Portland State University - Viking Yearbook (Portland, OR)
- Class of 1965
Page 1 of 211
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 211 of the 1965 volume:
“
M The book lies open Season's unremitting rain Falls to four and four again Time sediment Builds concrete spires Human atoms whir with cybernetic fires In earth's core starhearts beat Filling in the vacuum of unlearned Against your neighboris fence A lilac blooms And in your neighborfs yard A maple dies The skies are runny bubble chimes That link creation to our times The book lies open Immortality laughs tauntingly And crushes spires beneath the real four But rain produces lilacs And a maple tree While mortals seek eternity From houses lacking windows and a door And who will turn the page? preface The printed page seldom reveals the creator's full intent, but The Viking 1965 powerfully asserts an artistic and poetic impression of Portland State College. . Photographic reproductions of sections from Tom I-Iardy's South Park hall bronze screen serve as unifying elements in The Viking 1965. In his dramatic creation, Hardy brings together the disparate scenic glories of Oregon, immortal- izing them in bronze. And, more and more, this urban college brings together the disparate human elements of Oregon. The state's students, states- men, and visitors increasingly look to the college, Which, like Oregon's native grandeur, will not die. For the glowing cover, artist Werner Bittner eX- tracted the embodiment of the college's physical environment from Hardy's Work. Stylized versions of the symbolic lush, verdant surroundings were executed from the same screen panel by artist Corinna Campbell for the end sheet design and the title page emblem. The end sheet Work is a sumi or Japanese brush art rendition of Hardy's ivy vines. The emblem design is from the cluster of three maple leaves at the panel top. This Hardy theme is repeated three times in the color opening of the Ellipses sections. A personal response to the campus is reflected in Gerri Lent's poetry. The mood-setting sketches by artists Kay Archi- tect, Frieda Fehrenbacher, and Liz Neilson add a related but independent interpretation of PSC. VIKING 1965 PORTLAND STATE COLLEGE PORTLAND, OREGON COIIICHIS staff . . . ellipses I . football . . cross country homecoming student government pickvvick . humanities speakers . italian program impressario christmas . social science forensics . ellipses II . activities . basketball . Wrestling . macbeth . college bowl peace corps science . . jazz festival art . . . avvs . . . elections . ellipses III . greeks . . poetry series npa . . . publications minor sports baseball . track. . . senior pictures staff Editor-Bob I-Ienselinan Photo Editor-Dave Ball Graphic Design-Werner Bittner and Corinna Campbell Poetry-Gerri Lent Chief Writer-Dick Johnston Copy Reader-Barbara Hunt Artists-Kay Architect, Werner Bittner, Frieda Fehrenbacher, and Liz Neilson Staff Photographers-Eva Bushman, George Cully, Gladys Kawasaki, Stan Nutting, Doug Riese, and Leighton Smith End Sheets and Title Page Art-Corinna Campbell Cover-Werner Bittner Acknowledgment-Neal Bonome, Louis Bovverman, Art Chandler, Gordon Clark, Jim Cronin, Dave Falconer, Tom Newman, Pat Oberlander, Jack Sanders, and John Wendeborn 'Advisors-Wilma Morrison and Gerald Penk, editorial, Arvid Orbeck, art and design TE i s l if ew. kr, ..1., '. .X 5' xx, . , ' ff Q. R 5,1-in .EA . Q V , i i 1' ' ,NA .T .-.f-J ' .-exam 1 .7 Y Xxx' .' Q-Q QR, SI: Q X X gi Q- 54 S.. . ..,s .N-Q 4x,,N . -sf, '-. L- , 5 1 1: .h 10.1 'r H ,pw if ' ,J r'r-, ' ' 'Ng , -,sl-. . vs- 'J .xv -3 Autumn dawn That drops a city from its arms And seeing it is gone flings her charms wildly about the river and the sky falls asleep exhausted On the mountain's cheek beneath the sunls benevolent eye Dissolves into an autumn day that threatens clouds. The mild morning sun Goes blindly on its way Fingering each road and building bridge or tree x gn' '4 1 . . L ,W 7? I' X x , al 'Q gifbqgp, f- 5724 v W ' 1 ,Xp RT ...EL-N x 4,553 h V, .1 - Nw iff Sr -W E X 'Q ' il 'lk L N' - X X I-', Lfxn xi -: ':'S?'+ - .N xkxwk - X ' ,. f .. 3K A XJ! - xx A .f -bv, ' m, .- fx ' . Tx N wl -' gi! 3H',f'5l95?f f 25.5 FN 1,2 vxxxt 1, xr, Q' Mi H f 5 1, x' Autumn dawn That drops a oity from its arms And seeing it is gone flings her oharms wildly about the river and the sky falls asleep exhausted On the mountain's cheek beneath the sun's benevolent eye Dissoloes into an autumn day that threatens clouds. The mild morning sun Goes blindly on its way Fingering each road and building bridge or tree 1 '1'3'1'a. ' I I ' ' qf -T7 'j , .4 ,,. 4 i 'Uni 51131 F 1 . pvf- IF VL' : - .-.4 Q.-,Q A, 4, , Ui.- -. ..., A, h 'N-'---X-.-N..,..x - . N - , W AQEPXZX, ,V - ' V ' 1 ' , '1'-I-1 , xi-g.,,,Q::.zQ:-'-.1 ., , -- , ff' K5 1 . X ' 2 I I .3 8 Y I .,,. 3.4 1 X ' ,.f- ' .. Q5 l :Zu 'iii' is-ah - ' f ' -.... D ' 'Z - . x mf . . , A ' ' G , , 'B fv W , ' E :-,L x..L V -J ,. M? 3 - 9 if .vg-Qu Q, T - if f w,.,,,.f- , 1 Q ,L 1 H g .l ,, . . f V -11312 Eflxfx' ' - - .. .. 3 ,ff - .,-' ,lv ' Q Wa, wg ,JI I - fx r A-1, . 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V - E Quiet autumn and wet-grey Different than your registration day: Fear and laughter Hollow shouts Down nervous corridors Friends you never knew you'd meet Pouring through a thousand doors You never knew You'd see How long ago Was that? You never know. A hallway seems too long so everlastingly continuing And still the steps the endless that make your mind question ings begin to swirl maelstrom :T of doubt And everybody wants to know Teachers commanding Parents demanding And what can you say? I don't know. 7 , :', f f I 1 ' . '1' e 1 , I, f vryvl ,V,, , 1.M ?7v W V , ' ,,,,,,V:,1g.ff2f1j2gi , I 1'1 Somewhere A forest waits to Send its roots down Through cement Strange enchanting vines to cover out to blot away the windows which follow you each day in coming and in part ing Like merciless suspicious Eyes Some where a forest a beginning And an end Along the wall Of South Park Hall the strangeness Of raw nature J olts against the mind making knowledge quiver What if man were dead? 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' X411 -29-1 'ff ' I . -.am 1 I A I Yet inan and nature H ave not learned to share With, ease the buildings seein to laugh and mee the trees in reaching for the sky And who will win? -.x P X-Q ,xvg ' -,, Y - ,AF Ng i..1, I .-.M-1-'----X.- ,, j f ftfxx XSS RW 'ff 'fs K lx ,.,. .. A tfvvriq - .hvb xg-, K V 12 3 XM .1 QR Er-iii n 1 , Qi If Q, XX ' mm football Nineteen sixty-four ended and beganfootball eras at PSC. The end came as the Vikings Won their last OCC game, and the beginning as PSC defeated a Big Sky Conference team. The final gun that ended a 41-6 defeat of league rival Eastern Oregon ended PSC football competition in the OCC. The Vikings, who have not lost an OCC game since 1962, finished the 1964 season with a 3-0-1 conference record. The beginning came as the Vikings closed the season with an upset 18-10 Win over Weber State College, a Big Sky team. ? I f - wg-i f--.. ,,,.. fi- . ' -- '-. 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X . .., . . , 1 ' .gvfif as jff . v -. --may 6 A 7 RP -Y -1 if . -' 'P ' Q j' 'V ww- , H-'5 , :L- -- T -. ,A I- -'--:sv W... A I .. -qi. ---w-,Jr x ' QA i - X ,-, r 'i H .X -3r'5,f ' I X Although college officials claim that PSC will remain inde- pendent for several years after its OCC affiliation ends early this summer, predic- tions are that the college will join the Big Sky Conference. PSC's 4-4-1 season record was not spec- tacular. But by the end of the season, as inexperience turned to experience, a pre- dominantly freshman team was defeating veteran squads. After the Vik's first scrimmage, only nine days before the annual Vi-Pi game with Lewis and Clark, head coach Jerry Lyons' only comment was: Terrible! Lyons' comment was more than prophetic as the defense gave out in the third quarter of the game and Lewis and Clark rolled over PSC,32-13. The next week the Vikings again tasted defeat as Pacific beat them,20-7. After two defeats the Vikings were ready, line-ups had been changed and experience had been gained. Freshman quarterback Val Thompson guided PSC to a 21-6 victory over Oregon Tech. At British Columbia, fortunes changed as PSC lost,13-7, to the University of British Columbia. The next game PSC invaded Ashland and tied Southern Oregon,21-21. The tie resulted in the Viks and SOC sharing the OCC crown with identical 3-0-lirecords. Angered by the SOC tie-the Viks out- scored Oregon College, 27-12, and Eastern Oregon, 41-6, in the next two weeks of play. Then Linfield beat the Vikings, 31-0, to ruin hopes for a homecoming victory. The season ended with an 18-10 upset win over Big Sky opponent Weber State. Y J 'J I 'f '. -' in Jerry Lyons who has a 10-6-1 record after two years as head football coach at Portland State, is the only Vik football coach who has never lost an OCC game. With oflicial con- ference competition ending this year, Lyons has guided the Vikings to a 7-0-1 conference record. In 1963 Lyons had an over-all 6-2 record, the best in the history of the college. In 1964 the Vikings were 4-4-1. The differ- ence between the two records is experience according to Lyons. In 1963 there were a number of upperclassmen on the team while in 1964 only eight upperclassmen played. .531 K KA .7 Q1 JET: . GE. ,Y 1 a-.7 ,fx f .Q ,.V.,V,1mWQpqgjr'm'g.-:fr V- 4. yn.: - Y- . L Qffif-2' f ' ' -XA .V ww- ig. yv 1345-e::',.f Q5 if'-'.-'-ma, ' A . :ST K' 'J' '1,'f '? . 5- . ' 'flfwilin' V ,- i 't fl ' ' A ' kt. Yi . .. .. I I if-,M A-0 - M ,, x lin . .-ff' . ' . wgjagw.,-ff . , M --.ff If ' u K ' my .wg J-L91 Q ,' . -vi? 11 .V ' 1 ' .- g :1 is ' fc- 1122 ,. ' - f5, 'f - . U , if 1Q.,' 1 .5 A -',,,1-1,. A , '21 N mi g Q.-3Q1gf.i- ,qw 42511 ,X I, ,7 , R.. V 7 If 34 - ' 1 of ,.u'g'Qri! 7-'ffl , 241x:,':q:4iif, . ' 4 . cW4.,'. -- X t ,, . x . if .L ,A . Y wi ' R f 1.1.. Q' ,y,4.s.fv rg ,. ' Ame 41 ,FY H-33.1. - :., ' 3 ,, -Q: - Q we n- p -r -.41 .x. M 1 H 713.3 .s X . 