder 33
Box 694 Folder 34
Box 694 Folder 35
Box 694 Folder 36
Box 694 Folder 37
Box 694 Folder 38
Box 694 Folder 39
Box 694 Folder 40
Box 694 Folder 41
(Subjects: McMillin Theater)
Box 694 Folder 42
(Subjects: Major gifts; Panel on Male chauvinism; Mail service; Madison Mall planning; Matching processing of address lists)
Box 695 Folder 1
Box 695 Folder 2
(Subjects: Management and Costs Seminars; Management and Planning Institute for Higher Education; Horace Mann School; Manual of Tribunal Procedure)
Box 695 Folder 3
Box 695 Folder 4
(Subjects: Dean and Vice President in Charge of Medical Affairs; College of Physicians and Surgeons)
Box 695 Folder 5
(Subjects: Master's Level Education in New York State; Master of Philosophy; Master Plan (1972))
Box 695 Folder 6
(Subjects: Maternity Leave; Mathematics, Department of)
Box 695 Folder 7
Box 695 Folder 8
(Subjects: Department of Mechanical Engineering; Mechanical Laboratories; Men's Faculty Club; Memorials; MEET THE PRESS; Medicare and Medicaid; Department of Medicine; Medical Service Account; Medical School)
Box 695 Folder 9
Box 695 Folder 10
Box 695 Folder 11
(Subjects: President of Mexico; Merit Program Finalists)
Box 695 Folder 12
(Subjects: Department of Middle East Languages and Cultures; Militant picketing)
Box 695 Folder 13
(Subjects: Tozzi, Piero)
Box 695 Folder 14
Box 695 Folder 15
Box 695 Folder 16
(Subjects: Mitau Task Force; Misuse of official funds; Minority jobs; Minority group candidates for faculty positions; Minority banks)
Box 695 Folder 17
(Subjects: "Modern Survey of Young Alumni"; Moot Court Executive Committee - School of Law; Monthly student meetings; Monthly reports to the President; Modular education; Model Cities Program)
Box 695 Folder 18
(Subjects: Morse Memorandum (1971); Moratorium; Mortgages)
Box 695 Folder 19
(Subjects: Morningside Park Gym Site; Morningside Renewal Council; Morningside Citizens' Coalition; Morningside Community Patrol; Morningsiders United; Morningside Tenants' Committee; Morningside Report: Community Calendar; Morningside House; Morningside Sun)
Box 695 Folder 20 to 21
Box 695 Folder 22
Box 695 Folder 23
(Subjects: School of Dental and Oral Surgery – Dean)
Box 695 Folder 24
(Subjects: Department of Music)
Box 695 Folder 25
(Subjects: Nationality Question in Soviet Central Asia; Named professorships)
Box 696 Folder 1
(Subjects: National Area Conference)
Box 696 Folder 2
(Subjects: National Collegiate Athletic Association)
Box 696 Folder 3
(Subjects: National Defense Education Act; National Endowment for the Humanities)
Box 696 Folder 4
(Subjects: National Magazine Awards)
Box 696 Folder 5
Box 696 Folder 6
Box 696 Folder 7
Box 696 Folder 8
Box 696 Folder 9
(Subjects: Neurobiological Sciences; Necrology; Network Project; Need analyses)
Box 696 Folder 10
(Subjects: Honorary Degrees)
Box 696 Folder 11
(Subjects: Nevis Estate; Nevis Laboratories)
Box 696 Folder 12
(Subjects: Newspaper collections; New technologies in health education; Newspaper Fund; New tuition plan)
Box 696 Folder 13
Box 696 Folder 14
Box 696 Folder 15
Box 696 Folder 16
Box 696 Folder 17
Box 696 Folder 18
Box 696 Folder 19
Box 696 Folder 20
Box 696 Folder 21
Box 697 Folder 1
(Subjects: 92nd Street YM-YWHA; Nicaragua; "Night Before Christmas")
Box 697 Folder 2
(Subjects: Non-teaching members of the University; Noisy activity)
Box 697 Folder 3
(Subjects: Naval Reserve Officer Training Corp)
Box 697 Folder 4
Box 697 Folder 5
Box 697 Folder 6
Box 697 Folder 7
(Subjects: Observations on financial conditions; Oceanographic Ship Operating Schedules; Ocean Engineering; Occupational and Physical Therapy programs; Obstetrics and Gynecological Research; Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSHA))
Box 697 Folder 8
(Subjects: 112th Street Block Association; 150 Students; Omega Psi Phi; Office of Space Utilization; On-The-Job Training proposal)
Box 697 Folder 9
Box 697 Folder 10
Box 697 Folder 11
(Subjects: "Oral History in the U.S.: A Directory"; Open enrollment; Orthopedic Surgery; Oral History Research Office; Ophthalmology)
Box 697 Folder 12
(Subjects: "Palace of Topkapi"; Division of Painting and Sculpture; Pacific Ocean floor; Palm Beach Trip)
Box 697 Folder 13
(Subjects: Parks, Recreation and Cultural Affairs Admin.; Parking space allocation; Parker School)
Box 697 Folder 14
(Subjects: Payroll savings campaign; Pass-Fail grading system)
Box 697 Folder 15
(Subjects: Pension legislation; Peace rally)
Box 697 Folder 16
(Subjects: Personnel Office)
Box 697 Folder 17
(Subjects: Chairman of Trustees)
Box 697 Folder 18
(Subjects: Faculty of Philosophy; Physics, Department of; Physics Chairs; Physiology, Department of; Physical Education, Department of; Philippines; Phi Sigma Delta; Phi Beta Kappa; Physical and Life Sciences Summer Program; Pharmacology)
Box 697 Folder 19
Box 697 Folder 20
Box 697 Folder 21
Box 697 Folder 22
Box 697 Folder 23
(Subjects: Picketing; Piranesi Prints Exhibition)
Box 697 Folder 24
(Subjects: Plaques; Planting and beautification of malls; Playground at 611 W. 113th Street; Plan of Action for Financing Higher Education)
Box 697 Folder 25
(Subjects: Polarization of x-rays; Police Commissioner; Political Science, Department of; Police Department)
Box 697 Folder 26
(Subjects: Postage; People seeking positions)
Box 697 Folder 27
(Subjects: President to President Conference; President's Committee for Student Life; President's Special Meeting; President's office petty cash; President's message on science and technology; President's Luncheon; Preliminary bill from Thacher Proffitt; President's Club; Presidential Deputy for Governmental Affairs; Presidential Committee on the Arts; U.S. President; President's Council)
Box 697 Folder 28
(Subjects: Primary tuition program; Prisoners)
Box 697 Folder 29
Box 697 Folder 30
Box 698 Folder 1
Box 698 Folder 2
Box 698 Folder 3
(Subjects: Psychiatry, Department of; Professorships; Program in Leisure Education; Project on the Status and Education of Women; Promotions; Protest of various tenants of 130/140 Morningside; Department of Psychology; Psychological Aspects of Anticipatory Grief Conf.; Prompt reporting of grades)
Box 698 Folder 4
Box 698 Folder 5 to 6
Box 698 Folder 7
(Subjects: Office of Public Affairs; Faculty of Pure Science; Pupin building; Pulitzer Traveling Fellowship; Puerto Rican Studies; Puerto Rican students; Puerto Rican Resources Development Program; Puerto Rican and Latin Institute; Puerto Rican Board; Department of Public Health)
Box 698 Folder 8
(Subjects: Press releases)
Box 698 Folder 9
Box 698 Folder 10
Box 698 Folder 11
Box 698 Folder 12
Box 698 Folder 13
(Subjects: Questionnaires, Illegal)
Box 698 Folder 14
(Subjects: Radio TV Reports, Inc.; Department of Radiology; Radiation Safety Committee; Radcliffe Search Committee)
Box 698 Folder 15
Box 698 Folder 16
(Subjects: Regents Scholarship Examination; Regents Conference for Trustees; Regents professorships; Regional Manpower Systems; Regional organizations; Regional Institutes; Regents Eighth Annual Conference; Realized capital appreciation of special funds; Religion; Regents Commission on Doctoral Education; Religious activities)
Box 698 Folder 17
Box 698 Folder 18
Box 698 Folder 19
Box 698 Folder 20
(Subjects: Report on Demonstrations at Columbia; Reserve Officers' Training Corps; Retired and retirements; Resources for the Future; Resignations; College of Architecture Research Center; Research in Daily Life; Report to American Society of Newspaper Editors; "Report on America" dinner; Report to the Alumni; Residence Halls; Residence and Migration Report)
Box 699 Folder 1
(Subjects: Richmond-Hutchinson-Pirasteh Task Force Report; Right to Read Program; Riverside Drive Tenants Association)
Box 699 Folder 2
Box 699 Folder 3
(Subjects: Room 408 Low Library; Rockefeller Center Committee; Seminar on Role of University in Quest for Peace; Rockefeller Center Lease)
Box 699 Folder 4
Box 699 Folder 5
Box 699 Folder 6
Box 699 Folder 7
Box 699 Folder 8
Box 699 Folder 9
(Subjects: Rutgers-Columbia Football Trophy)
Box 699 Folder 10
Box 699 Folder 11
(Subjects: Sailing Club Faculty Advisor; Safety Committee; Sabbatical leaves)
Box 699 Folder 12
Box 699 Folder 13
(Subjects: Sao Paulo Biennial International Literary Prize)
Box 699 Folder 14
(Subjects: Savings Bond Drive; Margaret Sanger, Research Bureau; Salaries)
Box 699 Folder 15
(Subjects: Science of Creative Intelligence Symposium)
Box 699 Folder 16
(Subjects: Schermerhorn Extension)
Box 699 Folder 17
(Subjects: School Visitation Program; Schulyer Hall; School Study: Analyses of Revenues/Expenditures)
Box 699 Folder 18
Box 699 Folder 19
(Subjects: Security; Secretaries; Security Guards; Office of the Secretary; Sea Grant; Sears-Roebuck Luncheon; Seal of Columbia University)
Box 699 Folder 20
(Subjects: 70 Haven; Seven Universities Group; Senior Salary and Classification Review Committee; Senate Executive Committee; Senate consultation on tuition increases; Senate Community Relations Committee; Senate Bill 9784 Seminar on Mathematical Models; 76 Morningside Drive; Self-teaching Project; Sex discrimination)
Box 699 Folder 21
(Subjects: Shah of Iran)
Box 699 Folder 22
Box 699 Folder 23
Box 699 Folder 24
Box 699 Folder 25
(Subjects: Sigma Nu; Sigma Delta Epsilon; Sigma Delta Chi)
Box 699 Folder 26
(Subjects: 65 Security Plan; 65 Pension Plan; 605 West 113th Street; 609-615 West 115th Street)
Box 699 Folder 27
Box 699 Folder 28
Box 699 Folder 29
Box 700 Folder 1
Box 700 Folder 2
(Subjects: Social responsibility in investments; Social Committee of Carman Hall)
Box 700 Folder 3
Box 700 Folder 4
(Subjects: Society of Sigma Xi; Society of Older Graduates)
Box 700 Folder 5
(Subjects: Estate of Julian Clarence Levi)
Box 700 Folder 6
(Subjects: Spectator; Special Service Program; Special Committee to Review the Arts at Columbia; Special Committee for Development of Communication; Space allocation; Spanish and Portuguese Studies)
Box 700 Folder 7
(Subjects: Sports Information Office; Squash courts in Havemeyer; S 659)
Box 700 Folder 8
(Subjects: KOED Plan; Spingarn, Joel Elias)
Box 700 Folder 9
Box 700 Folder 10
Box 700 Folder 11
(Subjects: Staff termination procedures; State of New Jersey; Statutes of the University; Statistical Portrait of Higher Education; Statewide Master Plan; Standing committees; State aid to non-public colleges; Staff retirement allowance; Stabilization of prices, rents, wages and salaries; Stationery price list)
Box 700 Folder 12
Box 700 Folder 13
Box 700 Folder 14
Box 700 Folder 15
Box 700 Folder 16
Box 700 Folder 17
Box 700 Folder 18
(Subjects: Music, Department of)
Box 700 Folder 19
(Subjects: Stone Gym Youth Center)
Box 700 Folder 20
(Subjects: Strike)
Box 700 Folder 21
(Subjects: Student charges; Students on Boards of Trustees; Student Association Program in Leisure Education; Student Assembly; Student Affairs; Student activism; Student Conference on United States Affairs; Student loans; "Students Want Their Constitutional Rights"; Student Trustees; Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry; Student Organization for Black Unity; Students' monthly meeting at the President's House; Students' defaults on loans; Student Intern Cooperative Education Program; Office of Student Interests; Student fund raising activities; Student Forum; Student financial aid; Students for a Democratic Society)
Box 700 Folder 22
Box 700 Folder 23
Box 701 Folder 1
(Subjects: University Development and Alumni Relations)
Box 701 Folder 2
Box 701 Folder 3
Box 701 Folder 4
Box 701 Folder 5
Box 701 Folder 6
Box 701 Folder 7
(Subjects: Sukkot; Suppliers; Supplemented Interim Rules; Superblock for the Institute of Human Reproduction; SUNY at Buffalo; Summit, New Jersey; Supporting Staff Retirement Fund; Summer Program in the Physical and Life Sciences; Summer faculty pay for research)
Box 701 Folder 8
Box 701 Folder 9
Box 701 Folder 10
(Subjects: Swimming Advisory Committee; Survey of Voluntary Support of Education; Surcharge on gifts)
Box 701 Folder 11
(Subjects: Tax exempt organizations; Tax reform; Task Force on University Publications; Task Force on Tuition and Financial Aid; Talwani Committee; Mrs. Davidson Taylor)
Box 701 Folder 12
(Subjects: Special Asst to President for Education in Arts; School of the Arts, Dean)
Box 701 Folder 13
(Subjects: Termination forms; Term papers; Tennis Club; Tennis Advisory Committee; Tenants Committee 600 West 116th Street; Tenants in Columbia University buildings; Tenants of 535 West 111th Street; Temp State Comm to Study Causes of Campus Unrest; Television and Radio Newsmen Summer Program; Telephone work; Telegraph Editors and Copy Desk Chiefs, Seminar)
Box 701 Folder 14
Box 701 Folder 15
Box 701 Folder 16
(Subjects: Thanksgiving Day Proclamations; Foundation of Thanatology; Thacher, Proffitt, Prizer, Crawley & Wood)
Box 701 Folder 17
(Subjects: Title VII, Civil Rights Act of 1964)
Box 701 Folder 18
(Subjects: Tompkins Hall Nursery School; "Too Little Too Late"; Total disability benefits plan)
Box 701 Folder 19
(Subjects: Triga Reactor; Tribunal Legal Officer; Travel reimbursement; Trinity School; Travel program; Trans World Airline; Transit strike; Track Advisory Committee)
Box 701 Folder 20
Box 701 Folder 21
Box 701 Folder 22
Box 701 Folder 23
Box 701 Folder 24
Box 702 Folder 1
Box 702 Folder 2
Box 702 Folder 3
Box 702 Folder 4
Box 702 Folder 5
Box 702 Folder 6
Box 702 Folder 7
Box 702 Folder 8 to 9
Box 702 Folder 10
Box 702 Folder 11
Box 702 Folder 12
Box 702 Folder 13
Box 702 Folder 14
Box 702 Folder 15
Box 702 Folder 16
Box 702 Folder 17
(Subjects: Tuition and price controls; Turkish Ministry; Twenty-Five Year Club; Typewriter; Center for Turkish Studies; Tuition actions; Tuition increases; Tuition grants for sons and daughters; Tuition and fees; Tuition exemption)
Box 702 Folder 18
(Subjects: Student Aid Society)
Box 702 Folder 19
Box 702 Folder 20
(Subjects: Upward Bound Program; Unrelated business income; Committee on Undergraduate Residence; Union Theological Seminary; Undergraduate Dormitory Council)
Box 702 Folder 21
(Subjects: United Student Government Harpur College; United States Trust Company; United States Mission to N.A.T.O.; United States Military Academy; United States Department of Justice; United Givers Fund; United Doctors of Harlem Hospital Center)
Box 702 Folder 22
(Subjects: Long Island University)
Box 702 Folder 23
(Subjects: National Accelerator Laboratory)
Box 702 Folder 24
(Subjects: University Ad Hoc Day Care Committee; University Centers for Rational Alternatives; University Club; University College Work Study; University Community; University Consortium for World Order Studies)
Box 702 Folder 25
(Subjects: "University Directions: An Opening Statement"; University Delegates; University Directory; University Faculty Senate at CUNY; Statement of University finances; University Lecture)
Box 703 Folder 1
(Subjects: University representation; University Professor; University publications; University property)
Box 703 Folder 2
(Subjects: University space; University Student Affairs)
Box 703 Folder 3
(Subjects: Urban Center)
Box 703 Folder 4
(Subjects: Joel Pokomy)
Box 703 Folder 5
Box 703 Folder 6
Box 703 Folder 7
Box 703 Folder 8
Box 703 Folder 9
Box 703 Folder 10
Box 703 Folder 11
Box 703 Folder 12
(Subjects: Uriel Weinreich Memorial Lecture; Urban Professorship; Urban Fellowship Program; Urban Economics Professorship; Urban Community Schools Program)
Box 703 Folder 13
Box 703 Folder 14
(Subjects: Vanguard Program; Vacancies on Trustees' Committees)
Box 703 Folder 15
Box 703 Folder 16
(Subjects: Veterans; VEMA; Vehicle registration; Vetlesen Professorship)
Box 703 Folder 17
(Subjects: Visiting committees; Vision Lunch; Visiting Scholar Program; "A Visit from St. Nicholas")
Box 703 Folder 18
Box 703 Folder 19
(Subjects: Dean of Business School)
Box 703 Folder 20
(Subjects: Wage-Price Freeze; Wage and Salary Task Force)
Box 703 Folder 21
Box 703 Folder 22
(Subjects: War protests; Warren chair)
Box 703 Folder 23
(Subjects: Washington (George) High School; WCBS-TV interview; Washington Heights)
Box 703 Folder 24
Box 703 Folder 25
(Subjects: Weinreich (Uriel) Memorial Lecture)
Box 703 Folder 26
(Subjects: West Harlem Coalition for Morningside Park)
Box 703 Folder 27
Box 703 Folder 28
(Subjects: White House Fellowships)
Box 703 Folder 29
Box 704 Folder 1
(Subjects: Thomas Coppinger; Statutes; Thacher, Proffitt, Prizer, Crawley & Wood; Employment practices; Counsel for the University)
Box 704 Folder 2
Box 704 Folder 3
Box 704 Folder 4
(Subjects: Wills and bequests; Williams-Steigner Act (1970))
Box 704 Folder 5
Box 704 Folder 6
Box 704 Folder 7
(Subjects: Women in Higher Education; Women's Faculty Club; Women's Center; Women's Auxiliary to the 11th District Dental Soc.; Women's Auxiliary to the 11th District Dental Soc; Women's Studies Institute; Women artists)
Box 704 Folder 8
(Subjects: Women's Affirmative Action Coalition)
Box 704 Folder 9
(Subjects: Woodbridge Hall)
Box 704 Folder 10
Box 704 Folder 11
(Subjects: Writing Division; Wrestling Advisory Committee)
Box 704 Folder 12
Box 704 Folder 13
(Subjects: Yule Log Ceremony; Yale Plan; Yearbook of Higher Education; Yiddish; Brigham Young University)
Box 704 Folder 14
(Subjects: Geology, Department of)
Box 704 Folder 15
(Subjects: Geology, Department of)
Box 704 Folder 16
(Subjects: Zeta Beta Tau)
Box 704 Folder 17
This series of Central Files is the continuation of records found in Series I covering the year July 1, 1972 to June 30, 1973. Individually named and general alphabetical files are arranged in one alphabetical sequence. Important subjects addressed in the general alphabetical files are noted parenthetically.
