Old CU
The Sports Beverage Co. of Champaign, Ill., produced Big 8 and Big 10 Football Sports Soda can collections in 1984, but little is known about why they were produced.
The campus climate in 1962 was one of controversy and turmoil amid debates over academic freedom, editorial independence of the student press and a recruiting scandal. Here are some highlights.
This innovative nose guard patented in 1891 by S. J. Cumnock of Lowell, Mass., was intended to protect the nose, forehead and mouth of a person playing football or a similar sport.
A popular custom originating in the 19th century, dance cards resulted from a woman’s social dilemma of choosing dance partners at parties.
It started with a loud knock on Frank Tyler’s door in the dead of night in January 1874, as the story goes.
Imagine the campus without Varsity Lake — just a deep, muddy ravine channeling snowmelt down the hill.
As Japanese aircraft attacked Pearl Harbor in Hawai’i on Dec. 7, 1941, CU-Boulder President Robert L. Stearns called an emergency meeting with students in Macky Auditorium.