0. mv' 4. .f A+ 4. .ar V ,E .Q St, 'qw . X if .4-,gm-, . A vw, .hx X - X 1 . . - X .5 -F xtx . . iz.-S' x iv.- i ,K m . 1 'VL . ,. 4.+w-3. K- -1 , i gum, Qi., W X 452:- K 1 :.f.:,.f,2E5:- . f wiv N . -,.fw.c1, me Q 1 , SSN 1 5, -10 . E A 1 .w an K I ,ffl ...J 4:- M-A 'S vw , , Name Pos. Rick Silva HB Dick Curtis HB Val Thompson QB Gary Becker QB Andy Berkis FB Ron Simonson HB Carey Arthur HB Jay Lillie QB Steve Mikulic G George Kosovich HB Henry Owen G Greg Etchison HB Gil Pierson FB Jim Anstine G Jim McKay G Lanny Bennett C Roy Malensky G Barry Cripe E John Woodward E Ken Merlo G Tom Roach LB Jack Carroll G Mike McKeel C Larry Adamson G Loren Remy E David Beyerlein HB Sid Nolan HB Ed Reiley T Jim Porter T Jack Selanders T Gene Davis T Dick Marlow T Gary Alton C Randy Wiseman E Bob Weber E Jim Hollingsworth E Bruce Clark E Jerry Oldenburg E Bruce James E Leon Stupfel E Bob Wilson G Dick Gabbert T Howard Schmidt T Ken Stucki HB Bob Peets G John Bush E Steve Washburn G Q fav 1' PSC OPPONENT 13 Lewis and Clark 7 . Pacific ......... 21 Oregon Tech ...... 7 British Columbia 21 Southern Oregon 27 Oregon College . 41 Eastern Oregon . . . 0 Linfield ........ 18 Weber State .... Season: 4-4-1 OCC co-champion Conference: 3-0-1 PLAYER Andy Berkis .......... Jim Hollingsworth . . Tom Roach ......... Dick Curtis ........ Rick Silva ..... Loren Remy . . . Ed Reiley .... Team Safety . . . Total ...........,.... 115 PATS, 2 Fieldgoals Score 32 20 6 13 21 12 . 6 31 10 Points .. 48 .. 42 .. 21 c .. 18 .. 12 .. 6 .. 6 .. 2 . .155 Y... ai s o I'f , 1? ' .. wa , ,.II,, , . Q.. . -9 - 72 ' -5 .fr . I I . is . If Y , I 3 - .1 '5 I ' II ' . ' IIIII :sf .I 1- I . 55, -2 -- .,, .I , I I . ,II -QI .I -4 4. -' ' .,II ' , . :Q I Af 2-- I. -, 2 ' I Y. -.4 -- I I QI I? I: QI I I I I Q Alf- X ., ' ff I3 - V . . ' 'Z -. ' - -. - If ' Q' 'i - gg- f x F 'iz ki? ' .- ' Q. ' 1 -f f S' . , 3 ' a-4 . X P ' 5' - ' ' 3313 '1 M- . 2' . .. 1 It .. -a ', I' If-, -ve-Q I - I I. .1 I I . I 54 I l ggi -.5.III-8,1 'I .I -.Q if - 5 - 1 II I . I , , we 5 I ..I- --ir-I-,.f '- . .I I -- II I..-I I 'III Q, g. I I? .X II.-.II II 1 3 'V fu I fl:-' - ,4 ' bg,-N' . A ..-:- -- ' ' g. .I - I -c I- - - . -wI,.II .I 1 -I Q., . I I I I . I I. . I I 5 1--mu.. . . Y QQ.. 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I. .gg -III I 1. --5 IIg'.Q1-41-j:- IgC53g5II5:wf-.',g-.2..g.-.II.,.fIL..Ie.,..- - H. -4,-LQ--ar-:gf Tye-.IF - - Q III' 4I II I. ng . , Iggy 1' 557 5' if ,,'-. ff-'HJ :,',.5,, ig '-'5,.tI-2gB'5?ff':5i '?iEff1'-'3.S7Q- w1',- ',I ' 1 f '-'-1-Wt ff' '7 'f5. k 5 ' k I' ' .' V 'wi -' '1 ' x' . .-Am, 5 . WH. ,.3,I -2-. . I ,.. Z,-,f. .-- I.. f.. .. -mx I . ,Is- - , , I .M ., - Hg.. - .,,, - - - ' 1714. if -'51 5, k f,i,+--f.--- ,f ,..I,g,!v .'1.'::,' -:.-- , , QA'-:MP ,.1.-,ky-.:M+-. --L 34.g1:,'1.. -- 5,1 I -.W---.I 194:35 'IIII . . . , - f 4 ' -V . 1' : ,, 3,1 ,1, ...1 -' I- fp.-I .,-,-I, -1, 1.. 4 -no gf 'I,1-5'-.-1,4 --U, .9 .--7 -- x.:- -4-- -.Q JI. - I 4 5 .. 1 Q -.I - . gf 1.1 Mes-.1 -zgf. -- .-. . ' - 'lib '31, N3 , 1 . . - ' ' -- . 1 ., r-..-',-,. '- -- . ' Qi ..-.5vw..xI1.. '? .- -- .- w H-, - .- P'-. 4- -f - -- . . U. . Q- . -- ...M-... . , . X -. .'- - r:-I:-.-.- - 1--.av -- -. I cg- . .- ,I -,I I -- ,I - n-- -. I f- 2 'z - 4 J, -. Q, -I f Y 'Y' ' '44 -. x,'f 2g.p.,f.. 1 - 'I' 1.4f'51.,' '. -. ' ' V. X , . . . I,I I,.,,II,, . . P1 - .. 'a n - KY-4-'J.1.-ww--'----... ...X . ' I N 1 el . .I cross country P o r t l a n d State's all freshman cross Coun- try team-Mike Gebler, Steve Brickner, Wes Brenner, Bill Sprinkle, Bob Douglass, Pete Richard, John Spring-turned in a credible performance by capturing second place in the Oregon Collegiate Conference championship meet at Klamath Falls. Gebler and Brickner led the Viks as they placed fourth and fifth in the meet. Both of the Viking runners broke the old course record of 25:22. Geb- ler was clocked at 25:16, and Brickner in 25:21. Team scores for the meet Were: Southern Oregon 21, Portland State 57, Oregon College 64, and Oregon Tech 92. homecoming It was a Week of meeting-alum meeting alum, college meeting community, East meeting West, and nobody meeting chairman Louis Bowerman as he tore about bringing Portland State its best Homecoming yet. It started With pounding drums, screams and students gyrating to a raucous Beatle beat by the Del-Rays, and ended in the tran- quility of a classic Japanese garden for the November Moon Homecoming formal. Both Bowerman and Homecom- ing became a little less frantic as the Week Wore on. But it Was variety, not pace, which made Homecoming a suc- cess. There Was on and off-cam- pus luncheons and conferences, an alumni banquet, open house, a play, rally and bonfire, and the inevitable football loss. Stressing the College and Com- munity Homecoming theme, fif- teen queen candidates spoke their competitive interpreta- tions of The College and Com- munity. A Week later Kathy Anderson, a senior, was crowned after a student body vote. Joan Edwards, Pat Ober- lander, Susan Treadgold, and Joan Todd made up Queen Kathy's radiant court. Mohammed Baiz of Saudi Arab- ia Won, too. His jack o' lantern, a Viking complete with horns and scraggly hair, was ac- claimed best among the pump- kin carving endeavors of seven- teen foreign students. J-,f A cold, Windy day greeted the court and spectators at the Homecoming game. But the score Was colder as Linfield defeated PSC, 31-O. The game brought varied expressions to the faces of Queen Kathy Anderson, top and her court- f 'N EEK Susan Treadgold, Pat Oberlander, Joan Todd, and Joan Edwards. 'Wa C '-1': ' -f-:ff-. 'W-' 'V ,1 f fy, if . I ggibfqxyfga X'-M-Q '- 'Y wtf,-ff -. Ja., f -zgf' -. . Y 135.4 - aff- a ! 3 '1 2-ff, W r- 'N - '4 fm . 1 '- - L? . -. Q - T3 my H ' ' gy , 'LH' - ' - - - . gf: -F . -1 Q51 'f' , ,f, -. ',f3,4f,.,, tv fa 'Y fm Fifteen girls presented 15 in- terpretations of the role of Portland State College in the community as they competed for the 1964 Homecoming court. Seven judges selected the court and then students voted for their queen. Last year's queen Gloria Hosford crowned 1964 queen Kathy Anderson. She re- ceived a bouquet of red roses and a tiara at her Coronation. East met West under a No- vember Moon as Homecoming closed with a formal dance. A Japanese garden with a moon bridge, a pond covered with chrysanthemums and ivy, Hiro- shima cranes, colorful lanterns, and a shrine established an ori- ental motif in the College Cen- ter Ballroom. Jimmy Rodgers and the Fairmont Singers shat- tered the Eastern serenity, to the delight of the crowd, With music ranging from rock n' roll to the American ballad. The Carl Smith Orchestra played soft dance music. student government It's PSC folklore that student government mutters to itself as it searches for identity. This year muttering became assertion and student government-officially advising, not governing-began finding itself. Under President Paul Pinegar, it dared to be daring. The Executive Board ftop rightj dared to go big-time with Dave Brubeck, While the Student Senate, in quest of a role, dared to censure the McCarran Act and Was smashed by the Student Court Qfar rightj is i is L, 45,3 N-A if mf -2 g 5 --x Q-9 Student government is cooperation: students, faculty, and administrators Working as equals to provide service, entertainment, and a student forum. But, most of all, student government is hard Work. Unending meetings to plan freshman orientation, Homecoming, lec- ture seriesg to protest and applaud cam- pus and off-campus policies and events, to take a slap at federal law and ourselves. And it is this year's 335,000 shortage. For student administrators, government consumes study and Work hours. And some survive-others don't. 4 '7V 'M '5gg Q . A, 5 ' '. , I 1 gpapl l l 0 . - , I .gf , '- j' A r. E I 1, U 'x ff TN fl il S pickwick Audiences, delighted with the rich vein of comedy and pathos in Theatre Arts' Mr. Pickwick, saw Charles Dickens at his lightest, yet most typical. They guffawed as anthropology profes- sor Joe Pierce, playing that jocular and rotund Briton, Mr. Pickwick, wove a comic trail in his adventures with Pick- wickian Club cronies. From his London boarding house to a fancy dress breakfast party, to a suit for breach of promise and the intruding shadow of prison, Pickwick goes his iras- cible way, scandalizing the charming 19th century ladies into the vapors. An adap- tation of Dickens' famed Pickwick Pa- pers, the play was a period piece, snatched from Regency Era London by director Asher Wilson, Theatre Arts' actors, set designers, and costumers. N-sv if-N42-:Q sg 0 'r-V 4. . 15.17 -. Q J , . 1A,5 if -f 'A,, l.tx.,ai'1 ' , ,.A, ' ' qv: F '. '-'- 5m f'f 1 5 - nd I Pickwick . . . Tupman .... Winkle ..... Snodgrass .... Mrs. Bardell .... Mrs. Cluppins . . Tommy Bardell. Sam Weller ..... Sergeant Buzfuz Mr. Weller ...... Mrs. Weller ..... Mr. Stiggins .... Mr. Jingle ...... M ary .......... Mrs. Leo Hunter. . Mr. Wardle .... .. Rachel Wardle. . Emily Wardle. . . Isobel Wardle. . . CAST .............JoePierce . ...Jack Shields . . . . .Arnold Hummasti .........TobyGreen . . . . .Natalie Ettlin . . .Sheri Atwood . ...... Kurt Ettlin . . . .Kenneth Butler . . . ...... William Tate . . . . . . .Steven Smith . . . .Meri Lynn Shapera . . . . . .Charles Hinkle .... . .GaryAdams . ..... Gail Kaveny . ..... Nancy Drew . . . .Ralph Zusman . . . . . .Sue McClure . . ........ Patti McCal1ig ............AnnJohnson Joe ................ James Edward Wilson Wilberforce Hunter .......... James Breck Bailifj' .................... Ernie Maruska Mr. Justice Callisher ........ Gary Teadtke Turnkey .............. .... J ames Breck humanities When poetry-reciting English faculty mem- bers mounted Park Blocks benches one grey February noon hour to dispatch a plurality of birds with a single ,missle all Oregon learned that chaste demonstrations can be fun. The unrehearsed poetry reading made great headlines. And the PSC profs left it to the audience to ngure out Whether the perform- ance was a satirical stiletto aimed at Bend's Central Oregon College's controversial cen- soring of Ginsberg's H owl-or a sanitized spoof of the later public protest reading of Howl by University of Oregon faculty. As Fred Waller said in his introduction, We are confident that the purity of our motives in undertaking to dedicate this reading to 'The Virtuous Muse' will be self-evident... Howard Burnham was author and declaimer of the shovv's title piece, Commemorative Ode: In Praise of the Beneficent Blandish- ments of Poesy Conceived, if the Expression may be Forgiven, in Propriety . . . Howl, Heavenly Muse! Who on Parnassian Slope Is now invoked by Ginsberg, not by Pope: Eugenie Protests on the Wind ascend, And make thy Seat to Waver, if not Bend. A lesser task we here propose today, The Anxious Soul to calm, and Fears Allay. The proper poem soothes, it will be seen, Like Preparation H, or Unguentine. One sad fact only has our Conscience Stirr'd: Poet -alas !-is a four-letter word. ..-rf p , . Ym- F, -WP? -fc .. b 6 R, , i lk x 2 ' ff' ww' L Q X I A 1 1 new H 1 3.4 ' 142,225 , f, ., u,'..v-,.g4'g'5:' 2.12, 4. .,. As 5 I. 5 I 1, I, Q 'H sw Y f. ' . . , 1.17.4 ,g:- f. , ,,. ,,.mm-.,,MmwM--H g f 1 -,,.,. ' wr, -'-ggvg-vzvfaq-9ff3pjSE?1CS'1T Wh. M... ao- vvf-r,,-.V ,,, in . 45531.53 .I N 3' 'ff .12 i5 A . 5 '1 I9 , f cf Z ,V ,F . f,. Zia' 1 1. 'Q' 1 ' f Z , 3 1 129 3' 4 J - :Egg if ,, . 4 1 4 . A: 4.-5 f 1- ,,. -:farm ,G ' I' WWW? - .6535 .. , V' 1 iff, in i5,Y4.., jf I . ' ,EV .,, NW , 457' Z Q 97 . 596 2 .'fz7?'Wff : rf 9 'J speakers This year Portland Staters Were offered a smorgas- bord of speakers from which they could sample opin- ions of communism,.poetry, civil rights, laws, busi- ness, sex mores. Henry Winston ffar lefty, the blind Negro com- munist leader, glorified socialism before an overflow audienceg Clinton Duffy, former San Quentin prison Warden and now president of the American League to Abandon Capital Punishment, took a negative view toward legalized murder. Other speakers were Ste- phen Spender, poetg Roger Chaffee, NASA astronautg Carlin Capper Johnson, Lewis and Clark political sci- entistg Felix Greene, British journalist. 3 Q i wmv, A tug on the ear, faces contort- ed by curiosity, approval, or re- jection-reactions to speeches take many forms. Speakers of every political shading, of vary- ing authority, and of intense opinion come to Portland State. All are granted a platform if they present facts and answer questions from the usually large audiences. When Edith Green, Democratic congresswoman from Oregon's third district, spoke on Con- gress: Progress or Standstill ?, she got photogenic reactions from PSC President Branford P. Millar Crightj. ' italian program Hundreds of students, faculty, and towns- people traveled back centuries through 11 lectures commemorating anniversaries of two Florentine masters, Michelangelo Buo- narroti and Dante Alighieri. Following a triumphant Michelangelo lec- ture series, the Dante lectures brought to Portland State Dante authorities of such stature as John Ciardi, poetry editor of the Saturday R6Ui6tU,' Chandler B. Beall, head of the University of Oregon comparative lit- erature departmentg Giose Rimanelli of the University of British Columbia, and Robert J. Clements, director of the University of New York graduate school of comparative literature. The celebration of the septicentennial of Dante's birth began in an atmosphere of Italia during PSC's first Italian festival which included an art show with four Rodin drawings and model stage sets by Norman Bel Geddes for the 1921 production of the Divine Comedy. Portland State's Michelangelo series, one of the many held throughout the nation on the artist's quattrocentennial anniversary, was extremely popular. The quality of the PSC-produced series sur- prised no one. It was the 500-plus turnout packing the Old Main auditorium for each lecture that bowled over the planners. The program's prime movers, the Rev. Michael Ricciardelli, lecture coordinator, and Fred Harrison of the English department, ex- pected intimate groups of about 30. The Michelangelo series began in February of 19645 it ended in December with Charles LeGuinn's Florence of Michelangelo and Dante, Economical, Political, and Social, a transition between the two programs. mirandolina 34 .,., 141+ K. -M, v..,. ' ..-0 31,3-,Q A0.'m , 7533.9 zz V' . 2:5 if Mug -rx . '5':2 +1:-.:7,.:. . gg -, -4 4, V 'V , '34, N. v -Nu?-f ' 'Tw-.,.. ..,,. 4' 4 f 41 ii' Questa e' L'ItaZia brought Old World charm and Warm colors to Portland State during an otherwise bleak February. Coming at the conclusion of the sensation- ally successful Michelangelo lecture pro- gram, the sequence of musical performances, discussions, films, and a play in Portland State's first Italian festival was prelude to the Dante lecture series. The Italian festival got underway with a panel discussion on Michelangelo by the University of Oregon's Chandler B. Beall, and the Rev. Michael Ricciardelli, Frederick Littmann, Leonard Kimbrell, and Frederick Harrison, all of Portland State. Another panel discussion, Impressions of Present Day Italy, held later in the Week- long festival, was moderated by E. Dean Anderson, assistant to the PSC president. What really made the festival go were tvvo non-academic programs-music and an Italian comedy. Sixteenth century madrigals by the Lincoln high school choir opened an evening of Ital- ian music which featured Gloria Cutsforth, soprano, singing beautiful and stirring op- eratic arias. Ray Kaddy, baritone, also turned to Italian opera, singing selections from Pagliaccfi, La Trafuiata, and Rigoletto. Four fiery Italians, all in love with the same vvom an, left audiences gasping with laughter in three performances of Carlo Goldoni's Mimndolina. Income from the Italian festival Went to scholarships for students at the Oregon State System of Higher Education's Italian Studies Center in Pavia, Italy. -ff?.af17'. , . I-3101 - ' .uf f1',, ,- Y -' -:af ,S M, v ,, 0 I 4 5g..,.X , . X, ' 1 - 55:21 , .--'.'-2-11554E-'Ps-i 'E1:2v1511251, :lr-zx. ':1.+' 5' wi:-11. 1'7:,f 'Zi' 'I-I,-L '+' . m1fT554fj,. ' Gx ,:e,w4.' :-:al ' ' ,m f-faf-1-LIPS : ' ' ::,1,1+at , ':.:.gf.,:- - . . 1 - ' 55-1- . ' 11 -33.1 ' mf. ,Q b ii Ziiia 1 ' Ji' mm . '12, .. ,nm ,G -Eff' 1. . -S ' 2 5:12 , f .si 51 .15 ' ,-'T ' LF' .-1:2 - , -.ifzlrvxaizl-W' 'gm :Q ,.v,: ' .1:-.- -w - ,Q 2 1' . ,-My ,. J' -K Vi, ,Q ,V 54112- , 0 5 1 Q ' , x si? 8 ' ' 156:52 29:1 . in D 1 'W 1. MJ L L 4 , . rcl5Li ', M' ' i.,.,.:: . 'b i ' fi' X I' : 1 4 ' ' gj241.f'- , -, - 'f. 1' V ' A 11 ' 'N -s. kv F A- ,, . X ,X E. .41 A I f n 0 N. 5 ' .w N .hx Mt, 3 'Q x ,, .ik .. it f' 5 1 5 1 f.. 0. LA. N . ,3 51 V ,,,. fig.:-+4 1 J, .' 2 p .gifs . -X: M LM -ei A- he WH ' ' Q U, ., 5 ,M V .. 0 A 0 .s. fl'- 1 X , 1 5 'i I .F -.-- imprcssario An opera impresario's task is never easy, particu- larly when two prima donnas, kept by one man, and completing for one job, iight in audition. audition. In fact, the impresario might give up the opera company as a bad thought as did Mr. Scruples, played by Jack Shields, in Mozart's The Impre- sowio, Theatre Art's fall term musical presenta- tion. Staged in the elegance of an 18th century European opera house, the 1786 musical comedy is a mirthful tale of jealousies and errors which blocked Scruples after he was convinced by Mr. Bluff-J im de Busman-to start an opera. Marie Rogndahl Peake portrayed Madame Golden- trill, an experienced prima donna, and Miss Silver- peal, a beginner, Was played by Maria Novak. Both sang soprano solos, characteristic of the Singspiel stvle. Garv Adams was Mr. Angel. f X c- N. Fig Xi? I Rm. f .r R ,527 ' 'ff ' ..,v ., -V: 1 4 ' 2525253 J: 5555 aff: -' : 11:13 z 9 9 Q 1 f X ,m1,1' - 'RZ h JM.-. M11 its! '--111' 45:54- Q , ,f ,pq- Qi 41 2 I4 X .WV .,, K.. Mfr .- -ga 4e85D l .va Zn -aj' 5-fs. if ,- J 431.9 ,ef 4- :jeg K dl. . Y-, - - V., x 1 x .Q Eg ...L 1 ,. gg? X W 'f' , 3 7 6. b W orpheus A charmingly Wicked version of the Orpheus tradition shared a double bill in Theatre Arts' second production of the year. The metaphysical Orpheus by Jean Cocteau, an early French avant-garde Writer, revolves about the character of Orpheus, played by Richard Scheeland, a poet Whose search for truth is a sacred process and a duty. Orpheus .... Richard Scheeland Eurydice .......... Mary Hale H eurtebise .... Norman Jensen Death ........ Nicci McBroom Azrael ........... John Huber Raphael ........ George Stacey Commissioner. . .Gary Teadtke Clerk-Horse. . .Lorin Anderson M an ........... Bob Robinson christmas Disasters - floods, snow, finals - failed to dampen the holiday season at Portland State. As temperatures and rivers rose, Vikings busied themselves decorating the College Center and painting the nationally publicized Christmas tableaux on the cafeteria Win- dows. Although some complained that decorations throughout the college were sparse, glitter- ing trees brightened the cafeteria and north lounge. And, in student activities offices, Pat Oberlander, social-recreation board chair- man, and Allison Love hung evergreen wreaths from every door, Mae Ouchida, academic board chairman, festooned her office Walls with greenery in the Christmas tradition. Oregon's rampaging Weather didn't stop the successful AWS Christmas party for re- tarded children nor the annual PSC Christ- mas concert. But snow and a Portland radio station hin- dered the annual Sigma Delta Omega Christ- mas formal, L'hiver Soiree. The station's DJ repeated a rumor that the dance had been cancelled because of the Willamette's watery deluge. It hadn't. A light turnout selected Dotty Nastrom as queen and danced to mu- sic by the Jerry Van Hoomisen orchestra. Kay Robbins, Nancy Reed, Cherie Magarian, and Joan Haggblom completed the court. :I .f 1-' .- H: . nxt: -1 .Y E? -if 'A ' ' A' 2 . 