Box 704 Folder 18
Box 704 Folder 19
(Subjects: Journalism, School of)
Box 704 Folder 20
(Subjects: Academy of Political Science; Activity changes; Acapulco trip; Academy for Educational Development; Academic calendar; Accreditation; Academic Affairs; Academic renewal)
Box 704 Folder 21
(Subjects: Academic freedom)
Box 704 Folder 22
Box 704 Folder 23
(Subjects: Administrative affairs; Ad Hoc Committee for Organizing; Adjunct professorships; Ad hoc committees; Ad Hoc Committee of New York State Legislature; Ad Hoc Committee system; Administrative Advisory Committee on Federal Relations; Administrative assistants; Admissions; Aesthetic Realism; Advisory Planning Committee; Advertising charges; Adrian Professor of Mathematics; Adopt a Lion; Admissions Office)
Box 704 Folder 24
Box 704 Folder 25
(Subjects: Air Dome Running Track; Affiliated Business Fellows Gift; Air conditioning; Air conditioner for President's House; Affiliation agreements; Affiliation personnel)
Box 704 Folder 26
(Subjects: Health, Education, and Welfare, Department of (HEW))
Box 704 Folder 27
(Subjects: Health, Education, and Welfare, Department of (HEW))
Box 704 Folder 28
(Subjects: Health, Education, and Welfare, Department of (HEW))
Box 705 Folder 1
(Subjects: Health, Education, and Welfare, Department of (HEW); Conference of College Presidents)
Box 705 Folder 2
(Subjects: Health, Education, and Welfare, Department of (HEW); Barnard College Affirmative Action Program)
Box 705 Folder 3
(Subjects: Alpha Omega Alpha; Alpha Phi Alpha; Alpha Delta Phi; Alpha Chi Omega)
Box 705 Folder 4
(Subjects: Office of Alumni Relations; Alumni Records Center; Alumni Council of Alumni Federation; Office of Alumni Affairs and Development; Alumni reorganization; Alumni College, Trustees' Committee on Alumni Affairs; Alumni Representation, Alumni Trustees)
Box 705 Folder 5
(Subjects: Fall Reunion Day)
Box 705 Folder 6
(Subjects: Amateur Athletic Competition)
Box 705 Folder 7
Box 705 Folder 8
Box 705 Folder 9
Box 705 Folder 10
Box 705 Folder 11
(Subjects: American Irish)
Box 705 Folder 12
Box 705 Folder 13
Box 705 Folder 14
Box 705 Folder 15
Box 705 Folder 16
(Subjects: Anti-bias suits; Annual report; Annual Guide to Graduate and Undergraduate Studies)
Box 705 Folder 17
(Subjects: Americanism Award; Robert D. Lilley)
Box 705 Folder 18
Box 705 Folder 19
Box 705 Folder 20
(Subjects: Apartment buildings; April in Paris Ball; Appointments; Appointment Termination form; Appointment of Officers; Appointment Rules and Procedures)
Box 705 Folder 21
(Subjects: Arden House; Architectural Film Festival; Arab Student Club; Architects; Armstrong Awards; Art History and Archaeology, Department of; Art Properties)
Box 705 Folder 22
(Subjects: Graduate School of Architecture and Planning)
Box 705 Folder 23
Box 705 Folder 24
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 705 Folder 25
Box 705 Folder 26
Box 705 Folder 27
(Subjects: Assistant Vice President; Assignment of Planning, Programming and Budget Tasks; Astrophysics Laboratory; Associate professors; Assistant Deanship for Student Affairs; Assistant professor salaries; Assistant to the Vice President for Academic Affairs)
Box 705 Folder 28
(Subjects: Association of the United States Army)
Box 706 Folder 1 to 3
Box 706 Folder 4
Box 706 Folder 5
(Subjects: Avery Architectural Fee; Avery bequest; Avery Project)
Box 706 Folder 6
Box 706 Folder 7
(Subjects: B.A.-M.I.A. Proposal; Baccalaureate; Bacchanal)
Box 706 Folder 8
(Subjects: Baker Field)
Box 706 Folder 9
(Subjects: Baker Field)
Box 706 Folder 10
Box 706 Folder 11
Box 706 Folder 12
(Subjects: Bankers' Luncheon)
Box 706 Folder 13
Box 706 Folder 14
(Subjects: Noel Barnard)
Box 706 Folder 15
Box 706 Folder 16
Box 706 Folder 17
Box 706 Folder 18 to 19
Box 706 Folder 20
Box 706 Folder 21
Box 706 Folder 22
Box 706 Folder 23
Box 706 Folder 24
Box 707 Folder 1
Box 707 Folder 2
Box 707 Folder 3
Box 707 Folder 4
Box 707 Folder 5
Box 707 Folder 6
Box 707 Folder 7
Box 707 Folder 8
Box 707 Folder 9
Box 707 Folder 10
Box 707 Folder 11
(Subjects: Base salary changes; Basketball; Baseball Advisory Committee)
Box 707 Folder 12
Box 707 Folder 13
(Subjects: Beer and Chips Sessions)
Box 707 Folder 14
(Subjects: Belveder Park and Playground)
Box 707 Folder 15
(Subjects: City of Berkeley)
Box 707 Folder 16
(Subjects: Biometrics Research; Department of Biological Sciences; Bilingual education; Bill 5707A)
Box 707 Folder 17 to 18
Box 707 Folder 19
(Subjects: Blue Key Society; Blood Drive; Black student problem in the Film Division; Black students; Black and Puerto Rican Student-Faculty Organization; Black Faculty and Administrators of Columbia; Blue Pencil Dinner; Black Business Students Association; Black drop-out figures)
Box 707 Folder 20
(Subjects: Treasurer; Gifts)
Box 707 Folder 21
(Subjects: Bond Dealers Luncheon; Donation of books to prisons; Dr. Peterson and Dr. McGill's trip to Boston; Boston Gala)
Box 707 Folder 22
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 707 Folder 23
Box 707 Folder 24
Box 708 Folder 1
Box 708 Folder 2
(Subjects: Bronfman Luncheon; Broadcast Journalism)
Box 708 Folder 3
(Subjects: Paul Garrett Professor on Public Policy; Retired and retirements)
Box 708 Folder 4
(Subjects: Bulk stationery price list)
Box 708 Folder 5
Box 708 Folder 6
Box 708 Folder 7
Box 708 Folder 8
Box 708 Folder 9
Box 708 Folder 10
Box 708 Folder 11
Box 708 Folder 12
(Subjects: Burgess/Carpenter and Classics Library; Business Graduates Association)
Box 708 Folder 13
(Subjects: American Leadership Study)
Box 708 Folder 14
(Subjects: Business, School of-Dean Search)
Box 708 Folder 15
(Subjects: Buchler, Justus)
Box 708 Folder 16
(Subjects: Trustee)
Box 708 Folder 17
Box 708 Folder 18
(Subjects: Campus political activities; Campus disruption; Campus architect; CAIM (Columbia Anti-Imperialist Movement))
Box 708 Folder 19
(Subjects: Waite, Richard-sale of property to)
Box 708 Folder 20
Box 708 Folder 21
(Subjects: Dr. McGill's Car)
Box 708 Folder 22
Box 708 Folder 23
Box 708 Folder 24
Box 708 Folder 25
Box 708 Folder 26
Box 708 Folder 27
(Subjects: Central Harlem Meals on Wheels; Century Club Luncheon; Certificate in Advanced Librarianship; Century Association Luncheon)
Box 708 Folder 28
Box 708 Folder 29
(Subjects: Chants (protest))
Box 708 Folder 30
(Subjects: Brown, Herbert Charles)
Box 708 Folder 31
Box 709 Folder 1
Box 709 Folder 2
(Subjects: Chemical Engineering and Applied Chemistry, Department of; Child welfare; Children's rights litigation support unit)
Box 709 Folder 3
(Subjects: National Academy of Sciences)
Box 709 Folder 4
Box 709 Folder 5
(Subjects: City hospitals; Citizen Exchange Corps)
Box 709 Folder 6
(Subjects: Class Day; Classification Appeal Committee; Clinical appointments; Clinical Scholars Program; Club Van Cortlandt)
Box 709 Folder 7
(Subjects: Maniatty, Connie S.)
Box 709 Folder 8
(Subjects: Coalition Jobs; Collective bargaining)
Box 709 Folder 9
(Subjects: Dean of Students)
Box 709 Folder 10
(Subjects: College Work-Study Program; College Walk; College Facts Chart; College Class of 1913 College Admissions Office)
Box 709 Folder 11
(Subjects: Columbia owned properties; Columbia Players; Columbia Jewish Bayit; Columbia History of the World; Columbia Forum; Columbia employees; Columbia-in-Detroit program; Columbia Glee Club; Columbia Committee for Community Service; Columbia's Academic Eminence (1954); Columbia-Barnard Trustee Committee; Columbia Ad Hoc Committee for Organizing; Columbia-Barnard Course Guide; Columbia Administrative Staff Association; Columbia Composers)
Box 709 Folder 12
(Subjects: Columbia Tenant's Union; Columbia University Alumni clubs; Columbia University Woman's Club of Colorado; Columbia Travel Service; Columbia Women's Liberation)
Box 709 Folder 13
(Subjects: Columbia College Alumni Association; Columbia College Financial Aid)
Box 709 Folder 14
(Subjects: United Fund of Greater New York)
Box 709 Folder 15
(Subjects: United Fund of Greater New York)
Box 709 Folder 16
Box 709 Folder 17
Box 709 Folder 18
Box 709 Folder 19
Box 709 Folder 20
Box 709 Folder 21
Box 709 Folder 22
Box 709 Folder 23
Box 709 Folder 24
(Subjects: Publications-Columbia University)
Box 710 Folder 1
Box 710 Folder 2
Box 710 Folder 3
(Subjects: Community Board #12; Commemorative Columbia University Plaque (Franklin Mint); Community Board #9; Community Chest; Community Health Plan; Community League of West 159th Street; Community relations; Community Service Society; Compensation; Communist Treatment of Prisoners of War)
Box 710 Folder 4
Box 710 Folder 5
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 710 Folder 6
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 710 Folder 7
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 710 Folder 8
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 710 Folder 9
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 710 Folder 10
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 710 Folder 11
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 710 Folder 12
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 710 Folder 13
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 710 Folder 14
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 710 Folder 15
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 710 Folder 16
Box 710 Folder 17 to 18
Box 710 Folder 19
(Subjects: Committee on Undergraduate Residence; Committee on Graduate Residence)
Box 710 Folder 20
(Subjects: Washington Heights)
Box 710 Folder 21
Box 710 Folder 22
Box 710 Folder 23
(Subjects: Contraceptive advice; Construction Management Agreement; Construction budget)
Box 710 Folder 24
Box 710 Folder 25
Box 710 Folder 26
(Subjects: Cooper, Leon N.; Arrow, Kenneth J.; Stein, William H.)
Box 710 Folder 27
(Subjects: Copenhagen Caper)
Box 710 Folder 28
Box 710 Folder 29
(Subjects: Cordier, Dorothy B.)
Box 710 Folder 30
(Subjects: Dean, School of International Affairs)
Box 710 Folder 31
(Subjects: Course Guide; Courtesy Travel Service)
Box 710 Folder 32
Box 710 Folder 33
(Subjects: Crew Advisory Committee)
Box 710 Folder 34
(Subjects: Current Digest of the Soviet Press; Curtains (Low Rotunda))
Box 710 Folder 35
Box 710 Folder 36
Box 711 Folder 1
Box 711 Folder 2
Box 711 Folder 3
Box 711 Folder 4
Box 711 Folder 5
(Subjects: Deferred giving; Deaths; Deficit)
Box 711 Folder 6
Box 711 Folder 7
(Subjects: Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs; Provost)
Box 711 Folder 8
Box 711 Folder 9
(Subjects: Deputy to the President for Governmental Affairs)
Box 711 Folder 10
(Subjects: Accreditation; Dental and Oral Surgery, School of – Dean)
Box 711 Folder 11
Box 711 Folder 12
(Subjects: Dental and Oral Surgery, School of)
Box 711 Folder 13
(Subjects: Department of the Air Force; Department of the Navy; Department of the Army)
Box 711 Folder 14
Box 711 Folder 15
Box 711 Folder 16
Box 711 Folder 17
Box 711 Folder 18
Box 711 Folder 19
(Subjects: Director of Development and Alumni Relations; Directory-Columbia University; Disciplinary system)
Box 711 Folder 20
(Subjects: Ad Hoc Committee for Organizing)
Box 711 Folder 21
Box 711 Folder 22
(Subjects: Doctoral programs)
Box 711 Folder 23
Box 711 Folder 24
(Subjects: Dormitory Authority of New York)
Box 711 Folder 25
Box 711 Folder 26
Box 711 Folder 27
(Subjects: East campus; East Asian Institute; Early retirement program)
Box 711 Folder 28
Box 712 Folder 1
(Subjects: Education Amendments)
Box 712 Folder 2
Box 712 Folder 3
Box 712 Folder 4
(Subjects: Electronics; Electrical vaults expansion; Electrical Engineering and Computer Science)
Box 712 Folder 5
(Subjects: Emergency loans; Employee awards; Employee training programs; Employees in Institutions of Higher Education; English and Comparative Literature, Department of; English Graduate Union; Enrollment)
Box 712 Folder 6
Box 712 Folder 7
Box 712 Folder 8
Box 712 Folder 9
Box 712 Folder 10
(Subjects: Equal Employment Opportunity; Ephraim House)
Box 712 Folder 11
(Subjects: Externally Funded Research; External requests for names of women and minorities; External grant/contract information; Expenditures; Eviction proceedings; Ethnic heritage study centers; Exchange program)
Box 712 Folder 12
(Subjects: Lamont-Doherty Geological Observatory – Director)
Box 712 Folder 13
(Subjects: Life Sciences Building)
Box 712 Folder 14
(Subjects: Fall Reunion Day)
Box 712 Folder 15
(Subjects: Faculty Student Technical Assistance Program; Faculty Smoker; Faculty salaries; Faculty for McGovern; Faculty Directory; Faculty collective bargaining)
Box 712 Folder 16
(Subjects: Federal student aid; Fellows; Fencing Advisory Committee; Ferris Booth Hall)
Box 712 Folder 17
Box 712 Folder 18
Box 712 Folder 19
Box 712 Folder 20
Box 712 Folder 21
(Subjects: Fire drills; Film, Faculty of the Arts; Financing Higher Education; Film Festival)
Box 712 Folder 22
Box 713 Folder 1
Box 713 Folder 2
Box 713 Folder 3
(Subjects: 502 W. 113th Street; 511 W. 113th Street; 521 W. 112th Street; 535 W. 112th Street; 540 W. 112th Street; 549 W. 113th Street; 555 Madison Avenue)
Box 713 Folder 4
Box 713 Folder 5
(Subjects: Football Advisory Committee)
Box 713 Folder 6
Box 713 Folder 7
Box 713 Folder 8
(Subjects: 435 Riverside Drive)
Box 713 Folder 9
(Subjects: Freshman orientation; Franchises)
Box 713 Folder 10
(Subjects: Graduate School of Arts and Sciences – Dean)
Box 713 Folder 11
(Subjects: "Frisbee Building"; Friends of the Libraries)
Box 713 Folder 12
(Subjects: International Law – Professor)
Box 713 Folder 13
(Subjects: Fundraising)
Box 713 Folder 14
Box 713 Folder 15
(Subjects: Journalism, Graduate School of)
Box 713 Folder 16
(Subjects: Gay Liberation demonstration; Gay People at Columbia)
Box 713 Folder 17
Box 713 Folder 18
Box 713 Folder 19
(Subjects: Geology, Department of; General income allocation; General Purpose Funds; General Education)
Box 713 Folder 20
(Subjects: University Professor; Betts Professor of Law; Sofaer, Abraham D.)
Box 713 Folder 21
(Subjects: deBary, William Theodore)
Box 713 Folder 22
Box 713 Folder 23
Box 713 Folder 24
Box 713 Folder 25
(Subjects: G.I. Bill; Gifts)
Box 713 Folder 26
(Subjects: Glee Club; Glomar Challenge (ship))
Box 713 Folder 27
Box 713 Folder 28
(Subjects: Fund for Peace)
Box 713 Folder 29
(Subjects: Governmental Affairs; Governmental relations; Government funding)
Box 713 Folder 30
(Subjects: Grading system; Graduate admissions offers; Graduate painters and sculptors; Greece, academic freedom in)
Box 713 Folder 31
Box 713 Folder 32
(Subjects: Grievance procedure)
Box 713 Folder 33
(Subjects: Guard services; "Guidelines for the Desegregation of Facilities and Programs")
Box 714 Folder 1
Box 714 Folder 2
Box 714 Folder 3
(Subjects: Harlem/Inwood Tennis Development Program)
Box 714 Folder 4
Box 714 Folder 5
(Subjects: Professor of Economics)
Box 714 Folder 6
Box 714 Folder 7
Box 714 Folder 8
(Subjects: Krumb Professor of Mining)
Box 714 Folder 9
(Subjects: Assistant Vice President for Public Information)
Box 714 Folder 10
(Subjects: Health Center; Health and Hospitals Corporation; Health Service; Heat exchanger on top of Pegram; Hebert Amendment to the Military Procurement Authorization Bill; Health Policies Program)
Box 714 Folder 11
(Subjects: Professor of Geology; Lamont-Doherty Geological Observatory)
Box 714 Folder 12
(Subjects: Columbia Tennis Club)
Box 714 Folder 13
Box 714 Folder 14
Box 714 Folder 15
(Subjects: History, Department of; Hitchcock Scholarship)
Box 714 Folder 16
Box 714 Folder 17
Box 714 Folder 18
Box 714 Folder 19
(Subjects: Pulitzer Prizes; Professor of Journalism)
Box 714 Folder 20
(Subjects: Housing, Subcommittee on; House counsel; Holidays; Honorary degrees)
Box 714 Folder 21
Box 714 Folder 22
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 714 Folder 23
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 714 Folder 24
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 714 Folder 25
Box 714 Folder 26
(Subjects: Kuffler, Stephen W.; Eagle, Harry; Dulbecco, Renato; Puck, Theodore T.)
Box 714 Folder 27
(Subjects: Humanities; Human genetics and development)
Box 714 Folder 28
Box 714 Folder 29
(Subjects: Deputy to the President for Governmental Affairs)
Box 714 Folder 30
(Subjects: Deputy to the President for Governmental Affairs)
Box 715 Folder 1
(Subjects: Professor of Anesthesiology and Pediatrics)
Box 715 Folder 2
(Subjects: Information and Visitor Services; Insect hormone delegation from China; Institutional Research and Budget Planning)
Box 715 Folder 3
Box 715 Folder 4
Box 715 Folder 5
Box 715 Folder 6
(Subjects: Intercultural Program; Interim Affirmative Action Program; Inter-Schools and Others; Investors' Tour)
Box 715 Folder 7
Box 715 Folder 8
Box 715 Folder 9
Box 715 Folder 10
(Subjects: Picker, Harvey)
Box 715 Folder 11
Box 715 Folder 12
Box 715 Folder 13
Box 715 Folder 14
(Subjects: Italy; Israel; Iran, Consul General of)
Box 715 Folder 15
(Subjects: John Jay security)
Box 715 Folder 16
Box 715 Folder 17
(Subjects: Secretary, Office of)
Box 715 Folder 18
(Subjects: Joint policy on admissions; Joint Conference Committee; Joint Administrative Board; Joint Activities of Colleges and Universities; Johnson Hall; Job classification system)
Box 715 Folder 19
Box 715 Folder 20
Box 715 Folder 21
Box 715 Folder 22
(Subjects: Journalism, Graduate School of; Jugoslav Consul General; Judeans)
Box 715 Folder 23
(Subjects: University Record)
Box 715 Folder 24
(Subjects: Kappa Chapter of Sigma Xi)
Box 715 Folder 25
(Subjects: Proctor)
Box 715 Folder 26
(Subjects: Key card holders)
Box 715 Folder 27
(Subjects: Gast, Paul A.; Wasserburg, Gerald J.)
Box 715 Folder 28
Box 715 Folder 29
Box 715 Folder 30
Box 715 Folder 31
(Subjects: King's Crown Hotel)
Box 715 Folder 32
Box 716 Folder 1
(Subjects: Krumb School of Mines; Kurchatov, Akademik (research vessel))
Box 716 Folder 2
(Subjects: Professor of Physics)
Box 716 Folder 3
(Subjects: Western Electric Company)
Box 716 Folder 4
(Subjects: Language Laboratory; Lamont Sanctuary; Laser Safety Committee; Latin American Students; Latin American Studies; Law Library; Labor Committee)
Box 716 Folder 5
Box 716 Folder 6
(Subjects: Professor of Anthropology)
Box 716 Folder 7
Box 716 Folder 8
(Subjects: Legislative hearing; Legal Services; Legal expenses)
Box 716 Folder 9
Box 716 Folder 10
(Subjects: "The Liberal Arts: What is an Educated Man in the Year 1972?"; Library Service, School of; Librarians; Life Sciences Building; Lettuce; Libraries)
Box 716 Folder 11
(Subjects: Living trusts; Litigation; Listening Post)
Box 716 Folder 12
(Subjects: Local 1199)
Box 716 Folder 13
Box 716 Folder 14
Box 716 Folder 15
Box 716 Folder 16
(Subjects: Low Rotunda curtains; Low Memorial Library)
Box 716 Folder 17
(Subjects: Luncheon at 60 Morningside Drive; Luce Scholars Program)
Box 716 Folder 18
(Subjects: McIntesh Activities Council; McMillin Theater)
Box 716 Folder 19
Box 716 Folder 20
(Subjects: Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith; Parker, Albert)
Box 716 Folder 21
(Subjects: Ginzberg, Eli)
Box 716 Folder 22
Box 716 Folder 23
Box 716 Folder 24
Box 716 Folder 25
Box 716 Folder 26
Box 716 Folder 27
Box 716 Folder 28
Box 716 Folder 29
Box 716 Folder 30
Box 716 Folder 31
Box 717 Folder 1
Box 717 Folder 2
Box 717 Folder 3
Box 717 Folder 4
Box 717 Folder 5
Box 717 Folder 6
Box 717 Folder 7
Box 717 Folder 8
Box 717 Folder 9
Box 717 Folder 10
Box 717 Folder 11
Box 717 Folder 12
Box 717 Folder 13
Box 717 Folder 14
Box 717 Folder 15
[Restricted until 2049]
(Subjects: Coleman, Henry; Affirmative action)
Box 717 Folder 16
(Subjects: Major gifts; Major Medical Insurance Cost)
Box 717 Folder 17
Box 717 Folder 18
(Subjects: Management and Financing of Colleges; Management Intern Program; Management and Planning Institute for Higher Education; Managing Change System)
Box 717 Folder 19
(Subjects: Married student housing)
Box 717 Folder 20
Box 717 Folder 21
(Subjects: College of Physicians and Surgeons – Dean; Vice President in Charge of Medical Affairs)
Box 717 Folder 22
(M.Ph.)
