Office of Communications records, 1921-2005.

ArchivalResource

Office of Communications records, 1921-2005.

The Office of Communications records consist of subject files which document regular University business as well as special events, University policies, individual departments, faculty members, student activities and life, and dealings with alumni and donors. Also in this collection are clippings, faculty biographies, and assorted photographs of individuals and campus scenes, as well as the photographs of official University Photographers Bob Matthews and Denise Applewhite.

188.79 linear ft. (200 boxes)

Information

SNAC Resource ID: 8114771

Princeton University Library

Related Entities

There are 7 Entities related to this resource.

Princeton University. Office of Communications and Publications.

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Princeton University. Office of Communications.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6d56hcp (corporateBody)

The Office of Communications provides a variety of services for members of the University community, news media, and the public and is responsible for the Princeton Weekly Bulletin, the University web site, admission and course catalogs, the University's Martin Luther King Day celebration, and logo and poster design. The history of the University's Office of Communications can be traced to 1925, when Alexander Leitch was appointed Director of Public Relations. He was suc...

Princeton university press

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6jd8kft (corporateBody)

Founded in 1905 with a gift from Charles Scribner (Princeton Class of 1875), the Press was incorporated in 1910 as a non-profit corporation "to establish, maintain, and operate a printing and publishing plant, for the promotion of education and scholarship, and to serve the University by manufacturing and distributing its publications." The Press has published almost 3,000 titles since its first book, John Witherspoon's LECTURES IN MORAL PHILOSOPHY, appeared in 1912. Among its long-term projects...

Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs

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The School of Public and International Affairs was founded in 1930 as a cooperative enterprise of the History, Politics, and Economics Departments of Princeton University at the undergraduate level. With the establishment of a graduate program in 1948, the school was renamed for former president Woodrow Wilson, and a substantial gift in 1961 allowed for the enrollment of additional graduate students and the construction of a new facility (Robertson Hall). From the description of Wood...

Princeton University. Trustees

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Since its incorporation in 1746, the College of New Jersey (renamed Princeton University in 1896) has been governed by a Board of Trustees, headed ex officio by the Governor of New Jersey and the president of the college. The Trustees are responsible for the overarching policies that guide the trajectory of the university. Traditionally, committees of Trustees have concerned themselves with the major aspects of maintaining and running a university: finance, infrastructure, staff, curriculum, and...

Princeton University

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w63z1x39 (corporateBody)

The collection documents the physical expansion of the University from its earliest period through the acquisition of large tracts of land in the 20th century, including the properties around Carnegie Lake and numerous farms. Early records document transactions with such Princeton University notables as Nathaniel Fitz Randolph, John Witherspoon, Walter Minto, John and Richard Stockton, and John Maclean. For the most part, the papers consist of standard legal documents with detailed descriptions ...

Princeton University Faculty.

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