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Km social science Anthropologist Tom Newman didn't make headlines digging at Cascadia cave, but it was the first time Portland State has cap- tured a federal grant in archaeology from larger colleges. iWorking with a National Park service grant for salvage archaeology, Newman has un- earthed stone tools and uninterpretable rock writing or petroglyphs in his exca- vation of the ancient Indian shelter. The site soon will be flooded by the Green Peter dam. Newman's grant was part of over 350,000 in grants which the Social Sciences division expended this year. When veteran political scientist Frank Munk decided to come to PSC after 19 years at Reed, it was front page news. Munk, na- tionally recognized in his iield, is the author of several books and a familiar voice in the Northwest on international matters. gil:- 1 1,-'-A forensics Ben Padrow can count his forensics tournaments in trophies- he's got nearly 200. And, this year that count Was exceptionally high as PadroW's 65-student squad Won 31 awards in six bouts -including its third first-place sweepstakes in the prestigous Big Sky Invitational. Forensics, a most successful but seldom seen program at Port- land State, also squeezed in 170 symposia this year. Coach Padrovv says the student declamators reached an Oregon audi- ence of about 50,000 Topics included teenage morality, South- east Asia, and federal public Works. High schools, colleges, and civic groups ask for most of the speeches, but, explains Padrovv, You name it, We speak to them. The team also appears regularly on Padrowls KATU-TV College Upinion program. Don't forensics ever have troubles? Yes-they can't find room for all those trophies. I ,J', r--' 1 lx- .J U Ei' 'K S wr Ti I -1 Nt , js s if A' I .V Y f fl If m U' ' S F2 fs 1 ' 4 I A 2 2 . ,, .. fm, ff ' .fa I I ' e f' Ig 5 ' 1 I Q . -as f 'N ,1 XT 4 Y w8 'N' ff'- mY P Q -S 3 5 I 51 L, V ,Q M 155545 iigfezgsl , , But you're in School Now The trees inean nothing Nowhere Jungle through the buildings books pens and paper universe and thought And if you care you'll stop to drop a nickel Dig a sacrifice it seeins in the offering box the Giivilizedigods by way o f strange machines that dole out sandwiches and parking hills You don't drive A car You never eat Perhaps then You will never KW r face defeat But you can never Know. Qa- i'lI'xlSI'X f:i'GNIK W K -9-'J . 1, fi' , Q X . Wif, ' ., W., - -, .mg VV, ..w:,A,,.,,1f .f. '.-l - . A- Blae shy and Spring Don't ask where winter's gone I t's clone. Let that alone Sujjice As epitaph Q We do not need recalling snow and ice 5 They'll coine again next year But spring. .. 1.1.1 Sometimes you think It's never going to coine ,. That birds will never sing The girls to sun that trees will never leaf to green so shyly pnt away their wools And finger hopefully the oottons of another scene. And everyone begins to join Spring Sun! the crying, clawing Park Block Trees for snn . ..V. ,.V,,....' l ...L I z3iE2jQ25.g, ,.. ... .4,,., I, 51aQsggg15g.gg,1gs5gf-: :- You find the patterns of the clouds are hypnotizing Staring out the window class and rooin Teacher and his Thoughts Begin to blur . .. H ave another cigarette and Concentrate Another day as long as Earth's creation and You yawn trying desperately to hide the fact you're numb And cannot learn Another word or date or formula ,ua ffm ,vgaiffff if 3 .E iff-.' ful' 'V 5'-VWHH . r ,.-,nur While all the endless dripping minutes Fascinating clouds are The city like the rain swirling shifting falls from the spinning clouds in the sun the buildings stand like mystic fire pillars in the dark like smoky columns studded with spectral sparks From fourth jtoor ofuerpasses You over pass the river and the east sunlight blinds and maddens minds turned grey with winter light Wondering insensibly The mind takes flight to M eazico, to Southern France To China, to the moon Oh anywhere but here You are but here f.- u 1 fi M515 :..2,12f4-2 'f ssNg,.f-,gjgjgq-.ff , ggi' , f 4 af ifflff , Mfg f 4523, 16, .3 f'1 ,f'1a 'fl YJQLW .vg7zv1v,,j2A ng A5 .,L,,,-,JJ L if 31,5 WL fuuizi, gy- ?4s:z,-Mai -,?f'12w .-,.,1g,.q?i3,y. .fi p,11U,W,,, A ujlafl-ggi-:QA ,120 , . 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M xy fx N 44- 1 W4-gWfW f 1i2?cafe' 7'1 N ' , www, A Sv wwvg' wswf 'A 4 SSH? ,J .9 . , I 0 -u 6f'5 ' -1' , Z1 59. 2' 4. ix: 4 Mix .Laffy say: ali- x ff N x ei '-.QQ N Spring-term glooin Divides itself on summer sun Students like GH unnamed stream flood the Park Blocks Sprawling over every blade Of sun-warmed grass looking like d pastel-quilted blanket If w . fl Y, 11. ' 4 . Q V' f ,. ue ' .aF, .ff 1- Q! X EL ze- is V 5 M4 A . : -2 ,:1',1:,-I-:mfg-5-1'. V,.,,,4p,sSQ-3351533-::,,1:,:,. 1. -5,55ggrg::a5:f:r:33'-:gg:.5: . , - ff-2' ., -4 . .. - Nr.-'wa-:2'5::-:A5:E25'3I?15?52f5'E'4T?1f'P- ' .-M.-,1g4a,'. ....bluffs::r-x?Qfgafa-62-25211 f?aw - ' 4 gg --1-'?:512::31515:'ff35:::.::Q::wg-Qgggyzsvw' 1' . ' WW' ,,.k,4.:.:::s. . .V 15-25.11135 ' uw. ,- f 4 ' x I I I . ' A ., - r f. . - ' fffiff ..,, , ,,. ....x A ,' ,, ,Ik J 5.91:-.3 5 Af 2, if 2-41'2El-L,-QA ' 'W' ' ' . Rr: ,...4f-af.-1'2,g.,,15,:3:--111211-1 -' ' . 46' 44 -D f ,jzawff-',::5v Alkv ,'vgf.,:5e1-5'f5:p'--sg:-F' f'f21.E..1,3xfif3Ji 5f23W:'J' , ' ' 45: 54- M ' ' gg? :cw Sk NMS1 ni, .1 A . ,, If x 1:4315-:1s421g3i:5-ga' Q ' ,-.eqzgv .-my .-Q As- :A-.kg-:+-V. WU, We .N 5, 5 322:- X -we A ' ti. iflzhx N lui L QS ' .. . 9 -. 'f' .15 A Q ax XSQ 'f- I ' X X .4 f ,. i -'F ' ' 1:9 - 1 .I .Q - x ' - . .-Q N 4 . V .Q , 1. Q ' . 5 A X , , ' ' F sf ., .... msvg?- , 1 ' 1. ' 9 ' ' :'11:Q2-244-:?E5 f' ,A . ,f, f-vgfviil N V F J ' UQ w . - ' . x-Q. ' ' 'gggrizfsz'-Ax-:Z-f '- FWYYGK 1 .Q 'iz la. T ? From the lofty Balcony where music flags match the flutter And pale hands of spring-leaves Gesticulating in a sea of sunlight stranger Deny they live Shrug Declare no answers Quien sabe ? Qui sait ? light than pale hands Yes, who knows And that's the way that history goes the teacher asks , the student ' stammers ' . About a lifetime Then he dies some lengthy reply H islhistory is done But who can know? May be pale sun... activities NOW At PSC activities come a la carte more than at the campus- bound college but they are there for the choosing of those Who choose to be involved. In 1964- 65 there were more than 70 programs coordinated by Edu- cational activities. A Skin Diving club Was one of the -year's additions to the long list of organizations Which have their roots in metropolitan Portland State but Whose ac- tivities involve members in the life of other metropolitan col- leges and with the city itself. A random sampling from the roster of college registered or- ganizations and clubs shows the gamut-Chess club, Com- mittee on Democratic Educa- tion, International club, Young Republicans, Young Democrats, Students for Peace, Sailing club, Associated Women Students, Intercollegiate Knights, Viking Vets, and numerous honoraries. Assorted impromptu protest demonstrations were also big. Qlxl-Q-25212113it-f'.'5i.1'2ffi f-Hilti?-l:1'. V, I , 2 fr' , A ef- ' 'ff Y '. ' T 'i'-i ---.- 5'-i ' -.--f 32' H . , N Q n . K .- I .. .-Q, ,ff '- 9-, '-- . Gi 4 ' Sxqtigi- 1 f ' K ,Ti ' at - .', ,'--' .A F' N ' 5 555? YH- S 2 N A xl ia ' Q-,eg 1- it K .- .f 'mwah -. i ,, ,ia iii' K 'ist Q9 ' 1 + f'ff5'-7'i'?3 . 5-X-33 ,Me Q Ji. 'big 5 rl--5332 - - ' , 'Es - -. W ' vu , Q' -I s. J- ' P- -wW f', -- la- . 1- atv' 'ff i 'H 1 I 1 fp i' . q iyvs 1 ,az , ,,,,, .A A JL f ? fe ,-,,,,,.... Wu F'N. demonstrations 1 5 gg.-.,. -.rfvz A, Y' v .32 p ' K .j - 1+ Q' 5 psf fig. xqqw 4 Chess Skin diving Q . ...mx 'N 'I f 4 ,. Q 3' X X -Sv K. . r J x ..r 7 . ,, V - 20:14 .ff w f. ,aj . ,ll . , , 1 P ,ir ' W VW, , -ff . NT' ff. iiiffif?-Q I 'f .Q Q -4195. '4A2 ..p, Q I 'Q V 1 r . . Aa-A .,,,:, .A Q. 4 I Q hu. ,j,:4,,g- ,, -- - , , , 1 ,M- , -an -.V ' ' N , if ,.,,, ,. . , .- W.. , ,. - .vo-wi'p ,,.1.p11:?:fca2.t: vzfq. . . . . . Q-242724 fiif5g,z2:i.':11'Z' W: A -f-+f:..'f1, ,1 ., V 1,,A , ffl-.11 V- - , .gJ:5Q4-'fW,g:iE3,zljjjgjgf: .fwwf-Jw.. 'ign- , ..X,,f-wif, ' ,L-af? -' X ' I . Q.. i1E7943,gY!q:Q?m viz . lf! I , 1 basketball John Nelson, a 6-3 junior forward, has needed only three years of play to become Portland State's all-time basketball great. Nelson, With another year to play, has a ca- reer scoring record of 1,479 points, and is already 310 points ahead of the old record set in four years of play. This year Nelson averaged 24.9 points a game, made honor- able mention All-American, was named to the OCC all star team, and received the NAIA's Emil S. Liston award for being the outstanding junior scholar-athlete in the country. Even when a violation of training regulations brought about the suspension of other varsity team members Nelson and the junior varsity team reached the high point of the season in the last game as they Whipped this year's OCC champion, Eastern Oregon, 100-94, in a single overtime game. Nelson led all scorers with 37 points-his season and career record for a single game. Yet even with Nelson the team was able to compile no better than a 7-18 season record. .pf ,,,,., ax , K . 1 -M-.9 Q A. -' L'f5??5 ? ' Am- .V V:,,V:,.ye. .- k Nfviff- ,QM 9 . mf' ' -,::J:,+y5,.fffk Q.-3 V11 2 AE 2 4 2213- '- -, '5?ii'f?Er :E r . - - , . -., -' 551:43 gag' ' 4 - fl'N',.1 :.,,V. ., . 'GRY' 1: gl' I fxfj 'N 3' -we , - 3 , ' , xg 2.7 ' ' X v TP' , 'N ' fu:-'Q ,..,, ' .- . A? X V .24 2 - ' 4.41, K - 1-.w '24-T'3'?' -. -'11 ,:?23:5',Zj 1-51 : Vj' I. 2.1. .. ,A . W xl, R, . r 1 A . 11. 13'f ':i..5Iv:'21Z.5.,f ' 43727: .QV X cy . A pf 4-' A ' .-:Q:-pt,'g-2fEV:-.4-::f--5:4-:9:q:,,.--' vw' :R-'Mx-:M-Q 9. , , X af , - EQ K A Y g X Nl y-ox, 5133 ' 'f V ,-. - . t ' . if , i .5 def f .. f .. 5, mx. ..,.,,,,.. .- A ...,4.,.,., ,,.,9J9,,b '- ' -s- gc-ig4S jg1'2. I - ' M 'r--.r:.- 'kv -- ' - A 2: ..zVg-511, , Z' V A fwiezhzfa - 1 -1- v i. . 1 35: 1:3255- Pr - Q, V'-V w 2-e:::x1f.-Vw? 1 V. . .--:1':'71, C5 R 5N15Q6'4:f:i7 :-. 4:-'3'E5 F:G it -' . 4 3 V. 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Pi: F' ' Q5 1 . . f Iv ' HQ-L, f .':13 fg,., .- 1 1. -. f ..1-gag., rg-' , V 3651: V. .M X V 'Q' .