Box 717 Folder 23
(Subjects: Mathis report; Mayor's Office of Neighborhood Government; Mathematical Statistics and Genetics Professor)
Box 717 Folder 24
Box 717 Folder 25
(Subjects: Medical Service Account; Media Relations; Medical School Allocation; Medical Center Inventory; Mediaeval and Renaissance Studies Program; Medal for Excellence; Mechanical Engineering, Department of; Meals on Wheels Program; Medical Services to Minors; Medicine, Faculty of)
Box 717 Folder 26
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 717 Folder 27
Box 717 Folder 28
Box 717 Folder 29
(Subjects: Microbiology, Professor of; Middle East Languages and Cultures, Department of; Middle States Accreditation; Military Procurement Authorization Bill)
Box 717 Folder 30
Box 717 Folder 31
Box 717 Folder 32
(Subjects: Minority hiring; Minority group members; Minibus)
Box 717 Folder 33
(Subjects: Monitoring Committee; Model Cities Program)
Box 717 Folder 34
Box 717 Folder 35
Box 717 Folder 36
(Subjects: Morningside Real Estate; Morningside Heights Institutions; Morningside Renewal Council; 130 Morningside Drive; Morningside Heights security)
Box 717 Folder 37
Box 717 Folder 38
(Subjects: Muslim Student Association; Music, Department of)
Box 717 Folder 39
(Subjects: Dental and Oral Surgery, School of – Dean)
Box 717 Folder 40
(Subjects: "Nature of Criticism in Black Art"; Named chairs; Named professorships)
Box 718 Folder 1
Box 718 Folder 2
Box 718 Folder 3
Box 718 Folder 4
Box 718 Folder 5
Box 718 Folder 6
Box 718 Folder 7
Box 718 Folder 8
(Subjects: Necrology; Network Project; New endowments; Newman-Warren case writing project; Newspaper Personnel Management)
Box 718 Folder 9
(Subjects: New York Botanical Garden)
Box 718 Folder 10
Box 718 Folder 11
Box 718 Folder 12
(Subjects: Nobel Prize)
Box 718 Folder 13
(Subjects: Naval Reserve Officer Training Corp)
Box 718 Folder 14
Box 718 Folder 15
Box 718 Folder 16
(Subjects: Vice President for Business)
Box 718 Folder 17
(Subjects: 130 Morningside Drive; Officers of Instruction and Research; Office of Health Physics; Ocean Engineering; 112th Street Neighbors)
Box 718 Folder 18
Box 718 Folder 19
Box 718 Folder 20
(Subjects: Overheads; Orthopedic Surgery; Oriental Studies Program; Oral History Research Office; Optometry)
Box 718 Folder 21
(Subjects: Paper (recycled); Parents Committee for Day Care; Parents' Council; Parker School; Parking system)
Box 718 Folder 22
(Subjects: Peer review system)
Box 718 Folder 23
(Subjects: Personnel Office; Peter and the Wolf; Personnel)
Box 718 Folder 24
(Subjects: Trustees, Chairman of)
Box 719 Folder 1
(Subjects: Phi Sigma Delta; Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Gamma Delta; Philosophy, Faculty of; Pilgrims of the United States; Physicians visiting from China)
Box 719 Folder 2
Box 719 Folder 3
(Subjects: 130 Morningside Drive)
Box 719 Folder 4
Box 719 Folder 5
Box 719 Folder 6
Box 719 Folder 7
(Subjects: Dean, School of International Affairs)
Box 719 Folder 8
(Subjects: Police Commissioner; Police Department; Population Council; Political Theory: An International Journal of Political Philosophy; Political Science, Faculty of)
Box 719 Folder 9
Box 719 Folder 10
(Subjects: Power of attorney; Postal Service regulations; Position)
Box 719 Folder 11
(Subjects: Dean, Columbia College)
Box 719 Folder 12
(Subjects: Private Universities Governmental Relations Group; Presidential election; President, Office of; President's Ball; Presidential Committee on the Arts)
Box 719 Folder 13
Box 719 Folder 14
Box 719 Folder 15
Box 719 Folder 16
Box 719 Folder 17
Box 719 Folder 18
Box 719 Folder 19
Box 719 Folder 20
Box 719 Folder 21
Box 719 Folder 22
Box 719 Folder 23
(Subjects: Procedures for handling of illegal demonstrations and building occupations; Professor emeritus; Professors; Professorships; Program of General and Continuing Education in the Humanities; Project R.E.A.S.O.N.; Promotions; Protection of human subjects; Psychiatric Institute; Psychological counseling; Psychology, Department of; Psychology Club; Psychology, Division of Experimental)
Box 720 Folder 1
Box 720 Folder 2
Box 720 Folder 3
Box 720 Folder 4
Box 720 Folder 5
Box 720 Folder 6
(Subjects: Public Affairs, Office of; Public Health, School of; Public Relations Conference; Public transportation; Pupin Hall; Pure Science, Faculty of; Publications-Columbia University)
Box 720 Folder 7
(Subjects: Press releases)
Box 720 Folder 8
(Subjects: Press releases)
Box 720 Folder 9
(Subjects: Press releases)
Box 720 Folder 10
(Subjects: Press releases)
Box 720 Folder 11
Box 720 Folder 12
Box 720 Folder 13
Box 720 Folder 14 to 15
Box 720 Folder 16
Box 720 Folder 17
Box 720 Folder 18
(Subjects: Radiation Safety Committee; Quotas)
Box 720 Folder 19
(Subjects: Reactor Safety Committee; Recess; Registration; Reid Hall; Religious holidays)
Box 721 Folder 1
Box 721 Folder 2
Box 721 Folder 3
Box 721 Folder 4
Box 721 Folder 5
Box 721 Folder 6
Box 721 Folder 7
(Subjects: Research Gift for Dr. William Chaffee; Reports from Two Presidents; Research staff titles; Residence Halls; Resources for the Future; Retaining Industry in New York; Retirement allowances; Retired and retirements; Resignations; Rent exemptions)
Box 721 Folder 8 to 9
Box 721 Folder 10
(Subjects: Riverside Park Tennis Courts; Riverside Drive Tenants Association; Right to Read Program; Riverdale Children's Association)
Box 721 Folder 11
Box 721 Folder 12
Box 721 Folder 13
Box 721 Folder 14
Box 721 Folder 15
Box 721 Folder 16
(Subjects: Routing of documents)
Box 721 Folder 17
(Subjects: Rugby Football Club (Business School-Law School))
Box 721 Folder 18
Box 721 Folder 19
Box 721 Folder 20
Box 721 Folder 21
Box 721 Folder 22
(Subjects: Safety Committee; Sabbatical leaves; Sachem Society; Sailing Club gift; Salary classifications; Salary letters; Salary scale)
Box 721 Folder 23
Box 721 Folder 24
Box 721 Folder 25
Box 722 Folder 1
(Subjects: Scandinavian Presence in America, Seminar on)
Box 722 Folder 2
(Subjects: Schulyer Hall)
Box 722 Folder 3
(Subjects: Secretary of State; Security; Secretary, Office of; Search committees)
Box 722 Folder 4
(Subjects: Seminar on Managing Change)
Box 722 Folder 5
Box 722 Folder 6
Box 722 Folder 7
Box 722 Folder 8
Box 722 Folder 9
(Subjects: Shanks Village)
Box 722 Folder 10
Box 722 Folder 11
(Subjects: 620 West 116th Street; 615-617 West 113th Street; 609-615 West 115th Street; Sigma Xi)
Box 722 Folder 12
Box 722 Folder 13
(Subjects: Smitty's Festschrift)
Box 722 Folder 14
Box 722 Folder 15
(Subjects: Sociology, Department of; Social responsibility in investments; Soccer Advisory Committee)
Box 722 Folder 16
Box 722 Folder 17
Box 722 Folder 18
(Subjects: Society of Sigma Xi; Society of Older Graduates)
Box 722 Folder 19
Box 722 Folder 20
(Subjects: Dean, School of Law)
Box 722 Folder 21
(Subjects: Spectator Editors, Dinner with; Spain; Spring Strike)
Box 722 Folder 22
Box 722 Folder 23
Box 722 Folder 24
(Subjects: State of New Jersey; State Planning Commissions; State Postsecondary Education Commissions; State of the University, Committee on the; Statewide Master Plan; Statutes of the University)
Box 722 Folder 25
(Subjects: Director, Oral History Research Office)
Box 723 Folder 1
Box 723 Folder 2
Box 723 Folder 3
Box 723 Folder 4
Box 723 Folder 5
Box 723 Folder 6
Box 723 Folder 7
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 723 Folder 8
(Subjects: Professor of Musicology)
Box 723 Folder 9
(Subjects: Street lighting; Stone Gym Youth Center; Strickman Filter; Studies to be funded by the City of New York)
Box 723 Folder 10
(Subjects: Student Affairs; Student Trustees; Student Protest Resolution; Student aid; Student Organization for Black Unity; Student newspapers; Student enrollment; Student Employment Office; Student directory; Students for a Democratic Society; Student behavior; Student unrest)
Box 723 Folder 11
(Subjects: Supporting Staff Pension Plan; Swimming Advisory Committee; Summer Repertory Theater; Summer-only M.A. degree; Sublet)
Box 723 Folder 12
Box 723 Folder 13
(Subjects: Tax reform; Tax exempt organizations; Tau Beta Pi)
Box 723 Folder 14
(Subjects: Special Assistant to President for Education in Arts)
Box 723 Folder 15
(Subjects: Term papers; Teaching Apprentice Program; Tennis Center)
Box 723 Folder 16
Box 723 Folder 17
(Subjects: Thanatology, Foundation of; Thacher, Proffitt, Prizer, Crawley & Wood; Thefts; Three year A.B. and its implications for Community Colleges)
Box 723 Folder 18
(Subjects: Plagiarism)
Box 723 Folder 19
Box 723 Folder 20
(Subjects: Track Advisory Committee; Transfer students; Translations; Tribunals; Transportation)
Box 723 Folder 21 to 22
Box 724 Folder 1
Box 724 Folder 2
Box 724 Folder 3
Box 724 Folder 4
[Restricted until 2024]
Box 724 Folder 5
[Restricted until 2024]
Box 724 Folder 6
[Restricted until 2024]
Box 724 Folder 7
Box 724 Folder 8
Box 724 Folder 9
Box 724 Folder 10
Box 724 Folder 11
Box 724 Folder 12
Box 724 Folder 13
Box 724 Folder 14
Box 724 Folder 15
Box 724 Folder 16
Box 724 Folder 17
Box 725 Folder 1
Box 725 Folder 2
Box 725 Folder 3
Box 725 Folder 4
Box 725 Folder 5
Box 725 Folder 6
Box 725 Folder 7
Box 725 Folder 8
Box 725 Folder 9
Box 725 Folder 10
Box 725 Folder 11
Box 725 Folder 12
Box 725 Folder 13
(Subjects: 26th Precinct; Twenty-Five Year Club; Turkish Studies, Center for)
Box 725 Folder 14
(Subjects: Tuition exemption)
Box 725 Folder 15
(Subjects: Upward Bound Program; Unionization; Undergraduate Dormitory Council; "Uncertainty" Sculpture)
Box 725 Folder 16
(Subjects: Sozzi, Ercole Laurence)
Box 725 Folder 17
Box 725 Folder 18
Box 725 Folder 19
Box 725 Folder 20
(Subjects: University Club; University Committee on Deferred Gifts; University Consortium for World Order Studies; University Hall swimming pool)
Box 725 Folder 21
(Subjects: University Lecture; University Librarian)
Box 725 Folder 22
(Subjects: University name, use of; University-owned property; University Women's Realty Corporation; University Safety Officer)
Box 725 Folder 23
Box 725 Folder 24
Box 725 Folder 25
Box 725 Folder 26
Box 726 Folder 1
Box 726 Folder 2
Box 726 Folder 3
Box 726 Folder 4
Box 726 Folder 5
Box 726 Folder 6
(Subjects: Urban Chair; Urban Affairs, Office of; Urban Corps Program; Urban Fellowship Program; Uris Shell, Dedication of; Urban Studies)
Box 726 Folder 7
Box 726 Folder 8
(Subjects: Columbia Women's Liberation; Women's Affirmative Action Coalition)
Box 726 Folder 9
Box 726 Folder 10
(Subjects: Visiting Scholar Program; Voluntary Support of Education, Survey of; VEMA; Violations; Visiting Professors; Vietnam; Vice President for Personnel Management; Vega II, Motor yacht; Village Voice)
Box 726 Folder 11
Box 726 Folder 12
(Subjects: Palmason, Gudmundur)
Box 726 Folder 13
Box 726 Folder 14
Box 726 Folder 15
Box 726 Folder 16
Box 726 Folder 17
Box 726 Folder 18
Box 726 Folder 19
(Subjects: Director, Office of Alumni Relations)
Box 726 Folder 20
Box 726 Folder 21
(Subjects: West 112th Street Block Association; West 113th Street Block Association)
Box 726 Folder 22
Box 726 Folder 23
Box 726 Folder 24
(Subjects: 609-615 West 115th Street)
Box 726 Folder 25
(Subjects: Thacher, Proffitt, Prizer, Crawley & Wood)
Box 726 Folder 26
(Subjects: Wills and bequests)
Box 727 Folder 1
Box 727 Folder 2
(Subjects: Withdrawal from Vietnam)
Box 727 Folder 3
Box 727 Folder 4
(Subjects: Women's Affirmative Action Coalition; Women's Faculty Club; Woodbridge Lectures)
Box 727 Folder 5
(Subjects: Work-Study; "Workers' Bureaucratic Predisposition and Job Requirements" study; World Gratitude Day; Wrestling Advisory Committee)
Box 727 Folder 6
(Subjects: Yule Log Ceremony)
Box 727 Folder 7
Box 727 Folder 8
Box 727 Folder 9
This series of Central Files is the continuation of records found in Series I covering the year July 1, 1973 to June 30, 1974. Individually named and general alphabetical files are arranged in one alphabetical sequence. Important subjects addressed in the general alphabetical files are noted parenthetically.
Box 727 Folder 10
(Subjects: Academic review of 1972-1973 Academic freedom in Chile; Academic costume; Academic Affairs)
Box 727 Folder 11
(Subjects: Journalism, Graduate School of)
Box 727 Folder 12
Box 727 Folder 13
Box 727 Folder 14
(Subjects: Advertising; Admissions; Administrative expenses; Administrative affairs; Administrative committees; Ad Hoc Committee for Organizing; Ad hoc committees)
Box 727 Folder 15
Box 727 Folder 16
Box 727 Folder 17
(Subjects: Air conditioning; "African Art as Philosophy" Exhibit)
Box 727 Folder 18
(Subjects: Health, Education, and Welfare, Dept. of (HEW))
Box 727 Folder 19
(Subjects: Health, Education, and Welfare, Dept. of (HEW))
Box 727 Folder 20
Box 727 Folder 21
(Subjects: Alumni Club of Mexico; Alumni in Israel)
Box 727 Folder 22
Box 727 Folder 23
(Subjects: Amateur Athletic Competition)
Box 727 Folder 24
Box 727 Folder 25
Box 727 Folder 26
Box 727 Folder 27
Box 727 Folder 28
Box 727 Folder 29
Box 727 Folder 30
Box 727 Folder 31
(Subjects: Appointment of Officers; Anatomy, Department. of; "Applications of Psychological Knowledge to Conflict Resolution…"; Appointments; April in Paris Ball; Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith)
Box 728 Folder 1
Box 728 Folder 2
Box 728 Folder 3
(Subjects: Art Properties; Arab interests; Arden House; Armed Forces recruiting; Arrests of students; Arts, Committee on the; Army enrollments)
Box 728 Folder 4
Box 728 Folder 5
Box 728 Folder 6
Box 728 Folder 7
(Subjects: Asian American Field Study; Asian Studies; Astrophysics Laboratory; Associate degrees; Asian Youth Chamber of Columbia University)
Box 728 Folder 8
Box 728 Folder 9
Box 728 Folder 10 to 11
Box 728 Folder 12
Box 728 Folder 13
(Subjects: Avery Hall; Automobile; Award of Excellence; Audit Committee; Attica Brigade)
Box 728 Folder 14
Box 728 Folder 15
Box 728 Folder 16
Box 728 Folder 17
Box 728 Folder 18
(Subjects: Bankers' Luncheon)
Box 728 Folder 19
Box 728 Folder 20
(Subjects: Bard Hall; Bard Haven Apartments; Bard Haven Auditorium; Bard Haven drug bust; Bar and grill at 600 W. 116th Street)
Box 728 Folder 21
(Subjects: Senate Committee on Faculty Affairs, Chairman)
Box 728 Folder 22
Box 728 Folder 23
Box 728 Folder 24
Box 728 Folder 25
Box 728 Folder 26
Box 728 Folder 27
Box 728 Folder 28
Box 728 Folder 29
Box 729 Folder 1
(Subjects: Biological Sciences building; Bioengineering Institute)
Box 729 Folder 2
(Subjects: Pakistan, Prime Minister of)
Box 729 Folder 3
(Subjects: Black Faculty and Administrators of Columbia; Black Medical Research building; Black and Puerto Rican Student-Faculty Organization; Blank check purchasing plan; Blue Key Society)
Box 729 Folder 4
(Subjects: Treasurer; Gifts)
Box 729 Folder 5
(Subjects: Book Arts Press)
Box 729 Folder 6
Box 729 Folder 7
Box 729 Folder 8
(Subjects: Broadway Presbyterian Church; Bronfman Luncheon)
Box 729 Folder 9
Box 729 Folder 10
(Subjects: Burgess Hall; Bundy Funds; Bulk stationery price list)
Box 729 Folder 11
(Subjects: University Development and Alumni Relations; Director of Development and Alumni Relations)
Box 729 Folder 12
Box 729 Folder 13
Box 729 Folder 14
Box 729 Folder 15
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 729 Folder 16
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 729 Folder 17
(Subjects: Butler Library)
Box 729 Folder 18
Box 729 Folder 19
Box 729 Folder 20
Box 729 Folder 21
(Subjects: Thorndike, Robert L.)
Box 729 Folder 22
Box 729 Folder 23
Box 729 Folder 24
(Subjects: Campus landscaping; Campus profile; Campus lighting; Campus Crusade for Christ; Camp Columbia)
Box 729 Folder 25
(Subjects: Carleton Laboratory)
Box 729 Folder 26
Box 729 Folder 27
Box 729 Folder 28
(Subjects: Executive Vice President for Administration)
Box 729 Folder 29
(Subjects: Casa Hispanica; Catholic Residence Project; Catholic Student Organization)
Box 729 Folder 30
Box 729 Folder 31
Box 729 Folder 32
(Subjects: Central Files; Central Park; Certificate in Advanced Social Welfare)
Box 729 Folder 33
(Subjects: Center for Continuing Education; Center for Social Science; Center for Food Studies)
Box 730 Folder 1
(Subjects: Chemistry, Department of; Charters and Statutes; Charter Day; Chile, Academic Freedom in; China; Chinese scholars; Chinese Economics; Chinese scientists' visit to U.S.; Chemical Engineering and Applied Chemistry, Department of)
Box 730 Folder 2
Box 730 Folder 3
(Subjects: Christmas holiday)
Box 730 Folder 4
(Subjects: City hospitals; Civil Service Summer Intern Program)
Box 730 Folder 5
Box 730 Folder 6
Box 730 Folder 7
(Subjects: Club Van Cortlandt; Clinical Scholars Program)
Box 730 Folder 8
(Subjects: Coalition for the Washington Heights Community; Collective bargaining; Columbus Tapestry)
Box 730 Folder 9
(Subjects: College of Pharmacy; College graduates; College Facts Chart)
Box 730 Folder 10
(Subjects: Columbia Varsity Crew; Columbia University Summer Training Program for College Teachers; Columbia University Directory; Columbia University Club; Columbia University Community Chest; Columbia Undergraduate Fund Organization; Columbia Tenant's Union; Columbia-Barnard Course Guide; Columbia Ice Hockey Club; Columbia Community Against Tuition Hikes and Financial Aid Cuts; Columbia Administrative Staff Association)
Box 730 Folder 11
Box 730 Folder 12
(Subjects: Columbia Community Chest)
Box 730 Folder 13
Box 730 Folder 14
Box 730 Folder 15
Box 730 Folder 16
Box 730 Folder 17
Box 730 Folder 18
Box 730 Folder 19
(Subjects: Publications-Columbia University)
Box 730 Folder 20
Box 730 Folder 21
Box 730 Folder 22
Box 730 Folder 23
Box 730 Folder 24
(Subjects: Community Board #9; Commander of Manhattan North; Community organization support; Community relations; Computing activities; Community school districts; Computing Policy Committee)
Box 730 Folder 25
Box 730 Folder 26
Box 731 Folder 1
Box 731 Folder 2
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 731 Folder 3
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 731 Folder 4
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 731 Folder 5
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 731 Folder 6
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 731 Folder 7
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 731 Folder 8
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 731 Folder 9
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 731 Folder 10
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 731 Folder 11
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 731 Folder 12
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 731 Folder 13
Box 731 Folder 14
(Subjects: Committee on Whether the Campus Should be Moved; Committee to Study Alumni Communications; Committee on Graduate Residence; Committee Book)
Box 731 Folder 15
Box 731 Folder 16
Box 731 Folder 17
Box 731 Folder 18
Box 731 Folder 19
(Subjects: Continuing Education; Contract, Authority to; Consulate General of Israel; Construction budget; Concerts; Conferences; Conferral dates for doctoral degrees)
Box 731 Folder 20
(Subjects: Halperin, David A.)
Box 731 Folder 21
(Subjects: Halperin, David A.)
Box 731 Folder 22
(Subjects: Halperin, David A.)
