Ces of the University
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—« H V. s: V J / \ > \* I kv^. 1 ...V -. -**J % fcM • « S*\ ^*sfe '/ PKi^Biik. i •; i ... •^•^ ^••V. 'L'**.*-'*^. - "iwo»nmi>H •«?**»' // ^ \ . k c '<*•* ^ I* "** *tf Jk*-r The University Or Portland presents in retrospect a year of activities in re? ~ • <y> v& * • Nineteen Fiity - Four University or Portland Portland, Oregon Volume XX •4f *> &*&*'&* L«¥ / -! x >* i •J \,*v wK !i'$ - &V ,-•- -vtf. 5£i Patricia Pendergjast, co-editor John M. Clirisman, co-editor Rev. Lloyd "W. Tesfce, C. S. C, adviser o Coll eees 3 £j Administration and Faculty w Classe s Activities Athletics Within our circling expanse of green lawn we are only partly aware of the busily searching world that flashes along the boulevard in bright automobiles, feeds the tunnel mouth beneath the bluff with rumbling trains, and disturbs the slow Willamette with the feathered wakes of river commerce. But while the world flows around the campus in many-headed quest, here in new or ivied halls young men and women labor daily over test tubes, typewriters, calculators, compasses and piano keys each preparing to shape, in an individual way the future. Lightly they go about the serious business of learning to live Lightly, because all is not study and practice and experiment. There are laughter and shouts and loudspeakers blaring loudly. There are blue smoke and coffee in the cafeteria and dishes clinking in the Commons. There are bright-eyed nights of orchestras and orchids, club meetings and basketball games. In the rich grey silence of the chapel there is prayer For many, these days of fall, winter, and spring are the last college days. For all they are a time to be remembered To preserve these days for memory, we have prepared this book. Within its pages will be found a photographic record of the trials and joys, successes and occasional failures of the men and women who people the campus, and, in a smaller way, of the staff of this Nineteen Fifty-four LOG. rO MARY i tv7 X JLJLJ-<1\. through whom we receive spiritual life, whose cloak bears the print of child hands V nVVJ'riN lamp of purity, whose radiant splendor guides our night- chained steps V^ KJ I^CILN of heaven, around whose feet the sky falls softly like blue rain WE DEDICATE this 1954 LOG, our labors and their fruit, in your honor, for the Marian Year pro claimed by Pope Pius XII. Here are the vines of know ledi the traditional ivy that hears tomorrows rose. > H w West Hall: "Her ivy holds her up.' To prepare the individual for a fuller tomorrow Quiet hours in the library are also part of our cultural heritage. has always been the objective of liberal education, but the curricula is a constantly changing blend of the traditional and the new. From Aristotle to Maritain, Chaucer to Eliot, Pavlov to Galton, from Herodotus to Mayes, the liberal arts student learns the practical application of the best past and contemporary thought. Participation in the child guidance and psychology clinics, in student teaching, on publication staffs, on radio KDUP, and in University Theatre are some of these applications. 10 Freshman English is not all serious business. td w MIND ^^^^ aght ndep ; of n, IKS, other th ::: Ir, ^ real; ifihcy arc i r color or sion < '• "!" ''••• ihjc in /.'.'»(/V <>!' extension „ i, through tht rfircQa , ic awtfw "i !i,c »r, and teujperataft, \s2. J I tttl arc 1 lhc • is di;^ snilsi' The r lace m\ I and Hoes co. tnd. • ivitv of som »th.i' {fc^ tinns which th< I a' # rash jud. te is ;1,c ohi< cfivity of •r "> nidge ther-here m:«mayv he an apparentfvwwtf tnmert . i. i rocc ' mnhidgrtK ««hr*ecoi «w«rf akmott>iw*um li n Ii%. rate cf the judgmein t 3 . -men! of the •u—n —around* * ^ar» that peopk M t th* MM TV:. W Along with his professional knowledge, the business administration student acquires a background in scholastic philosophy and Christian ethics. H Facility in the use of business machines comes only after long hours of practice. 0 a The struggle to feed and clothe Tomorrow from nature's storehouse of resources is carrie i out in the business world. In preparation for accepting responsibility and leadership the business administration students search theories, fill neat accounting pages, operate business machines, and tour industrial firms. And more important they acquire the principles of business ethics without which the furtherance of social justice is impossible. Observing the design department CONT CAN at Jantzen Knitting Mills was a 1 n CQNT *•** part of a student tour to learn the BLAW KNX, merchandising field. BOEING J BORDEN** SORB WA&j ^/fjjftiD BRA, BUCYRUS BUDD M BURL MIL; Becoming acquainted with the BURR ADO i sources of law, the dark caverns filled with reports, was a part of CAL PACrJ ! the course in business law. CAN ORY0 CAN PJ£^ • U* CAP!TAt«R j CARRIER . J CASE J.I. 5 CATER TR.