- f N fe- .iv . ,fE?'2'21b:1' fi hifi! - . -1. ' 4- sf'-ff. ...rizlf P M - fw - ' Nfl- ' . .f , - - '. W' -.4 3+ xywgzliiyf I I , 21,35 .ziwiw Q gn. A 379: ' ff ' ,il-'-f Zhi, ,. ' Il.. I 'A-fn F 11 A. . . wi-ri' . 1. ' . ,fiiff Q, ' 1 .TiftFar--Y. -w'3Eif:fi FQ . , ., 12l.'r '.. .. f , QL' Q' M ' '. .w . . f -I -Q.-,:. . yy.. -.N .vi f7,,1:v:',-. sg- f-:A.:,L- I nn W'-::.2'-1y, .1 .,s:. ' . - 1 54014 ma- 32-nw. mvf.1maria.mxfwa'4i:-fmmrfufli. ,. 1za1r.sfifc:,-213413-:.r.M!':.-E'! 4?vfff3':?:vQ-fm z'.ws.f.1 :'ff1:'m':---5 K -7 - .aw A r 5 ..', .L N. +- V' mf . ,V I. wfgv .4 .zfp V. 7.3 - , . MW, f , .V . 4054 'lf ff, 1547 1 f .. -V ., 3 Af- ,z,2 'g:1, 5 ,. 1 Ng, A .1 1 Jew ix . , M v.4.,x.V3,, ,V V - ,:,,..-,1.' , .1 wer...-., .. t i -, ,'.f, 5,-5,-.x.- Q35 f.i -'7?'f f.l PM ,.,.5,5 -4,1-5,-J-,y . .-1 - es 4-'ig .','..f'. K .112 I f ,FEE ISM- A W, , ' Vx ..-4 fl' Y. 4, ' . 4, 2-5. . ., U, r V1 ggyi,-ga fy' 15 'iqgng . Q.. I . .A .I gg, .V . 5 r1f., ff.,. .3-'1 FW' ,iz . ff Z 'Yi' ., ' ian: Wx' .Y f'-1 ',2I S+. 1 '-'-- .' . A , - 1 w,f'v-2sf- vi-.a1af:.w . 'fvrf' L'--5 AZ --sn:-'1 4 -,'xf'i:N if 'whiff - r if wk' Q MY' 8 Q, 4, . 'T- ':?,f '47 Name G John Nelson 26 Wes Nelson 22 Jim Nelson 22 Dan Nichols 23 Randy Bethke 10 Mike Campbell 23 Larry Harding 2 Dave Remington 22 Jerry Williams 10 Bill Wahl 18 John Sherman 14 Ken Campbell 1 Jerry Gordon 10 Walt I-Iixson 3 Rick Silva 3 Tim Stone 3 Scharringhausen 3 Mike Ogara 2 Bill Mullens 2 Bill Reisbeck 1 Afug. 24.9 6.2 8.5 6.2 1.0 7.6 1.0 9.9 1.2 1.8 1.7 2.0 1.9 15.7 10.7 6.7 7.3 3.5 3.0 2.0 i Opponent PSC 71 ...... Gonzaga ...... 53 97. . . Montana State . . . 43 ' 825 88 ....... Pacific ....... 92 ...... Linfield ...... 68 74 .... Weber State .... 57 64 ...... U. of P. ...... 57 72 .... Oregon Tech .... 51 78 .... Oregon Tech .... 64 71 ...... Alumni ...... 64 100 .... Weber State .... 54 74 .... Idaho State .... 66 73... Oregon College ... 75 63. . Southern Oregon .. 86 59.. Southern Oregon .. 71 60. . . Oregon College . . . 69 80. . . Eastern Oregon . . . 72 68. . . Eastern Oregon . . . 58 71 .... Oregon Tech .... 67 59 .... Oregon Tech .... 81 67. . . Seattle Pacific . . . 58 74. . . Oregon College . . . 70 77. . Southern Oregon . . 89 71.. Southern Oregon .. 57 72. . . Oregon College . . . 67 73. . . Eastern Oregon . . . 69 94. . . Eastern Oregon . . .100T 1940 ..... TOTALS ..... 1748 74.6 .... AVERAGE .... 67.2 5Double Overtime TSingle Overtime fw fix ,-'51 is ,VE -.4-.. .. 1,9 A ,,,.A . ..1s1A',1-- 4 .fl . is A , if . L-X X 15' fa lk W- F x ,a1 Vm4fz:::m,,'ff.f , . 1 as . r., 551 :fm I-1, ' W nf' --v, 'in Sh 'FSA 7202: .. ,, ,, .V . , ' 330' 2 X fzegk, 5 l I X ? 1 ,',, '12 if 5 fn , l , . q, F l 2 1 . f 52522111 I LS.. Q 'I I-'RL ', ' ' 5 .Q I 4 -uwfv ' 'sG:w1P.,. ., . 5-Ff4l9 ?iA' xr ' , fir, A qc, uv ,4 it EMKENQKN +3 'v v 1. .3 L, .. - wa 1 '1UlS?if 'e lgggf ,I fu 1 Ji? gfffas' x .3 my I 1 1 Wrestling Portland State continued as a national Wrestling power. It placed sixth in the NAIA na- tional Wrestling tournament, and vvon for a fourth consecu- tive year looth the Oregon Col- legiate Conference and District 1 and 2 NAIA championships. The Viks finished With an 8-2-1 season record for dual meets. At the national tournament Rich Sanders paced the Vikings as he Won the 115 pound na- tional championship. Other PSC Wrestlers in the tournament were Rich Green, 1233 Ron Cal- houn, 1309 Masuru Yatabe, 137 g and Les Brown, 157. The live grapplers advanced to the na- tional tournament by Winning championships in their indi- vidual vveight brackets in the District 1 and 2 NAIA cham- pionship tournament. Dual Meet Scores PSC . Opponent 25 ........ OTI .....,.. 5 20 ........ MAC ........ 14 15 ........ OSU ......., 11 31 ....... U of W ....... 2 14 ........ OSU ........ 14 15 ....... CWSC ....... 17 17 ........ WSU ..,..... 10 23 ........ EOC ........ 8 17 ....... CWSC ....... 10 26 ........ L Sz C ........ 8 13 ........ BYU ........ 14 OCC and District 1 Sz 2 cham- pions and sixth place in NAIA national Wrestling tournament. Af- .eq . X ,-Z'1 ' ,wx N x ,.. .5y.. : 11ffT1T.'l L .gy w - -. 44- .,,,.- I f. -'ff 1 , :I , -' - x: wx :,u'.:-H - W fl-.-3551 1 -:.N--- . QQ. t --+3 .--4:3 av:-,:.,g-,A Y V, wma, 2giQ:,,Qw gff. -1 ,. 55523711 . f X-S3-952-mfqaai 'Q W.-.-x,.,.,., . Q V .4 f5::f,fx.,. . pq pa ,, :J-' Q2 L., ' '-1 .4 5174 I IA , , . JR Sf? f E Nw' .45 ff V 1 AQ , I M 'A-A A 1, 'J 5 ' :f EQ -X ,gn I .1 z- . f .Ar L.. 125 . 4 CSG' - xx --an I' ? f,f X ,JT ,f nj::':., -A , ,.,. K .2 'Ya-ax 4 4 fx zf ,Kan -.. QV , ,S 5 7 3' o 1 0 .f ' 1 mrzpfripf:-,' , ag! X I iv Ax, 1 f , 4 r W 2 ' ' ,. N5's,., ff' f. 7 , - MXt,.,. ,. , ,... .. .. . . 1 x-mf ' -5321 Wg' .. .9-1Pg:21,m'fg:yf1, ex? -'fs ,f?f::g,3.,f2i4,ep:f 129 , 1- vaw:,,.,,,X.f2Q- J., ' 5335-1?rQs:fA . QQ, , , , -. i, 5 , 91 , 'Vg' ' , J 1 f ' 'Q Fv:5 r ' 2 lm W V ., Qs 4 . , C ' :ki gg ,fig . - 1' ' ,..V -.,,,,., 5 - .,52' ,1 ,-5 f -?a. ffE'1 .gg,.a,. . ,3 Q qi if 1 1 V! L film 2 PI X , , V 1- 3 7' 42 Sifffff , Nik ' ' K ,5 .1 A , .,,!f w, if . nf '-:1j.'3f':,- .:' N X I 1 , J Q J 1 r , 53 macbeth Audiences packed the house for all four per- formances as the Portland State Players scored a dramatic triumph with Macbeth. Despite one bitter review everyone agreed that actors, set and costume designers, and director Asher Wilson had outdone them- selves in staging an exciting and first-rate Shakespearean presentation. What made it all the more exciting was the appearance of Arnold Moss, a leading actor with the American Shakespeare festival at Stratford, Conn., and an internationally ac- claimed interpreter of Shakespearean roles. Moss, as the ambitious Macbeth, played his way superbly through witchcraft, blood, murders, and Macbeth's ultimate self-de- struction. The applause was not all for Moss, however. Lady Macbeth's sleep-walking scene, as played by Marcia Wilson, was mas- terful. The applause was also for the performances of Douglas Coleman as Duncan, and for Ralph Zusman as Malcolm, Gary Adams as Macduff, Mark Wheeler as Donalbain, Doris Alexander as Lady Macduff, Richard Tracy as Banquo. And for the bewitching trio, Nancy Drew, Ronna Loewen, and Mary Hale. Adding a new dimension to the stage was Kermit Shafer's unusual 16-foot high re- volving set. Mary Collins achieved her usual excellence in costumery. 1 N 1 E dh.. 4.4. . , -1 -. I ww- ' :Ig 35525 X1 f X' X 4 X Q if -' l lfizf .ciigkxf . f 5 1 , , x Y r 10,3 ' 4 F 1 'Q' I '7- Sf 'E . f . X I 4 , 1 NT 5 57 f 2 Q K P Z, x Z 'Q I' .,.-. 4 Y 1 fiivh ' ,. 2 , , - f - 5521.31-Igil 5-1 - - -: f . xgwz- -' ' x gig' -4 A if l2555511i5fE :i -51 ff fa V' ' g1:555557QQa'2E'f' I , . 'sf.w:x,.w if 7 i ! 5 ! '7m.,.., x ' EKU, , '7 5 'X Q , , 1 , 1,1,:g,::g1g:s1::?f::,.. .f1.1:5:2:af'v-w?2:1e-4-'sf:::1v1:-gggvy H .,,.:ng::5:,:f-f2fgf,:3:j-:ss -Q-z-:-'-f' ,g::3cmb'7t?G2-7J5:?.: f: X , lg f 1if2f' 425 f :ry 1 ff-I - - ' 1f'-??E3:E:35:1i'i2':'- - Q., we Q -1. qgotfzig .-, ,-Z1-Wg-:1.,.:,,, '-'v'MvLjQl,-:alll v22Lfw:s::j:-piqzrzgiiuili:-1Zgziiria-::k3:E:fSf ,- 4 15 Rf : c1:'t.-'g:f'iP-f'- . 11-1' ' -2 . , J, V 'Viv'-I-1.-M.x:.,.,.,, 4 ff W, 22 - ' K J f f ' fi2Elf?E?E G s- , ' :EX 'er - - ' ' 'PEFAFW V ' 'rn vw. .41-Q. ' , 4,,,nW-H. ws' .y, Q., ., ' iw , A f . ' 4521-f?:1'-11f,qxfamgxz-.2Q fq., -' J-4 1' 1g .g:iewg'5fQ,. ' , 23g,,g-f - Q -M ' 1 ,. ,.,L5fgj5.z?' Ml' ff - it A Xif.1 1,2g-.1-'Q ' .v:.?b,5'ffiHe:-5 7.5 - , - -- -- xr 1 4 , Ay -f- Y' -1 ZEf'.:?'4'ffi' 25 - 1, Vg ' ' ' fi? 2- '22 -' 'zur ,. 1' 1:5-, ' : 4: Q 'ku 4- 1 , 'f g,4,,3.m , , h 5 , '1 7,f'v-1v'rrgr-f-rv:- mf,-ff-1,-7 f.g+y2'Af: 4' ' 9 If . 2 ,m ' ' , Qfigiizc' . ' Yi1, f-I1-,1 -k , , ' T 4,-'.-51 ' hr ' Rf-W 'fi'E7 9 A vj 4, f, ,,,,, ,- W, 5 , 4 ' ' I QigM?p4L9.Lffv,.....-.'A.J' 44.?..f:M,-. 5P -4?yff3'.- 'F ff? 3: '4' 'fy' 'f A. 3 f , gf, 211745, , A J, 3 F rw, ,Ihr , . . .1v,.L.,njf,, , ,,,,,f- , HV- Q1 ...zj r:L:'.2ri.4,,..-- , . - T 1 CAST Duncan ..... Douglas Coleman Malcolm ....... Ralph Zusman Donalbain ...... Mark Wheeler Macbeth ......... Arnold Moss Banquo ........ Richard Tracy M acdu ff ......... Gary Adams Lennox ..... Richard Sheeland Ross ............. Rick Fendel M entheith ...... Gary Teadtke Angus ......... Charles Hinkle Fleance ......... Tad Savenor M acdu jjvs Boy. .Patti McCallig Scottish Doctor Arnold Hummasti Captain ........... Dick J unge Porter ........... Jack Shields Lady Macbeth. .Marcia Wilson Lady M acdu jj' Doris Jean Alexander Gentlewoinan . .Dianne Heater Three Witches .... Nancy Drew Ronna Loewen Mary Hale First Murderer. . .James Breck Second Murderer Michael Grimsted Seton ............. Dick J unge Messenger. .Arnold Hummasti Steward ........ Gary Teadtke Court Lady. . .Gwen Whiteneck Servants ..... Q . .Greg Meiling Pat Jones John Neelands Soldiers .... . . .Greg Meiling Pat Jones John Neelands Q ,. ,.., .,., R at V Q Y my 'Vi W fr. 0' . Sf' MRMINGHAM IITHERNWWV:-Q ANVJ xg xi 8 STA xy? 'X' '..r U , gg.. L- A54 '- A- '5'11L'f':-Q 5 ' , 1 ,- if Z ig 1, - if . '4 V 4 ,. , . x : . Q 5 ',1-af: - rf -,QM-: .ggi-2:5-.L :::i.3fc2E1. x ,gv4.,.2Ma ,mfg-4-2SS,?,-W, Ma,-49.-Lf . .fiv- N as K f ex -62 I ff oz Xa f x :paw-L. -f -nga' 3 is -fx , -N.. Q ' ,-gk ' ' N. ,-1-dm - -. gQ1i5iEvit334 'K ff233??L'?i1':-Q -7' , V iff . -ri . 'Q X N' X 2 xx S x I N X X , ., ,f:i5,,,..5. .. t ' xv--f 3wC11'1.':. 4 , .-fN:'X-:1 5 V' W 'ff if 'E3,R+ ' .,'?-I X 1 I 175s A ,. -F' v - 'f :C 1 -, - J ' ,:'1i-?2,.- ii , kc , V if :gf 'X 1qz'?iL, :ff ' -. ' - -Tj' A ws. 