Box 731 Folder 23
(Subjects: Copyrights)
Box 731 Folder 24
Box 731 Folder 25
(Subjects: Course Guide)
Box 731 Folder 26
(Subjects: Council of the Class of 1976 Council of Deans)
Box 731 Folder 27
(Subjects: Crew Advisory Committee; Cross River Road, Katonah)
Box 731 Folder 28
Box 731 Folder 29
Box 731 Folder 30
Box 731 Folder 31
Box 731 Folder 32
Box 731 Folder 33
(Subjects: Delegate system; Deferred tuition plan; Debate Council)
Box 731 Folder 34
(Subjects: Director, Institute on East Central Europe)
Box 731 Folder 35
Box 731 Folder 36
(Subjects: Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs; Provost)
Box 732 Folder 1
Box 732 Folder 2
(Subjects: Campus landscaping)
Box 732 Folder 3
Box 732 Folder 4
(Subjects: Dental education; Dental School aid; Detroit visit)
Box 732 Folder 5
Box 732 Folder 6
Box 732 Folder 7
Box 732 Folder 8
(Subjects: Department of the Air Force)
Box 732 Folder 9
Box 732 Folder 10
(Subjects: New Testament Missionary Fellowship)
Box 732 Folder 11
Box 732 Folder 12
Box 732 Folder 13
(Subjects: Ad Hoc Committee for Organizing)
Box 732 Folder 14
(Subjects: Doctoral Evaluation Project; Doctoral Council; Doctoral programs; Dormitory tour)
Box 732 Folder 15
Box 732 Folder 16
Box 732 Folder 17
(Subjects: Drug abuse; Drew (Charles) Pre-Medical Society)
Box 732 Folder 18
Box 732 Folder 19
(Subjects: East Asian Library; East Asian Languages and Cultures, Department of; East Hall)
Box 732 Folder 20
Box 732 Folder 21
(Subjects: Editorial Page Editors and Writers Seminar; Educational Psychology: Schooling Program)
Box 732 Folder 22
Box 732 Folder 23
Box 732 Folder 24
Box 732 Folder 25
(Subjects: Energy conservation program; Electric power; Employees' dependents; Employment policies; Energy crisis)
Box 732 Folder 26
Box 732 Folder 27 to 28
Box 732 Folder 29
Box 733 Folder 1
Box 733 Folder 2
(Subjects: Equal Employment Opportunity)
Box 733 Folder 3
(Subjects: Eviction; Ethnic Studies; Estate Planning Program)
Box 733 Folder 4
Box 733 Folder 5
(Subjects: Expenditures; Excess property)
Box 733 Folder 6
Box 733 Folder 7
Box 733 Folder 8
(Subjects: Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act; Fall Reunion Day)
Box 733 Folder 9
(Subjects: Faculty collective bargaining; Faculty children; Faculty Association; Faculty assignments; Faculty employment; Faculty Handbook; Faculty and Librarian Election on Unionization; Faculty housing; Faculty organization; Faculty salaries; Faculty Senate; Faculty Services Division; Faculty House)
Box 733 Folder 10
Box 733 Folder 11
Box 733 Folder 12
(Subjects: Festschrift (Smitty's); Ferris Booth Hall; Fencing Advisory Committee; Federal Relief Funds; Federal State and Municipal Relations; Federal Liason Representative; Federal Education Programs; Federal College Work-Study Program; Federal Aid; Federal student aid)
Box 733 Folder 13
Box 733 Folder 14
(Subjects: Film Division; Financial turnaround; Financial crisis; Financial Report)
Box 733 Folder 15
Box 733 Folder 16
Box 733 Folder 17
Box 733 Folder 18
Box 733 Folder 19
Box 733 Folder 20
(Subjects: 530 W. 112th Street; 532 W. 215th Street; Five year plans; 540 W. 112th Street; 549 W. 113th Street)
Box 733 Folder 21
Box 733 Folder 22
(Subjects: Football coach search; Football Advisory Committee)
Box 733 Folder 23
(Subjects: 432 South Road, Poughkeepsie; Forum (Columbia); Foreign Student Center; "Forces Shaping Modern Greece" Symposium)
Box 733 Folder 24
Box 733 Folder 25
(Subjects: Freshman orientation; Fraternities)
Box 733 Folder 26
(Subjects: Graduate School of Arts and Sciences – Dean)
Box 733 Folder 27
(Subjects: Furnald Undergraduate Dormitory Council; Fuel crisis; Fringe benefits; Furnald Hall)
Box 734 Folder 1
(Subjects: Gay People at Columbia)
Box 734 Folder 2
Box 734 Folder 3
Box 734 Folder 4
(Subjects: General Purpose Funds; Geography, Department of; Geology, Department of)
Box 734 Folder 5
Box 734 Folder 6
Box 734 Folder 7
Box 734 Folder 8
Box 734 Folder 9
Box 734 Folder 10
Box 734 Folder 11
Box 734 Folder 12
Box 734 Folder 13
(Subjects: Glee Club)
Box 734 Folder 14
(Subjects: Goals for Student Affairs)
Box 734 Folder 15
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 734 Folder 16
(Subjects: Governmental relations; Governmental Affairs)
Box 734 Folder 17
(Subjects: Professor of Anthropology)
Box 734 Folder 18
(Subjects: Graduate Student Representative Council)
Box 734 Folder 19
Box 734 Folder 20
(Subjects: Great Teacher Awards; Greenhouse Nursery School)
Box 734 Folder 21
(Subjects: Group of Senior Students; Guide for Foreign Visitors; Guaranteed student loan programs; Guard services)
Box 734 Folder 22
Box 734 Folder 23
Box 734 Folder 24
Box 734 Folder 25
Box 734 Folder 26
(Subjects: Controller)
Box 734 Folder 27
Box 734 Folder 28
Box 735 Folder 1
Box 735 Folder 2
(Subjects: Professor of Economics)
Box 735 Folder 3
Box 735 Folder 4
Box 735 Folder 5
Box 735 Folder 6
(Subjects: Assistant Vice President for Public Information)
Box 735 Folder 7
(Subjects: Health and Hospitals Corporation; Heights-Inwood; Health Service)
Box 735 Folder 8
Box 735 Folder 9
Box 735 Folder 10
Box 735 Folder 11
Box 735 Folder 12
Box 735 Folder 13
Box 735 Folder 14
Box 735 Folder 15
Box 735 Folder 16
(Subjects: HEOP (Higher Education Opportunity Program))
Box 735 Folder 17
(Subjects: Tennis Center)
Box 735 Folder 18
(Subjects: Engineering and Applied Science, School of, Dean)
Box 735 Folder 19
(Subjects: Goitein, S.D.)
Box 735 Folder 20
(Subjects: Higher Education Opportunity Program; Hiring and Promotional Information, Disclosure of; History, Department of)
Box 735 Folder 21
Box 735 Folder 22
(Subjects: Professor Emeritus of Art History)
Box 735 Folder 23
(Subjects: Hockey Club)
Box 735 Folder 24
(Subjects: Homecoming)
Box 735 Folder 25
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 735 Folder 26
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 736 Folder 1
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 736 Folder 2
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 736 Folder 3
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 736 Folder 4
(Subjects: Housing; Hospital audit responses; Housing Revolving Loan Fund)
Box 736 Folder 5
(Subjects: Eagle, Harry; Dulbecco, Renato; Puck, Theodore T.)
Box 736 Folder 6
(Subjects: Hudson Hall; Humanities Fund)
Box 736 Folder 7
(Subjects: Ice Hockey Club)
Box 736 Folder 8
(Subjects: Instructional Appointments for Officers; Investor Responsibility Research Center; Inventory of Facilities Needs; Information Services; Indirect Cost and Fringe Benefit Rates; Independence Day Holiday; Indemnification Liability Insurance; Income and expense statement; Inaugural practices)
Box 736 Folder 9
Box 736 Folder 10
Box 736 Folder 11
Box 736 Folder 12
(Subjects: Inter-university salary comparison; Inter-Schools and Others; Interchurch Center; Interdisciplinary or Transdisciplinary Programs on Religion)
Box 736 Folder 13
Box 736 Folder 14
Box 736 Folder 15
Box 736 Folder 16
Box 736 Folder 17
Box 736 Folder 18
(Subjects: Iran; Iran Center; Irish Cultural Society; Israel)
Box 736 Folder 19
Box 736 Folder 20
Box 736 Folder 21
Box 736 Folder 22
(Subjects: Japan; Jay (John) Hall; J.D. Degree)
Box 737 Folder 1
(Subjects: Jewish Theological Seminary; Jewish Community Planning and Organization Program)
Box 737 Folder 2
(Subjects: Secretary, Office of; Commencement Day Luncheon)
Box 737 Folder 3
Box 737 Folder 4
(Subjects: Johnson (Samuel) Bookplate; Joint Administrative Board; Joint Administrative Committee (Columbia-Barnard); Joint Committee on Disciplinary Affairs)
Box 737 Folder 5
Box 737 Folder 6
(Subjects: Clinical Scholars Program)
Box 737 Folder 7
Box 737 Folder 8
(Subjects: Jury Duty; Junior Phi Beta Kappa; Junior Interborough Interracial Crusaders; Judeans; Jordanian Army Officers Visit)
Box 737 Folder 9
Box 737 Folder 10
Box 737 Folder 11
(Subjects: Proctor)
Box 737 Folder 12
(Subjects: Proctor)
Box 737 Folder 13
Box 737 Folder 14
Box 737 Folder 15
Box 737 Folder 16
(Subjects: King (Martin Luther, Jr.) Birthday)
Box 737 Folder 17
Box 737 Folder 18
Box 737 Folder 19
Box 737 Folder 20
Box 737 Folder 21
Box 737 Folder 22
(Subjects: Honorary degrees; Professor of Philosophy)
Box 737 Folder 23
(Subjects: Kuwait; Lamont Sanctuary)
Box 737 Folder 24
(Subjects: Wen, Oliver)
Box 737 Folder 25
(Subjects: Renovations)
Box 737 Folder 26
(Subjects: Law Building; "Law, Order, and Liberty" Seminar; Law students)
Box 737 Folder 27
Box 737 Folder 28
(Subjects: Legislative representatives; Legal Services; Lectureships)
Box 738 Folder 1
Box 738 Folder 2
Box 738 Folder 3
(Subjects: Lewisohn Hall)
Box 738 Folder 4
(Subjects: Library Service, School of; Library Development Center)
Box 738 Folder 5
Box 738 Folder 6
(Subjects: Libraries Citation for Distinguished Service)
Box 738 Folder 7
Box 738 Folder 8
(Subjects: Listening Post; Living trusts; Litigation)
Box 738 Folder 9
(Subjects: Local 241)
Box 738 Folder 10
Box 738 Folder 11
Box 738 Folder 12
Box 738 Folder 13
Box 738 Folder 14
(Subjects: Low Library Windows; Low Library Renovations)
Box 738 Folder 15
Box 738 Folder 16
Box 738 Folder 17
Box 738 Folder 18
Box 738 Folder 19
Box 738 Folder 20
Box 738 Folder 21
Box 738 Folder 22
Box 738 Folder 23
Box 738 Folder 24
Box 738 Folder 25
Box 738 Folder 26
Box 738 Folder 27
Box 738 Folder 28
Box 738 Folder 29
Box 738 Folder 30
Box 738 Folder 31
Box 738 Folder 32
Box 738 Folder 33
Box 738 Folder 34
Box 739 Folder 1
Box 739 Folder 2
(Subjects: McVickar Hall)
Box 739 Folder 3
Box 739 Folder 4
(Subjects: Mail code; Maison Francaise)
Box 739 Folder 5
(Subjects: Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs)
Box 739 Folder 6
(Subjects: Manhattanville College; "Managing the Socially Responsible Corporation" Seminar; Manhattanville Community Centers, Inc.)
Box 739 Folder 7
Box 739 Folder 8
Box 739 Folder 9
(Subjects: Vice President for Health Sciences)
Box 739 Folder 10
(Subjects: Master's Degree Program for Executives; Master of Science; Maxwell Hall; Mathews Lectures; Mathematical Social Science Board; Mathematical Methods and Operations Research; Master Plan Amendment)
Box 739 Folder 11
Box 739 Folder 12
(Subjects: Mental Health; Meeting in Earl Hall; Men's Faculty Club; Medical Center; Medical appointments)
Box 739 Folder 13
Box 739 Folder 14
Box 739 Folder 15
Box 739 Folder 16
Box 739 Folder 17
(Subjects: Life Sciences Building)
Box 739 Folder 18
(Subjects: Minority student problems; Middle Eastern Studies Grant; Mileage reimbursement)
Box 739 Folder 19
Box 739 Folder 20
Box 739 Folder 21
(Subjects: Morocco)
Box 739 Folder 22
(Subjects: Morningside Junior Library, Inc.; Morningside Heights Institutions; Morningside Renewal Council; Morningside Village Community Center)
Box 739 Folder 23
Box 739 Folder 24
Box 739 Folder 25
Box 739 Folder 26
(Subjects: Music, Department of)
Box 739 Folder 27
(Subjects: Columbia Scholastic Press Association)
Box 739 Folder 28
(Subjects: Nahas Report on Marijuana; Named chairs; Named lectureships)
Box 739 Folder 29
Box 739 Folder 30
(Subjects: National College "Pitch-In" Week)
Box 740 Folder 1
(Subjects: National Magazine Awards)
Box 740 Folder 2
Box 740 Folder 3
Box 740 Folder 4
Box 740 Folder 5
Box 740 Folder 6
Box 740 Folder 7
(Subjects: Necrology; "Nervous Breakdown of the First Amendment" Lecture; Neurology, Department of; Neuropathology, Professor of; Nevis Laboratories; New Testament Missionary Fellowship)
Box 740 Folder 8
(Subjects: New York City Urban Corps)
Box 740 Folder 9
Box 740 Folder 10
Box 740 Folder 11
(Subjects: Nominations Committee; North campus science library)
Box 740 Folder 12
(Subjects: Nuremburg Tribunal; Not-for-Profit Corporation Law)
Box 740 Folder 13
(Subjects: Maxwell Hall)
Box 740 Folder 14
Box 740 Folder 15
(Subjects: 114th Street; 111th Street; 130 Morningside Drive; 100 Morningside Drive; 101-3 Park Avenue; On-campus recruiting program; Olive Bridge Fund; Office space; Officers of Instruction and Research; Office of the Secretary; Office of University Placement and Career Services; Office of Student Employment; Office of Research Services; Office of Public Information; Ocean Resources Management Program)
Box 740 Folder 16
(Subjects: Pakistan; Overdrafts; Oral History Research Office; Optometry)
Box 740 Folder 17
(Subjects: Parking system; Parker School)
Box 740 Folder 18
(Subjects: "Patterns for Lifelong Learning"; Patent policy; Payroll)
Box 740 Folder 19
(Subjects: Director of Athletics)
Box 740 Folder 20
Box 740 Folder 21
(Subjects: Petits Chanteurs d'Estaimpuis)
Box 740 Folder 22
(Subjects: Trustees, Chairman of)
Box 740 Folder 23
(Subjects: Pharmacy site; Phase IV restrictions; Phi Beta Kappa; Philosophy, Faculty of; Physical Therapy Program; Physics, Department of)
Box 740 Folder 24 to 25
Box 740 Folder 26
(Subjects: Paul, Alvin R.)
Box 740 Folder 27
(Subjects: Paul, Alvin R.)
Box 740 Folder 28
Box 741 Folder 1 to 2
Box 741 Folder 3
Box 741 Folder 4
(Subjects: Planning Board 12; Plaques)
Box 741 Folder 5
(Subjects: Dean, School of International Affairs)
Box 741 Folder 6 to 7
Box 741 Folder 8
(Subjects: Police Department; Political Science, Department of)
Box 741 Folder 9
Box 741 Folder 10
(Subjects: Post-Doctoral Fellows in the Medical Faculty; Position)
Box 741 Folder 11
(Subjects: Dean, Columbia College)
Box 741 Folder 12
(Subjects: "Private Rights and the Public Good" Conference)
Box 741 Folder 13
Box 741 Folder 14
Box 741 Folder 15
Box 741 Folder 16
Box 741 Folder 17
(Subjects: Governmental relations)
Box 741 Folder 18
(Subjects: Psychology, Department of; Psychiatric Institute; Property section; Promotional opportunity; Program registration; Psychoanalytic Clinic for Training and Research)
Box 741 Folder 19
Box 741 Folder 20
Box 741 Folder 21
Box 741 Folder 22
Box 741 Folder 23
Box 741 Folder 24
Box 741 Folder 25
(Subjects: Public Affairs, Office of; Public funds; Public Health, School of; Puerto Rico; Pulitzer Prizes; Public Information; Pure Science, Faculty of; Puerto Rican/Latin Center)
Box 741 Folder 26
(Subjects: Press releases)
Box 741 Folder 27
(Subjects: Press releases)
Box 741 Folder 28
(Subjects: Press releases)
Box 741 Folder 29
(Subjects: Press releases)
Box 741 Folder 30
(Subjects: Press releases)
Box 742 Folder 1
(Subjects: Press releases)
Box 742 Folder 2
(Subjects: Press releases)
Box 742 Folder 3
Box 742 Folder 4
Box 742 Folder 5
Box 742 Folder 6
Box 742 Folder 7
(Subjects: Radio telescope)
Box 742 Folder 8
(Subjects: Rustin, Bayard)
Box 742 Folder 9
Box 742 Folder 10
(Subjects: Redistricting; Rehabilitation Medicine, Department of; Religious holidays; Rembrandt painting)
Box 742 Folder 11
Box 742 Folder 12
Box 742 Folder 13
(Subjects: Hurd, Charles P.)
Box 742 Folder 14 to 15
Box 742 Folder 16
(Subjects: Residence Halls; Resignations; Retired and retirements; Rescinding of J.D. degree)
Box 742 Folder 17 to 18
Box 742 Folder 19
(Subjects: National Development Board)
Box 742 Folder 20
(Subjects: National Development Board)
Box 742 Folder 21
(Subjects: National Development Board)
Box 742 Folder 22
Box 742 Folder 23
(Subjects: Right to Know laws; Right to Read Program; Riverside Drive Tenants Association)
Box 743 Folder 1
Box 743 Folder 2
Box 743 Folder 3
Box 743 Folder 4
Box 743 Folder 5
Box 743 Folder 6
Box 743 Folder 7
(Subjects: ROTC; Rowing Hall of Fame)
Box 743 Folder 8
Box 743 Folder 9
(Subjects: Russell (Agnes) School; Russian and East European History, University Committee on the Archive of)
Box 743 Folder 10
Box 743 Folder 11
Box 743 Folder 12
(Subjects: Sailing Club)
Box 743 Folder 13
Box 743 Folder 14
(Subjects: Presidential Citation for Distinction)
Box 743 Folder 15
Box 743 Folder 16
(Subjects: Samuels (Jack Harris) Library; Sale of term papers; Salaries)
Box 743 Folder 17
Box 743 Folder 18
Box 743 Folder 19
(Subjects: Schermerhorn Hall; Schinasi Residence)
Box 743 Folder 20
(Subjects: School Study Report; Schulyer Hall)
Box 743 Folder 21
(Subjects: Scientists and Engineers for Social and Political Action; Science Honors Program)
Box 743 Folder 22
Box 743 Folder 23
(Subjects: New York City Rand Institute)
Box 743 Folder 24
Box 743 Folder 25
(Subjects: Search committees; Sexual Experience and Homophobia, Survey on; Sex discrimination; Service charge legislation; Seminar for Sports Editors; Seminar on Irish Studies; Security Select Committee on Higher Education)
Box 743 Folder 26
Box 743 Folder 27
Box 743 Folder 28
(Subjects: Sigma Delta Chi; Sigma Nu; Sigma Xi; Silver (Gabriel) Memorial Lecture)
Box 743 Folder 29
(Subjects: 616 West 114th Street; Six presidents, meeting with)
Box 743 Folder 30
Box 743 Folder 31
(Subjects: Smoking)
Box 743 Folder 32
(Subjects: Solomon, Joseph; Soccer Advisory Committee; South Field)
Box 743 Folder 33 to 34
Box 744 Folder 1
(Subjects: Society of Professional Journalists; Society of Older Graduates)
Box 744 Folder 2
Box 744 Folder 3
Box 744 Folder 4
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 744 Folder 5
(Subjects: Dean, School of Law)
Box 744 Folder 6
(Subjects: Special Committee of the Trustees; Special Summer Task Force; Squatters)
Box 744 Folder 7
Box 744 Folder 8
Box 744 Folder 9
Box 744 Folder 10
Box 744 Folder 11
Box 744 Folder 12
(Subjects: Standing committees)
Box 744 Folder 13
Box 744 Folder 14
Box 744 Folder 15
Box 744 Folder 16
Box 744 Folder 17
Box 744 Folder 18
Box 744 Folder 19
(Subjects: Stetten (Alice) Student Lounge)
Box 744 Folder 20
(Subjects: Professor of Musicology)
Box 744 Folder 21
Box 744 Folder 22
(Subjects: Subcommittee on Retired Faculty; Summer-only M.A. degree; Summer Powers; Summer gate closing schedule)
Box 744 Folder 23
(Subjects: Student Trustees; Student organizations; Student Mental Health Consultants; Student Information Form; Student Hostel; Student Handbook; Student enrollment; Student directory; Student Conference on United States Affairs; Student Association of the School of International Affairs; Student Trustees Questionnaire; Student Affairs; Student aid; Student advising; Student housing; Student loans; Students for "Action")
Box 744 Folder 24
Box 744 Folder 25
(Subjects: Surplus sale; Swimming Advisory Committee; Symposium on Presidential Power)
Box 744 Folder 26
(Subjects: TAP (Tuition Assistance Program); Tax deductibility; Task Force on Columbia's International Activities)
Box 744 Folder 27
(Subjects: College of Physicians and Surgeons - Acting Dean)
Box 744 Folder 28
(Subjects: Theater Arts Program; Tennis Advisory Committee; Term papers; Thacher, Proffitt, and Wood; Thanatology, Foundation of)
Box 745 Folder 1
Box 745 Folder 2
(Subjects: 351 Riverside Drive (Schinasi Residence); Thorndike Hall)
Box 745 Folder 3
(Subjects: Title IX Regulations)
Box 745 Folder 4
(Subjects: Track Advisory Committee; Transit strike; Trial publicity; Trip to Michigan)
Box 745 Folder 5
Box 745 Folder 6
Box 745 Folder 7
Box 745 Folder 8
[Restricted until 2025]
Box 745 Folder 9
[Restricted until 2025]
Box 745 Folder 10
[Restricted until 2025]
Box 745 Folder 11
[Restricted until 2025]
Box 745 Folder 12
[Restricted until 2025]
Box 745 Folder 13
[Restricted until 2025]
Box 745 Folder 14
[Restricted until 2025]
Box 745 Folder 15 to 16
[Restricted until 2025]
Box 745 Folder 17
[Restricted until 2025]
Box 745 Folder 18
[Restricted until 2025]
Box 745 Folder 19
[Restricted until 2025]
Box 745 Folder 20
[Restricted until 2025]
Box 745 Folder 21
[Restricted until 2025]
Box 746 Folder 1
(Subjects: Turkish Studies, Center for; Uniform Management of Institutional Funds Act; Tug-of-War; Twenty-Five Year Club; Universities ratings; Upward Bound Program)
Box 746 Folder 2
(Subjects: Tuition exemption)
Box 746 Folder 3
(Subjects: Union Theological Seminary; Unionization)
Box 746 Folder 4
Box 746 Folder 5
Box 746 Folder 6
(Subjects: Neusner, Jacob)
Box 746 Folder 7
Box 746 Folder 8
Box 746 Folder 9
(Subjects: University Counsel; University Board of Inquiry)
Box 746 Folder 10
(Subjects: University Lecture; University gym; University garage; University facilities, use of)
Box 746 Folder 11
(Subjects: University Study Group; University Resources Planning Conference; University paper, use of; University Resident Theater Association)
Box 746 Folder 12
Box 746 Folder 13
Box 746 Folder 14
Box 746 Folder 15
Box 746 Folder 16
Box 746 Folder 17
Box 746 Folder 18
Box 746 Folder 19
Box 746 Folder 20
Box 746 Folder 21
(Subjects: Urban Corps Program; Uris Hall; Uris Luncheon)
Box 746 Folder 22
(Subjects: Special Summer Task Force)
Box 746 Folder 23
Box 746 Folder 24
Box 746 Folder 25
Box 746 Folder 26
(Subjects: Vega II, Motor yacht)
Box 746 Folder 27
Box 746 Folder 28
Box 746 Folder 29
(Subjects: Virginia Private School Case)
Box 746 Folder 30
Box 747 Folder 1
Box 747 Folder 2
Box 747 Folder 3
Box 747 Folder 4
Box 747 Folder 5
(Subjects: West Harlem Community Organization)
Box 747 Folder 6
Box 747 Folder 7
(Subjects: White House Fellowships)
Box 747 Folder 8
(Subjects: Thacher, Proffitt, and Wood)
Box 747 Folder 9
Box 747 Folder 10
Box 747 Folder 11
Box 747 Folder 12
Box 747 Folder 13
(Subjects: Pavry, Jal)
Box 747 Folder 14
(Subjects: Pavry, Jal)
Box 747 Folder 15
(Subjects: World of Learning; Workmen's compensation; Work-Study; Woodbridge Hall)
Box 747 Folder 16
(Subjects: Wrestling Advisory Committee)
Box 747 Folder 17
Box 747 Folder 18
This series of Central Files is the continuation of records found in Series I covering the year July 1, 1974 to June 30, 1975. Individually named and general alphabetical files are arranged in one alphabetical sequence. Important subjects addressed in the general alphabetical files are noted parenthetically.
