Portland State University - Viking Yearbook (Portland, OR)

 - Class of 1966

Page 1 of 226

 

Portland State University - Viking Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1966 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 226 of the 1966 volume:

.Q-113215 52,5--fl.. 'X ' -L , , q N 1+ -4 . ,Lf gs' ...h 19.1 my .lf-,QI ff, . 4.1. 1-. , ml wi, hwy.: .r 6,4 . fy. ,mae--. , ..--. , Am.: -. '-.... I ' f ' ,Q 11631, 5 Q 1 - .yu nf w fr,-I Nj: . 17'-3 ' W7 - K 47 J ' X E.,-Wllq -. 1- . . ,L 4 ' . , 11 V -.,--1-22. ' 5- 5 ,yi .' mv 'X -an 1 1.1. A, 'A' rf A 0- f N31 ff-wtf' 4 ' 1. - -fpzrs: Jig' 1. G --,111 My F- fzfr ' x . 11. H' MU ' .V ..: 2-- xn -.--I -4 V. ,J , - s f- iL w 5,.. I 'Wy -vw - .- ' 5-1'-.' 'F' A 'gf , -' '-! 'f. -1 Fix, G' 'lf A,-'yggii , x '55 P . 4'1I4.E'H5.! . ':. 45,5 l,,.'1,m:, A 'Q rf ' 1 1' A '- ' Sw ' N 31 'L l 1 1 5, , X, V 1 , , ..f x . , , ,v ywu' 5 - -gl. , f i x.r-:-,- -. 1-jpg -1 W '. 1 7' , -- .,,, . . f., 1 N. P N 4:!'w1H.- f, ' fx: Y.5.,.N A .., .1 ,ilmgf Liu' 'fr- D A D X - X , 1 A-wi 'U fry ,V I 1, W , X . , f'f5,,,. Y in ,ff '-. ,N 1 ' , ,gfjy-mff' 1 1.11 .W .au--,n.. ' , , , 'd:I'Z, H f- N, 54 2 .,Jf. JI! , .4--, 7. 1 5., x , iN: H, I HL' 4jL:.4.' V -. .5, :...,,-.1 1.1 - V H A ., ix 12-- 'Q '11 L ,- th, 5 'f' .J 'fi ' A- N, A ' I - '., f V i gilsli, ' I, .I wi-I '- :Til Mr., H - In Ft?-lyk 'nw - - 1 ff :J ,A .N ' ' . -' ,J .. Av- - .3 -, 2' '1. W :A I - - bk ,JSM-, H -T..-l-A 'Y 95151 1 7'fQf:'f '- wr' F f 4 5-1 fl X x ' ' ' h -Y K'-.-li., M1 XX Y-Lim I, - .1 J ' 'fi 1 ' 1 : . 112, 1' GL 'fy 'N ., f -- ' Q. fx A xiii ,. H -' . 'W--4x', ' N n' V.. ' 1 . .41 ' 'g 1 13 Lfff NE 702254K 07:53 ',07Nj,-3 C24 VIKING PORTLAND STATE COLLEGE PORTLAND, OREGON 1966 Preface ...... Introduction .. Registration ................. . . . Academics I .................... ... State Board of Higher Education .... ... Football ................ .. Homecoming ............... ... Cross Country ........ . . . Geology Field Trip .... ... Basketball ......... Glass Menagerie . . . Human Rights ..... Outdoor Program ... Chess Club .......... .... Student Government . . . . . .. Dances .............. . . . Speakers .......... Art Committee .... New Facilities . . . Academics ll .... TABLE OF CONTENTS 2 Winter Carnival ... Publications ........ Taming of the Shrew . Wrestling .......... Model United Nations Cafeteria ......... '. Demonstrations .... Elections .......... Festival ofthe Arts . . . Track ............ Golf ............ Tennis ..... Baseball ....... jazz Festival ...... Academics Ill .... Finals ......... Seniors ... Index ...Z .... ... Staff ............. Printing Notations ... College is new to some, it is old to many. New or old, each fall it soon becomes an amalgam of peculiar sen- sations and common experiences. lt is going to classes and cutting classes, drinking coffee and swearing off, loafing and cramming. lt is wondering about getting a date for the weekend, it is worrying about getting a date for the weekend, it is not getting a date for the weekend-or even worse, it is getting the wrong date for the weekend. It is being secure with the familiar few, it is being lonely in an unfamiliar crowd. It is writing the highest midquarterg it is flunking a course. lt is P. E. and lit. and chemistry, art and political science, and no time for lunch. It is hours of questioning, it is one sec- ond of understanding. The proportions vary from person to person, but there is one thing common to all . . . getting up and getting there. In the mid-sixties, for mid- city PSC, getting there is movement. Here on cover and inside pages is the way that movement looks to the '66 Viking artists--parabolic, sweeping freeway, broken by the stop-go intersect of the streets, and into the north- south surge and re-surge through the buildings. PREFACE 3 iIllI'lIllllBlillII ua A , ,v .L I., is W H, tl H 2 :sf ' . Z H1 Q'-2 13:1 ul---.152 'Lf 1'- ,fa .. . 1 4 Nui, 1 x vii 0- K.,- Q Q' x 3 '.-N .. -H. . 'N 5- . 0- .- . Q ' an. 53-1 gg-.az -Q? -4... he.. 3 vw 5 x ...Q , I1 gguuxxk ?3i 1, wx , dk. -.:.l - L,ho..rL rt Q2 - '5r. 9 -. '.. ' . Q A Y rf- - . -' V Fil'-':, , , -'- l.,.:-Y . Q.. R. -. 5.55, .,,.f,. J . . . ., . .. . xi, - i Q- Q- A .L 4 , X an ham ff 'I 7 , I Xx If J 'f ' - iw ia, if'r,gj.j' ' f :W A .ii far 1 1 WTF 14 91? .P-4 'fl 1, 11 A in 22 HJ W .m - 4. . f, 1A 54' EW it JE- .1211 ' 'N fig Ag' -- .L X XW f1a f . . ,Q I , Y -x 4 ,Yf - , xq J. ,.. . 4. .N R. h . g xv, .A., ' , ix 5 - w f' . I a . , 1 . 1 ,. . f 'N- f'? 'j M I Y A,--'A-5-NA' J I I X' ,A wfw , ,p . m, .Mg v L , M J . 1 -. . J , Q . -.X . ....-5' 1, 5' 7 'L' A iq X i ng -. f - I ' QA . 1 P' 1 -- 9' x' 1 K ! L V Alhl X ff W X V 0 1 1' , vw'-'V 7 V' . 1 i f f e. it .jx :Y ' , - ' ff, 11 A 4 -E: 9 lg is 1 N -.-4, 1 my-. L A , w,::.w4-, - if r 'L ,L v-1.l L..' xv 1 A w -yn. . f :wt-1 ., M .A A ..4v .. -N ?L ,w-:EL L x A. .rf Ns'-'. ,I I ., e' 5' kf5.e'!g1 .'1 Z 0 x4l'x,gl LH Tess: ,M A ffizizfiffqw w f vm J 313-is R . + :. sv: I -v .1 ff' 'Q A H x 1' 'R W. Q? ,,,,:,,!,.V.,,... 'T 4, L,5 Us. ff'-w ,-9 'Ak X -1. we-. ' i Q-'M-P-MP' 1 ,wffua--W. a11.'. -nw - A 46:2 ..-, W.-,was:,53. .- wa.-g4jgf,QTJQ'EfF' ws' J .-and - Gs m .g,,..l- ' EMI. E, ,,.,-.gp 1 A , f 7 I H NJ 'ii - - : 'Y-. 4 2- qi, V A , 'Z i E , 5 A . . I V A 1 1 5 . . 1 4 - 1 f Y : f X ' 'Qs so T Lt xy l'llUlSll'illlIlll Portland State took the Big Three statistical-image scrim- age fall quarter in a registration upset that left the tatistical brass as red-faced as a Northwest forecaster he day after the 1962 windstorm. The State Board had covered its 1965-66 budget bet on n 8300 enrollment at PSC. Registrar Baumgartner said he final tab would be 8500. The registrar stuck to his igure all through the pre-registration press forecasts End finally was stuck with it when the total hit 9125- 0 percent over fall 1964. The 9125 were stuck with it when they found the field f interference through the halls all but impossible to un, the lines to the section-stamp goals harder to buck. o add to the fun of registration, 1965, this was the fall he academic headquarters staff chose to hold tough on ection enrollment maximums. By Friday, mid-morning, nglish, history, poli sci and other heavy enrollment ourses were turning away customers, and the sound f Closed Section keening could be heard in the Park locks. By mid-afternoon the wail had reached head- uarters and a two-day extension of registration was rdered. Came winter-and spring, and the registrar's office was h'isted on another statistical petard-in reverse. Instead of the usual five to seven percent a quarter attrition, each quarter's drop was nearer nine percent. And no one had an explanation for boom or drop. If it was the Viet Nam draft scare that upset what has been a pretty steady fall increase of 'IOOO a year, the male-female ratio didn't reflect it. If it was tougher grading by an overloaded faculty that thinned the ranks, the flunk-out percentages didn't show it. Which leaves for Registration 1965-66 only one new and one old verity on record. New is forecast for next fall when, for the first time, PSCers will not have to push through three blocks of buildings to sign up for classes. The whole thing will be in one center ring-the gymna- sium in the new P. E. building. The old verity is the registrar's word that the long-forecast day of registration by mail is as remote as ever-still under discussion. bg . l 0445415 , .a illlillll-IIIIHIS I 'Sli' i 4Y1 1 .QQ- .454 W J SJ. 1 U Q.-. 4 9.1 sg' . sl ' . 0 QI I' I I ,, ' lr. . I 'L . .. x.-g, s ' 'I ,OA N ff 4555 AF ll' A V. 1 . QSM. ,fix ,. A 4 an ' W ' ' L 1 HQ , av A ,TQ Y J. Ji '- . 2. ' kv N' 11? 'Wy A A .W -V .af 1 I l f-- ...