Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Valparaiso University (Valpo) is a private university in Valparaiso, Indiana, United States. It is an independent Lutheran university with five colleges. It enrolls nearly 2,300 students [ 3 ] and has a 350-acre (140 ha) campus.
R. J. Q. Adams (M.A. 1969), professor of European and British history at Texas A&M University; Patrick Roger Cleary, founder of Cleary University [1] William P. Richardson (1864–1945), co-founder and first dean of Brooklyn Law School; Henry P. Rusk, dean of the Department of Agriculture at the University of Illinois
To cut costs, the university shut down its law school in 2020 and no longer offers degrees in secondary education and French. By selling the paintings, Valparaiso will raise more than the projected $8–10 million needed to build new student housing, [2] with the O'Keeffe painting alone worth $10–15 million. [3]
Chloe Kiser, one of two professors leading “The Human Experience: Empathy and Dialogue” for a class of first-year students in Valparaiso University’s new Access College for Success, went ...
Valparaiso University seal.png 267 × 265; 58 KB. VU-HeritageHall-1905.jpg 521 × 377; 277 KB. VU-OldCollegeBuilding-1918.jpg 631 × 400; 350 KB This page was last ...
The Valparaiso University Law School was the law school of Valparaiso University, a private university in Valparaiso, Indiana. [1] Founded in 1879, the school was accredited by the American Bar Association in 1929 and admitted to the Association of American Law Schools in 1930. [2]
The Christopher Center Library (also known as the Christopher Center for Library and Information Resources) is the library on the campus of Valparaiso University in Valparaiso, Indiana. [1] The Christopher Center is Valparaiso's fourth library and replaces the former Henry F. Moellering Library, which was demolished in 2005 to make way for the ...
It is located in the Valparaiso University Center for the Arts (VUCA). Prior to the museum's opening, the university's collection was housed and displayed within several buildings across campus. It was named the Brauer Museum of Art in 1996 to honor the collection's long-time director and curator, Richard H. W. Brauer.