Box 747 Folder 19
Box 747 Folder 20
(Subjects: Air Force; Accreditation, American Library Association Committee on; Acknowledgement letters; Ad Hoc Committee on Salary; Administrative expenses; Administrative affairs; Admissions; Adult Education; African Writing Conference; Academic Affairs)
Box 747 Folder 21
(Subjects: Branson Report)
Box 747 Folder 22
Box 747 Folder 23
Box 747 Folder 24
Box 747 Folder 25
(Subjects: Alumni Affairs and Development, Office of; Alumni Conference; Alumni Medals; Alumni Relations, Office of; Alumni Trustees)
Box 747 Folder 26
Box 747 Folder 27
(Subjects: Amended Rules of University Conduct)
Box 747 Folder 28
(Subjects: American Ariosto Centennial Celebration; American Association of University Women)
Box 748 Folder 1
(Subjects: American Indian, Museum of and Columbia Program in Indian Studies)
Box 748 Folder 2
(Subjects: American Language Program)
Box 748 Folder 3
Box 748 Folder 4
Box 748 Folder 5
(Subjects: Andora Apartments (Dallas, Texas); Anesthesiology, Department of; Anthropology, Department of; Apartments in University-owned Buildings; Appointment Declined (William R. Markesbery); Appointed Staff, Appeal Procedure for; April in Paris Ball)
Box 748 Folder 6
(Subjects: Archives; Armstrong (Edwin H.) Field Laboratory; Assembly Bill 7626 Assembly Bill 998; Army, Secretary of the; Associate Resident University Counsel; Arden House)
Box 748 Folder 7
Box 748 Folder 8
(Subjects: Arts Drop-In; Artificial Dwelling Project; Art History Student Union Lecture Series; Art Properties; Art History and Archaeology, Department of)
Box 748 Folder 9
(Subjects: Arts Drop-In)
Box 748 Folder 10
Box 748 Folder 11
Box 748 Folder 12
(Subjects: Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women)
Box 748 Folder 13
Box 748 Folder 14
Box 748 Folder 15
Box 748 Folder 16
Box 748 Folder 17
Box 748 Folder 18
(Subjects: Audio-visual Materials; Auto Pollution; "The Automobile and the Regulation of its Impact on the Environment" Report)
Box 748 Folder 19
Box 748 Folder 20
Box 748 Folder 21
(Subjects: Bachelor of Planning Degree)
Box 748 Folder 22
Box 748 Folder 23
(Subjects: Bard Hall; Bard Haven Apartments)
Box 748 Folder 24 to 25
Box 748 Folder 26
Box 749 Folder 1
Box 749 Folder 2
Box 749 Folder 3
(Subjects: Vice President for Fiscal Management)
Box 749 Folder 4
Box 749 Folder 5
Box 749 Folder 6
(Subjects: Beta Theta Pi; Berol Rare Book Library)
Box 749 Folder 7
Box 749 Folder 8
(Subjects: Big Six Group (Six Universities Group); Biological Sciences, Department of; Biometrics Research)
Box 749 Folder 9
(Subjects: President's Committee on Bioengineering)
Box 749 Folder 10
(Subjects: President's Committee on Bioengineering)
Box 749 Folder 11
(Subjects: Black and Puerto Rican Student-Faculty Organization; Blue Key Society; Blue Shield Better Benefits Contracts)
Box 749 Folder 12
(Subjects: Treasurer; Gifts)
Box 749 Folder 13
(Subjects: Board of Managers-Ferris Booth Hall)
Box 749 Folder 14
Box 749 Folder 15
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 749 Folder 16
Box 749 Folder 17
Box 749 Folder 18
Box 749 Folder 19
Box 749 Folder 20
(Subjects: Bulletins; Bulk stationery price list; Buckley Amendment (Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act))
Box 749 Folder 21
(Subjects: University Development and Alumni Relations)
Box 749 Folder 22 to 23
Box 749 Folder 24
Box 749 Folder 25 to 26
Box 749 Folder 27
(Subjects: Burden Room)
Box 749 Folder 28
Box 749 Folder 29
Box 749 Folder 30
(Subjects: Butler Library; By-laws of the Trustees, Amendments to)
Box 749 Folder 31
Box 750 Folder 1
(Subjects: Sartre, Jean Paul; Gewirth, Allan)
Box 750 Folder 2
(Subjects: Calendar of Events)
Box 750 Folder 3
Box 750 Folder 4
(Subjects: Camp Columbia; Campus Development, Committee on; Capital Campaign; Capital Budget; Capital Expenditures; Capital Gifts Program)
Box 750 Folder 5
Box 750 Folder 6
(Subjects: CARP (Collegiate Association for the Research of Principles)
Box 750 Folder 7
Box 750 Folder 8
Box 750 Folder 9
Box 750 Folder 10
Box 750 Folder 11
(Subjects: Discrimination based on sex)
Box 750 Folder 12
(Subjects: Executive Vice President for Administration)
Box 750 Folder 13
(Subjects: Casa Hispanica)
Box 750 Folder 14
Box 750 Folder 15
Box 750 Folder 16
(Subjects: Central Park; Cee Gee Garage)
Box 750 Folder 17
(Subjects: Media Resource Center)
Box 750 Folder 18
(Subjects: Chandler Hall)
Box 750 Folder 19
Box 750 Folder 20
(Subjects: Chinese Studies; Chinese New Year's Eve Reception; Children's Mansion; Chemistry, Department of; Children's Free School)
Box 750 Folder 21
(Subjects: Christmas holiday)
Box 750 Folder 22
Box 750 Folder 23
(Subjects: Coalition of Private University Students)
Box 750 Folder 24
(Subjects: College Poetry Prize)
Box 750 Folder 25
(Subjects: What's On At Columbia?; Columbia Administrative Staff Association; Columbia-Barnard Agreement; Columbia-Barnard Course Guide; Columbia-Barnard Orientation; Columbia-Community Athletic Field; Columbia Labor Committee; Columbia Scholastic Press Association; Columbia Spectator; Columbia Tenant's Union; Columbia West: 1975 and Beyond Program; Columbia Staff Bulletin)
Box 750 Folder 26
Box 751 Folder 1
(Subjects: Columbia Community Chest)
Box 751 Folder 2
Box 751 Folder 3 to 4
Box 751 Folder 5
Box 751 Folder 6
Box 751 Folder 7
Box 751 Folder 8
Box 751 Folder 9
(Subjects: Publications-Columbia University)
Box 751 Folder 10
(Subjects: Publications-Columbia University)
Box 751 Folder 11
Box 751 Folder 12
(Subjects: Community Board #12; Computing Policy Committee; Community Chest; Community Use of Gym; Community relations; Community Educational Exchange Program (CEEP); Community Affairs Committee)
Box 751 Folder 13
Box 751 Folder 14
Box 751 Folder 15
Box 751 Folder 16
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 751 Folder 17
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 751 Folder 18
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 751 Folder 19
(Subjects: Honorary degrees; University Medal for Excellence; Barnard Medal for Meritorious Service to Science)
Box 751 Folder 20
(Subjects: Honorary degrees; University Medal for Excellence)
Box 751 Folder 21
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 751 Folder 22
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 751 Folder 23
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 751 Folder 24
(Subjects: Honorary degrees)
Box 751 Folder 25
(Subjects: Commission on the Status of Women)
Box 751 Folder 26
Box 751 Folder 27
Box 751 Folder 28
Box 751 Folder 29
Box 751 Folder 30
(Subjects: Committee Preferences, List of; Committee on Graduate and Professional Education; Committee to Study the Organization of the Arts and Sciences)
Box 751 Folder 31
(Subjects: Computer Based Interactive Guidance System, Development of; Computer Center; Computing Policy Committee)
Box 751 Folder 32
(Subjects: Construction; Construction Management Agreement; Continuing Education; Construction budget)
Box 751 Folder 33 to 34
Box 752 Folder 1
Box 752 Folder 2 to 4
(Subjects: Halperin, David A.)
Box 752 Folder 5
(Subjects: Appointments; Professors)
Box 752 Folder 6
(Subjects: Copley - Myles Cooper portrait; Coordinating Council for Child Development)
Box 752 Folder 7
(Subjects: Vice President for Fiscal Management)
Box 752 Folder 8
(Subjects: Cordier (Andrew W.) papers; Cornell University; Corporate Archives; Correspondents Fund)
Box 752 Folder 9
(Subjects: Cost transfers)
Box 752 Folder 10
(Subjects: Council of Deans)
Box 752 Folder 11
Box 752 Folder 12
(Subjects: Crown Zellerbach Foundation; Cross-National Studies of Social Service Systems)
Box 752 Folder 13
Box 752 Folder 14
(Subjects: The Westmoreland Davis Memorial Foundation)
Box 752 Folder 15
Box 752 Folder 16
(Subjects: Dean's Day; Debate Council)
Box 752 Folder 17
Box 752 Folder 18
(Subjects: Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs; Provost)
Box 752 Folder 19
(Subjects: Frances Delafield Hospital; Democratic National Convention, 1976)
Box 752 Folder 20
Box 752 Folder 21
(Subjects: Faculty housing)
Box 752 Folder 22
(Subjects: Dental Education in NY State; Deutsches Haus; Department of the Air Force)
Box 752 Folder 23
Box 752 Folder 24
Box 752 Folder 25
Box 752 Folder 26
(Subjects: Ditson (Alice M.) Fund)
Box 753 Folder 1
(Subjects: District 65 Organizing Committee)
Box 753 Folder 2
(Subjects: Doctoral programs; Doctoral Programs, review of; Doctoral Evaluation Project)
Box 753 Folder 3
Box 753 Folder 4
Box 753 Folder 5
Box 753 Folder 6
Box 753 Folder 7
(Subjects: DuPont grants; Charles Drew Premedical Society)
Box 753 Folder 8
Box 753 Folder 9
(Subjects: East Asian Languages and Cultures, Department of; East Hall; East Asian Fund Drive)
Box 753 Folder 10
Box 753 Folder 11
Box 753 Folder 12
(Subjects: Education Amendments; Education law)
Box 753 Folder 13
(Subjects: Academic freedom)
Box 753 Folder 14
(Subjects: Employee Relations; Electrical Engineering and Computer Science; Employment of Handicapped Persons)
Box 753 Folder 15
Box 753 Folder 16
(Subjects: English program evaluation committee; English and Comparative Literature, Department of; Energy conservation program; Endowments)
Box 753 Folder 17
Box 753 Folder 18
Box 753 Folder 19
Box 753 Folder 20
(Subjects: Equal Opportunity Day Dinner)
Box 753 Folder 21
(Subjects: Equal Employment Opportunity Commission; Equal Employment Compliance Committee)
Box 753 Folder 22
Box 753 Folder 23
(Subjects: Exchanges with Soviet Union; Executive Program in Business Administration; Experimental Winter Session; Exxon Corporation)
Box 753 Folder 24
Box 753 Folder 25
(Subjects: Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act)
Box 753 Folder 26
(Subjects: Faculty assignments; Faculty Association; Faculty Handbook; Faculty salaries; Faculty House)
Box 753 Folder 27
Box 753 Folder 28
Box 754 Folder 1
Box 754 Folder 2
(Subjects: Federal Aid; Schedule of fees; Federal Regulations of Universities)
Box 754 Folder 3
(Subjects: Financial Report; Financial Planning)
Box 754 Folder 4
Box 754 Folder 5
Box 754 Folder 6
Box 754 Folder 7
Box 754 Folder 8
Box 754 Folder 9
Box 754 Folder 10
Box 754 Folder 11
(Subjects: 560 Riverside Drive)
Box 754 Folder 12
Box 754 Folder 13
(Subjects: Forum on the Status of Women; George Barry Ford Hall)
Box 754 Folder 14
(Subjects: Ford Urban Chairs)
Box 754 Folder 15
Box 754 Folder 16
Box 754 Folder 17
Box 754 Folder 18
Box 754 Folder 19
(Subjects: Columbia-Barnard Orientation; Freedom of Information Laws)
Box 754 Folder 20
(Subjects: Future of International Studies in the U.S.; Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education; Fund for the City of New York)
Box 754 Folder 21
(Subjects: Gay People at Columbia)
Box 754 Folder 22
(Subjects: Center for Food Studies; General income allocation; Geological Mineral Collection)
Box 754 Folder 23
Box 754 Folder 24
(Subjects: School of General Studies) January 1974-June 1975
Box 754 Folder 25
(Subjects: School of General Studies)
Box 754 Folder 26
(Subjects: School of General Studies; Scholarships)
Box 754 Folder 27
Box 754 Folder 28
Box 755 Folder 1
Box 755 Folder 2
Box 755 Folder 3
(Subjects: Racism)
Box 755 Folder 4
Box 755 Folder 5
(Subjects: Lecture-Seminar Program on Science and Public Affairs; Columbia College Fund)
Box 755 Folder 6
(Subjects: Governor's Committee on Scholastic Achievement)
Box 755 Folder 7
(Subjects: Committee on Graduate Residence; "Graffiti on the Ivy Wall"; Van Doren (Mark) Award; Graham Memorial Lecture)
Box 755 Folder 8
Box 755 Folder 9
(Subjects: Graduate Biomedical Sciences Advisory Committee)
Box 755 Folder 10
(Subjects: Guggenheim Fellowships; Gymnasium)
Box 755 Folder 11
(Subjects: Library acquisitions; Dodge Center; Hamilton (Alexander) Award)
Box 755 Folder 12
(Subjects: Harvard Institute for Educational Management; Arden House; Harlem Hospital)
Box 755 Folder 13
Box 755 Folder 14
Box 755 Folder 15
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Box 755 Folder 17
(Subjects: Faculty Handbook)
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Box 755 Folder 27
(Subjects: General Studies Challenge gift)
Box 755 Folder 28
(Subjects: History, Department of; Highering practices; Higher Education General Information Survey)
Box 756 Folder 1
(Subjects: Hoey (James J. and Jane) Award; Holiday schedule; Holocaust)
Box 756 Folder 2
Box 756 Folder 3
Box 756 Folder 4
Box 756 Folder 5
Box 756 Folder 6
Box 756 Folder 7
(Subjects: Affiliated Business Fellows Gift; Columbia College Fund; Faculty housing)
Box 756 Folder 8
Box 756 Folder 9
(Subjects: Protection of human subjects; Humanities Fund)
Box 756 Folder 10
(Subjects: Hundred Year Association; Air Force)
Box 756 Folder 11
(Subjects: Institutional Committee on Human Investigation; Identification Card; Indirect Cost Allowance; India Festival; Tennis Courts)
Box 756 Folder 12
Box 756 Folder 13
(Subjects: Latin American Studies Institute; Harvard Institute for Educational Management)
Box 756 Folder 14
(Subjects: Latin American Studies Institute; Russian Institute; Southern Asian Institute; Middle East Institute; Western Europe Institute; African Studies Institute; East Central Europe Institute; East Asian Institute)
Box 756 Folder 15
(Subjects: East Asian Institute; African Studies; War and Peace Studies Institute; Russian Institute; Middle East Institute; Latin American Studies Institute; East Central Europe Institute; Southern Asian Institute; Western Europe Institute)
Box 756 Folder 16
(Subjects: Inter-Schools and Others)
Box 756 Folder 17
(Subjects: International Association of Universities; IBM Corporation)
Box 756 Folder 18
Box 756 Folder 19
Box 756 Folder 20
Box 756 Folder 21
(Subjects: Internal Revenue Service Guidelines for Private Schools
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Box 756 Folder 23
Box 756 Folder 24
Box 756 Folder 25
Box 756 Folder 26
Box 757 Folder 1
Box 757 Folder 2
Box 757 Folder 3
Box 757 Folder 4
(Subjects: Palestine Liberation Organization)
Box 757 Folder 5
Box 757 Folder 6
Box 757 Folder 7
(Subjects: Japan International Christian University Foundation)
Box 757 Folder 8
Box 757 Folder 9
Box 757 Folder 10
(Subjects: Robert Wood Johnson Jr. Charitable Trust; Robert Wood Johnson Foundation; Joint Administrative Board)
Box 757 Folder 11
Box 757 Folder 12
Box 757 Folder 13
(Subjects: Journal of Educational Statistics; Journal of Mathematical Psychology; Journalism, Graduate School of)
Box 757 Folder 14
(Subjects: Jurzykowski Foundation; University Judicial Board)
Box 757 Folder 15
Box 757 Folder 16
Box 757 Folder 17
Box 757 Folder 18
Box 757 Folder 19
Box 757 Folder 20
Box 757 Folder 21
Box 757 Folder 22
(Subjects: Kennecott Exploration, Inc.)
Box 757 Folder 23
Box 757 Folder 24
Box 757 Folder 25
Box 757 Folder 26
Box 757 Folder 27
(Subjects: King Abdulaziz Universty)
Box 757 Folder 28
(Subjects: Paul H. Klingenstein Fellowship Fund)
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Box 757 Folder 32
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Box 766 Folder 1
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Box 766 Folder 23
Box 766 Folder 24
Box 766 Folder 25
Box 766 Folder 26
Box 766 Folder 27
Box 766 Folder 28
Box 766 Folder 29
Box 766 Folder 30
This series of Central Files is the continuation of records found in Series I covering the year July 1, 1975 to June 30, 1976. Individually named and general alphabetical files are arranged in one alphabetical sequence.
Box 766 Folder 31
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Box 784 Folder 1
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Box 784 Folder 20
Box 784 Folder 21
Box 784 Folder 22
This series of Central Files is the continuation of records found in Series I covering the year July 1, 1976 to June 30, 1977. Individually named and general alphabetical files are arranged in one alphabetical sequence.
Box 785 Folder 1
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Box 791 Folder 1
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Box 792 Folder 1
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Box 793 Folder 1
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Box 793 Folder 33
Box 794 Folder 1
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Box 795 Folder 1
Box 795 Folder 2
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Box 795 Folder 28
Box 796 Folder 1
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Box 797 Folder 1
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Box 798 Folder 1
Box 798 Folder 2
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Box 798 Folder 17
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Box 798 Folder 27
Box 799 Folder 1
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Box 799 Folder 24
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Box 799 Folder 26
Box 799 Folder 27
Box 799 Folder 28
Box 799 Folder 29
Box 800 Folder 1
Box 800 Folder 2
Box 800 Folder 3
Box 800 Folder 4
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Box 800 Folder 6
Box 800 Folder 7
Box 800 Folder 8
Box 800 Folder 9
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Box 800 Folder 11
Box 800 Folder 12
Box 800 Folder 13
Box 800 Folder 14
Box 800 Folder 15
Box 800 Folder 16
Box 800 Folder 17
Box 800 Folder 18
Box 800 Folder 19
Box 800 Folder 20
Box 800 Folder 21
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Box 800 Folder 23
Box 800 Folder 24
Box 800 Folder 25
Box 800 Folder 26
Box 800 Folder 27
Box 800 Folder 28
Box 800 Folder 29
Box 800 Folder 30
Box 800 Folder 31
Box 800 Folder 32
Box 800 Folder 33
Box 801 Folder 1
Box 801 Folder 2
Box 801 Folder 3
Box 801 Folder 4
Box 801 Folder 5
Box 801 Folder 6
Box 801 Folder 7
Box 801 Folder 8
Box 801 Folder 9
Box 801 Folder 10
Box 801 Folder 11
Box 801 Folder 12
Box 801 Folder 13
Box 801 Folder 14
Box 801 Folder 15
Box 801 Folder 16
Box 801 Folder 17
Box 801 Folder 18
Box 801 Folder 19
Box 802 Folder 1
Box 802 Folder 2
Box 802 Folder 3
Box 802 Folder 4
Box 802 Folder 5
Box 802 Folder 6
Box 802 Folder 7
Box 802 Folder 8
Box 802 Folder 9
Box 802 Folder 10
Box 802 Folder 11
Box 802 Folder 12
Box 802 Folder 13
Box 802 Folder 14
Box 802 Folder 15
Box 802 Folder 16
Box 802 Folder 17
Box 802 Folder 18
Box 802 Folder 19
Box 802 Folder 20
Box 802 Folder 21
Box 802 Folder 22
Box 802 Folder 23
Box 802 Folder 24
Box 802 Folder 25
Box 802 Folder 26
Box 802 Folder 27
This series of Central Files is the continuation of records found in Series I covering the year July 1, 1977 to June 30, 1978. Individually named and general alphabetical files are arranged in one alphabetical sequence.