- S 5... A .nn-s. - 5 -'H mil' f un 'I' A wel, ' 'fav' -x PHYSICAL EDUCATION CLASSES Portland State's great Ieveler is gone-the gauntlet of s ering in the Old Main locker room run by every male u classman for the last ten years-a sort of PSC roulette stakes of icy or scalding water. One of PSC's less hallowed traditions, taking PE in the Main gym, died an unmourned death spring term. The old gym floor and the cramped locker room facilities already seen 50 years of service when Portland State b using them in 1955. No one suspected that it would years before PSC gym classes would move to a better fa The Old Main gym was barely tolerable in PSC's early but as enrollment doubled and tripled the gym beca crowded that underclassmen adopted the name used by erations of high school students-the Black Hole of Cal Taking PE in Old Main was a unique experience. The PE was not as exhausting an ordeal as dressing down and s ering. Each hour two waves of students, one hurryi shower and dress, the other attempting to shed its clothes and slip on the standard PE garb, would colli the locker room and the resulting maelstrom made wish for a medical release from PE. Nude, sweaty bodies bodies fresh from the showers, and a tangle of human b in various stages of undress competed for space to br and to dress. When you finally dressed and were hurryi make it to a class in South Park Hall, a sweaty piece of gear might catch you across the face or a wet body brus as you pushed through the tangled mass of humanity. FP 23 v . ' 1 . I ,O Ka' K L1 lf -E' 4. 6 I 1 Q F' ,f 21 Q x X XX ffm, X ,fm . .35 , -A , lt., Q Q !yog.rf I fi' H ' fl P P i xx ? . f--5' nwxfm 1 f xvk dd, Viv., X gvnf, 11 I7 - ' 1 w Q -w' M5, - ' ' 2?21f.jgf'2'i - , as ' is E 1 Y 'Alf . ., M.. Jn jv4,- f .1 KU: , I 1 -'swf-,r Y 'if T5 A , , ' Q - 2 'ls' ! QL.. u .f -,,,, , nh I: Z -x. . 5-sf ,H ' ,-xGQl During the summer the Old Main gym will die only to be reborn as a large lecture hall. The bouncing of basketballs and the slap of old ten- nis shoes on a weary floor will disappear for- ever when the plastic surgeons begin the noisy transformation of the Black Hole of Calcutta. Those who have suffered in her will not be sorry to see her go. They only hope that somnolent lectures and impersonal television screens do not reawaken the dreaded spirit of the Black Hole. Sweat gear and social dance in a synagogue? PSC's women's PE classes abandoned the de- crepit synagogue of Ahavai Sholom which has been their PE facility for years, for PSC's new 52.25 million PE building. A weak wall, no heat, falling plaster, and a light system which went out when you hit the walls were the hazards of the old building. The bracing run from Old Main in PE skivies through all types of weather was annoying to PE students, but it often was as pleasing to Girl Watchers as it was shocking to little old ladies out for a constitutional f ., 4 V. ,fi-11 g 7 515 -4 ,:,ar.-:L R, Jug?-ff v 45 , X, X .'l, .K . . A f'r.,, , .1 J' . li 0 Q V X QQ' .- I ' E ' a --- v ' :NL W4 R hx 9. ' : I ' ,, I Jil? ,I - 4 E ,fl . a -la M '3 , . . 3 'QW' r. .,.. A if ,,..,,,, 315' V .va - :fv ' 2-:ms .1-M gy fi . ' -22m i W nv. was A a 1 . ' 5 T A-. ,I i I U51 -fu , ..j M img? Y ' -uh .5 L --:' 1 iq l fax ,p Q gm if ' ' f. . T N. M',e, , GENERAL SCIENCE General Science is a discipline familiar to many non-scientists trying to fulfill out of division requirements. But things are looking up for the once hapless and bored social scientist or artist. A new astronomy course, with a great stress on observation, has spiced up the choice offered to students. For those who found physical science interesting, a new course in advanced physical science was available for the first time. The old standby of general biology showed an abnormal increase of 40 per cent, registering 800 fall term. This unexpected number, combined with a size- able increase in physical science courses, com- pletely absorbed the time, space, and faculty of the General Science Department. Pressures were somewhat relieved via the drop and flunk-out mortality of winter and spring terms. The move of most upper division science to the new build- ing is a promise for fall. I .AMB if, x .,.. ..,. .,. . Q ' gg N,,,,, X 2--' v Q-nd r ,, , UWT f' yfg RF LE: W' , 3, ug' 4 Q nl N it 'A ,uf f '- .N fs nqt G F1 -, , 1 If f has ' fl I Q. ' H if 'VW11 . . 'I 1 ft ? '5 -Pr in '4Q2 f'?fT'e 1' ' ii .fs Z Y x 'N-. V i Q' '-if If 2. ,E X -, .So Cdlq' 'L f ENGLISH COMPOSITION English composition faced the age-old problem of showing hordes of freshmen what they didn't know and needed most... how to communicate on paper. But this year comp had a new look, or at least a new technique about it. Gone are the three terms of comp for all freshmen. Gone with it are the horrendous schedul- ing problems created for the hapless freshmen who never can get Wr Ill at any but the most conflicting times. The Writing Depart- ment decided to distribute English comp through three years with students taking a term of it each year. There are persuasive argu- ments that the spacing over three years makes possible improve- ment of the course itself. But there is obvious motive for change . . . the freshmen crush in a school that can hardly cope with the students it has. The comp revision eased the load of the depart- ment in two ways. First, the computers decided who would take comp which term, neatly cutting the class load each term to a third of what it would have been under the old system. Second, the second and third terms to be offered in the next two years will see an ever greater reduction in students because of the normal PSC attrition rate. The Writing Department is giving students time to flunk out both before and between terms of English composi- tion.The good thing about it is that many fill the extra two terms' void with courses in literature which they otherwise would not have taken. But the new system may leave many unable to cope with the essay exams now virtually extinct on the underclass level, and it may speed the trend to IBM exams. P1-' 31 ings.:-: .., wr l Slille llllilI'll Ill llllllllll' Blllllillllllll In matters fiscal and curricular. The college is connected to the Chancellor... The chancellor's connected to the BOARD and... The BOARD is connected to the legislature... A tap on this money-power line-from the offices of Presi- dent Branford P. Millar and Business Manager William Lem- man, to Chancellor Roy E. Lieuallen, to the Board of Higher Education, to Salem, and back again-shows that 1965-66 were the breakthrough years. Take it from the Minutes of the Meeting. With one unprecedented 556,000,000 check, the 1965 legis- lature ensured PSC a S15,000,000 downtown campus, via the urban renewal acquisition route. l .inf ll?-4 .gl ' E. 6, ,Ac An SB800,000 dispensation from the above fueled the Board's curricular machinery and freed the college to launch its first graduate programs-mathematics, physics, chemistry, ap- plied science-in the fall of '66, and history, economics, and English in 1967. Among the curricular sub-headings, the Board approved: Portland State as center for teacher prepa- ration of the mentally retarded and physically handicapped, a Central European Studies Program, and a unique M.A. degree in German. On the Board's PSC construction record for '65-'66: the Duniway playing field, two apartment buildings remodeled into faculty offices, the College Center wing, Science and Physical Education buildings completed, air-conditioning of College Center, library and South Park Hall, start of the first half of what will be a full-block, 'IO-story library Copen winter '67l, start of the second half of South Park topen winter '68l, and expansion of the Parking Building-to house more cars to liquidate the debt on the first half, which isn't paying for itself this year. The roll call of the breakthrough Board: Charles R. Hollo- way, Portland, chairman, Ralph E. Purvine, Salem, Ray T. Yasui, Hood River, Elizabeth H. johnson, Redmond, 1. F. Forrester, Pendleton, john W. Snider, Medford, Philip A. loss, Portland, George Layman, Newberg, and john Merri- field, who was succeeded in 1965 by Ancil Payne, ........1n- . X in 1 l l l ,. li l l l l l 33 .1 , igi si rflvfi-1 ., .f '1 8 . 3c9 v-1 '-fwf, W. -ffm? L f X , Qi, ,rlx T- ,Z ixnh lx 4 312. 3 'V 1- xa. 14? ' 1' ,MQ- L , WU. rw ,. 1.1. . if J , , , .QA 'f 3 gi E31 I 4 ,, 'Lf , 'J-cf' Jr I A . V ,LE -A . --Q ..-x Q ' 1 . V. ,-if ' Q. , ff-' 1f.Qj'2IE.' A. K -egr- ? . 4' 16,-5 It-',f ' Q I 1' 'hr' - .. Jah , I Mba . 1' E r, 3 A um A ., ,gig E , gn -. S, ,. N ur, , -, . Q. V , ffg X QV My 'i' ' X W . 