The Wanamaker Collection, 1908-1921 is a collection of images and documents taken of Native American Peoples during the first decades of the 1900s. Joseph K. Dixon, under the sponsorship of John and Rodman Wanamaker of Philadelphia, took three western expeditions that produced more than 8,000 images. Dixon later documented Native participation in World War I through photographs of the veterans and individual questionnaires. and The IU Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology is committed to responsible stewardship of collections including images of one's family and community; please email iumaa@iu.edu if you would like to unpublish an image of your relative.
The Indiana University Libraries Moving Image Archive (IULMIA) is one of the world’s largest educational film and video collections. The archive contains mor...
Robert Berry (born 1940) is an actor, playwright, and teacher. While a student in the Theater Department at Indiana University Bloomington in the summer of 1...
Doris Joan Richards Neff graduated from Indiana University in 1949 with a BA in Physical Education with High Distinction. This collection consists of four sc...
The Hungarian-American project was an international undertaking of the Indiana University Folklore Institute between 1981 and 1984. Headed by IU folklorists ...
This is the collection of anthropologist Fred McEvoy’s photographs from his 1967-1968 research among Sabo labor migrants in southeastern Liberia. McEvoy's ma...
The Indiana University Physical Plant was the central department for university buildings and grounds upkeep from 1959-2015. Prior to 1959 the Physical Plant...
The Friends of Liberia collection consists of educational, and government material. Within the collection there is also information about the organization, a...
Bai T. Moore was a renowned poet and author whose work was greatly influenced by his experiences growing up in Liberia. In addition to Moore's career as a wr...
The Johnson, J. mss. consists of materials devised by Jane (Russell) Johnson primarily for the instruction of her son, George William Johnson. The materials ...
The title emerged from a 1971 merger of The Component and Onomatopoeia to create a student newspaper for all of IUPUI. At different times the newspaper appea...
Students of Purdue University-Indianapolis Extension located on east 38th Street published this title, first monthly and later twice each month. The paper co...
This weekly title first appeared at two-week intervals after the IUPUI merger. It focused on the ”Circle City Campus” or “Downtown Campus” at 518 North Delaw...
This title appeared monthly and later twice each month. It served students taking classes in the buildings at 518 North Delaware and 122 East Michigan Street...
One issue of this title survives. The newspaper catered to students of the “Indianapolis Center” of the IU Indianapolis Extension campus located in buildings...
This collection contains digitized student newspapers of the Indiana University and Purdue University presences in Indianapolis held in IU Indianapolis Unive...
The Spectrum began its two-year run on November 4, 1965, as the student newspaper for the South Bend-Mishawaka Campus of Indiana University; by the time it w...
Succeeding The Spectrum, South Bend Campus Student began publication on January 12, 1968, with an eight-page issue heralding a student-arranged concert by Th...
The Preface is Indiana University South Bend's preeminent and longest-running student newspaper. The paper has been in publication on campus since 1969, two ...