Box 802 Folder 28
Box 802 Folder 29
Box 802 Folder 30
Box 802 Folder 31
Box 802 Folder 32
Box 802 Folder 33
Box 803 Folder 1
Box 803 Folder 2
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Box 803 Folder 16
Box 804 Folder 1
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Box 805 Folder 1
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Box 805 Folder 31
Box 806 Folder 1
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Box 806 Folder 20
Box 807 Folder 1
Box 807 Folder 2
Box 807 Folder 3
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Box 807 Folder 5
Box 807 Folder 6
Box 807 Folder 7
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Box 807 Folder 21
Box 808 Folder 1
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Box 808 Folder 22
Box 809 Folder 1
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Box 809 Folder 15
Box 809 Folder 16
Box 809 Folder 17
Box 809 Folder 18
Box 809 Folder 19
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Box 809 Folder 22
Box 810 Folder 1
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Box 810 Folder 3
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Box 811 Folder 1
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Box 812 Folder 1
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Box 812 Folder 31
Box 813 Folder 1
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Box 813 Folder 6
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Box 813 Folder 16
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Box 813 Folder 32
Box 814 Folder 1
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Box 814 Folder 26
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Box 814 Folder 28
Box 814 Folder 29
Box 814 Folder 30
Box 814 Folder 31
Box 815 Folder 1
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Box 815 Folder 3
Box 815 Folder 4
Box 815 Folder 5
Box 815 Folder 6
Box 815 Folder 7
Box 815 Folder 8
Box 815 Folder 9
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Box 815 Folder 14
Box 815 Folder 15
Box 815 Folder 16
Box 816 Folder 1
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Box 816 Folder 25
Box 817 Folder 1
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Box 817 Folder 6
Box 817 Folder 7
Box 817 Folder 8
Box 817 Folder 9
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Box 817 Folder 11
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Box 817 Folder 13
Box 817 Folder 14
Box 817 Folder 15
Box 817 Folder 16
Box 817 Folder 17
Box 817 Folder 18
Box 817 Folder 19
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Box 817 Folder 21
Box 818 Folder 1
Box 818 Folder 2
Box 818 Folder 3
Box 818 Folder 4
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Box 818 Folder 6
Box 818 Folder 7
Box 818 Folder 8
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Box 818 Folder 14
Box 818 Folder 15
Box 818 Folder 16
Box 818 Folder 17
Box 818 Folder 18
Box 818 Folder 19
Box 818 Folder 20
Box 818 Folder 21
Box 818 Folder 22
Box 818 Folder 23
Box 818 Folder 24
Box 819 Folder 1
Box 819 Folder 2
Box 819 Folder 3
Box 819 Folder 4
Box 819 Folder 5
Box 819 Folder 6
Box 819 Folder 7
Box 819 Folder 8
Box 819 Folder 9
Box 819 Folder 10
Box 819 Folder 11
Box 819 Folder 12
Box 819 Folder 13
Box 819 Folder 14
Box 819 Folder 15
Box 819 Folder 16
Box 819 Folder 17
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Box 819 Folder 21
Box 820 Folder 1
Box 820 Folder 2
Box 820 Folder 3
Box 820 Folder 4
Box 820 Folder 5
Box 820 Folder 6
Box 820 Folder 7
Box 820 Folder 8
Box 820 Folder 9
Box 820 Folder 10
Box 820 Folder 11
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Box 820 Folder 13
Box 820 Folder 14
Box 820 Folder 15
Box 820 Folder 16
Box 820 Folder 17
Box 820 Folder 18
Box 820 Folder 19
Box 820 Folder 20
Box 821 Folder 1
Box 821 Folder 2
Box 821 Folder 3
Box 821 Folder 4
Box 821 Folder 5
Box 821 Folder 6
Box 821 Folder 7
Box 821 Folder 8
Box 821 Folder 9
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Box 821 Folder 11
Box 821 Folder 12
Box 821 Folder 13
Box 821 Folder 14
Box 821 Folder 15
Box 821 Folder 16
Box 821 Folder 17
Box 821 Folder 18
Box 822 Folder 1
Box 822 Folder 2
Box 822 Folder 3
Box 822 Folder 4
Box 822 Folder 5
Box 822 Folder 6
Box 822 Folder 7
Box 822 Folder 8
Box 822 Folder 9
Box 822 Folder 10
Box 822 Folder 11
Box 822 Folder 12
Box 822 Folder 13
Box 822 Folder 14
Box 822 Folder 15
Box 822 Folder 16
Box 822 Folder 17
Box 822 Folder 18
Box 822 Folder 19
Box 822 Folder 20
Box 822 Folder 21
Box 822 Folder 22
Box 822 Folder 23
Box 822 Folder 24
Box 822 Folder 25
This series of Central Files is the continuation of records found in Series I covering the year July 1, 1978 to June 30, 1979. Individually named and general alphabetical files are arranged in one alphabetical sequence.
Box 822 Folder 26
Box 822 Folder 27
Box 822 Folder 28
Box 822 Folder 29
Box 822 Folder 30
Box 822 Folder 31
Box 823 Folder 1
Box 823 Folder 2
Box 823 Folder 3
Box 823 Folder 4
Box 823 Folder 5
Box 823 Folder 6
Box 823 Folder 7
Box 823 Folder 8
Box 823 Folder 9
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Box 823 Folder 13
Box 823 Folder 14
Box 823 Folder 15
Box 823 Folder 16
Box 823 Folder 17
Box 823 Folder 18
Box 823 Folder 19
Box 823 Folder 20
Box 824 Folder 1
Box 824 Folder 2
Box 824 Folder 3
Box 824 Folder 4
Box 824 Folder 5
Box 824 Folder 6
Box 824 Folder 7
Box 824 Folder 8
Box 824 Folder 9
Box 824 Folder 10
Box 824 Folder 11
Box 824 Folder 12
Box 824 Folder 13
Box 824 Folder 14
Box 824 Folder 15
Box 824 Folder 16
Box 824 Folder 17
Box 824 Folder 18
Box 824 Folder 19
Box 824 Folder 20
Box 824 Folder 21
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Box 824 Folder 23
Box 824 Folder 24
Box 824 Folder 25
Box 824 Folder 26
Box 824 Folder 27
Box 824 Folder 28
Box 824 Folder 29
Box 824 Folder 30
Box 824 Folder 31
Box 825 Folder 1
Box 825 Folder 2
Box 825 Folder 3
Box 825 Folder 4
Box 825 Folder 5
Box 825 Folder 6
Box 825 Folder 7
Box 825 Folder 8
Box 825 Folder 9
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Box 825 Folder 11
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Box 825 Folder 14
Box 825 Folder 15
Box 825 Folder 16
Box 825 Folder 17
Box 825 Folder 18
Box 825 Folder 19
Box 825 Folder 20
Box 825 Folder 21
Box 825 Folder 22
Box 825 Folder 23
Box 826 Folder 1
Box 826 Folder 2
Box 826 Folder 3
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Box 826 Folder 6
Box 826
Box 826 Folder 8
Box 826
Box 826 Folder 10
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Box 826 Folder 19
Box 827 Folder 1
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Box 827 Folder 3
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Box 827 Folder 7
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Box 827 Folder 9
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Box 827 Folder 26
Box 828 Folder 1
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Box 829 Folder 1
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Box 830 Folder 1
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Box 831 Folder 1
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Box 831 Folder 8
Box 831 Folder 9
Box 831 Folder 10
Box 831 Folder 11
Box 831 Folder 12
Box 831 Folder 13
Box 831 Folder 14
Box 831 Folder 15
Box 831 Folder 16
Box 831 Folder 17
Box 831 Folder 18
Box 831 Folder 19
Box 831 Folder 20
Box 831 Folder 21
Box 831 Folder 22
Box 831 Folder 23
Box 831 Folder 24
Box 831 Folder 25
Box 831 Folder 26
Box 831 Folder 27
Box 832 Folder 1
Box 832 Folder 2
Box 832 Folder 3
Box 832 Folder 4
Box 832 Folder 5
Box 832 Folder 6
Box 832 Folder 7
Box 832 Folder 8
Box 832 Folder 9
Box 832 Folder 10
Box 832 Folder 11
Box 832 Folder 12
Box 832 Folder 13
Box 832 Folder 14
Box 832 Folder 15
Box 832 Folder 16
Box 832 Folder 17
Box 832 Folder 18
Box 832 Folder 19
Box 832 Folder 20
Box 832 Folder 21
Box 832 Folder 22
Box 832 Folder 23
Box 832 Folder 24
Box 832 Folder 25
Box 832 Folder 26
Box 832 Folder 27
Box 832 Folder 28
Box 833 Folder 1
Box 833 Folder 2
Box 833 Folder 3
Box 833 Folder 4
Box 833 Folder 5
Box 833 Folder 6
Box 833 Folder 7
Box 833 Folder 8
Box 833 Folder 9
Box 833 Folder 10
Box 833 Folder 11
Box 833 Folder 12
Box 833 Folder 13
Box 833 Folder 14
Box 833 Folder 15
Box 833 Folder 16
Box 833 Folder 17
Box 833 Folder 18
Box 833 Folder 19
Box 833 Folder 20
Box 833 Folder 21
Box 833 Folder 22
Box 833 Folder 23
Box 834 Folder 1
Box 834 Folder 2
Box 834 Folder 3
Box 834 Folder 4
Box 834 Folder 5
Box 834 Folder 6
Box 834 Folder 7
Box 834 Folder 8
Box 834 Folder 9
Box 834 Folder 10
Box 834 Folder 11
Box 834 Folder 12
Box 834 Folder 13
Box 834 Folder 14
Box 834 Folder 15
Box 834 Folder 16
Box 834 Folder 17
Box 834 Folder 18
Box 834 Folder 19
Box 834 Folder 20
Box 834 Folder 21
Box 834 Folder 22
Box 834 Folder 23
Box 834 Folder 24
Box 834 Folder 25
Box 834 Folder 26
Box 834 Folder 27
Box 834 Folder 28
Box 834 Folder 29
Box 835 Folder 1
Box 835 Folder 2
Box 835 Folder 3
Box 835 Folder 4
Box 835 Folder 5
Box 835 Folder 6
Box 835 Folder 7
Box 835 Folder 8
Box 835 Folder 9
Box 835 Folder 10
Box 835 Folder 11
Box 835 Folder 12
Box 835 Folder 13
Box 835 Folder 14
Box 835 Folder 15
Box 835 Folder 16
Box 836 Folder 1
Box 836 Folder 2
Box 836 Folder 3
Box 836 Folder 4
Box 836 Folder 5
Box 836 Folder 6
Box 836 Folder 7
Box 836 Folder 8
Box 836 Folder 9
Box 836 Folder 10
Box 836 Folder 11
Box 836 Folder 12
Box 836 Folder 13
Box 836 Folder 14
Box 836 Folder 15
Box 836 Folder 16
Box 836 Folder 17
Box 836 Folder 18
Box 836 Folder 19
Box 836 Folder 20
Box 836 Folder 21
Box 836 Folder 22
Box 836 Folder 23
Box 836 Folder 24
Box 836 Folder 25
Box 836 Folder 26
Box 836 Folder 27
Box 836 Folder 28
Box 836 Folder 29
Box 837 Folder 1
Box 837 Folder 2
Box 837 Folder 3
Box 837 Folder 4
Box 837 Folder 5
Box 837 Folder 6
Box 837 Folder 7
Box 837 Folder 8
Box 837 Folder 9
Box 837 Folder 10
Box 837 Folder 11
Box 837 Folder 12
Box 837 Folder 13
Box 837 Folder 14
Box 837 Folder 15
Box 837 Folder 16
Box 837 Folder 17
Box 837 Folder 18
Box 837 Folder 19
Box 837 Folder 20
Box 837 Folder 21
Box 838 Folder 1
Box 838 Folder 2
Box 838 Folder 3
Box 838 Folder 4
Box 838 Folder 5
Box 838 Folder 6
Box 838 Folder 7
Box 838 Folder 8
Box 838 Folder 9
Box 838 Folder 10
Box 838 Folder 11
Box 838 Folder 12
Box 838 Folder 13
Box 838 Folder 14
Box 838 Folder 15
Box 838 Folder 16
Box 838 Folder 17
Box 838 Folder 18
Box 838 Folder 19
Box 839 Folder 1
Box 839 Folder 2
Box 839 Folder 3
Box 839 Folder 4
Box 839 Folder 5
Box 839 Folder 6
Box 839 Folder 7
Box 839 Folder 8
Box 839 Folder 9
Box 839 Folder 10
Box 839 Folder 11
Box 839 Folder 12
Box 839 Folder 13
Box 839 Folder 14
Box 839 Folder 15
Box 839 Folder 16
Box 839 Folder 17
Box 839 Folder 18
Box 839 Folder 19
Box 839 Folder 20
Box 839 Folder 21
Box 839 Folder 22
Box 839 Folder 23
Box 839 Folder 24
Box 840 Folder 1
Box 840 Folder 2
Box 840 Folder 3
Box 840 Folder 4
Box 840 Folder 5
Box 840 Folder 6
This series of Central Files is the continuation of records found in Series I covering the year July 1, 1979 to June 30, 1980. Individually named and general alphabetical files are arranged in one alphabetical sequence.
Box 840 Folder 7
Box 840 Folder 8
Box 840 Folder 9
Box 840 Folder 10
Box 840 Folder 11
Box 840 Folder 12
Box 840 Folder 13
Box 840 Folder 14
Box 840 Folder 15
Box 840 Folder 16
Box 840 Folder 17
Box 840 Folder 18
Box 840 Folder 19
Box 840 Folder 20
Box 840 Folder 21
Box 840 Folder 22
Box 840 Folder 23
Box 840 Folder 24
Box 841 Folder 1
Box 841 Folder 2
Box 841 Folder 3
Box 841 Folder 4
Box 841 Folder 5
Box 841 Folder 6
Box 841 Folder 7
Box 841 Folder 8
Box 841 Folder 9
Box 841 Folder 10
Box 841 Folder 11
Box 841 Folder 12
Box 841 Folder 13
Box 841 Folder 14
Box 841 Folder 15
Box 841 Folder 16
Box 842 Folder 1
Box 842 Folder 2
Box 842 Folder 3
Box 842 Folder 4
Box 842 Folder 5
Box 842 Folder 6
Box 842 Folder 7
Box 842 Folder 8
Box 842 Folder 9
Box 842 Folder 10
Box 842 Folder 11
Box 842 Folder 12
Box 842 Folder 13
Box 842 Folder 14
Box 842 Folder 15
Box 842 Folder 16
Box 842 Folder 17
Box 842 Folder 18
Box 842 Folder 19
Box 842 Folder 20
Box 842 Folder 21
Box 842 Folder 22
Box 842 Folder 23
Box 842 Folder 24
Box 842 Folder 25
Box 842 Folder 26
Box 842 Folder 27
Box 842 Folder 28
Box 842 Folder 29
Box 843 Folder 1
Box 843 Folder 2
Box 843 Folder 3
Box 843 Folder 4
Box 843 Folder 5
Box 843 Folder 6
Box 843 Folder 7
Box 843 Folder 8
Box 843 Folder 9
Box 843 Folder 10
Box 843 Folder 11
Box 843 Folder 12
Box 843 Folder 13
Box 843 Folder 14
Box 843 Folder 15
Box 843 Folder 16
Box 843 Folder 17
Box 843 Folder 18
Box 843 Folder 19
Box 843 Folder 20
Box 843 Folder 21
Box 843 Folder 22
Box 843 Folder 23
Box 843 Folder 24
Box 843 Folder 25
Box 844 Folder 1
Box 844 Folder 2
Box 844 Folder 3
Box 844 Folder 4
Box 844 Folder 5
Box 844 Folder 6
Box 844 Folder 7
Box 844 Folder 8
Box 844 Folder 9
Box 844 Folder 10
Box 844 Folder 11
Box 844 Folder 12
Box 844 Folder 13
Box 844 Folder 14
Box 845 Folder 1
Box 845 Folder 2
Box 845 Folder 3
Box 845 Folder 4
Box 845 Folder 5
Box 845 Folder 6
Box 845 Folder 7
Box 845 Folder 8
Box 845 Folder 9
Box 845 Folder 10
Box 845 Folder 11
Box 845 Folder 12
Box 845 Folder 13
Box 845 Folder 14
Box 845 Folder 15
Box 845 Folder 16
Box 845 Folder 17
Box 845 Folder 18
Box 845 Folder 19
Box 845 Folder 20
Box 845 Folder 21
Box 845 Folder 22
Box 845 Folder 23
Box 845 Folder 24
Box 846 Folder 1
Box 846 Folder 2
Box 846 Folder 3
Box 846 Folder 4
Box 846 Folder 5
Box 846 Folder 6
Box 846 Folder 7
Box 846 Folder 8
Box 846 Folder 9
Box 846 Folder 10
Box 846 Folder 11
Box 846 Folder 12
Box 846 Folder 13
Box 846 Folder 14
Box 846 Folder 15
Box 846 Folder 16
Box 846 Folder 17
Box 846 Folder 18
Box 846 Folder 19
Box 846 Folder 20
Box 846 Folder 21
Box 847 Folder 1
Box 847 Folder 2
Box 847 Folder 3
Box 847 Folder 4
Box 847 Folder 5
Box 847 Folder 6
Box 847 Folder 7
Box 847 Folder 8
Box 847 Folder 9
Box 847 Folder 10
Box 847 Folder 11
Box 847 Folder 12
Box 847 Folder 13
Box 847 Folder 14
Box 847 Folder 15
Box 847 Folder 16
Box 847 Folder 17
Box 847 Folder 18
Box 847 Folder 19
Box 847 Folder 20
Box 847 Folder 21
Box 847 Folder 22
Box 848 Folder 1
Box 848 Folder 2
Box 848 Folder 3
Box 848 Folder 4
Box 848 Folder 5
Box 848 Folder 6
Box 848 Folder 7
Box 848 Folder 8
Box 848 Folder 9
Box 848 Folder 10
Box 848 Folder 11
Box 848 Folder 12
Box 848 Folder 13
Box 848 Folder 14
Box 848 Folder 15
Box 848 Folder 16
Box 848 Folder 17
Box 848 Folder 18
Box 848 Folder 19
Box 848 Folder 20
Box 848 Folder 21
Box 848 Folder 22
Box 848 Folder 23
Box 848 Folder 24
Box 848 Folder 25
Box 848 Folder 26
Box 848 Folder 27
Box 849 Folder 1
Box 849 Folder 2
Box 849 Folder 3
Box 849 Folder 4
Box 849 Folder 5
Box 849 Folder 6
Box 849 Folder 7
Box 849 Folder 8
Box 849 Folder 9
Box 849 Folder 10
Box 849 Folder 11
Box 849 Folder 12
Box 849 Folder 13
Box 849 Folder 14
Box 849 Folder 15
Box 849 Folder 16
Box 849 Folder 17
Box 849 Folder 18
Box 849 Folder 19
Box 849 Folder 20
Box 849 Folder 21
Box 849 Folder 22
Box 849 Folder 23
Box 849 Folder 24
Box 850 Folder 1
Box 850 Folder 2
Box 850 Folder 3
Box 850 Folder 4
Box 850 Folder 5
Box 850 Folder 6
Box 850 Folder 7
Box 850 Folder 8
Box 850 Folder 9
Box 850 Folder 10
Box 850 Folder 11
Box 850 Folder 12
Box 850 Folder 13
Box 850 Folder 14
Box 850 Folder 15
Box 850 Folder 16
Box 850 Folder 17
Box 850 Folder 18
Box 850 Folder 19
Box 850 Folder 20
Box 850 Folder 21
Box 850 Folder 22
Box 850 Folder 23
Box 850 Folder 24
Box 850 Folder 25
Box 850 Folder 26
Box 850 Folder 27
Box 850 Folder 28
Box 851 Folder 1
Box 851 Folder 2
Box 851 Folder 3
Box 851 Folder 4
Box 851 Folder 5
Box 851 Folder 6
Box 851 Folder 7
Box 851 Folder 8
Box 851 Folder 9
Box 851 Folder 10
Box 851 Folder 11
Box 851 Folder 12
Box 851 Folder 13
Box 851 Folder 14
Box 851 Folder 15
Box 851 Folder 16
Box 851 Folder 17
Box 851 Folder 18
Box 851 Folder 19
Box 851 Folder 20
Box 851 Folder 21
Box 851 Folder 22
Box 851 Folder 23
Box 852 Folder 1
Box 852 Folder 2
Box 852 Folder 3
Box 852 Folder 4
Box 852 Folder 5
Box 852 Folder 6
Box 852 Folder 7
Box 852 Folder 8
Box 852 Folder 9
Box 852 Folder 10
Box 852 Folder 11
Box 852 Folder 12
Box 852 Folder 13
Box 852 Folder 14
Box 852 Folder 15
Box 852 Folder 16
Box 853 Folder 1
Box 853 Folder 2
Box 853 Folder 3
Box 853 Folder 4
Box 853 Folder 5
Box 853 Folder 6
Box 853 Folder 7
Box 853 Folder 8
Box 853 Folder 9
Box 853 Folder 10
Box 853 Folder 11
Box 853 Folder 12
Box 853 Folder 13
Box 853 Folder 14
Box 853 Folder 15
Box 853 Folder 16
Box 853 Folder 17
Box 853 Folder 18
Box 853 Folder 19
Box 853 Folder 20
Box 853 Folder 21
Box 853 Folder 22
Box 853 Folder 23
Box 854 Folder 1
Box 854 Folder 2
Box 854 Folder 3
Box 854 Folder 4
Box 854 Folder 5
Box 854 Folder 6
Box 854 Folder 7
Box 854 Folder 8
Box 854 Folder 9
Box 854 Folder 10
Box 854 Folder 11
Box 854 Folder 12
Box 854 Folder 13
Box 854 Folder 14
Box 854 Folder 15
Box 854 Folder 16
Box 854 Folder 17
Box 854 Folder 18
Box 854 Folder 19
Box 854 Folder 20
Box 854 Folder 21
Box 854 Folder 22
Box 854 Folder 23
Box 854 Folder 24
Box 854 Folder 25
Box 855 Folder 1
Box 855 Folder 2
Box 855 Folder 3
Box 855 Folder 4
Box 855 Folder 5
Box 855 Folder 6
Box 855 Folder 7
Box 855 Folder 8
Box 855 Folder 9
Box 855 Folder 10
Box 855 Folder 11
Box 855 Folder 12
Box 855 Folder 13
Box 855 Folder 14
Box 855 Folder 15
Box 855 Folder 16
Box 855 Folder 17
Box 855 Folder 18
Box 855 Folder 19
Box 855 Folder 20
Box 855 Folder 21
Box 855 Folder 22
Box 855 Folder 23
Box 855 Folder 24
Box 855 Folder 25
Box 855 Folder 26
Box 855 Folder 27
Box 855 Folder 28
Box 855 Folder 29
Box 855 Folder 30
Box 855 Folder 31
Box 855 Folder 32
Box 856 Folder 1
Box 856 Folder 2
Box 856 Folder 3
Box 856 Folder 4
Box 856 Folder 5
Box 856 Folder 6
Box 856 Folder 7
Box 856 Folder 8
Box 856 Folder 9
Box 856 Folder 10
Box 856 Folder 11
Box 856 Folder 12
Box 856 Folder 13
Box 856 Folder 14
Box 856 Folder 15
Box 856 Folder 16
Box 856 Folder 17
Box 856 Folder 18
Box 857 Folder 1
Box 857 Folder 2
Box 857 Folder 3
Box 857 Folder 4
Box 857 Folder 5
Box 857 Folder 6
Box 857 Folder 7
Box 857 Folder 8
Box 857 Folder 9
Box 857 Folder 10
Box 857 Folder 11
Box 857 Folder 12
Box 857 Folder 13
Box 857 Folder 14
Box 857 Folder 15
Box 857 Folder 16
Box 857 Folder 17
Box 857 Folder 18
Box 857 Folder 19
Box 857 Folder 20
Box 858 Folder 1
Box 858 Folder 2
Box 858 Folder 3
Box 858 Folder 4
Box 858 Folder 5
Box 858 Folder 6
Box 858 Folder 7
Box 858 Folder 8
Box 858 Folder 9
Box 858 Folder 10
Box 858 Folder 11
Box 858 Folder 12
Box 858 Folder 13
Box 858 Folder 14
Box 858 Folder 15
Box 858 Folder 16
Box 858 Folder 17
Box 858 Folder 18
Box 858 Folder 19
Box 858 Folder 20
Box 858 Folder 21
Box 858 Folder 22
Box 858 Folder 23
Box 858 Folder 24
Box 858 Folder 25
Box 858 Folder 26
Box 858 Folder 27
Box 858 Folder 28
This series of Central Files is the continuation of records found in Series I covering the year July 1, 1980 to June 30, 1981. Individually named and general alphabetical files are arranged in one alphabetical sequence.