1'--'-If fx . 111 ' m ,2fM,ff-IC, ,, . V ' 3 1', 1 1 .. , , .N:,,g Mg - U f:2',m: 1 Y ..' 1.5, , ,, A X! 1 Is. ?'Z.,2,r' 'f'Ll'f1'V I P.. -Q a 4 x 'We-,. I-fn , i, f -. L., A ii:-D X1 EEE ' KW? 1 2 if 'W 7 I ifx ' 1 . 'airr 1 gre? An -4 rv' I L7, 4 I -- -114, me M il gQ1.'g,1 Q X AA ' A , - .T 'Tff ' fha-1:-' .--- . ',.: 1 -af- fi-'il'-' '1- '? . A 1 it 5- Y '-1' ,fl ,,--' :L-77 1 . f X .,7'1,..gn I ?' 1 ' 'mf' 'ff' 'f -'W' f . ff wi- - a:'? fl xv A we N7 --.a ,..h X. -',, -, : --- -1-Q--w ..- - , . ,,..:.1,wv.-.-7-x .A uw-,..1,. , ,. ,Q -,,,.,,,, -5 A- N H . A 1 Nw. ,.. ' , S , 1 an ,, 5? ff? , ' V 45, . ' 36 ndy Berkis, 215-pound senior full back, set a new four-year rushing mark as he ained 442 yards to push his career total to 2,277 yards-74 better than the old ecord of 2,203 set by Billy fBye-Byei White in 1963. eriy Oldenburg and Rick Silva, both sophomores, teamed up to set a new one- season punting record of 36 yards per kick on 64 boots. Silva got off three punts a 48.7 yard average in the Weber State game for a one-game punting record. also caught 17 passes for two touchdowns and 228 yards. quarterback Dan Withers, named PSC's outstanding freshman, took offense honors with 485 yards rushing and passing. '::.4 Q Y .ll 1 pan'- V-.-all ' ' -il' -----films--ui.--1.-.. ,--,1,, D-st.. 154 , -...-... ', ,,,:- . ,s 1,4 NAME Adamson, Larry . Anstine, jim .... Arthur, Carey . . . Barron, jerry .... Bennett, Lanny . . Berkis, Andy .... Beyerlein, Dave . Bush, john ..... Clark, Bruce .... Cripe, Barry ..... Curtis, Dick .... Davis, Gene .... Etchison, Greg .. Falconer, Dave . Fee, Tom ....... Filley, lim .... Gorman, Ed .... Heard, jim ...... Henricksen, Larry lanes, Bruce ..... jones, Terry ........ . Kosovich, George Lage, George .... Malensky, Roy .. Martindale, Pete . McGriff, Dale ... McKeel, Mike ... Merlo, Ken ..... Mikulic, Steve . . . Oldenburg, jerry .... . Peets, Bob ...... Porter, jim ...... Raddle, Ken .,... Selanders, jack .. Silva, Rick .... Stout, Milt ..,... Summers,john .. Thompson, Val . . Weber, Bob ..,... . . Withers, Dan . . . Wiseman, Randy Wood, Pete ..... POS. ...G ...G ....HB ...T .. .... .C ..FB .HB ...E ...E .HB ...T .HB .. ...G ...T ...E .QB ..FB ..FB ...E ...E .HB ...T .. ...G ...G ...G ...C ...G .. .... HB ...E .. ...G ...T ...T ...T ....HB ....HB .. .... HB .QB ...E .QB ...E ...T 1 ! . .- Y.4.5..2 fLX!QT:s::5 OPPONENT SCORE Bacramento State ........ 7 ewis 84 Clark ....... .... 2 2 Eouthern Oregon ........ 8 gllestern Washington ..... 13 ritish Columbia ..... .. 6 daho State .,........... 27 Dregon Tech ............ 7 Neber State College ..... 74 Jniversity of Montana .... 33 PLAYER POINTS Andy Berkis ,....... 12 Rick Silva ...... Bob Weber .... Dan Withers Ed Gorman .... jim Heard .. Steve Mikulic Milt Stout . .. ..'l2 ..'l2 ..'l2 .. 6 .. 6 .. 6 .. 6 Gene Davis ......... 2 ' Larry Henricksen .... ' 2 ' TOTA L ..... TPATS .. 78 PSC 6 0 20 2 12 7 18 6 7 XS: 1 nv I-ii' --. 4,4 Q .v' K 'UI Portland State's Vikings continued to roll over old Oregon Collegiate Conference foes with gridiron wins over Oregon Tech, 18-7, and over Southern Oregon, 1965 OCC champions, 20-8. Other competition proved mostly too strong for the inexeperienced Viks as the only other win of the season for PSC came 12-6 over the Thunder- birds of University of British Columbia. Tougher competition is reflected in the season record, 3-6, as three Big Sky Conference teams, Idaho State, Weber State, and University of Mon- tana, all dealt PSC decisive defeats. Other losses were to Sacramento State, Western Washington, and long-time crosstown rival Lewis 84 Clark. The Vikings also suffered their worst defeat in 19 years when they were crushed 74-6, by Weber State as they poured it on in hopes of a bowl bid. .A 'fx l. 1 fy ' , 'JH' frwfw , Fl, i A Vi. -3-24!!wLPfQFx I - , 1: ,,q,,f- Ig,f'1Wfj.. f ' , ' ' ,ww , , , . -Qu ' ,, ' .:', , fg,4,fff? 2 ff 'I , Ng 'l I 'W , ' P: wi , '. .. ' -,fswwk A I 1 v-unc' ' e'-'77 T1 W' ,111 i E 73:5 ' Q 7' ,r v M. 9- f. Q 0 1 L 1 N if Homecomings are for alums, and the alums singled out for special welcome in November, 1965, were the originals. . . the class of '56, first to be graduated from Portland State after it became a degree grant- ing college in 1955. They came back. . .10 years and 515,000,000 worth of buildings later. . . not to wan- der through time-hallowed halls, but to have Sondra Long and her group give them tours around a campus which had been no more than an architect's drawing during their undergraduate days. Dr. Stephen Epler, director of PSC in the Vanport days before it became a college, came back as one of the week's guest speakers. TY fn-Y 'N ' , L-A 1' -ill ' ., 72, W Axe' x li 'fx ' - 1' X' I 4-4-- Haw-,,- ai -7 -W if 1' Q V .1. , w ef P, 'gl N- , ,y I V l 'fffglf - W-Y V , ,L V. .. '57 G. ., ' ' .1 2 ' ' . 5 ,v, , ve, . . Q.. .- -f., X' , 1, - , S ' r , '-f,',- ' .Al ff, L D I 5- , 9 .Fli- W, .4 ',4,:1.bl'!'- vs K uf.: ' .av ' '. , A' T!-, gf - - , ' ffffz' 2 fawwrsf.. 5 'g t I. ,gf ,V X ' HI .Av ,A fm . 1 :ei Q '13, ,'7' ,FT I x From the Sunday reception opener sponsored by the Alumni Association, through the noise parade, bonfire, and grizzly game CPSC caved to Montana 33-75 to the Friday formal at the Hilton Hotel, Home- coming Week was shepherded through by Peggy Hillgaertner and her committee heads: Carl Paulson, Pam Rundberg, Artha Fiddler, Lea Moshofsky, john Metcalf, Ron Perkins, Sondra Long,'iRoger Warren, Dave Nevins and Bob Bailey. Sophomore Geri Tull won the queen competition at the pre-homecoming convocation and received her crown from Kathy Anderson, last year's reigning beauty. Princesses who made up Geri's 1966 court were: Carol Morgareidge, Mary O'Donnell, joan Walton and Nancy johnson. Along with the week's guest speakers in seminars and convocations, and the exhibits of PSC, past and future, there was a new man-in-the-halls entertain- ment offering. Under the dismal listing of Pre-Func- tion Day activity, there was all-day-and-into-the evening dancing to juke music in the new CC LeCave cafeteria. If attendance is the measure, this program sleeper should be a PSC homecoming tradition. 45 Freshmen and sophomores are not the ingredients for a championship team and that was the story of Ralph Davis' cross country squad this season. The team was all-frosh with one sophomore exception. The harriers did manage to win their first two home meets, but in- experience and tough competition took their toll and they lost the remaining en- counters. The team lacked depth with only captain Bill Sprinkle, Eric Lewis, jim McDowell, and Walt Bolf perform- ing consistently. Sprinkle finished first for the Vikings in all but one meet. Of course we enjoy winning, said Davis, but during the cross country season we also try to develop stamina for our distance runners so they will be ready for the faster pace of the spring track season. lIl'llSS lIlllllIll'l n ' 1 I' 'r fc S. G .ar 9 J f' p p A W1 -.I. .- M H.. 5 . -j s s..,q'g-,X ,V M , xv' ,.' ,QP 1- ' f,-3, -- ...- . NJ . ' 'QQ' 'sl ?L x ' x gi., 3 -.. 1372!-'1,' -Z x A ' . - cz JN 'Q' '.'x K4 ' is ,H . 'F' .' 1 - , V ' pp - -0 T. yy - U ....,,.,L ti' by -A ,A-'..xk-', M I g .f-FV?-,,,J . ,1L,,g.14., . .. , . Q 2 'i'5,v-.'l:s ' --N B I-rm li , .ill fr 'ny-qt'J-' f' f ,--- v,. - . '- ' ' ff, 35? - A ,tus -74 '19 f . L A ,. , Z4 gif. Q-1-.f 11- A ' af V - - ,.,.. - . f . r-:TZ 1 : D' , . 1 ' N5 , L! -XA'-.,.ff.-' . . 5. . , v as ' 'f' ' -Q 1 7?'f ' H , N 1,3 'L' F ' -.ffm ,V ' ' . Q gil- . .0 . , - 1 ' Q + .. X ,542 - I f -Q 1. - Q jg g ' Q -- bg , . K-.'f ,.. K Hof, -- , l ,N 1 a Q S V1- ' , r-.f ' 5 ' Te' Q, - , ,Y l.-lf-in-A , -Q . .I L A , , .V , . -- . ' ' f-X ' , - ll A. - hi 4 'f ' 'L Q: f fi: .- gi-1. Q. V- -, ' K' , ' , L.: .1 '7r.,42 '.:e.,' fa '.. - ' .Wet A' 'W-: 1' -'PQ - - . HfI.:x:'g.f-4 'WJ jf 'gfisvft Q-' .-47 HU 4-cm -F .fy H , 'ir .1 3,5 -.-J.!- .- '4 I - - ,'f7,,1-hAl.A p I ,H r is ZIQQ . - y ' :Wfy f X ,fi i-:fi . ,r X: 5.4 xl' :W gif: ,A S Wil WW-N I' wif.-,f' X. . -, ff - - in Yi, fn A garb X I 2' 4 4 9 .s - 11 5 . i I 1 v. ,.'1' Ai I W i' t LL ., R ' ' ,fp ,E 'Q Y X V, Qi - X . K f 1, I' i Q V ka f y N '. 