The building is named in honor of Amy du Pont,
(1876-1962), benefactor, creator of the Unidel Foundation.
The Music Resources Center in the Amy
du Pont Music Building houses a collection of over 9000 sound recordings
and 230 video recordings.
The gamelan studio in the Amy du Pont
Music Building is used by the University's two gamelan ensembles. Gamelan
is the major performing ensemble of Southeast Asia, analogous to the orchestra
in Western culture.
The building is named in honor of the
first dean of the School of Home Economics, Amy Rextrew: member of the
faculty from 1927; dean of home economics, 1945-48; dean of women, 1948-52.
The building is named in honor of Trustee
R.R.M. Carpenter, Jr., who is also a member of the UD Athletics Hall of
Fame and the Delaware Sports Hall of Fame.
An aerial view of the Bob Carpenter Center,
with the Delaware Stadium, Mini-Stadium, and baseball diamond in the
background.
The building is named in honor of Allan P. Colburn,
assistant to the president, 1947-50, and provost, 1950-55, who was a member
of the chemical engineering department from 1938.
The building is named in memory of father and
son George Gillespie Evans [pictured] and Charles Black Evans, who were
members of the Board of Trustees.
The building is named for Walter Scott Finney
Graham [above], president of Delaware College 1851-54; his brother William Sloan Graham,
valedictorian of the first graduating class of Delaware College; and their
father, Rev. Robert Graham, a trustee of the Academy of Newark and Newark College.
The building is named for William Sloan Graham [above],
valedictorian of the first graduating class of Delaware College; his brother
Walter Scott Finney Graham, president of Delaware College 1851-54; and their
father, Rev. Robert Graham, a trustee of the Academy of Newark and Newark College.