Box 858 Folder 29
Box 858 Folder 30
Box 859 Folder 1
Box 859 Folder 2
Box 859 Folder 3
Box 859 Folder 4
Box 859 Folder 5
Box 859 Folder 6
Box 859 Folder 7
Box 859 Folder 8
Box 859 Folder 9
Box 859 Folder 10
Box 859 Folder 11
Box 859 Folder 12
Box 859 Folder 13
Box 859 Folder 14
Box 859 Folder 15
Box 859 Folder 16
Box 859 Folder 17
Box 859 Folder 18
Box 859 Folder 19
Box 860 Folder 1
Box 860 Folder 2
Box 860 Folder 3
Box 860 Folder 4
Box 860 Folder 5
Box 860 Folder 6
Box 860 Folder 7
Box 860 Folder 8
Box 860 Folder 9
Box 860 Folder 10
Box 860 Folder 11
Box 860 Folder 12
Box 860 Folder 13
Box 860 Folder 14
Box 860 Folder 15
Box 860 Folder 16
Box 860 Folder 17
Box 860 Folder 18
Box 860 Folder 19
Box 860 Folder 20
Box 860 Folder 21
Box 861 Folder 1
Box 861 Folder 2
Box 861 Folder 3
Box 861 Folder 4
Box 861 Folder 5
Box 861 Folder 6
Box 861 Folder 7
Box 861 Folder 8
Box 861 Folder 9
Box 861 Folder 10
Box 861 Folder 11
Box 861 Folder 12
Box 861 Folder 13
Box 861 Folder 14
Box 861 Folder 15
Box 861 Folder 16
Box 861 Folder 17
Box 861 Folder 18
Box 861 Folder 19
Box 861 Folder 20
Box 861 Folder 21
Box 862 Folder 1
Box 862 Folder 2
Box 862 Folder 3
Box 862 Folder 4
Box 862 Folder 5
Box 862 Folder 6
Box 862 Folder 7
Box 862 Folder 8
Box 862 Folder 9
Box 862 Folder 10
Box 862 Folder 11
Box 862 Folder 11
Box 862 Folder 12
Box 862 Folder 13
Box 862 Folder 14
Box 862 Folder 15
Box 862 Folder 16
Box 862 Folder 17
Box 862 Folder 18
Box 862 Folder 19
Box 862 Folder 20
Box 862 Folder 21
Box 862 Folder 22
Box 862 Folder 23
Box 862 Folder 24
Box 862 Folder 25
Box 862 Folder 26
Box 862 Folder 27
Box 863 Folder 1
Box 863 Folder 2
Box 863 Folder 3
Box 863 Folder 4
Box 863 Folder 5
Box 863 Folder 6
Box 863 Folder 7
Box 863 Folder 8
Box 863 Folder 9
Box 863 Folder 10
Box 863 Folder 11
Box 863 Folder 12
Box 863 Folder 13
Box 864 Folder 1
Box 864 Folder 2
Box 864 Folder 3
Box 864 Folder 4
Box 864 Folder 5
Box 864 Folder 6
Box 864 Folder 7
Box 864 Folder 8
Box 864 Folder 9
Box 864 Folder 10
Box 864 Folder 11
Box 864 Folder 12
Box 864 Folder 13
Box 864 Folder 14
Box 864 Folder 15
Box 864 Folder 16
Box 864 Folder 17
Box 864 Folder 18
Box 864 Folder 19
Box 864 Folder .20
Box 865 Folder 1
Box 865 Folder 2
Box 865 Folder 3
Box 865 Folder 4
Box 865 Folder 5
Box 865 Folder 6
Box 865 Folder 7
Box 865 Folder 9
Box 865 Folder 10
Box 865 Folder 11
Box 865 Folder 12
Box 865 Folder 13
Box 865 Folder 14
Box 865 Folder 15
Box 865 Folder 16
Box 865 Folder 17
Box 865 Folder 18
Box 865 Folder 19
Box 865 Folder 20
Box 865 Folder 21
Box 865 Folder 21
Box 865 Folder 22
Box 865 Folder 23
Box 865 Folder 24
Box 865 Folder 25
Box 865 Folder 26
Box 865 Folder 27
Box 865 Folder 28
Box 865 Folder 29
Box 865 Folder 30
Box 865 Folder 31
Box 865 Folder 31
Box 865 Folder 31
Box 865 Folder 32
Box 865 Folder 33
Box 866 Folder 1
Box 866 Folder 2
Box 866 Folder 3
Box 866 Folder 4
Box 866 Folder 5
Box 866 Folder 6
Box 866 Folder 7
Box 866 Folder 8
Box 866 Folder 9
Box 866 Folder 10
Box 866 Folder 11
Box 866 Folder 12
Box 866 Folder 13
Box 866 Folder 14
Box 866 Folder 15
Box 866 Folder 16
Box 866 Folder 17
Box 866 Folder 18
Box 866 Folder 19
Box 866 Folder 20
Box 866 Folder 21
Box 867 Folder 1
Box 867 Folder 2
Box 867 Folder 3
Box 867 Folder 4
Box 867 Folder 5
Box 867 Folder 6
Box 867 Folder 7
Box 867 Folder 8
Box 867 Folder 9
Box 867 Folder 10
Box 867 Folder 11
Box 867 Folder 12
Box 867 Folder 13
Box 867 Folder 14
Box 867 Folder 15
Box 867 Folder 16
Box 867 Folder 17
Box 867 Folder 18
Box 867 Folder 19
Box 867 Folder 20
Box 867 Folder 21
Box 867 Folder 22
Box 867 Folder 23
Box 867 Folder 24
Box 868 Folder 1
Box 868 Folder 2
Box 868 Folder 3
Box 868 Folder 4
Box 868 Folder 5
Box 868 Folder 6
Box 868 Folder 7
Box 868 Folder 8
Box 868 Folder 9
Box 868 Folder 10
Box 868 Folder 11
Box 868 Folder 12
Box 868 Folder 13
Box 868 Folder 14
Box 868 Folder 15
Box 868 Folder 16
Box 868 Folder 17
Box 868 Folder 18
Box 868 Folder 19
Box 868 Folder 20
Box 868 Folder 21
Box 869 Folder 1
Box 869 Folder 2
Box 869 Folder 3
Box 869 Folder 4
Box 869 Folder 5
Box 869 Folder 6
Box 869 Folder 7
Box 869 Folder 8
Box 869 Folder 9
Box 869 Folder 10
Box 869 Folder 11
Box 869 Folder 12
Box 869 Folder 13
Box 869 Folder 14
Box 869 Folder 15
Box 869 Folder 16
Box 869 Folder 17
Box 869 Folder 18
Box 869 Folder 19
Box 869 Folder 20
Box 869 Folder 21
Box 869 Folder 22
Box 869 Folder 23
Box 869 Folder 24
Box 869 Folder 25
Box 870 Folder 1
Box 870 Folder 2
Box 870 Folder 3
Box 870 Folder 4
Box 870 Folder 5
Box 870 Folder 6
Box 870 Folder 7
Box 870 Folder 8
Box 870 Folder 9
Box 870 Folder 10
Box 870 Folder 11
Box 870 Folder 12
Box 870 Folder 13
Box 870 Folder 14
Box 870 Folder 15
Box 870 Folder 16
Box 870 Folder 17
Box 870 Folder 18
Box 870 Folder 19
Box 870 Folder 20
Box 870 Folder 21
Box 870 Folder 22
Box 870 Folder 23
Box 871 Folder 1
Box 871 Folder 2
Box 871 Folder 3
Box 871 Folder 4
Box 871 Folder 5
Box 871 Folder 6
Box 871 Folder 7
Box 871 Folder 8
Box 871 Folder 9
Box 871 Folder 10
Box 871 Folder 11
Box 871 Folder 12
Box 871 Folder 13
Box 871 Folder 14
Box 871 Folder 15
Box 871 Folder 16
Box 871 Folder 17
Box 871 Folder 18
Box 871 Folder 19
Box 871 Folder 20
Box 871 Folder 21
Box 871 Folder 22
Box 871 Folder 23
Box 872 Folder 1
Box 872 Folder 2
Box 872 Folder 3
Box 872 Folder 4
Box 872 Folder 5
Box 872 Folder 6
Box 872 Folder 7
Box 872 Folder 8
Box 872 Folder 9
Box 872 Folder 10
Box 872 Folder 11
Box 872 Folder 12
Box 872 Folder 13
Box 872 Folder 14
Box 872 Folder 15
Box 872 Folder 16
Box 872 Folder 17
Box 872 Folder 18
Box 872 Folder 19
Box 872 Folder 20
Box 872 Folder 21
Box 872 Folder 22
Box 872 Folder 23
Box 872 Folder 24
Box 872 Folder 25
Box 872 Folder 26
Box 872 Folder 27
Box 873 Folder 1
Box 873 Folder 2
Box 873 Folder 3
Box 873 Folder 4
Box 873 Folder 5
Box 873 Folder 6
Box 873 Folder 7
Box 873 Folder 8
Box 873 Folder 9
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Box 873 Folder 11
Box 873 Folder 12
Box 873 Folder 13
Box 873 Folder 14
Box 873 Folder 15
Box 873 Folder 16
Box 873 Folder 17
Box 873 Folder 18
Box 874 Folder 1
Box 874 Folder 2
Box 874 Folder 3
Box 874 Folder 4
Box 874 Folder 5
Box 874 Folder 6
Box 874 Folder 7
Box 874 Folder 8
Box 874 Folder 9
Box 874 Folder 10
Box 874 Folder 11
Box 874 Folder 12
Box 874 Folder 13
Box 874 Folder 14
Box 874 Folder 15
Box 874 Folder 16
Box 874 Folder 17
Box 874 Folder 18
Box 874 Folder 19
Box 874 Folder 20
Box 874 Folder 21
Box 874 Folder 22
Box 874 Folder 23
Box 874 Folder 24
Box 874 Folder 25
Box 874 Folder 26
Box 874 Folder 27
Box 874 Folder 28
Box 874 Folder 29
Box 874 Folder 30
Box 874 Folder 31
Box 875 Folder 1
Box 875 Folder 2
Box 875 Folder 3
Box 875 Folder 4
Box 875 Folder 5
Box 875 Folder 6
Box 875 Folder 7
Box 875 Folder 8
Box 875 Folder 9
Box 875 Folder 10
Box 875 Folder 11
Box 875 Folder 12
Box 875 Folder 13
Box 875 Folder 14
Box 875 Folder 15
Box 875 Folder 16
Box 875 Folder 17
Box 875 Folder 18
Box 875 Folder 19
Box 875 Folder 20
Box 875 Folder 21
Box 875 Folder 22
Box 875 Folder 23
Box 875 Folder 24
Box 876 Folder 1
Box 876 Folder 2
Box 876 Folder 3
Box 876 Folder 4
Box 876 Folder 5
Box 876 Folder 6
Box 876 Folder 7
Box 876 Folder 8
Box 876 Folder 9
Box 876 Folder 10
Box 876 Folder 11
Box 876 Folder 12
Box 876 Folder 13
Box 876 Folder 14
Box 876 Folder 15
Box 876 Folder 16
Box 877 Folder 1
Box 877 Folder 2
Box 877 Folder 3
Box 877 Folder 4
Box 877 Folder 5
Box 877 Folder 6
Box 877 Folder 7
Box 877 Folder 8
Box 877 Folder 9
Box 877 Folder 10
Box 877 Folder 11
Box 877 Folder 12
Box 877 Folder 13
Box 877 Folder 14
Box 877 Folder 15
Box 877 Folder 16
Box 877 Folder 17
Box 878 Folder 1
Box 878 Folder 2
Box 878 Folder 3
Box 878 Folder 4
Box 878 Folder 5
Box 878 Folder 6
Box 878 Folder 7
Box 878 Folder 8
Box 878 Folder 9
Box 878 Folder 10
Box 878 Folder 11
Box 878 Folder 12
Box 878 Folder 13
Box 878 Folder 14
Box 878 Folder 15
Box 878 Folder 16
Box 878 Folder 17
Box 878 Folder 18
Box 878 Folder 19
Box 878 Folder 20
Box 878 Folder 21
Box 878 Folder 22
Box 878 Folder 23
Box 878 Folder 24
Box 878 Folder 25
Box 878 Folder 26
Box 879 Folder 1
Box 879 Folder 2
Box 879 Folder 3
Box 879 Folder 4
Box 879 Folder 5
Box 879 Folder 6
Box 879 Folder 7
Box 879 Folder 8
Box 879 Folder 9
Box 879 Folder 10
Box 879 Folder 11
Box 879 Folder 12
Box 879 Folder 13
Box 879 Folder 14
Box 879 Folder 15
Box 879 Folder 16
Box 879 Folder 17
Box 879 Folder 18
Box 879 Folder 19
Box 880 Folder 1
Box 880 Folder 2
Box 880 Folder 3
Box 881 Folder 1
Box 881 Folder 2
Box 881 Folder 3
Box 881 Folder 4
Box 881 Folder 5
Box 881 Folder 6
Box 881 Folder 7
Box 881 Folder 8
Box 882 Folder 1
Box 882 Folder 2
Box 882 Folder 3
Box 882 Folder 4
Box 882 Folder 5
Box 882 Folder 6
Box 882 Folder 7
Box 882 Folder 8
Box 882 Folder 9
Box 882 Folder 10
Box 882 Folder 11
Box 882 Folder 12
Box 882 Folder 13
Box 882 Folder 14
Box 882 Folder 15
Box 882 Folder 16
Box 882 Folder 17
Box 882 Folder 18
Box 882 Folder 19
This series of Central Files is the continuation of records found in Series I covering the year July 1, 1981 to June 30, 1982. Individually named and general alphabetical files are arranged in one alphabetical sequence.