1, ' ' 1 Q 'All ' ich- ' x if .PWR f-- : fag - A A ' ., 'fif-,A ' 'A , I V, 1 . ' ' 'if u -3,4 H 4 ' 1.x ' - 7 . 9' 3' 2 . X .:, f , .2 ,s .. - ' Q 1- 94 , , ' 'H' . b V :ff 5. ,, 4,4 ' gi - avr. gig?-' il v . ,Q S' ff I. X K ' 1 ,f .. Q bf- 9,- . - ' 7' , , , ,::f.f , . 'A ffiff -xQ3?3i2' Qf' ' I-4:1-751V -A . A M ,A lx ,,, ,Z-, .' ' r YI . , WMA :.,',f,.- w- gf f .v. '.. 2 W.,-L7. 41 A. C fill: ' f .:J . 0 I ass-fxl Y, 'J 'r I 'FI' 1 ' -nl ,.f, 1.1 Q 4 'fi 41 11 lim 9' 1' .I .us W' X gg-- 1.4 , f r J ' 4 .ll X ff' - sv- f i 1-.-Z. .. J' -4 -Q . X PN - .bs h - 4 . v ' vy I .Q TA v..'l f' , are-l M1 llllllllllll lllllll lI'lll They looked like scores of insects scouring the rocks along the Sandy River above Trout- dale rather than what they were-PSC stu- dents, part of the 400 who took the Geology Department's November field trip up the Columbia Gorge. They traveled only a short 83 miles up through the brochured beauties of Interstate 80, but when they returned to Portland down the Washington side of the Columbia they had been back a long 40,000,000 years in the Northwest's geologic history. For in the Gorge, the Columbia has carved a geologist's dream, a panorama in technicolor that ex- poses all the rocks that make the mountains in the Cascade range. For the geology buffs, Troutdale was orienta- tion to the signs left by the Ice Age series of great floods that modified the Gorge. The postcard-familiar view from Crown Point be- came a panoramic stage on which they were introduced to five type-cast characters-five distinctive examples of volcanoes, all the way from cinder cone to composite. In the Oneonta Gorge the science trippers, circa 1966, stopped to hold research requiem for a forest that died under a lava flow of 30,000,000 years ago. And, between Hood River and their lunch a The Dalles, the students saw where natur had momentarily put her work away in three great folds of the earth's crust-folds tha were as plain to the eye as the folded blan- kets on their laps. To the educated eye, that is. Every year the geology field trips grow. Th long-established November Gorgejunket this year had to be rerun on Sunday, and called for reinforcements from scientists outside th ranks of PSC's staff. Headed by john Allen, Geology Department head, the tour guide included Paul Howell, U. S. Army Engineers, Ralph Mason of the State Department o Geology and Mineral Industries foriginator o the PSC field trips 15 years agol. and Portland State faculty: Mrs. Miriam McKee, Paul Ham mond, Don Shaffroth, Richard Thoms, and Robert Van Atta. K. .HA 5.1- .- -, -3. ttf,-1 P J- o ,gs ,A- 4 ...Q 50 I '- -,ffm -4 --,, I A Y ,--,., iff W Z, . ,ul Overwhelming competition made the Portland State appearance as a basketball independent an unpleasant affair as the Vikings sputtered to 6-'I9 season record. New Viking hoop coach Marion Pericin had more than his share of problems as he faced the toughest schedule in PSC his- tory with only two starters, john and jim Nelson, back from last year. It was a long winter as the Viks dropped 'I3 straight before Pericin got his first win as a PSC coach. A good portion of the Vikings' early season prob- lems were the result of a schedule that put the Vikings on the road for nine of the first 13 games, against teams such as Idaho, Idaho State, Gon- zaga, St. Martins, Seattle Pacific, Linfield, Montana, Montana State, and Weber State. But once the Viks got started they turned in a creditable performance as they rolled to a 6,6 record the second half of the season. P 4' Q 'xl -,A -.Y - x - ' f' if 3 Nfl 'I . . Zh' 5. A , . 1, 5 , J 1 K - J 4 LL! X 3 Y . ' . 'f' 'Q I A x if 1 5' Y A L1 . 3 .MJ , ' ., Y - J ,fx lv' . x 0 N1 , V . , Q . 1 x 1 - -' 0 1' '-Q '- 5 wa.. 'fr' 5 .' ' ' . ,M ' ' -1 4 ., gif T - m Wx., 4 - - .. . - -Q 2 2' ., Vg . . A v v ,n Q ,S . . A, XX- ,A 'W' V . it ,- '- - .13 , s vig. fg- A g f w Y ln, ' 3 s 1, rr f'-L' .. T 'Z H W' 4 , , fi w' 1 '13 1 ' A X , .ri 1'-,'-'wfcfua vw: . , aa --.,.-1 3 , x ivu ey- , vu '- ' - . I.-1: - - ' , 1 , ' 4 ff-H'fe'..+S.f+g -ff? 3 9 ' .1 ,QL . . Y , .. ' I 'VMI' ' I, . ..., Q 1,,.' 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Sw fs-fix L.- pe V. 1 T Zta N I f , 1 N L , 'N 'Sas' NAME G TP AVG. P john Nelson .... .. 25 644 25.8 Bill Wilkerson ... .. 25 388 15.5 Mike O'Gara .. . . . 25 284 11.3 lim Nelson . . . .... 25 250 10.0 Ed Gorman ......... 25 222 8.9 Randy Bethke ....... 21 32 1.5 Walt Hixon .... .... 1 4 22 1.6 jerry Goron ... .... 18 17 0.9 BillWahl ........... 15 16 1.1 Bill Riesbick ........ 17 14 0.8 Scharringhausenus . . . 7 0 0.0 While the Viking's win-loss record was not impressive some individual performances were. Portland State's super-star, john Nelson, still provided much of offensive punch for the Vi- kings with a 25.8 point per game average. Nelson leaves PSC after four years with almost every individual record in the book. His marks include: most points-2,1235 most field goals-8285 most free throws-4675 and best average points per game-25.8. Nelson's career high for a single game was 45 points. Nelson, who as a junior was selected as an NAIA scholar-athlete, found NCAA competition to his liking as he came on in the second half of the season to average 29 points per game in the last 12 games. In addition to being a great offensive threat Nelson also handled the ball well and often passed up good shots to pass to a team-mate for the easy score. Another Nelson, lim, also finished his fourth year for the Vikings this season. This Nelson was probably the most improved player- 'f . Q. s. x ' ls, t R1 UlllSS lllBllll!lllI'lll Portland State Players upset the box-office thinking of the Theater Arts Department with its 1965-66 season opener. The Glass Me- nagerie, Tennessee Williams' fresh, young and unWilliams.-like story of a family's frantic search for a future, broke a campus pat- tern of slow fall starts by playing four nights to an enthusiastic and near-capacity audience. -I I 4. 'H- I ' . iw X' Q + H o . -Q.,- gf if 5 ,-. 41 5' K 'Yu fn V' 4? The play brings to life the memories of Tom Wingfield, mem- ories of his shy and lovely crippled sister, Laura, and his mother, Amanda, whose life-reason has become an obsessive struggle toward some undefined fulfillment for her children. Under direction of Pauline Peotter, Mara Stahl was an almost poetically gentle Amanda, Sharyl Oliver, a poignantly sympa- thetic Laura, and john Goodhue, a fiery and bumptious Tom. David Boothby played the red-headed Gentleman Caller, the the only contrast to the closed family group. Set designer Kermit Shafer worked the background magic which Portland audiences have come to expect, using special lighting and projections to reinforce the mood of the piece. A large picture of Amanda's husband dominated the single set which served as living room, bedroom, front porch and street scene. Bathed in effulgent yellow light throughout the play, this por- trait made the long-departed Papa Winfield almost a fifth char- acter in the play. Amanda's ball gown, exhumed from a trunk for the' most important visit of the Gentleman Caller, exemplified the always evocative costuming of Mary Collins. The play never finds a future for Laura and Amanda and, in the end, they, like the unicorn in Laura's glass menagerie, are doomed to live in a collection of lifeless, captured animals. 60 N 4 ,- x 4'-. an I , I Q-4 -:SB S I 4 rg, A ..5 5 .,1' si,- Q , 5. if V 3 -, fix ,I .gf ' K I -1-V - ,. x -b. Z I 'Q Q N Y S .fx yi. W A P -1 -1 ' f- '31 S, ' 'f .EDP L. 'ual X ,, 1...-..-,.1. ' ff' :P 'J ifffff? 1 I 'W .K N- fbgdl url - Y 'Af' ALI. M ' f 513:41 50.91 , -xl , X . . 1 -. - 5 I t 1 sxr...- I x A . R QA '. O x'- .-,5'?! 5 W' Y. .mfg g af , 'T I l n, Q -,y u ' . is-...M F .I -'S if ff 1 ,r ' ' . ' 1. f '51-f f Q- 4. ' ' ,nn - ,. F: 2, ' Sai:-3 Lg 5' 1--. ' f' 1 ,E V A4 .X f , . gf X X X L V Lvl, ,gills A '- U , . - - 1' F . 1 - Q X, 'g fy ' If i Aptk, I 'gf A: 1 V - , jlfggsy-Tlx 'N K Jx' WY. N X D ' , X '. V nf' i 'feb hx J I N 'Qi , g , I v- 1 I ,V :N ,L 3 .lk -51 1 - , , f WSG- 'V '- ' 1 4. 