Harvard University
Organization
Found in 4 Collections and/or Records:
Fotis C. Kafatos personal archive
FOUND IN:
Harvard University Archives
Collection Identifier: HUM 287
Overview:
Fotis C. Kafatos (1940-2017) was professor of Biology at Harvard University (1969-1994) and chair of the Department of Cellular and Developmental Biology (1978-1981). The Fotis C. Kafatos personal archive chiefly contains Kafatos’s class notes taken while he was a student at Cornell University (1958-1961) and Harvard University (1961-1963) primarily in the fields of biology and zoology, and his Harvard University lecture notes from 1965 to 1990 that he used in his biology classes. Also...
Records of the Mary Ingraham Bunting Institute, 1933-2008 (inclusive), 1960-1999 (bulk)
FOUND IN:
Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute
Collection Identifier: RG XXVIII
Overview:
Records of the Mary Ingraham Bunting Institute contain the office files of the deans and directors of the Institute: Constance E. Smith, Alice Kimball Smith, Susan Storey Lyman (Acting Director), Patricia Albjerg Graham, Marion Kilson, Mary Baughman Anderson (Acting Director), and Margaret McKenna.
Leonard Opdycke lecture notes
FOUND IN:
Harvard University Archives
Collection Identifier: HUGB 0677.40
Scope and Contents:
Collection contains Opdycke’s lecture notes, course handouts, exams, and a few student papers for art history courses that Opdycke taught at Harvard from the 1930s through the early 1960s. Most lecture notes are handwritten; handouts and exams are mimeograph copies of typescript. Decriptive course titles were derived from Harvard University, Faculty of Arts and Sciences. Courses of instruction....
Henry Edwards Scott personal archive
FOUND IN:
Harvard University Archives
Collection Identifier: HUM 319
Overview:
This collection chiefly chronicles Henry Edwards Scott, Jr. (1900-1990) studies in the fields of chemistry, engineering sciences, English, mathematics, physics, and music at Harvard University primarily from 1918 to 1922, and his participation in student organizations including the Pi Eta Club and the Harvard Glee Club. A drawing and a commercial advertisement demonstrate Scott’s career as an artist.