Box 883 Folder 1
Box 883 Folder 2
Box 883 Folder 3
Box 883 Folder 4
Box 883 Folder 5
Box 883 Folder 6
Box 883 Folder 7
Box 883 Folder 8
Box 883 Folder 9
Box 883 Folder 10
Box 883 Folder 11
Box 883 Folder 12
Box 883 Folder 13
Box 883 Folder 14
Box 883 Folder 15
Box 883 Folder 16
Box 884 Folder 1
Box 884 Folder 2
Box 884 Folder 3
Box 884 Folder 4
Box 884 Folder 5
Box 884 Folder 6
Box 884 Folder 7
Box 884 Folder 8
Box 884 Folder 9
Box 884 Folder 10
Box 884 Folder 11
Box 884 Folder 12
Box 884 Folder 13
Box 884 Folder 14
Box 884 Folder 15
Box 884 Folder 16
Box 884 Folder 17
Box 884 Folder 18
Box 884 Folder 19
Box 884 Folder 20
Box 884 Folder 21
Box 885 Folder 1
Box 885 Folder 2
Box 885 Folder 3
Box 885 Folder 4
Box 885 Folder 5
Box 885 Folder 6
Box 885 Folder 7
Box 885 Folder 8
Box 885 Folder 9
Box 885 Folder 10
Box 885 Folder 11
Box 885 Folder 12
Box 885 Folder 13
Box 885 Folder 14
Box 885 Folder 15
Box 885 Folder 16
Box 885 Folder 17
Box 885 Folder 18
Box 885 Folder 19
Box 885 Folder 20
Box 886 Folder 1
Box 886 Folder 2
Box 886 Folder 3
Box 886 Folder 4
Box 886 Folder 5
Box 886 Folder 6
Box 886 Folder 7
Box 886 Folder 8
Box 886 Folder 9
Box 886 Folder 10
Box 886 Folder 11
Box 886 Folder 12
Box 886 Folder 13
Box 886 Folder 14
Box 886 Folder 15
Box 886 Folder 16
Box 886 Folder 17
Box 886 Folder 18
Box 886 Folder 19
Box 886 Folder 20
Box 886 Folder 21
Box 887 Folder 1
Box 887 Folder 2
Box 887 Folder 3
Box 887 Folder 4
Box 887 Folder 5
Box 887 Folder 6
Box 887 Folder 7
Box 887 Folder 8
Box 887 Folder 9
Box 887 Folder 10
Box 887 Folder 11
Box 887 Folder 12
Box 887 Folder 13
Box 887 Folder 14
Box 887 Folder 15
Box 887 Folder 16
Box 887 Folder 17
Box 887 Folder 18
Box 887 Folder 19
Box 887 Folder 20
Box 887 Folder 21
Box 888 Folder 1
Box 888 Folder 2
Box 888 Folder 3
Box 888 Folder 4
Box 888 Folder 5
Box 888 Folder 6
Box 888 Folder 7
Box 888 Folder 8
Box 888 Folder 9
Box 888 Folder 10
Box 888 Folder 11
Box 888 Folder 12
Box 888 Folder 13
Box 888 Folder 14
Box 888 Folder 15
Box 888 Folder 16
Box 889 Folder 1
Box 889 Folder 2
Box 889 Folder 3
Box 889 Folder 4
Box 889 Folder 5
Box 889 Folder 6
Box 889 Folder 7
Box 889 Folder 8
Box 889 Folder 9
Box 889 Folder 10
Box 889 Folder 11
Box 889 Folder 12
Box 889 Folder 13
Box 889 Folder 14
Box 889 Folder 15
Box 889 Folder 16
Box 889 Folder 17
Box 889 Folder 18
Box 889 Folder 19
Box 889 Folder 20
Box 889 Folder 21
Box 889 Folder 22
Box 889 Folder 23
Box 889 Folder 24
Box 889 Folder 25
Box 890 Folder 1
Box 890 Folder 2
Box 890 Folder 3
Box 890 Folder 4
Box 890 Folder 5
Box 890 Folder 6
Box 890 Folder 7
Box 890 Folder 8
Box 890 Folder 9
Box 890 Folder 10
Box 890 Folder 11
Box 890 Folder 12
Box 890 Folder 13
Box 890 Folder 14
Box 890 Folder 15
Box 890 Folder 16
Box 890 Folder 17
Box 890 Folder 18
Box 891 Folder 1
Box 891 Folder 2
Box 891 Folder 3
Box 891 Folder 4
Box 891 Folder 5
Box 891 Folder 6
Box 891 Folder 7
Box 891 Folder 8
Box 891 Folder 9
Box 891 Folder 10
Box 891 Folder 11
Box 891 Folder 12
Box 891 Folder 13
Box 891 Folder 14
Box 891 Folder 15
Box 891 Folder 16
Box 891 Folder 17
Box 891 Folder 18
Box 891 Folder 19
Box 891 Folder 20
Box 891 Folder 21
Box 891 Folder 22
Box 891 Folder 23
Box 891 Folder 24
Box 891 Folder 25
Box 891 Folder 26
Box 892 Folder 1
Box 892 Folder 2
Box 892 Folder 3
Box 892 Folder 4
Box 892 Folder 5
Box 892 Folder 6
Box 892 Folder 7
Box 892 Folder 8
Box 892 Folder 9
Box 892 Folder 10
Box 892 Folder 11
Box 892 Folder 12
Box 892 Folder 13
Box 892 Folder 14
Box 892 Folder 15
Box 892 Folder 16
Box 892 Folder 17
Box 892 Folder 18
Box 892 Folder 19
Box 892 Folder 20
Box 892 Folder 21
Box 892 Folder 22
Box 892 Folder 23
Box 892 Folder 24
Box 892 Folder 25
Box 892 Folder 26
Box 892 Folder 27
Box 892 Folder 28
Box 892 Folder 29
Box 892 Folder 30
Box 893 Folder 1
Box 893 Folder 2
Box 893 Folder 3
Box 893 Folder 4
Box 893 Folder 5
Box 893 Folder 6
Box 893 Folder 7
Box 893 Folder 8
Box 893 Folder 9
Box 893 Folder 10
Box 893 Folder 11
Box 893 Folder 12
Box 893 Folder 13
Box 893 Folder 14
Box 893 Folder 15
Box 893 Folder 16
Box 893 Folder 17
Box 893 Folder 18
Box 893 Folder 19
Box 894 Folder 1
Box 894 Folder 2
Box 894 Folder 3
Box 894 Folder 4
Box 894 Folder 5
Box 894 Folder 6
Box 894 Folder 7
Box 894 Folder 8
Box 894 Folder 9
Box 894 Folder 10
Box 894 Folder 11
Box 894 Folder 12
Box 894 Folder 13
Box 894 Folder 14
Box 894 Folder 15
Box 894 Folder 16
Box 894 Folder 17
Box 894 Folder 18
Box 894 Folder 19
Box 894 Folder 20
Box 894 Folder 21
Box 894 Folder 22
Box 894 Folder 23
Box 895 Folder 1
Box 895 Folder 2
Box 895 Folder 3
Box 895 Folder 4
Box 895 Folder 5
Box 895 Folder 6
Box 895 Folder 7
Box 895 Folder 8
Box 895 Folder 9
Box 895 Folder 10
Box 895 Folder 11
Box 895 Folder 12
Box 895 Folder 13
Box 895 Folder 14
Box 895 Folder 15
Box 895 Folder 16
Box 895 Folder 17
Box 895 Folder 18
Box 895 Folder 19
Box 895 Folder 20
Box 895 Folder 21
Box 895 Folder 22
Box 895 Folder 23
Box 895 Folder 24
Box 896 Folder 1
Box 896 Folder 2
Box 896 Folder 3
Box 896 Folder 4
Box 896 Folder 5
Box 896 Folder 6
Box 896 Folder 7
Box 896 Folder 8
Box 896 Folder 9
Box 896 Folder 10
Box 896 Folder 11
Box 896 Folder 12
Box 896 Folder 13
Box 896 Folder 14
Box 896 Folder 15
Box 896 Folder 16
Box 896 Folder 17
Box 897 Folder 1
Box 897 Folder 2
Box 897 Folder 3
Box 897 Folder 4
Box 897 Folder 5
Box 897 Folder 6
Box 897 Folder 7
Box 897 Folder 8
Box 897 Folder 9
Box 897 Folder 10
Box 897 Folder 11
Box 897 Folder 12
Box 898 Folder 1
Box 898 Folder 2
Box 898 Folder 3
Box 898 Folder 4
Box 898 Folder 5
Box 898 Folder 6
Box 898 Folder 7
Box 898 Folder 8
Box 898 Folder 9
Box 898 Folder 10
Box 898 Folder 11
Box 898 Folder 12
Box 898 Folder 13
Box 898 Folder 14
Box 898 Folder 15
Box 898 Folder 16
Box 898 Folder 17
Box 898 Folder 18
Box 898 Folder 19
Box 898 Folder 20
Box 898 Folder 21
Box 899 Folder 1
Box 899 Folder 2
Box 899 Folder 3
Box 899 Folder 4
Box 899 Folder 5
Box 899 Folder 6
Box 899 Folder 7
Box 899 Folder 8
Box 899 Folder 9
Box 899 Folder 10
Box 899 Folder 11
Box 899 Folder 12
Box 899 Folder 13
Box 899 Folder 14
Box 899 Folder 15
Box 899 Folder 16
Box 899 Folder 17
Box 899 Folder 18
Box 899 Folder 19
Box 899 Folder 20
Box 899 Folder 21
Box 900 Folder 1
Box 900 Folder 2
Box 900 Folder 3
Box 900 Folder 4
Box 900 Folder 5
Box 900 Folder 6
Box 900 Folder 7
Box 900 Folder 8
Box 900 Folder 9
Box 900 Folder 10
Box 900 Folder 11
Box 900 Folder 12
Box 900 Folder 13
Box 900 Folder 14
Box 900 Folder 15
Box 900 Folder 16
Box 900 Folder 17
Box 900 Folder 18
Box 900 Folder 19
Box 900 Folder 20
Box 900 Folder 21
Box 900 Folder 22
Box 900 Folder 23
Box 900 Folder 24
Box 900 Folder 25
Box 900 Folder 26
Box 900 Folder 27
Box 900 Folder 28
Box 900 Folder 29
Box 900 Folder 30
Box 901 Folder 1
Box 901 Folder 2
Box 901 Folder 3
Box 901 Folder 4
Box 901 Folder 5
Box 901 Folder 6
Box 901 Folder 7
Box 901 Folder 8
Box 901 Folder 9
Box 901 Folder 10
Box 901 Folder 11
Box 901 Folder 12
Box 901 Folder 13
Box 901 Folder 14
Box 901 Folder 15
Box 901 Folder 16
Box 901 Folder 17
Box 901 Folder 18
Box 901 Folder 19
Box 901 Folder 20
Box 902 Folder 1
Box 902 Folder 2
Box 902 Folder 3
Box 902 Folder 4
Box 902 Folder 5
Box 902 Folder 6
Box 902 Folder 7
Box 902 Folder 8
Box 902 Folder 9
Box 902 Folder 10
Box 902 Folder 11
Box 902 Folder 12
Box 902 Folder 13
Box 902 Folder 14
Box 902 Folder 15
Box 903 Folder 1
Box 903 Folder 2
Box 903 Folder 3
Box 903 Folder 4
Box 903 Folder 5
Box 903 Folder 6
Box 903 Folder 7
Box 903 Folder 8
Box 903 Folder 9
Box 903 Folder 10
Box 903 Folder 11
Box 903 Folder 12
Box 903 Folder 13
Box 903 Folder 14
Box 903 Folder 15
Box 903 Folder 16
Box 903 Folder 17
Box 903 Folder 18
Box 903 Folder 19
Box 903 Folder 20
Box 904 Folder 1
Box 904 Folder 2
Box 904 Folder 3
Box 904 Folder 4
Box 904 Folder 5
Box 904 Folder 6
Box 904 Folder 7
Box 904 Folder 8
Box 904 Folder 9
Box 904 Folder 10
Box 904 Folder 11
Box 904 Folder 12
Box 904 Folder 13
Box 904 Folder 14
Box 904 Folder 15
Box 904 Folder 16
Box 904 Folder 17
Box 904 Folder 18
Box 904 Folder 19
Box 904 Folder 20
Box 904 Folder 21
Box 904 Folder 22
Box 904 Folder 23
This series of Central Files is the continuation of records found in Series I covering the year July 1, 1982 to June 30, 1983. Individually named and general alphabetical files are arranged in one alphabetical sequence.
Box 905 Folder 1
Box 905 Folder 2
Box 905 Folder 3
Box 905 Folder 4
Box 905 Folder 5
Box 905 Folder 6
Box 905 Folder 7
Box 905 Folder 8
Box 905 Folder 9
Box 905 Folder 10
Box 905 Folder 11
Box 905 Folder 12
Box 905 Folder 13
Box 905 Folder 14
Box 905 Folder 15
Box 905 Folder 16
Box 905 Folder 17
Box 905 Folder 18
Box 905 Folder 19
Box 905 Folder 20
Box 905 Folder 21
Box 906 Folder 1
Box 906 Folder 2
Box 906 Folder 3
Box 906 Folder 4
Box 906 Folder 5
Box 906 Folder 6
Box 906 Folder 7
Box 906 Folder 8
Box 906 Folder 9
Box 906 Folder 10
Box 906 Folder 11
Box 906 Folder 12
Box 906 Folder 13
Box 906 Folder 14
Box 906 Folder 15
Box 906 Folder 16
Box 906 Folder 17
Box 906 Folder 18
Box 906 Folder 19
Box 907 Folder 1
Box 907 Folder 2
Box 907 Folder 3
Box 907 Folder 4
Box 907 Folder 5
Box 907 Folder 6
Box 907 Folder 7
Box 907 Folder 8
Box 907 Folder 9
Box 907 Folder 10
Box 907 Folder 11
Box 907 Folder 12
Box 907 Folder 13
Box 907 Folder 14
Box 907 Folder 15
Box 907 Folder 16
Box 907 Folder 17
Box 907 Folder 18
Box 907 Folder 19
Box 907 Folder 20
Box 907 Folder 21
Box 907 Folder 22
Box 907 Folder 23
Box 908 Folder 1
Box 908 Folder 2
Box 908 Folder 3
Box 908 Folder 4
Box 908 Folder 5
Box 908 Folder 6
Box 908 Folder 7
Box 908 Folder 8
Box 908 Folder 9
Box 908 Folder 10
Box 908 Folder 11
Box 908 Folder 12
Box 908 Folder 13
Box 908 Folder 14
Box 908 Folder 15
Box 908 Folder 16
Box 908 Folder 17
Box 908 Folder 18
Box 908 Folder 19
Box 908
Box 908 Folder 2
Box 908 Folder 3
Box 908 Folder 4
Box 908 Folder 5
Box 908 Folder 6
Box 908 Folder 7
Box 908 Folder 8
Box 908 Folder 9
Box 908 Folder 10
Box 908 Folder 11
Box 908 Folder 12
Box 908 Folder 13
Box 908 Folder 14
Box 908 Folder 15
Box 908 Folder 16
Box 908 Folder 17
Box 908 Folder 18
Box 908 Folder 19
Box 908 Folder 20
Box 908 Folder 21
Box 908 Folder 22
Box 908 Folder 23
Box 908 Folder 24
Box 908
Box 908 Folder 2
Box 908 Folder 3
Box 908 Folder 4
Box 908 Folder 5
Box 908 Folder 6
Box 908 Folder 7
Box 908 Folder 8
Box 908 Folder 9
Box 908 Folder 10
Box 911 Folder 1
Box 911 Folder 2
Box 911 Folder 3
Box 911 Folder 4
Box 911 Folder 5
Box 911 Folder 6
Box 911 Folder 7
Box 911 Folder 8
Box 911 Folder 9
Box 911 Folder 10
Box 911 Folder 11
Box 911 Folder 12
Box 911 Folder 13
Box 911 Folder 14
Box 911 Folder 15
Box 911 Folder 16
Box 911 Folder 17
Box 911 Folder 18
Box 911 Folder 19
Box 911 Folder 20
Box 911 Folder 21
Box 911 Folder 22
Box 911 Folder 23
Box 912 Folder 1
Box 912 Folder 2
Box 912 Folder 3
Box 912 Folder 4
Box 912 Folder 5
Box 912 Folder 6
Box 912 Folder 7
Box 912 Folder 8
Box 912 Folder 9
Box 912 Folder 10
Box 912 Folder 11
Box 912 Folder 12
Box 912 Folder 13
Box 912 Folder 14
Box 912 Folder 15
Box 912 Folder 16
Box 912 Folder 17
Box 912 Folder 18
Box 912 Folder 19
Box 912 Folder 20
Box 912 Folder 21
Box 912 Folder 22
Box 912 Folder 23
Box 913 Folder 1
Box 913 Folder 2
Box 913 Folder 3
Box 913 Folder 4
Box 913 Folder 5
Box 913 Folder 6
Box 913 Folder 7
Box 913 Folder 8
Box 913 Folder 9
Box 913 Folder 10
Box 913 Folder 11
Box 913 Folder 12
Box 913 Folder 13
Box 913 Folder 14
Box 913 Folder 15
Box 913 Folder 16
Box 913 Folder 17
Box 913 Folder 18
Box 913 Folder 19
Box 913 Folder 20
Box 914 Folder 1
Box 914 Folder 2
Box 914 Folder 3
Box 914 Folder 4
Box 914 Folder 5
Box 914 Folder 6
Box 914 Folder 7
Box 914 Folder 8
Box 914 Folder 9
Box 914 Folder 10
Box 914 Folder 11
Box 914 Folder 12
Box 914 Folder 13
Box 914 Folder 14
Box 914 Folder 15
Box 914 Folder 16
Box 914 Folder 17
Box 914 Folder 18
Box 914 Folder 19
Box 914 Folder 20
Box 914 Folder 21
Box 914 Folder 22
Box 914 Folder 23
Box 914 Folder 24
Box 914 Folder 25
Box 914 Folder 26
Box 915 Folder 1
Box 915 Folder 2
Box 915 Folder 3
Box 915 Folder 4
Box 915 Folder 5
Box 915 Folder 6
Box 915 Folder 7
Box 915 Folder 8
Box 915 Folder 9
Box 915 Folder 10
Box 915 Folder 11
Box 915 Folder 12
Box 915 Folder 13
Box 915 Folder 14
Box 915 Folder 15
Box 915 Folder 16
Box 915 Folder 17
Box 915 Folder 18
Box 915 Folder 19
Box 915 Folder 20
Box 915 Folder 21
Box 915 Folder 22
Box 915 Folder 23
Box 915 Folder 24
Box 916 Folder 1
Box 916 Folder 2
Box 916 Folder 3
Box 916 Folder 4
Box 916 Folder 5
Box 916 Folder 6
Box 916 Folder 7
Box 916 Folder 8
Box 916 Folder 9
Box 916 Folder 10
Box 916 Folder 11
Box 916 Folder 12
Box 916 Folder 13
Box 916 Folder 14
Box 916 Folder 15
Box 916 Folder 16
Box 916 Folder 17
Box 916 Folder 18
Box 916 Folder 19
Box 916 Folder 20
Box 916 Folder 21
Box 916 Folder 22
Box 916 Folder 23
Box 916 Folder 24
Box 916 Folder 25
Box 916 Folder 26
Box 917 Folder 1
Box 917 Folder 2
Box 917 Folder 3
Box 917 Folder 4
Box 917 Folder 5
Box 917 Folder 6
Box 917 Folder 7
Box 917 Folder 8
Box 917 Folder 9
Box 917 Folder 10
Box 917 Folder 11
Box 917 Folder 12
Box 917 Folder 13
Box 917 Folder 14
Box 917 Folder 15
Box 917 Folder 16
Box 917 Folder 17
Box 917 Folder 18
Box 917 Folder 19
Box 917 Folder 20
Box 917 Folder 21
Box 917 Folder 22
Box 918 Folder 1
Box 918 Folder 2
Box 918 Folder 3
Box 918 Folder 4
Box 918 Folder 5
Box 918 Folder 6
Box 918 Folder 7
Box 918 Folder 8
Box 918 Folder 9
Box 918 Folder 10
Box 918 Folder 11
Box 918 Folder 12
Box 918 Folder 13
Box 918 Folder 14
Box 918 Folder 15
Box 918 Folder 16
Box 918 Folder 17
Box 918 Folder 18
Box 918 Folder 19
Box 918 Folder 20
Box 918 Folder 21
Box 918 Folder 22
Box 918 Folder 23
Box 919 Folder 1
Box 919 Folder 2
Box 919 Folder 3
Box 919 Folder 4
Box 919 Folder 5
Box 919 Folder 6
Box 919 Folder 7
Box 919 Folder 8
Box 919 Folder 9
Box 919 Folder 10
Box 919 Folder 11
Box 919 Folder 12
Box 919 Folder 13
Box 919 Folder 14
Box 919 Folder 15
Box 919 Folder 16
Box 919 Folder 17
Box 919 Folder 18
Box 919 Folder 19
Box 919 Folder 20
Box 919 Folder 21
Box 919 Folder 22
Box 919 Folder 23
Box 919 Folder 24
Box 920 Folder 1
Box 920 Folder 2
Box 920 Folder 3
Box 920 Folder 4
Box 920 Folder 5
Box 920 Folder 6
Box 920 Folder 7
Box 920 Folder 8
Box 920 Folder 9
Box 920 Folder 10
Box 920 Folder 11
Box 920 Folder 12
Box 920 Folder 13
Box 920 Folder 14
Box 920 Folder 15
Box 920 Folder 16
Box 920 Folder 17
Box 920 Folder 18
Box 920 Folder 19
Box 920 Folder 20
Box 920 Folder 21
Box 920 Folder 22
Box 921 Folder 1
Box 921 Folder 2
Box 921 Folder 3
Box 921 Folder 4
Box 921 Folder 5
Box 921 Folder 6
Box 921 Folder 7
Box 921 Folder 8
Box 921 Folder 9
Box 921 Folder 10
Box 921 Folder 11
Box 921 Folder 12
Box 921 Folder 13
Box 921 Folder 14
Box 922 Folder 1
Box 922 Folder 2
Box 922 Folder 3
Box 922 Folder 4
Box 922 Folder 5
Box 922 Folder 6
Box 922 Folder 7
Box 922 Folder 8
Box 922 Folder 9
Box 922 Folder 10
Box 922 Folder 11
Box 922 Folder 12
Box 922 Folder 13
Box 922 Folder 14
Box 922 Folder 15
Box 922 Folder 16
Box 922 Folder 17
Box 922 Folder 18
Box 922 Folder 19
Box 922 Folder 20
Box 922 Folder 21
Box 922 Folder 22
Box 922 Folder 23
Box 922 Folder 24
Box 922 Folder 25
Box 922 Folder 26
Box 922 Folder 27
Box 922 Folder 28
Box 923 Folder 1
Box 923 Folder 2
Box 923 Folder 3
Box 923 Folder 4
Box 923 Folder 5
Box 923 Folder 6
Box 923 Folder 7
Box 923 Folder 8
Box 923 Folder 9
Box 923 Folder 10
Box 923 Folder 11
Box 923 Folder 12
Box 923 Folder 13
Box 923 Folder 14
Box 923 Folder 15
Box 923 Folder 16
Box 923 Folder 17
Box 923 Folder 18
Box 923 Folder 19
Box 923 Folder 20
Box 923 Folder 21
Box 923 Folder 22
Box 923 Folder 23
Box 923 Folder 24
Box 923 Folder 25
Box 923 Folder 26
Box 923 Folder 27
Box 924 Folder 1
Box 924 Folder 2
Box 924 Folder 3
Box 924 Folder 4
Box 924 Folder 5
Box 924 Folder 6
Box 924 Folder 7
Box 924 Folder 8
Box 924 Folder 9
Box 924 Folder 10
Box 924 Folder 11
Box 924 Folder 12
Box 924 Folder 13
Box 924 Folder 14
Box 924 Folder 15
Box 924 Folder 16
Box 924 Folder 17
Box 924 Folder 18
Box 924 Folder 19
Box 924 Folder 20
Box 924 Folder 21
Box 924 Folder 22
Box 925 Folder 1
Box 925 Folder 2
Box 925 Folder 3
Box 925 Folder 4
Box 925 Folder 5
Box 925 Folder 6
Box 925 Folder 7
Box 925 Folder 8
Box 925 Folder 9
Box 925 Folder 10
Box 925 Folder 11
Box 925 Folder 12
Box 925 Folder 13
Box 925 Folder 14
Box 925 Folder 15
Box 926
Box 926 Folder 1
Box 926 Folder 2
Box 926 Folder 3
Box 926 Folder 4
Box 926 Folder 5
Box 926 Folder 6
Box 926 Folder 7
Box 926 Folder 8
Box 926 Folder 9
Box 926 Folder 10
Box 926 Folder 11
Box 926 Folder 12
Box 926 Folder 13
Box 926 Folder 14
Box 926 Folder 15
Box 926 Folder 16
Box 926 Folder 17
Box 926 Folder 18
Box 926 Folder 19
Box 927 Folder 1
Box 927 Folder 2
Box 927 Folder 3
Box 927 Folder 4
Box 927 Folder 5
Box 927 Folder 6
Box 927 Folder 7
Box 927 Folder 8
Box 927 Folder 9
Box 927 Folder 10
Box 927 Folder 11
Box 927 Folder 12
Box 927 Folder 13
Box 927 Folder 14
Box 927 Folder 15
Box 927 Folder 16
Box 927 Folder 17
Box 927 Folder 18
Box 927 Folder 19
Box 927 Folder 20
Box 927 Folder 21
Box 927 Folder 22
Box 927 Folder 23
Box 927 Folder 24
This series of Central Files is the continuation of records found in Series I covering the year July 1, 1983 to June 30, 1984. Individually named and general alphabetical files are arranged in one alphabetical sequence. Only the first three folders of this series ("A", "AC" and "AD") are currently available for use. The rest of this series is currently unavailable for use.
Box 927 Folder 25
Box 927 Folder 26
Box 927 Folder 27