'V-, , , . r. ' :mi mf, , 5, :gf -, , , gf- --fx - . . ,. - mf I4-.f 'V -.. -,J ., l W. ., k D V The bearded sandaled protester has left the civil rights picket line to swing the placards of anti- war crusades. A new group believing in quiet positive action has moved the emphasis from civil disobedience to discussions of civil rights problems, and personal action to solve these problems. The Human Rights Lecture Series provided a scholarly analysis of civil rights prob- lems in three talks. Wilson Record of PSC spoke on Racial Responsibility and Racial Revolu- tion. Milton Rokeach of Michigan State pre- sented his theories in Race and Shared Belief as Causes of Discrimination. The series ended with a panel. Participating were C. Eric Lincoln, PSC, and Clyde deBerry, University of Oregon, and Professor Record. The topic: Making Neg- roes Part of American Society-What are the Obstacles? What Must be Done? 537 .f M1 M' 1, if 'f-is - Ho' QULL- fe' K . . X h -Q MTF? gt-. X r- -IX K , p 'I fffi 3, ' X uv- , - ' ,.lf' IlUlllll0l' lll'llllI'i'IllI It began at Christmas when Sam McKinney, ski teacher and Ht. Hood guide, was added to the Stu- dent Activities staff to set up something this dis- persed, city-centered student body had never had, an Outdoor Program. By summer, various groups- some 150-200 students-had logged 3000 miles in 25 hiking, biking, and climbing trips. To the original housing lit was carry your own sleep- ing bagsl the program added a 70-capacity mountain home, Silcox Hut, at the top of Mt. Hood's Magic Mile through an arrangement with the U. S. Forest Service. The massive stone lodge, vvith hand-hevvn beams and fireplaces, is of the same vintage and architecture as the WPA-built Timberline Lodge. L an 2 . i I 66 The Outdoor Program, which takes all comers, so far has attracted men and women in about a 60-40 ratio. Classroom and field instruction emphasize techniques of outdoor living and skills. So far it has fielded day trips up the Columbia Gorge and weekends of climbing and hiking. Several summer trips are scheduled to Three Sisters area in Central Oregon, the Olympic Range in Washington, the Goat Rocks Wild Area, and Timberline Trail around Mt. Hood. Future plans for McKinney and the newly formed Outdoor Recreation Board, under chairmanship of George Selfridge, see Port- land State with its resident student body and its location in the heart of the Northwest mountain-river-seashore recreation land, as the ideal college for an expanded year'round outdoor operation. In the planning is a PSC Coastline Trail from Astoria to the California border, paralleling the Skyline Trail along the backbone of the Cascade Range. And in summer '67? A hiking, camping Eur- opean tour. Y fir as-jf ,T ww, .m.u-yi-5 - 1 V' X -'fb 68 17' l 3 ag T! 4 W -Q'-if .0 ff' ,,g.-- ,,,.. ,L 414, .H ! IIIIBSS lllllll PSC's Chess Club broke into extramural competition and intramural communi- cation last year and made news in both fields. The pawn and pen pushers won five and lost one of their chess meets with regional colleges and universities. And they played to a no-decision end- ing in their running feud with the Van- guard newspaper. Under the presidency and editorship of jim Mitchell, the club went into the publicity business with its own flyer, Checkmate, in weekly protest against what it claimed were Rearguard news derelictions on all things chess. Along with this, the club put on a varied program of chess tournaments, displays, exhibitions by several chess masters, and twice-weekly sessions of intramural competition in the College Center Ballroom. Viking chessmen entered a team in the tough Northwest Intercollegiate Chess League this year which alerted the na- tion's chess players to the intellectual strength of Portland State College. This team was composed of james Mitchell, Reuban Saez, Denny jenquin and Tim Nettleton. Captained by Ralph Stein, the Viking team ended the season with five wins, no draws, one loss. Highlight of the year came january 27th with the club's First Annual Chess Festival held in the Ballroom of College Center, The Festival. featured a collec- tion of exotic and unusual chess sets, a speaker's hour presided over by Col- lege Bowl coach Ben Padrow, and a simultaneous exhibition given by World Champion contender Sammy Reshev- sky of New York. Four TV stations car- ried the spectacular Reshevsky match to Portland homes. The title of best chess player at PSC this year was won by Mitchell. Reuban Saez was second, and Denny lenquin, third. They played the three top boards for the Viking chess team this year. 1 , w+.m':' '.5.1!.' ' ' '- . , , H , ,Wh ., .HL , .. , . 1 - ' w 11 M 4 vr ,, w 1 X , .. g.,.l.'.,! A' -:3..A ,. H I - ' -,'-.JYj3.,:- ' 'Lum' ,Lt W ZZ: V -.. xniriifll . '55 A 1'-' A ,'f'1.f': r5:,,. 1 Y 1 -6 Q. 4, : Av J L1 ff I-Af , 1 P 1 W C 1 A MY 4 A., , V K H-:4, .- ' L Af., 5. . ,vw..- 'E 'F43T3F X VV, . 1 4 5: -E: F V.-Q -ii L Ng 1 Q 1: :Yft 1 IA l . - 1 1 . W I I A f ,B - 1,sF' i5',g1:f if R, I 7251-5 17' I 'Ugg 4k a '1 'F 'f NH m A 1 S-11 X w ' H T? Ju ,. -.41 . f: .Qklgglw-1 , ,,fL.- gg ., b a. .V34Aq.i:,,, :yggj .'1 J!! 'J'--'vii ,dm ,L ,Q -g-iegQ-5.Zf- ff-553'-I . , 'Rihrf' ,. e' -Wei' . v,1f,f., 4-- -' '-ATQZ1 ' i-ia -,ff Ji -u LEG' I! 1727- 'T r .59- . '.f'5? : Sllllllllll !lllllBl'lIlllBlll Student government at Portland State was led down the right hand side of the path of moder- ation this year. ASPSC president Timme Helzer and his vice president, jim Westwood, served out an uncontroversial tenure attracting little comment, derisive or otherwise from the stu- dent body. Against a protesting chorus of foul, Helzer abstained all year from appointing members to the student court, and left the attorney general's office 'vacant. Without a judiciary, politicos went their lawless way. Among other accomplishments, the student senate contributed to the Sunday opening of the library during the last weeks of winter term and throughout the spring. Involved primarily in intergovernmental problems, the senate found it difficult to attract the attention of the general student body. 75 It was the activities boards who did the arduous and rewarding work that kept programs going. Mae Ouchida led the Academic Board through an eventful fall and winter term, resigning in the spring to become vice president. jean Bailey, a new and effective arrival in student activities took Mae's place. The Academic Board oversaw such programs as art exhibits, poetry series, and I Beethoven's birthday ceremonies. john Dawkins and the Community Affairs Board worked with the tutorial program, urban stud- ies, and the political affairs forum. Upon his resignation in winter term, Pam Erickson be- came boss. Pat Oberlander wore two hats this year as chair- man ofthe Social Recreation Board and second vice president. Her board's Winter Carnival, Homecoming, and spring formal were testi- monials to energetic and imaginative character. Chairman Ken Williams watched the Publica- tions Board while it administered the Vanguard, Viking, and Review. Among the achievements of the year was the Associated Collegiate Press All American rating won by the Vanguard. Bill Nygren edited the paper to this top category of college newspapers. Student elections on campus turned city wide attention to ASPSC politics. Lauded as a new breed of student body president, joe Uris stormed to a landslide victory with his run- ning mate, Mae Ouchida. Mae brought sound achievement to the ticket and joe brought new ideas. The combination set off a large fire dur- ing the campaign. Smoke from this fire, along with quantities of hot air, so pervaded the at- mosphere of fourth floor College Center that production was somewhat hampered. 76 'gi N. ,X if .,....,.-v- , 4, i' I - 2:5 . M , .Ki K ,51 f . r W, ,..--fi V ' -J .ezgvlefl 4 , ivzhw ,if1.f91,Q?- 1. -. - . ..-Y , YYAY YQ, Y YL gr. .A . y, ..-ll! v n Q. sis. N r . I L' A ,- ' if W r 4 ,fi- 1 n ff J 2 r I If 5. f- 'D' , A V, ' il- W Q 53.2 M.. A , wh ., 41' Jr , as 211259 X' X an fi X1 'Vjf4rl4f. --eff 3 .gs 1 . 4 ph., I 4 4 gn' 1 t, ,ull- ff G .,,.... ,gr-'M 'J I ' L ,--,-7.39.4 'X .J S... ,,3qv x . L gl 1, r s 'tml .4 '5 I'-Q 14' 1 .K A. in-as S I 532 N- 'Vx' Y' f 'W' 6' r ,V AY ,A V A'-1' Q: Q51 M- 1 h 1 N '5-'ef F' 'ff ' ill f 2 I f'4 - W .y px 'I li f 45,1 bi? j .