One of the massive pillars that was carved in the form of a giant (with snake tail) for the Odeon of Agrippa, a large concert hall located in the center of the Ancient Agora of Athens.
The Oddny was the name of a boat that Walter J. Breckenridge, wife Dorothy, and Dr. Robert and Mrs. Green chartered to travel on the Hudson Bay while on their research trip in the summer of 1933.
Creator:
Bell Museum of Natural History
Contributor:
Breckenridge, Walter J., 1903-2003 (Photographer)
Created:
1933-08-25
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, University Archives.
The Oddny was the name of a boat that Walter J. Breckenridge, wife Dorothy, and Dr. Robert and Mrs. Green chartered to travel on the Hudson Bay while on their research trip in the summer of 1933.
Creator:
Bell Museum of Natural History
Contributor:
Breckenridge, Walter J., 1903-2003 (Photographer)
Created:
1933-08-25
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, University Archives.
The Oddny was the name of a boat that Walter J. Breckenridge, wife Dorothy, and Dr. Robert and Mrs. Green chartered to travel on the Hudson Bay while on their research trip in the summer of 1933.
Creator:
Bell Museum of Natural History
Contributor:
Breckenridge, Walter J., 1903-2003 (Photographer)
Created:
1933-08-27
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, University Archives.
The Oddny was the name of a boat that Walter J. Breckenridge, wife Dorothy, and Dr. Robert and Mrs. Green chartered to travel on the Hudson Bay while on their research trip in the summer of 1933.
Creator:
Bell Museum of Natural History
Contributor:
Breckenridge, Walter J., 1903-2003 (Photographer)
Created:
1933-08-26
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, University Archives.
An Ethiopian drama centered around questions of religion and spirituality, chosen as the University Theatre entry for the American College Theatre Festival regional competition.
Watercolor painting of two pairs of mallards floating among stalks of wild rice. "OCTOBER" painted across the image in block letters. This is an early, possibly childhood work by Francis Lee Jaques and may be adapted or copied from other sources. Image is mounted on brown paper; slots have been cut in the paper, and the edges of the painted shee...