'Q f ' 'g li--' '- 116- .Y V 1113: ,. N, -1 - Q I I Branford Millar said it best: We always knew we had stu- dents like these. Now the rest of the nation knows. The Portland State president's praise was for the super-victori- ous College Bowl team which broke every existing record in the seven-year series of the NBC television program. Coached by Ben Padrow, asso- ciate professor of speech, the team consisted of Jim West- wood, captain, Mike Smith, Larry Smith, Robin Freeman, and alternates Marv Foust, Doug Hawley, Al Kotz, and J im Watt. Brian Fothergill, a math major who prodded Portland State into entering the compe- tition, is the father of the team. The team brought sudden and dramatic recognition for PSC as broadcasters and newspa- pers, national publications in- cluding Tfime magazine, and state and community leaders hailed the team and the college. The Oregon Legislature held a College Bowl day. And the team brought home over S15,000. More than that, Portland State was also the all-time champion on the General Electric- sponsored quiz showg no other college has approached PSC's unerring fielding of brain- busting questions. PSC Record Date PSC Total Jan. 31 ..... 300 Feb. 7 Feb. 14 Fab. 28 ..... 345 Mar. 7 ...... 415 Totals ...... 1,7 25 350 315 Opponent Opp. Total San Francisco ..... 155 Park College ...... 25 Kent State. . . . . . 35 Coe College ....... 175 Birmingham ...... 60 450 PSC's 1,725 point total broke the previous five-game Bowl record of 1,525 set by Bow- doin college. And the 415 scored in PSC's final contest smashed Virginia Military In- stitute's earlier 400 point record. PSC was the first College Bowl five-time winner recording over 300 points in each contest. The team also held its opponents' cumulative score to 450, a record. af? peaee corps H31 or none! This is the determined motto of a tiny, but determined, elus- ter of Portland State students-Peace Corps volunteers in the PSC Turkey VII training program. And, after 720 demanding class hours in less than two months, all 31 gradu- ated on April 23, making Portland State the major training center for Turkey-bound eorpsmen. Of 325 vol- unteers in Turkey, Portland State has prepared 195. The corps is attracted by the collegeis Middle East Studies Center, one of three or four institutions in the na- tion eapable of training volunteers for the Middle East. Oregon stands high in the corps oth- erwise, too. The state is highest in volunteers per capita in the nation. f' F-' , 2, 'iP1M i,, a iu s ,zfgjqzfzalfv Q 1' ' ,L-:ish -mfr, ' :f ejfxgg, 3 5sgff2...i.g ,M al cience -- gpg: 5,1 . ..?,.,,:E:E-N . 'ff fa., . 'gf:2S+w . H my by x. .Q 9 Q v A- 16 1 I. ,fff 9-M-pq. me After two years of frustrating de- lays the Science building is taking shape. This half-completed class- room-laboratory facility will soon be joined by Science II, plans to be presented to the 1968 legislature. Expansion of Science facilities will eventually allow complete escape from ramshackle Old Main. But more important, the growth is part of an all-college plan to strengthen undergraduate work in prepara- tion for greatly enlarged graduate programs due in two years at PSC. This was a year of preparation and progress for the Science division. As the division's building reared from its muddy pit, scien- tists began planning for the big move from gloomy Old Main and strengthened under- graduate courses for the leap into graduate work two years hence. Advanced degrees will first be given in chem- istry, physics, and applied science. Bolster- ing of biology and mathematics also began this year as groundwork for masters de- grees in those disciplines in three years. Despite the resignation of division head Thurman Peterson and a minor invasion of the nuclear physics laboratory by vandals, Science kept up its traditional slow but sure advancement. Grant funds spent this year exceeded S300,000 and a PSC drive for the Clyde Johnson memorial fund brought over 32,000 for scholarships. A large new organic chemistry laboratory installed in Old Main was so welcome that faculty and students didn't complain be- cause fume hoods weren't connected during the first weeks of operation. The new labora- tory will not be moved to the now abuilding Science structure where a federally-financed environmental health research laboratory will occupy the fifth floor penthouse. 7 ffalf 41 U: .H l -x x 22? 77 Q. iff-: '::.,r KY f 5-A' , ,,f- ,nw 1 1 ' ' e 9' .X . ff ' J-:ff,...':::v-. Q '4 3 2FZ31. ' ' - f :T-7'5 1 .ik ,L-YK L. Lv v 1 f V.. ,, sf' 'slam v 5 573521- 25526 ' W x-.g,, ., Q, H4 JF E., 4, .f ', .2-5 - f' ' 1- ,V--V x ,Ur .,rZA '1,,a,g'x f I -V V2 , , M V,-. . 0 - x, vw I ,V-:gf .ff fr, , h., 1, I .,, 5 , 141 2 k .-J-1.1-.v'f,-5 '.--: 5171.541 gil? 3 ' V Q4 3 si ' ' 3 7 V 42 2 ,I A ' 1 fo - B W1 . 'Q af- , ., .F f'1 -4 .f f 232 . 55 . -PL' ' 4 Jazz swung into the limelight at PSC in March. The school's first jazz festival lasted three days and was an artistic and inancial success. Ranging in sounds from big band to trio and far-out progressive to Latin jazz, the series added another leaf to Portland State's musical book. On the first night, the Carl Smith Orchestra played and jazz vocalist Patti Hart sang. With arrangements by trombonist Quen Anderson and saxist Earle Minor, the band hopped through up-tempo tunes with amaz- ing alacrity and then dropped down the beat With a three-movement tribute to a late Portland bass player, Blues For Bonnie. Latin jazz, the Brazilian samba nova,', Was featured during the first half of Thursday's concert. Jim Smith's quintet breathed Latin fire into a form of jazz rarely heard outside of South America. The multi-horned Gus Mancuso stepped onto the Old Main stage next and offered jazz on the piano, bass, vibes and baritone horn. His cohorts, Billy Christ, bass, and Sandy Sa- vino, drums, kept up a pace in their share of the festival that was hard to follow. But it Was followed the next night at the Public Auditorium by the Dave Brubeck Quartet. Paul Desmond, alto saxg Gene Wright, bass, and J oe Morello, drums, aided Brubeck in putting the final touches to PSC's first jazz festival. It Won t be the last. I I N 1 1 3 fi 3 lfu QUAQS ' :Y-Q 5' ..- V x . .V ' .1 , f. L -I x fm '.-. F .- 4 'i f M 5 ' y r :E 2. N fx I ,geifizx 3 1 5,8451 51 xx Qin. ski? H 1 -4 5 5 4, f'W5'l Aenai-uf E f ., 'N Q ' ,.:, Aj! 75. -Q , I f gg? 11' 551 ' five ' - .U C, w ' 12512 3 fi - 5 iii ' '4 -c,,,qfg?j' ,. 1. 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Lrhfgg-hgmn-ftfl 1 ng-rf' ,,vEI..5+ D N -M 7 WS -F 5553533 'T , ,TN Q Y 1 QQ, SQ, I X 'A Xxx X xx X , , I aft With grimacing face-impressions, screaming carmen and dismal black smears, and order emerging from a chaotic background, the work of art- ists from an agitated continent splat- tered the ascetic White gallery and stirred the emotions of Portlanders who viewed the II Bfiemzl Americana de Arte. For Portland State the Latin Ameri- can exhibit was an artistic coup with- out recent parallel. The tightly- budgeted Art Exhibition committee, advised by Katherine Corbett, opened the show before it was seen in Ameri- ca's wealthy art center, Babylon-on- the-Hudson. The show, which will return from New York to the west coast, was part of the committee's continual drive to bring good art to PSC. This year's program ranged from the classicism of Leonardo da Vinci through Rodin's transitional work to up-to-the-minute pop art from Los Angeles and San Francisco. New Spanish spatialism was pre- sented for the first time in the metro- politan area in a Spanish government- arranged exhibition of four modern Iberian painters. In another inter- national show etchings by Andre Zorn were displayed in conjunction with the celebration of Swedish month in Portland. The unusual mat-like tapestries, coarsely woven with broad stripes and Hebraic letters, in a showing by Tif- fany award winner Muriel Helfman of St. Louis, reflected the rebirth of inter- est in this ancient medium. Other exhibits included the Oregon Historical Society's Ship and Shortcut -memorabilia of the Portland harbor and the noble battleship Oregon-and southwest Indian drawings from the Northern Arizona museum. , I, 1 ww, I ., 4 , f' l' E 1 - ' X 'X I . '- is V . f 3 1 ' 4 . F 3 V1 1 f L . 3 V- L s I , ,,, I , ' V it iiw A, ,APP ,V .. 1' V ttup ,V - 4 I . ' I X95 :JI - I, T f . , .5 , -.lg 1 . c i1r.s A L.. 'VI 7, .,.- . ' 1 'Lb L .4 33 ' J i' 4 .' : ' 4 , . 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U -.1 1. .4 3 mu k .,-1 . ,z , .-,sam 5 H214 ' ,f . t r wise 3 ., ,,,,,,,.,v...N-.ffw f ' '. 5 1' - f ' , F V - I -, ,.-nv fm ' I HWS It all started When a handful of Women at the old Vanport Extension Center, outnum- bered more than four to one by men students, decided they didn't have enough say about their college life. So they organized and the Portland State Associated Women Students has been vigorously saying-and doing- ever since. And for the 19-year-old AWS this was the best year yet for its service activities. Fashions, a guided tour of the college, cook- ies, and conversation introduced over 300 new Women students to PSC and AWS at the opening Mixnic. Members sold the Phrenrige directory, lost and found articles, and Homecoming mums, helped with registration, and revived the fine art of keeping teachers happy at the yearly Apple Polishing Party. The annual Christmas Party for retarded children, followed by the AWS-Glamour magazine contest, completed Winter activi- ties. Gail Haberman was named PSC's Best Dressed Girl. Officers guiding this year's activities Were: Georgia Rae, president, Cathy Olsen, first vice-president, Eileen Hadfield, second vice- presidentg Doris Rademacher, secretary, and Barbara Hunt, treasurer. I w- 3 'X E? 1 .I m i , 3 A 1 'vig' V 4 A13 ,U , I . 1' :S 1 1 l 'Q 5 , lu, D V. N 'QQ ,QQ X -Q , - 92 'fan 'ff' - J .,.L , A , .4 M rw Q' , 4 'v 1 ,.,,,., as Q, 34 . Mx rf 'vig if '53 - if ' 1 f , , .K -,. ' - ff W5 F40 . A Y X X E ,T .Wi I ?marthto'iheXsaXX0'fW . ....v ,.,.., . , A ' ,.: F . ww . E2 , V 4 .Ev ,,,.-W.,-,.fi:,f2vf -- imfzf 5:5 tm, W' .assay . f4f' -4 M Q 1 xi x 9 -9 f Q A Xi Jax, , ,SQ . 1 30 ,ff , Az. 5.:,3:g:g:g. ,A . mfr-j-:, , . 2 1 'ff' N. 5 g N55 - l 1 I 1.4.1. :. ., 7.1.11 .rg,.1.f' . . ,-,gg12,.,. 5 - X , 2, . Q , -5 7 'Am .y 2 dv ex: .. 5 V' . ff? , 8 A - 'I' 2 f N. N 252, - rf - ' 9- V5551: -iijaff-Z::1.,' i . J ' r . Hi. . 4.2.-2'fs.e2a:sQ.1Zf 5332-92 ff ' W? ' 'FX ,af 'I?r? : - .