-Uivsi? ' ! .-3 ui ir XX. np- '16 'rf , . ...,,,.t 1 V,-513. 'Siu , ' -3.4, 1 ,,. ffl 'F LW-e rj Lad. TF 4 VW, L 1 if , .A 3' x 4 Lf 4 ,f -.K J Ziff' -J , 45. . , 51191515 , ' 5. 5-H44 1 V P -LL. 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' ,WA my mn 'if' , PQ 1 1 V f--- .1 ,ff 1 fa- ' J , A f- in ,rf , walk 1 'HL , , always, the errors made more conversation than the hits. local decibel reading after the February appearance of came in lounder than anything DeGaulle kicking up in the international stratosphere at the time. appeared with a 51500 price tag and, appar- information as to what the Student Activities staff him to do to earn it. When he was faced with 300- audience and all Portland's W, radio, and newspaper instead of a sequestered reception, he balked-un- The show finally went on, with the audience less enchanted with the speaker's diplomatic generalities, college heads squirming at the noticeable exiting of staff no students at the class-hour break. Mendes-France was co- ponsored by the Portland World Affairs Council. eroi jones came as the last in a successful '66 Poetry Series, nd left in his wake a noisy argument over whether he is a ignificant Negro poet and playwright or a flash in the current rotest pan. He also left a lot of disgruntled students and ownspeople who tried and failed to hear him, and an Acti- ities staff debating whether to pick up his check. jones, who as scheduled to appear before afternoon and night audi- nces as well as in classes, showed up for the night session nly and then walked out after 45 minutes. lllllllll !li'lllBl'l The White Gallery is no longer white. Since last fall its once antiseptic walls have been dressed in unobtrusive and art-flattering burlap. And since last fall the exhibitions in this 12 by 40 foot traffic lane to the College Center Lounge and Browsing Library have played to what are probably the largest gal- lery audiences in Portland short of the Art Museum itself. Diversity was the mark of this year's White Gallery exhibits. The exquisite craftsmanship of William Spratling, silversmith, was dis- played early in the fall, followed by an ex- hibit of Harold Kottler's forceful ceramic constructions and thrown pieces. Early in winter term, students and townspeople saw the sensitive oils of Frederick Klein, one of Portland State's own art teachers, the exhibit supplemented by paintings of james Prior and Keith jones, both recently graduated from the college. The Prior and jones can- vasses were the opening art attraction in the second-floor dining room and third floor exhibit hall of the new quarter block College Center wing. wie- ,V .. I,+ ..'rv1..- KK.. 455, 'un 'We 'tw Emi- .JL-,J,, Q25 J, ' 5.5143 ,-mu 1 . f 1. . 4 '76 1,5 ..:-,xl . J, ur 1, - '. ' 'W 5:0-' -1- . wc-- 51:17 .a,.. 2,15 T 1' vv. , 14 . L.,,-md l l l l l 1 l l 1 l if Probably the most varied show of the year was the uninhibited Most Treasured Pos- session potpourri in which members of the Art Committee itself displayed everything from a 50-year-old teddy bear to antique wall tapestries. The White Gallery ended winter term with the vibrant reds, blues, green, and the float- ing central forms of Ted Hallman's inspira- tional weaving. With the help of an art com- mittee advisor, Robert Kasal, a personal friend of the Pennsylvania artist, the Gallery offered a three week showing of Hallman's unique three-dimensional woven forms and tapestries containing plastic shapes. A show of Maillol woodcuts was part of Portland State's contribution to the citywide Salute to France in March and April, fol- lowed by an exhibition of assemblage pain- ter Harold lacob's work, courtesy of the Fountain Gallery. The population explosion at PSC caused a simi- lar explosion in facilities. Faculty members were treated to both improved office and eating space, as well as additional classrooms. To PSCers perhaps the most impressive develop- ment was the completion of the Science and Physical Education buildings for use next fall. A big bonus for the Athletic Department was the metamorphasis of the undulating surface of Duniway Park into a full scale playing field. The new College Center Wing added student activities offices, several new classrooms, the Portland Room-a new dining area, and a new gallery, primarily for the display of student art. l Only students who have suffered the four block sprint to the First Christian Church for folk dancing or a fencing practice in the basement cell of Old Main fully appreciate the new Physi- cal Education Building which has provisions for indoor baseball, roof tennis, handball, squash, golf and archery plus large and small gyms, giving PSC basketball teams a true home floor. Upperclass science will move to the completed Science Building while the underclassmen, lack- ing seniority, remain in a less crowded Old Main. A greenhouse, aquarium, lecture audi- torium seating 145, animal housing and in- creased lab and research space are among the facilities the Science Building will provide. But this S12 million building project will not end the crush at PSC. At best it will maintain the present level of saturation. To merely keep up with the predicted enrollment increase, PSC must continue to build at least at the 1965-66 rate. A choice must be made-fewer students or more buildings. :' :fn 13 , . r' s . nk, I , 4 .. f 4 ai + 5 4,3 Q rag- ' ' If 1.-'. : Q I .. , .3 A ' , Q .,.. WIP ' T4 .f J.-gkfh .AQ 'Q .,. .-9 , 4. 95 J T N W N N. ! X 5 . H N. '18 ' ss v f 1 ,J J N 1' 'rf I ' ' .1 i. if .L l -. I.. - . 5 ,f 5' suvwcoologazeoa 0 0 0 0L!f!..'!t-.,.. I-ooofag-,s.,,a. 00000566 - overtones P0090-40 'Width 0 Q' it IQ Qi is if if it 6 in if we BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Portland State is an ideal location for a strong School of Business Administration. An urban business center is only a few blocks away from the campus, providing ample opportunities for research projects. Direct contact and co-opera- tion with business and industry are readily avail- able. Nevertheless, the BA statistics are surpris- ing. There are 1,613 business administration majors-nearly a fourth of the students en- rolled at the college. To bridge the gap between business and non- business disciplines, the Business Administration School has begun a program to award six 352,400 scholarships to graduate students who majored in non-business fields as undergraduates. The computers have entered every phase of business and were given a significant place in the business administration curriculum at the beginning of the '65-'66 school year. Computers purchased a year ago made the change possible. Introduction to Business was changed so that two-thirds of the course is computer oriented. Business students learn to use the interpreted results of the computer as an aid to their busi- ness decisions. The department stresses the ap- plication of the computer to solve specific business problems. An advanced data process- ing course attacks the technical aspects of the same problem. -1. , Q .if lg lh...7- W A H A f .... ..U:-,-f---fzrxq Thrift,-,,,,-Q,-, . ,.,.., . . V f - Q 0 . W 1' 'F' :1o1.,n ' -Y., ,,, . y 6f-5-..., LJ ffivi aw 'lv if-. 1 . , . , ,VM ,.,4.V:'-I ,gwiv ' 1' 1 Vx. lu V! N 1 .L f I , , ff E' Tau X ,1l'.54 Xq t' 7' . ' 'sf' 'iri5wQ1ffl3,Z-f - 1 L 1 '. . ., X -:.'fN:r'-1'1 1f 55,5-1,1.i -gi: - ilwijlibviigz.ff-.'E'13T.!-.ffm -5 . 2 D- . if-. is.. I A H V N W 'A ??554f56'11Gi.'1I1?:,f?W' L' U ik ' X Xfi,'.T.f-:xanga . 1 ' PHYSICS AND CHEMISTRY After a year of searching, the Division of Science found a new dean to replace Thurman Peterson who resigned last july to return to teaching. Dr. Karl Ditt- mer, former head of the Chemistry Department at Florida State University, assumed his position after Mark Gurevitch, PSC Physics Department head, spent this year as acting dean of science. Dittmer, a bio- chemist, holds a Ph.D. from Cornell University Medi- cal School. The big news in upper division science this year was preparatory-the tooling up for next fall's move into a new building, and into graduate workin chemistry, physics, math, and applied science. Students and faculty marked this as their last year in the ancient laboratories of Old Main, and looked forward to having much more teaching and research space in the five story science complex on Mill Street. -f+1fii0i l s.'