Photograph (undated) of the Long Center on the University of Scranton campus. In the foreground is Linden Street, currently the site of the University Commons.
Photograph (ca. 1967) of the Long Center under construction, in the snow. The Hotel Casey and the Lackawanna Station in downtown Scranton are visible in the background, as is the Alumni Memorial Library.
Photograph dated November 26, 1967, of Father Aloysius C. Galvin, S.J. (President of the University of Scranton 1965-1970), Scranton Mayor James J. Walsh, and Most Rev. J. Carroll McCormick, D.D. (Bishop of Scranton), during the dedication of The...
Photograph dated July 20, 1966 of the ground breaking ceremony for the University of Scranton's Long Center, then known as the Physical Education Building. From left to right: Scranton Redevelopment Authority counsel Atty. David Miller, Lackawanna...
Article about the history of the University of Scranton by Dr. Frank X. J. Homer '64. This article served as the fifth and final installment of a series of preprints from The University of Scranton: A Centennial History.
Photograph (undated) of the University of Scranton campus at night. Linden Street is at center, with the Long Center (left) and St. Thomas Hall visible in the background.
Course catalog (undergraduate) for the 1970-1971 academic year. This catalog is numbered as Volume 55, No. 4 of the Bulletin of the University of Scranton.
Course catalog (undergraduate) for the 1976-1977 academic year. This catalog is numbered as Volume 61, No 4. Pages 4-5 were mistakenly omitted during the digitization process.
Photograph of University of Scranton students arriving on Move-In Day during Orientation 1977. The photograph was taken on Linden Street in front of the Long Center.
Black and white photograph dated July 16, 1965 of the demolition of residences from Quincy to Clay Avenue between Linden Street and Ridge Row, in preparation for the construction of a Field House (later named the Long Center) on the University of...
Draft of a book on the history of the University of Scranton, written by Frank Homer, Professor Emeritus of History at the University who was also a graduate of the University's class of 1964 and is considered the University's historian.