-1 , . x ,, .fhf , '- :fPf:f:.'f J L: A fi-' , . , .11 i' . .H Q .K Q w elections Balloons, bands, blunders, bally- hoo, and broads-it was a typical Portland State student body elec- tion. Despite protests of election rule violations and sniping by candi- dates at their opponents for evad- ing the most important issue, the vote turnout exceeded 1,600 better than ever before. Much of the turnout Was attributed to presidential candidate Timme I-Ielzer whose night-before-election phone campaign to underclassmen apparently paid off. Helzer and J im Westwood snatched the two top offices from the opposition, the Jim Bishop-Bob Erickson and Roger McGee-Richard Reinoehl tickets. Pat Oberlander, this year's Social- Recreation Board chairman, took the second-Vice president's job with a Write-in campaign. LH -1 'ki Es V.-,Y r L , 5.4 - p, 'Qi' , , Q 1 , V5 0, . 'ST J ? . Mg, do , , R' ig f 4 'Wi .' . 1 ,if-1 33 .44 ' V 1 5'-, 1, U.. If H ,,,. .hu . ffgsrif' S? fm li, Q ' w 5 I X I - 5 I Qi-1x 1g-avg-7 elhpses III X-A .-Q., . -lianamkmga L50 Xmxx 4,-' -E '-., ,S , x R X 'L-. si-V' ,lt ,Mi Mx- x x X x - N XX 5 eg E ? I Y Y 1 Y ' l S X , . X 3 L X K X I -ll x But Spring or none You are in school you inight flee to jungles tangled in the woodlands just around the bend but do not flee too far Physics is at twelve o'oloolc or English is at three K but now you don't have anything so run around the corner for a beer but don't forget you must be here j By twelve o'olook or three Coines every Day Even though you pray and plead that just this once Good Father Tiine will trip and miss S I H Your twelve o'oloolc or Three It never happens Oh, You know. Well, good for you and ine We two are sane ' l rw Lxqf F LEX jj J LJ? Y f Ki 1 'J f W 'vf 2 1V I' ' ' t ww.-z-? 1-:4fs1441a-141213 ,i V , , fr.g.::gg5g3q,. , . , ': :':'3:5?-+2-kgffi' ,::5?fgff. 1 . , 4352 ... , .... A X. ., 4 V4 K 0 ' SJ x N .. ,.,. . 4 .. 2 ,iz , '-11:-efgi ,,1::f. 2': ' 517.-.' .2552 27:1 :IfS:7:f.,SZf 1'.'Z7:' Wx gas- ' .1 . ' , --'of-,-512952-1-2.av.2:g,, ,.,:5 , , ' . '3-22.21,-.:5f9,y4-1 .2 -- gy- . M44-I' .1115 jg. nf , ,u.,..g:'1-:'5f:::g' :s:5:g, ggmzf:-:- it i z,--:Ach ,f3:::zv-P .:.f,- ,. , I ' ' ., . t - ,. H -rze'- :,: w,::,,. ,,::::5:5,3.Eg ' H -. - -' . .irzgzgs -2:g-- ,- + -- - .fx 5: , Q0 .izfzixf V 4 -:lf V - ,-1: ,,. ww: assi, +I' f f ' -w w .-11:1-3'2,: 'ififfk . Z.-i2:.gI1:a .,:,,4,., - -521.-VI .. J f . 99' f am- .,. .q . ' u , -51511: .-:-q- -1.0 , 34 15 WW' WM The sun grows heavy With your books Final finals oorning up Great grey eyes with dirty sniudges greet grey eyes Across the no-inan's land Disguised as Library but nobody is fooled not efoen no nian Even he wants nothing not one part to play in this guerrilla war the last assault for now f-K5 ,, if Who will live to play in next year's war game, friend? J km I don't know except this war it has no end. Unless it has no players True unless it has no players trees are poor for substitutes trees play dijjcerent games, I dare... Q, M Cs qw ff ,f-4, 4 , f , P2 'Wm 1 '95 f 1 iii-Q59-!1e,3 j Final finals coming up Stacks of books are used to ward ojjf fear Aiinless chatter matches aimless looks As students turn their backs upon the passing year. And desperately recall - . How fascinating clouds swirling shifting ' M ade' their yellow pencil write a word They never heard ' And Lordy Did they give a dainn? No Not Then... I N o one eats And no one sleeps The taverns close at 1:00p But sonieone always has a rooin where A . ' nonsense , . . on its highest plane Can be discussed ' QW? F' :.M 1. zji . f., A 1 MZ . mm 7:2 ' JN 544' W f . I A -kg: 1 .gf , W-..s. .-., .i,,5,,f-. -if 1 -I I 1 J fl I x X x x glam . i-na-zzz:-nr.,.n1v And then the term ts done. Tests are over. Now no cloud can nullify the sun and you are free to laugh. Neighborhoods explode In raucous final's celebrations Beer flows golden in the mellow light Suddenly you find you love the people of all nations m,,L'-is AM if '-Nw FZ.---f K, ' Qf X 6. I ,gig Music, dancing, Kissing lips that inatch your own so inarvelously You vow too recklessly to take biology next year And then you think You ask if there's a purpose to it all To all the pencils pens the papers and the books the blackboards teachers lectures on mortality to starting in the fall and finishing in the spring to never understanding any one thing and learning nothing in its All You think, you ask And even while you celebrate with noisy cheers You're wondering where it will go Yes even while you joke and sing You wonder if .one day a question will be asked f 14145553-zs, V -':fQf5Q?'Ef' :fix Wg ,X 'ke grccks Compared to years when Hellenic adversities punctured the academic world with fulminating dialogues, this was a peaceful, productive year for Portland State's Greeks. Any uproar was from the traditionally weird and wonderful dances which highlighted the year. The Greek dancing season started with Tau Kappa Epsi1on's M arolfi Gras-the New Orleans of Bourbon street, wrought iron balconies, and Spanish moss made hot by agitating raucous music and agitating, raucous students. An open break between the Portland State administration and three national sororities in 1964 cost the Greek women their PSC recognition. But, off-campus, Portland State's former sororities threw the wackiest ball of the year, the Pajama dance. La five gauche with its odd, frantic ways came to Portland State during Spring term, imported by Kappa Sigma for the Paris Apache dance. Beards, exposed garters, and gay abandonment in Parisian sewers set the theme for the sensationally successful dance. 0 u E 5-giiqgs ,X af-. Q - Af . N, if Q. Xi? xx X - 'Yr- v RFQ g-z gl ' -X ,X , ' U ,Zv,', V. Q X- E2 - , ga , ,A ,L . ,., f ' 3, -. A :, , -1-. Af 4,w -1 ,.--- :V?f,..5 : 5 'wx -f - Q ' 27 , ff'L f'N Jw-1 Q. .- ,... , if M.,-D V ,. M-:W ff-' 'Q Rf.. ' W-721451. TF 3- 26:1 sf 'Q' Zi. Q M-:Q iifaf ,Q . -S? - ' L N.. .fy .-,A .,., , J., k www! ' 1 An, poetry series John Ciardi, Saturday Review poetry editor, Wore two hats when he came to Portland State. Recep- tive audiences heard Ciardi the Dante translator and Ciardi the poet. On Dante, Ciardi maintained, the modern reader's difiiculty stems from the differences in Worlds. Contemporary audiences do not feel morality is coupled With the physical World, but to Dante these were uncompromisingly linked. Earlier, Ciardi the poet gently put down poetry which attempts to carry great social messages. Poetry is fun, he said, chiding the poet who sells his soul for a pot of message. Ciardi's appearance was the apex of a nine-program poetry series which drew poets to PSC. V F n to-ww Av.. -.,,,, if m i x 1 Meng:-' . :fig A . - - f -J '5 xg, fm, ' .- - 5,1 ' fn.: -sv . . , . Q. W ,Qfm-,ww -... 5 VX.. - ' 9 v K 5. - -3- ff' jQiQ:::Yf.25f:3a6f'iQ 'y W 1 1 . .- ' -:'I-.5-iii.-'?5K': r'1', :F . -i?if?3- -' Y-Km A-:fx '1 5? 'g':,Q.'. - j-'55 . 5 . 5 :E ' , 1 X-ax . X i, ' bv-M78 'W x --Q b . . ' ? X I V 5 1 -- fx Q, ' x ,, Y .Ng A Q . -- - 'F' 55? g - -Q L . 2 ' . fix-' Q ff .,, -'- 1 -' ,. N ' -5-,. , 45 - A -qw -. 1 ff: 5 E 8 v . . .. . 6 I . U I. ,,5,.,,,,f. ,I Q :H - A QQ . X X V 1 J' :iJ-J,:- '. - f . ,I ' :X Q xr . 1 v.. More than 600 heard and questioned Stephen Spender, British poet and critic, and co-editor of the English- American periodical, Encounter. Editor Robert Dana of the North American Review, and the authors of Five Poets of the Pacific N orthwest, Portland poets William Stafford and Kenneth Hanson, Portland artist Carl Morris, and Seattle poets Richard Hugo and David Wagoner also en- thused Portland State audiences With readings. To encourage young poets, Portland State joined With Reed and Lewis Sz Clark to sponsor student poetry read- ing exchanges during Spring term. PSC's poets, Joanne Jones, Bill Tate, and Anne Hamilton, were selected by a student-faculty panel. ,f-'wwf ,ff- W' 2 W 'QEWL' ' x Q- 1- 1 V. 1.1. L -vw , :HH . 4 f 2:9 fl '7 33346.- v ,ea f. f, W is YM I b.. Y ga f -uf. 1' 524. A 24' Nw, 6: 1-:-,X sm- npa If six members of Portland's minis- cule National Party of America came to Portland State seeking publicity, they succeeded. In the process they destroyed any myths about academic freedom's rational sway over human emotions. The crowd of some 250 students and faculty which gathered in the Park Blocks around the NPA's youthful president, Edmund Crump, was un- easy from the start. For nearly an hour the Portland Staters jeered at Crump's rantings about Portland newspapers and Judaism, watched all the while by the Sears and Roebuck- uniformed right wingers and Portland police. Then the heckling crowd soured. The mob flattened two tires of the NPA's wheezy old pickup truck, stole the ignition keys, ripped down a Confed- erate flag flying from the truck, and pulverized inflammatory signs on the side of the pickup. The explosion came when history pro- fesor John Stevens, who had been al- lowed to stand in the pickup's bed, suddenly ripped off the flag. As the anti-Semites rode off to head- quarters in protective custody, their antiquated truck-also in protective custody-was trundled along behind a police Wrecker, leaving the crowd to contemplate what it had done. E V -nmmnumnuzg ' - - ' publications The Vanguard damned the building as fortress-like. But, when the College Center addition was done, Portland State's Weekly tabloid moved in with nary a gripe. For 18 years, The Vanguard operated from sundry corridors and hallways and of late from an unused escalator shaft. Editor Clarence Hein's addition of editorial cartoons by Pulitzer prize Winner C. Herbert Block- I-Ierblock -heralded a year of expanded edi- torial opiniong the neWspaper's enter- tainment and news departments were similarly bolstered. The Review returned this year to its traditional student literary magazine format. Editor Jim Riley said stu- dents and faculty like the book - all copies were sold. t r .