-' 9' r 4 , .fi'4'f'-' -'ITD ' VV r ' ' v , I1 1. 1 f . . . K. 1. 5155-7,v7,, M- ff -1-aes-. . ' A-, ,gh ,. ff' .qi , W . I , H . . I- I f , - ' Ax: . x f f , 'I' 'Sf' ' Q , '55 lb . x A, 5: K1-a m, - - ' . QQ, 'af L , f T gm. . 'A ' 'ww Nffv, - ,--M ji, ,Q-. ,Q gi- ..,,, 415, 2,6 ' -s 3 . firm-1.--'--.. -1- , - 'ff' .Ag W .-:-L1-s4H-- - ' - .4 ,, 2 -fa. we . s Wistar f55g1iggfg4 f ig,..ff-,A L N ' xfllb ,Lp W, ,, A. '7 ' m , - ' A .MQ Nm. H , I A WY' x 1 sf ' 5 f K 4- 1-'fini '.'A fi 2 Q -5 1 4 l W, vw ' 'ii 1 ffffw' J X L., X N. 1 k a ew ia ff 40 9' . . 59711 H. 1 'E . Mx i 2, 5 , ' , K '- 4 ' :: ' -2: ff! 'Ni iz- Q MQ, A I 55 1 W ' we :: . QQ.. .. v I , ,, ie ma .QW fr W 1 'f' rs i!i sie ffwwil. Lv 112 Z9 Q, .2 H W I ' Q , 5 ' f 'J . 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If l -vV HS I .K 'i if ,P- ' Bain -3 L, -J k N'-f -UF' f ' fl 2 'IO5 ,, ,. Y 1 .U ' '1 v. f' . 1' ,J . V57 s 4 E 5- 'Q' x w f ' 'lf' '. Z1 'rf fl LJ ' J J A f v' grub kk A -, 421' -v ,-4 f 21. 'U f 'X' 131 1 J' F f 1.4 j ' 4 , an ' . ' f if 5.5 ' J ,ax !,.. A' Ki! Q 3 Q 4 ,p..4.f-.fgg-:M Juni , . l ...,,w.'5.. ,Q Eg -- 11 K w 1 A A I V Ar ul. f A 3: i ,,. wkipiw.. J r?pf.iv'g:f:4'I',..7.,-5.4-yu ..,. A' A ' fl V4 ' 9 'wi' , T .S s . 4 XL Y h , Q-MJ L 1 x ' -3 X 4 ' K L K d S L1 E Ei? I :M X Qi .::4?l?Ff'h 1' Ulrliiig? :.f -' - ' - ,NG vm. 4.-xl .5-3 .,,, Q A '+'S?Jfgw!1h,'5p?Faqg??F3ew,5 W Y ' FH ,LLL ' Y K zafii W as g 5 ,, A , , VZ, is :-. ki F M.. Hifi f 'Sift- W ff, v 3 A , .-. , J ' -f f E 'L I .,, ig! ,154-Q , ,, ly-Q fi 4' mu - I .- LL,,,, . ,, ix 55:23. ,W-,,qK,'-4...,,E si 5354 1. ..,, , Hs.. its '-'A v 1 . ,, 1- fy -mf qf. - 5 ,1 41 1 I 'Hs , A! .. v:4f. pf, A y ,MA .,., . V.--,-V-. ,.1-.., ,..,. Y. T.. N' ' ' --'i'?v2X ' 'L+-fi'-' H, . , fr ,, 'Fam , :1 A , . ,!- , ' 1 E ju f., ' 5493-.af F A ,.,-r,-'wwf ' wi 1 V ' .1-il . V , ' . :'f.-i,3?EQ.g .- , H: Iv Q, 5,Li:,, ' , -P ' A . ' - ' v wqfi- ' t , ' 5 - ' ' 'ifgifff' , 1' -1 ' -. ,, 5, ,,. ' V- , , Q5 -m m -V , , w f A 'A :Y :Xi'5 '?-SW . ' ,. R- '5-LA ,-- . A, -K, ,,: .,,.1,,. - '1 ,. .-Ly: 5-5 '2' 5. VE- N- : f -I 151 ' 57-331, , 'if ,Q if 4 iff X , .4 fm . ,',. 1.- f .ff .,,. luv., : 4,111 5-H .Y vlfv' jf f few. . ul, Q X , Y gf . ,N X Tr X Y - lil 0 I f-Q-urn ,Q-wff' ,ix 'FK 14K't'w..,Lh 5 Q :rf r11Of a ' wyvfdf , -' ' Q ' vpyift 'tpvff' C1-I-4 14 fi' I 1 4 'Z'- 6' 6 A . lxklbx ,AAN 'xg 1, XX-'Sz - ' , 6 'FMP-X . . .5 A . XB is 4. A ,Q , , ' igfq f ..- -. J , ,yi I-2 fl' , 1 0 V fQ5?g'f -. 'H 5 , 5 'PZ:'f' v., ,. , n 1 --., uf 4 ,U M-W1 MUSIC PSC's Music Department is pressed for space like many other departments. Practice rooms are us- ually filled to overflowing with musicians sitting on the floor waiting for a place. A growth of 45 per cent in the last four years, leading to an enrollment of 100 music majors and 300 non-majors in music courses, is responsible for the crowded conditions. Departmental growth within the yast year has been cultural as well as physical. The major new devel- opment was the Contemporary Music Series or- granzied by music instructor David Block. lt fea- tured lectures and concerts on avant garde music. The expanded activities of the department includ- ed an appearance before the Oregon Musical Education Association in the College Center Ball- room. Two operas were performed-the one act American work, Down in the Valley , in the fall and the three act, The Ballad of Baby Doe , in May. The most notable new program was the scholarship series of three concerts by the Sym- phonic Band. The receipts went towards a new music scholarship fund, the first such fund music students have ever had. The Arabic program has produced tangible as well as intangible results. Last summer, ten PSC Arabic students won National Defense Foreign Language fellowships at Harvard and Michigan. The center is hopeful of winning a dozen or more NDFL grants for the summer of 1966. PSC has played a major part in the National Under- graduate Program of the Overseas Study of Arabic, administered by Princeton University. For the past four years, more than one third of the NUPOSA grantees have been from Portland State. Of four PSC students nominated this year, two, john Meynink and Gary Leiser, won these grants which provide a year of travel and study in Shemlan, Lebanon. Through the center, Portland State is a sponsor- ing participant in the Summer Institute in Arabic Studies at the American University in Cairo. To- gether with the Department of State, PSC aids in the administrative co-ordination of the insti- tute and the selection of candidates. In 1965, five undergraduates and 24 graduate students from 'I6 universities attended the institute. The Middle East Center has become a supplier of students to graduate schools of Near Eastern Studies, one of the distinctive things for which PSC is known. Its graduates have won grants to such schools as Harvard, Princeton, the Ameri- can University in Cairo, and johns Hopkins. Five years ago when PSC edged out Princeton, among others, in winning federal money for the first Federally financed undergraduate Middle East program in the country, the reaction of public and college community was one of amazed incredulity. This year, when national scholarships are announced in this field of study, no one will be surprised to see PSC gradu- ates and undergraduates high on the list. The announcement has become a spring routine. Wnb. ' . . A .J ' ' fu -W . X ' 57' 'S S517 .,,, Q , X egg bf is MJ 1 X - , V -I .-L 2 i S A .Af uf 'bi-WV N ., ' 5. 'I ' 'F' 'E' V ' ae- . if 'Five' 'z - 1551 f x ' f ' f ,' 4 , V 'f . 'Mx - P ' 'pk . , se. ff ,. 'i.,4.Nm, QS.: Wim . k.15:1lf,.VLN . --.hyd ' I A! ,I :kg Zi . 5 . .L N r 9 4 f I F3 '1e:-- 'fs ffl! ke 45 'X , ,G ' 9-73 u .Y H' i. .e'K, : ,,- api 353, 5' ' 'E ff-'I' F ' 1 A-S -1, gf' 2' Q , w'?i5:7 V 1.g ' 5 f .5 . : xx X ' rg-1 if fb V. ' 3' h Q9- I fig S PALACE SLIPPERS unan Abdul Hamid II 'U876 - 1909, fi , H Q' f'-3 H WN .waxy Y- x .1 I A' A V, -' pu.. ,xv 4 W X , '- I 'Q X, 4, , - ' ' HKU. N' N . :f 4 Y 'iQ'r T-2..! I ' 1 . X 'WE AH: fn., ' 3 55 ' f ' 3 if , I 'X g ' 55, 'Y 3.4, K , ' f..' N n I 1 . A ' ' U N Q If if b Sk X ' ' E K m 5, 1, y ' . ,Pl 1 Mu L X, 4 yi' , 'l'Vx! p l X A , g I 'Q' , '7 . , H W il It I 4 XM . 2 ' 'Q X wa flfii' , X 4' 5 iff 1' ' 1 2-I' K J. K 4 4 TJ Qi Ak 'wr 4 A K X 9 . 11 x FM l Q 4.4 -' '- ha ,F -,Qi : - ,pg E I ul U . 4, X 'Fava-'C '.c,g T.: 4 -T X 1 aug' x- - 7-' Wlllllll' lIilI'lIlllill They held the 1966 Winter Carnival in the springg April 1-3 was the earliest weekend they could buy a mountain. And that was all right because shining sun on shining snow greeted the about 1000 students who poured into Bend and onto Mt. Bachelor from 14 Oregon, Washington and Idaho colleges and uni- versities. Director ofthe whole show was Marv Foust. lt was a weekend of activity and Activities Of carving fresh tracks down slopes of fast corn snow. Of watching races, and getting sunburned. It was going to parties, singing songs and staying up all night. And dragging out of bed at 10 in the morning. It was trying not to look like an idiot on skis. Floun- dering and falling and... looking like an idiot. It was great. .- 1 V 31-r-'fzix ag- , -1 A V' . 2, 1 -f. :L ff-' ' ' ,Y -ffl-'-9 2.-',-XF, . , . 1 -,. m , ., .'4!.x w W4 Q, ,ff - .- x ' 'Y 1 41,12-4' fam, W L-24.195, 'J' E' ., ' , 1 ' ' if-1? 1 L. - , N. F '. fgfwfgilfffif-YEA Tiff f 11? 3- 'unix 11.4.-..r-ev fgfffixx 5, .x--1 i R t - f .ggi 5- 1-' ,ay 529. I., ?,,5Qgff-5,,:-:Qi , 1. 1: ,.:x ' .,v,j,L ,rf f-,,,, 4t'-- ,Q -- ngnjl A4 I.:-,I 4,--1' - .L,' x,Q.1i-LQ' .34g2g':-7 . -F -Y. , Q 1 aj a ., : wi 121 'liigdf 35351-'ffifignllgifrglg2f?, gs'2555 ::r..,E,-e 'fT'if.',f 'az..'-- ' ' , i ,' p -- 1 - f . . , W L1.- , ,' ' .115-1 'ff' -fb-zzz.-1-ig..-f 1 I 7 5' ' ,-9 fs' JN- se 'H-x ' '1 45 j gkiii 'YE-Q54-95'- ii -'YLCWT ni 1 6 V 4 , ma 8 ' 'f f 'VL ' ffv H9224 1 -'ir ,4V?'49g:sv:,1,'f-, ' - tglff-'J.L:.'