Search Results
Biographical
Biographical material consists of a family history written by Andy; descriptions of the jobs she held from 1968-1979; scrapbooks compiled by her mother, Lael Cappaert, for the years, 1952-1969; and a book on the first nine years of Andy's life And God Said No, written by her mother in 1961.
Biographical
Biographical contains miscellaneous sources of material, some written by Moore himself.
Biographical
The Biographical series contains a brief sketch of the life of Wells before and after his time working with the Michigan Central Railway Tunnel project.
Biographical
0.5 linear feet
The Biographical series contains several autobiographical writings, lists of publications, genealogical materials, and a volume entitled "Permanent memoranda," in which Winchell summarized his life by tabulating his publications, new species described, income, public lectures, and other benchmarks.
Biographical
The Biographical series (0.3 linear feet) includes materials which give an excellent overview of MacDonald's family, career, and civic activities. Particularly helpful are the "Obituaries/Posthumous Accolades," as they provide a context for the other materials, which represent family and civic interests. The "Clippings--Career" file offers a comprehensive selection of information on MacDonald's career status and objectives over a broad period of time, including his bid for WSAM in 1962.
Biographical
Biographical Information includes a bibliography of Christensen's academic journal articles, some personal recollections about his childhood, and some brief professional information. The journal article listing is current to 1995 and is assembled from many different summaries found in his papers. The personal childhood reflection is dated 1990 and is approximately 25 pages long. The professional information includes a summary of his University of Michigan personnel record (when he arrived in 1955) and also has a ten page reflection about his time as Chair of the Biochemistry Department at the University of Michigan (as recollected in 1992).