-13: -L3' -1,4 W: ,. ' I 53597 :A .L X an guard IW in The Viking, under Editor Bob Hensel- man, expanded by 32 pages and con- tinued reiinement of the format which has Won the book several awards in the past three years. First directed by Ed Grosswiler, then by Dick Johnston, the Publications Board met regularly to reorganize it- self, consider budgets, and choose new editors for student publications. viking ,.. T .dx . -f+:+9?f:f.5 , 1 2-V -W vi., L f.v4L. '2l'ef:3 golf Portland State's golf team again ripped through NAIA competition as Well as handling opponents such as Oregon, Oregon State, and Gonzaga. The duffers were led by Pete Taylor and Paul Vetsch Whose averages hovered around 74 all season. Bob Rennie, Doug Vetsch, JimOrr, Butch Reichel, and Ed Green also posted fine scores, averaging between 76 and 79. As far as tennis was concerned the Viks took their lumps Xl if J fi ,LE baseball iw Returning regulars such as first baseman J im Leahy, right fielder Jim Frazier, and third baseman J im Schmidt had to carry the load early in the season for the baseball team until freshmen acquired experience. Freshman Ed Gorman helped the Viks with pitching. Holding infield positions Were: second base Bill Heckaman, short stop Paul Johnson, third baseman Butch Lindblad, and catcher Skip Sconce. In the outfield Were: center field Rick Silva, and left field George Vass. .- l fm v -f x -H9113 Wfneizfy 55?ii,.,ffw,f? if ma, ,W 2 NT M1 'sr :eva 4 9 .g , .5wf9 v 'vi track Viking trackmen had few bright spots as new Oregon Collegiate Conference rules eliminated some of the PSC squad. Some team members lacked the 24 credit hours from the previous two quarters required for eligibility. Standout for the Vikings was Harold Strong in the 100 yard dash. Strong posted good times of around 9.8 for the 100. Others who helped were: Roger Sandvold, short dis- tancesg Don Dalrymple and Herb Parker, broad jumpg and Jim Rommell in the pole vault. But in the end it was lack of depth and inexperience that hurt PSC most. 1 , ' 'M if , A 42:44-22194 - , ,M !ff5f,,..,. . 1 ' 4 f, A '- ' 'E W , 5559 1 1 1 1 D g 0. 1' P - rr .2-I '14-0' , I ' . hh., A ,- .I 0 --V J,...5 , . ur 8 'PJ J 1114.-fn . -.V . ., , f' f- ' 1. ' 'a1'- - ' I ff' f P I 5. ..f! x . A a - Y. m ' - 4- - ,' K X f Q-,T - ' Q Y. 5 ' ,, I V. w 4- lk. A s X . T ' J 1. J --r 1 X - .Q ..,, an , '..x,1-- x . N ,,.:--Z ft , 8 1 - ,U at If graduates -1965 A nf . Q IiQQ3fxj,,.f, .7 -aaa! v - ge - . A. I ql 'XKQQSQW 5 . if N- N' H- 4 . . ' Q 5 1 N? 1 ES'-' 1 wj 'f xx X lx 'W' x HX A ' .x l ' A X I W1 Albert, Abe Adams, Rosalee Adamy, Ed Aitkenhead, Joy Albro, Lyle Alexander, Gerald Anderson, Kathryn Aplan, Joan Aplanalp, Elita Architect, Kay Arola, Darryl Aust, Mary Austin, Mary Bacon, Arlus Barendrick, Ben Bartell, Don Beeh, William Bell, Judy Bender, Larry Benedict, Ellen Beniield, Spencer Benight, Sally Berge, John Bertman, David Bishop, Julie Bissonette, Lee Black, Carol Bogumil, Susann Bomersheim, Ruth Bonfiglio, Jaques Brandl, John Brendman, Al Brenner, Richard Brockman, Ernest Brong, Ledi Brown, Jean Brueckner, Jim Brunner, Karen Buckley, Janet Buckman, Thelma Bush, Pam Campbell, Cameron Carson, Faye Carter, Burl Cartwright, Bonnie Chapelle, Barry Chinn, Marian Christiansen, Jo Ann Clark, Loretta Clark, Sharon Sci Hist Elm Ed Bus Adm Appl Sci Appl Sci Elm Ed Bio Sci Art Chem Elm Ed Elm Ed Bus Adm Pol Sci FL Bus Adm Pol Sci Soc Sci Soc Sci Hist Sci Math Elm Ed Math Bus Adm Elm Ed Engl Math Erth Sci Gst FL, Soc Sci Elm Ed Engl Soc Sci Elm Ed Elm Ed Sci Bio Sci Elm Ed Math Elm Ed Soc Engl, FL 4 515:21 :f:- '-:A- 2 xi.. 1 1 WW fm Clore, Robert Close, Jim Cogan, Carol Coisman, Fred Colby, Harlene Cole, Jon Core, John Corlett, Fay Correll, Robert Coverdale, Peggy Cowne, Donald Cox, Ken Crowe, Joan Crowe, Nancy Curtis, Clara Dahlstrom, John Darby, Ruth Daugherty, Linda Davidson, Bill De Barezy, Elsa De Blasio, Robert Dechant, Judy Decker, John Deering, Darlene Dempster, Susan Dexter, Ron Diment, Don Jr. Donaldson, Glen Douglass, Julia Dorrell, Paul Durst, Dennis Ecoff, Robert Elia, Victor Ellis, Peter Erickson, Jill Fagan, Patrick Fisher, John Flower, Bill Foren, Terry Forkner, Jack Gabriel, Donna Galvin, Mike Ganslee, Gary Gardiner, Mike Gardner, Opal Gardner, Sharon Gehrke, Lynne Gemilli, Thomas Gilchrist, Jack Gillard, Carol Engl Bio Soc Sci Hum Bus Adm, Geo Bio Elm Ed Soc Sci Elm Ed Sci Chem Hist Hist Soc Sci Hist Bus Adm Elm Ed Chem FL Soc Sci Bus Adm Elm Ed Elm Ed Soc Sci Bus Adm Math Elm Ed Bus Adm Bus Adm Bus Adm Chem Math Soc Sci Math Appl Sci Psych Bus Adm Math Soc Sci Math Bio Elm Ed Math Econ Soc Soc C' B- '27 I I 1 Gilmer, James Goddard, Eugenia Goldharnmer, Leland Gordon, Foley Grellert, Edward Grifiis, William Grifiiths, Dennis Grifiiths, Joyce Gngsby, Paula Grover, Gerald Gunderson, Harry Gwyther, Dennis Hammel, Joanne Hamor, Magdalena Hampton, Margaret Handyside, Judy Hansen, Frank Hansen, Richard Hardt, Barbara Harri, Bob Harris, Rod Hartley, Diane Hattenhauer, Janet Hawley, Doug Hearn, Mary Hecker, Margaret Hefiler, Les Hein, Clarence Heitschmidt, Douglas Henderson, Roger Henry, Michael Henselman, Carol Hibbard, Michael High, Marilyn Hill, Richard Hinds, Kent Hoffard, Donald Hohensee, Robert Hollingsworth, Ralph Honeyman, Arthur Hopkins, Nancy Hosford, Gloria Hubbard, Lucy Hunt, Terry Isom, Jerrald Jackson, Patrick J aspers, Walt Johansen, Palle Johnson, Barry Johnson, Carol Appl Sci FL Phy Soc Chem Chem Econ Elm Ed Elm Ed A Bio Bus Adm FL Engl Bus Adm Math Bus Adm Bus Adm Bus Adm Elm Ed Math Art Soc Engl Hum Soc Sci Bus Adm Math Math Hum Elm Ed Econ Bus Adm Econ Bus Adm Psych Hist Psych Anthro Hist Bus Adm Soc Sci Sci Hist Sci Elm Ed Johnson, David Johnson, Henry Johnson, James Johnson, Karen Johnson, Richard Johnston, Milton Jones, Bob Jones, Diana Jones, Jarrett Kaveny, Harold Keith, Shirley Keller, Charles Kempster, James Kenyanjui, Peter Kerr, J anis King, Donald Kingsbury, Delissa Kinoshita, Kathy Kirihara, Irene Kirkpatrick, Rodney Knight, Lee Koppang, John Koski, Mary Kotz, Allan Kruger, Gary Krupa, Lawrence Kurrle, Jack Kurtz, Harry Landis, Peter Landau, Jarrell Larson, Carol La Zelle, Lea La Zelle, Roy Leagjeld, Jerry Low, Nancy Leighton, Elizabeth Levenson, Sandra Levinson, Arthur Levy, Richard Limtiaco, Lenard Linker, Lavine Lorber, Kenneth Lundervold, Larry MacDougall, Tom MacFarland, Marie Maki, David Mankin, Sharron Marlow, Richard Martindale, William Mathenge, Solomon Sci Bus Adm Bus Adm Pol Sci Appl Sci Chem Appl Sci Bus Adm Bus Adm Anthro Hum Hum Pol Sci Art Psych Hum Psych Pol Sci Gst Bus Adm Hum Engl Geo Sci Bus Adm Bus Adm Soc Sci Appl Sci Bus Adm Math Bus Adm Bus Adm Soc Soc Math Pol Sci Bus Adm Soc Sci Bus Adm Soc Sci Hist Bus Adm Anthro -ur Wa ff 85 row mf, 2' - C lb' Mathews, John May, David McCarthy, Patricia McCoury, Melvin McCoy, Wally McDonald, Dan McDuffie, Claudia McGill, Nancy Mclnroy, Ray Mclntyre, Beverly McMahan, Donald McQueen, Hazel McWhirter, Josephine Michel, Charles Miller, Marilyn Miller, Shirley Moberly, Jeanette Monahan, Jean Morrau, Jane Morse, Violet Moss, Ken Mott, Nancy Murphy, Avon Murphy, Colleen Nawrocki, Tom Nees, Wilbur Neilson, Elizabeth Neilson, Shirley Nelson, Janet Nelson, Larry Nelson, Rosalie Neuschwanger, Judy Newhouse, Roselle Newton, Richard Noakes, Beverly Noe, Sharon Norris, Lowell Nufer, Beverly Nyberg, Karen O'Dell, Richard Oliva, Janice Olsen, Suzanne Parry, Robert Paskill, Peter Pearson, Judi Pederson, Donald Pederson, Thomas Peel, Bobbie Perry, Joe Persaud, Rudolph Math Sci Math Bus Adm Bus Adm Bus Adm I-list Elm Ed Bus Adm Elm Ed e Bus Adm Soc Sci Soc Bus Adm Bus Adm Bio Elm Ed Speech Art Soc Sci Elm Ed Engl Soc Art Phy Art Anthro Bus Adm Sci Hum Art Art Sci Elm Ed Math Bus Adm Elm Ed Sci I-list Elm Ed I-list Soc Elm Ed Chem Bus Adm Soc Sci Chem Pol Sci uf X1Se2W5:,,rf: - . 1 tp- v a-f' , , QVQAQ , , ,. 1 'f' ,my Q If 1' 'r , 7-TA, Nr 05 k D 7'+? 1,, Z f4s xfcxk v .-X 3 -up , Af' pi s Wiz' M? .ff Q..-:1-9, 'b:Q'+v'v:r-sA-1- na' AS ' zflvflvt Ili-122 , f- fi V , a H: ,tif ..-ax 'UM Persey, James Peters, Larry Peters, Merlin Peterson, Dorothy Polos, John Primmer, Donna Pritchett, Betty Purcella, Robert Purcell, John Ramberg, Daniel Rancich, Michael Rector, Natalie Reese, Larry Reid, Lawrence Reinhorn, Mary Regier, Eugene Regier, James Rice, Don Richards, J oan Richardson, Claudia Rickel, Don Ritchey, June Robbins, Sally Roberson, Daryce Roberts, Sybil Robinson, Ronald Roise, Stephen Rosenberg, Sally Ross, Donna Rucker, Roy Salmonson, Sharon Schafer, Robert Scheid, Earl Schick, Lawrence Scott, Dorothy Seafeldt, James Serell, Jon Shadley, Duane Sherrer, Sandra Signer, Sandra Simon, Richard Smith, David Smith, Kenneth Smith, Paul Smith, Peter Smith, Shirley Smrkovsky, Eloise Speers, Priscella Sposito, Carlo Math Bus Adm Elm Ed Bus Adm Appl Sci Sci Bus Adm Bus Adm Hist Hist K Geo Elm Ed Psych Bus Adm Elm Ed Hum Engl Bio Soc Hum Pol Sci Sci Art Sci Hist Hist Art Sci Elm Ed Soc Sci Chem Hum Bus Adm Bus Adm Bus Adm Elm Ed FL Math Art Bus Adm Sci Soc Sci Sci 1 -cz .wwf V US- ' ,Q -4. sf' Stacey, George Stack, Judith Staub, John Staines, Alan Stangel, Ron St. Claire, Richard Steinman, Teresa Stewart, Eugene Stock, Riley Stromvig, Jim Sundholm, Linda Swanson, Gene Tallman, Jo Anne Thomas, John Tillman, Richard Tingley, Bette Todd, Joan Todd, Robert Treadgold, Sally Treadgold, Susan Vaetz, Barbara Van Domlen, Joan Von Demfonge, Henry Warner, Lou Washburn, Edna Watt, Bob Weigel, Nancy Wells, Darrel Wells, Douglas Wells, Maude ,We1ton, Tom Weninger, William Wenzel, Doi' Wenzel, Joe Wesson, Robert Weston, John C. Whitehead, Jim Wiese, Karen Wilkings, Jerry Williams, Don N Williams, Joe Williams, Ken E. Williams, Penny Williams, Roger Williams Sharon Willoughby, Paul Wislart, Cathy Wittwer, J uel Worthington, Bruce Wright, Ron Yerke, Roger Yocam, Eva Zusman, Ralph Pol Sci, Speech Elm Ed Elm Ed Bus Adm Geo Elm Ed Sci Bus Adm Phy Math ' Bus Adm Elm Ed Soc Sci Psych Elm Ed Speech Psych Elm Ed Elm Ed Elm Ed Bus Adm Sci Geo Math Elm Ed Elm Ed Chem Geo Bus Adm Bus Adm Elm Ed Bus Adm Psych Psych Hist Bus Adm Hum Pol Sci Art Elm Ed Pol Sci Bus Adm Bio Psych Speech A 'Q PRINTING HOUSE-HALLVVYLER PRINTING COMPANY TYPE FACE- IDEAL NEVVS HEADLINE FACE- B,-XSKERVILLE
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