( CELANESE _JcERTl CHES OH | CHIMILW,| _ CHI MIL PR'_ ' uHMkWJgfl] CHGO Rl CHRYfLE* CITIES SVC i CLI MOLY ! "Boeing opened at 58 and 3/10 and closed at 56 and 4/10." Learning to read the "Board" at a stock broker's was part of the financial phase of business. Xfl The main entrance to Science Hall; the ten o'clock bell will make a difference. Physicists with spectroscope bear down on elusive rays. "There it is, right there!" Young zoologists learn the secrets of the amphibious vertebrates. H The chemistry lab: test-tubes, Bunsen burners and doubtful odors are a part of everyday training. Dorothy Stevens knows what she is mixing, but we don't. 2 c (ft cro- Student nurses arriving at the hos pital to begin floor duty. Hours in the nursery are pleasant duty. Student nurses take advantage of th Nursing students must become qualified in the chemistry lab. Life in the nurses home is not all work. On warm days, there are hours of relaxation around the outdoor bar becue. To care for the sick and helpless of tomorrow in Christian charity is the objective of the student nurse. In the College of Nursing, at St. Vincent's, since 1934 a part of the University, young women acquire a proficient knowledge operating room amphitheatre to learn details of surgery. of this basic and necessary profession. Therapeutic treatments can be fun for both nurse and Learning the operation of modern devices such as the patient. oxygen tent is a part of nurses* training. e xn o Young talent matured under the helpful guidance of an experienced master. Instructors were beacons of sureness in the darkness of uncertainty. The desire for skill I To walk on any afternoon past the long, white music building adjoining Education Hall :s to hear cacophony^ not unlike a midnight "bop" session in a musicians' hangout. These sounds of strife represent the training field for future musicians practicing now for recitals, concerts, and their weekly radio broadcasts but eventually to take a place among music lovers and music makers. They prepare to lift Tomorrow's soul toward God. Applause is the sweetest music a performer ever hears. And few can guess of the lonely hours behind the polished poise. long rehearsals on sunny afternoons. M •jlilj BOssas 30- nn JIH {III H H Modern Engineering Building era Instruction in the various shop apparatus is a part of the engineering course. ' 'A quadratic of tl 20 To build Tomorrow with his hands- this is the dream of the engineering nnr liff student. Using mathematics, the drafting board and precision instruments as his building blocks, traditional knowledge as his trowel, unlimited imagination as his mortar, and Christian principles as his blueprint, he will raise a structure of benefit to mankind. <,T*\_ 5KT5 Here, in Engineering hall, the student becomes familiar with each of these materials. *est building on campus. "Up . over . back . right there!" scond order describes a line which is a tangent to the circle.' 21 > o The AFROTC Color Guard. Playing pilot can be fun, as these smiling faces seem to indicate. Slightly large, but the effect is obvious. PERSONA„ L EQUIPMENT On Thursdays and Fridays the campus might be mistaken for an Air Force installation. On those days each week the AFROTC cadets learn to wear the Air Force blue. From across the great lawn fronting on Willamette boulevard— on these days a parade ground- come the distant military music and the chanted cadence. With no fanfare, but with equal urgency, AFROTC cadets learn aeronautics and military administration and technology. In these days of world fear the well-rounded individual must be prepared to defend Tomorrow. The piece of equipment no pilot should be without his parachute. ROTC Gracluati "S Seniors First row (Left to right) Don Zenger, Ivan Jones, Al Weber, Jim Justin, Gene Crew, Mike Walsh, Lee Flegel, Mike Poell, Bill Bierick, Gil Scherzinger, Joe Peixotto, Bob S inc lair. Second row Burke Mims, Bernard Fr itz, Frank K idd, Ral ph Irwin, Tom Becker, Bob Kroon, Pat Gilroy, Glen Reller, Charles Williams, Dave Weiland, Bernie Mandich. Third row Dade Wright, Dick Fleck, Howard Kosel, Norm Silver, Bob Br idges, Bob Christensen, Dave A lexander, George Sw indel Is, Bob M asat, Jack Howard, Fourth row Norm Chang, George Galati,Ed Herbes, Kev Van Hoomissen, Dick McManus, Don Henkle, Dick Barnard, Dick Stearns, Dean Morehouse, Ernest Basabe. era. 0 0 The Praying Hands .... campus memorial to war dead. Traditionally during October students gather in The Rev. Andrei Ouroussoff S. J., visiting the campus, Education hall for a two-day retreat from the offered the Holy Mass according to the Byzantine rite, world of books.