-I-1REEL- -1 no-rv?-U -W4-:1rS 11 .h-Qs, ,ian - ., V ' ., , Ire, .H ,Nfl gg, If 'W ,I A .5- 391-3 .Ln:.?7 'El ' '1 uri 'if 5 1F':f'lf:'L2Lf'!',,. 5-Wi 5, ?TTl'1 i T3?'if--fp-aufW'? ' A 4 .-1 ,,-J, ,f 1 if-. , 5- .- , -gf, '- I' ' .al .iff-? i:7?1 I 1 25:-' , Y .F fra. 1 'I-,7 'V 'X ,- - ,V .- - ... , :',,,v5,..: :-2,- g .' ., -. fre: -1- ,V - , ,..,- - A --,1 -' ,.9,,- ,Z 4, , 4. ,,, .., - .f 4 yq . ,,f- f Y, V ff 5,1-f Q -'f 75: ' L, 'Ziff' ff4 1i'a .w.f i,fT I. fn ' 4- fx X' ' ' ' 'fl ' In the ski competition at Mt. Bachelor, sanctioned this year by the Pacific North- west Ski Association, 'I3 teams vied for top honors. There were races-slalom, giant slalom, and downhill- Friday through Sunday. The Skimeister perpetual trophy, awarded annually to the outstanding racer of the meet, went to Central Washington State's Bob Spalding, whose times were 109.7, 88.2, and 76.0. In the combined team results, PSC placed sixth. In individ- ual scoring, however, Portland State's Steve Claire ran second only to Bob Spald- ing, making times of112.2, 92.0, and 78.9. john Kirk, PSC, placed in the top third in combined individual times. . P -47' 4 1 .1 ,bf arf' K . .fl L 14:5 f ' - Pr J 'aa' . 1: 1 f r D'- 'v..,'-, .' 'Wr- . P a an-' I 4l,,r'- I! 'sa w. . ja A I, . -GW' - 'f L -a ' g Arf ,j-..- . ' . . , , i ..--lu, 'l'l9 fa -1 ,,. . f-' Dutchman's Flat, below the ski area at Mt. Bache- lor, was the site of the Saturday non-ski activities where collegians bumped and spun down an icy hill on saucers, trotted clumsily about on snow- shoes, and basked everywhere in the sun. A noisy bunch of Portland State men won the hard-fought tug-o-war. When it was all over, there was a cook- out, courtesy of PSC's Outdoor Program buffs. 120 4-ss - W io X Q pr' fl ll I L' Hp 5 1- 'Lv 1 ,245 -. f Ji 'l '...'sfT: f 0 .3 cj 'r l--14. , . ., - -4 'U 4. QQ 7 ' ' 55 4. H a1i?L-E 'A X 1 wf- -L- ,- .- 9, ,. i,. ' - ' - -JW , M, .ik K Q f . 1 .4 A S' . U - ' . :E-,QQ .W . , n U ' -LN :nv f , . , V19 6 51515 I ,W , an -. . 15 W'-W , h-L b V I QV, fl, V ' N 1. p K. 1 LA? . 5 . , V. '--, -. .sw 33- 4 '1 ,i A ,inf F 'N 1. V 1. LFQ W J A , L, 4-Q'-.1-xi-F' ,'9, '-,ll 51 H ' ' -A .' I-4' :mr -V -w 'J 4' 5 'iviis-4x'l3LZ,75QI'g.gLl - ' .V 1 S f ' ' -52:1 4 iffy.--Y-f.i+ 3. H ' L-, 3'-.Lu -UV - Qi:-affffix' ,. ' ,gill :xiii X , ' i fl Hmm: X W Nr ' '- : 2?LQfg,L. ,LSE . M TF 'iflifai 'I21 'KS I -'I sf A ff.-.gs it ti We n I' Q I rw a N f of 1 , ii ,4:,, Q . SQXIB .iq .' an ,- C . . VK- 'YO nl -vw Q V ' 1 Lf-'.T,,'f' ,Q ' Romfu 'yi . 'Ts-P' f 4b.: I 4 u'4rf's '-a Q' -., .Lf V411 WA, ph- ff? 1 N- ' s I X X1 X.. 1 UE a . X r x, m xi i N X N WN X XNQW ' lla-Q I x .. .'-SX . .,..-L 291157 Y f ' Z- .M X. ' ' my fiifgx ' ra W in '. 'vga-if rs K, - - -Q ,--5.-, rfgrghigz 1, ' f Z 27 . R 3:g2Zf 'Cifsr . -fqz - 1 L w i . Q i Ki g 1 5 , jgfHfe, 52 x 34 ,bu 4 1 Sh k 5 I I 21,933 NX I X '-iii, N x I PTR t 1 W X rl ,H r 1, ff E' I 1 V N-. flzfw 'IJ .,, ffl-. l I an ',f1-:J 51.3 ,l ,!3m. Peter Morgan edited the Review, the literary maga- zine, through a series of roadblocks, and across the early May deadline. His last blow was the distribution day news that the business office had lost the list of 800 names of students who reserved the magazine in winter and fall registration lines. Under the leadership of Bill Nygren, secure behind editorial prerogative, the Vanguard forged to new highs amid controversy, often taking editorial stands that aroused the Establishment. At the height of the shooting, the paper received an All American, top rating of the Associated Collegiate Press. Under busi- ness manager Dennis Stephens, and his assistant, Nancy Ouchida, the paper jumped to 16 pages and stayed in the black all year. The previous Publications Board created a unique situation for the Viking-a dual editorship. Under David Ball and Corinna Campbell, the lack of a clear- cut editorship, and a transient staff, created delays, and slowed the process-but not fatally. 1 ill ,..-I 'rf 5-,?g: .-'fa 'V . if -I A ' 315-4 The Publications Board met occasionally-very oc- casionally. Under the leadership of chairman Ken Williams, Pub Board members led a life of leisure, with each editor following his own course of action during the academic year. The board breakdown and its side complications led to a spring fiat from Dean of Students Channing Briggs and Dean of Undergraduate Studies Fred Waller that would have restructured the Pub Board, disenfranchising the editors. Arousing the fury of the Student Senate, the editors, and later the new stu- dent body president, joe Uris, the decree from above was rejected. The board met and restructured with the old faculty members and new students-at-large. Members of the '65-'66 board were, beside the edi- tors: faculty members Gerald Penk, Margaret Clarke, Robert Dodge, William Schantzg Student Activities staffer B. B. Bauer, students Dennis Cook, Pam Erick- son, Doris Rademacher, lerry Van Winkle, and Mrs. Wilma Morrison, advisor to Vanguard and Viking. X-' lltll L .E vw, 4 : 4 ... 1 l 1 al, C ig, trtg ian- ,t W Ser 'T t - if r if li J: 4 ' f N l A74 i 4. is 5 flat it l , 5 X , X i a. wuz - 'x lilIlllIIU Ill lllii SlII'BWi A slapstick Elizabethan carnival of color a action emerged on the stage in Noveml: as the PSC Players presented Shakespear Taming of the Shrew. Mara Stahl as Ka stormed and stomped her shrewish w through a romance with William Tate as t charmingly unshakable Petruchio. r Shrew is a delightful story of a headstro woman and a clever suitor, and it becamf brawling, lusty farce under the direction Pauline Peotter. Characters were boldly drawn, sparkling wi vitality. Individual interpretations made t Elizabethans as timeless, as universal, human nature itself. Bianca, as played Leah Gates, was the eternal coquette, ma aging men with a hypocritically sweet ma ner and a will of iron. Arnold Hummast Gremio was the whining, scheming person fication of all the rich old men who seek use money for power. Through it all, Ga Teadtke and Gary Smith as the two servan Biondello and Grumio, played antic cou terpoint to the strikes and riots going 1 among their betters. Costumes created by Maw Collins, and tl stage sets of Kermit Shafer combined in coordinated kaleidoscope of color. Doi stripes, printed flowers in green, blue, ye low, pink, were synchronized with the bac ground...the whole subtly combined 1 mood-set each scene. x ' .W 1-' .wif FH. , '.. E552-sci' mf63 :Q:, A .. , px V WSJ ,V Q 'iw W9 9' ,nk ,541 ':,y3J' X ..w2,'1Qwuw-fa-M 3 . 63 . -i , I . ' 'A ' X f A ifvwtb- 1' Q.,-pw 1 A-at MY ' gs, 1 f- if I ...fy-' - x '- aww ll .h if ,, Q +5 I '4 4? w2'5,'vi :ff :-- 1. 39.91 5 Qgflw 5 . Mx.A.f'1'.,,, L w. , Q A P? f NS ff , 9, flpsig .xx , X w. ,yy ,- K -- 954 ..- 'gba fo bw - ,X X s F x.': s' ' I X f 1 Ah ,ali 3 S. vw' fl tr- uv dev F -1 'X f ' : A X . Q . 1. if Q .,, ,,- ,, M, .4 1 V Fi' 1 '. vu' H T 3 -' V' 'C Hz!-qf'L, .5 ' :El1,., x'iY,-TL' yr ,- A .251-jgg ,J1i'?:fJ, fg.. ' L-f if-91 25 , -f '36 Ziff' jf, A e ' .fy If Gb- n It w ,mv ll if ' X ex.-a'.f 3- 4 X I-' ' ' 45' ,!' ,. -1 . ' V . 'v 5:7229 ,gg 1 I E 'gui' , I fqrif, f --5. pf - H1 4' A' ,, iw.,-' ff 1- I F , . I ..-,wa '- , ' . 15 M, ' 5 w . 45,172 if ' V40 f ,V , ., V Q .A-ak, 3 A , , .. , . . x , Wg.. T? I an . .-, . o I V 4, ,QQ ,Q Q ms A -.. 'ini Y . 'A ' f ' 1' if . K 4 E 1 9 ! 13 V sf Q 5 . fa - , , V. l up 'Lily gf it 'J ' f vt.: , ,.' ,. ,. iq: FF.-- J ,I - ' .ffl-9373: ' , 1 .sl-:Zi W - ,, . , .,,.14- .. --,M,.,..., - A kv- , , . - 3 A 'QA .uv .-f-'..1-u-zcumqq-vm. -..-v. -- ' ' A , f' -'f 'L 1.1. 1 ,V -4' , E Viv- 'U ' - 6- ,ps , ,- 45 , 'A ,uh -. 4 u - ' -.IL ' . 1 -ggi. -..N.-A I M -, -g imf ,H 5'wnL .M --1 1, fx f , P WT . 'gl' A 5 1 4.5mm f H, P' I 1 .v 4 5 ,, 951- 'W It 1 EPM f If FHVL. 4359 H 1 .1 3 , ,Hidil9'x14f+xfyg,g:-.X 41 L A .,.-s , . WE I -5 .-y w gL..,,' N V 1 --' pl gli, , . ,, ' W I 1 1 'V -4 1 ,ig E Q. :r- , , lu gt 'if -gif 'H A1 aiiffify , . ...fm W All. - i Q49 ' EE- ' ' 155557 z .-'H'lTiW'- 5 :FW HL' nl, -, M 'wg 'X ,Q 5 . 4 llll'llSlllllll ln an awesome display of power, wrestling coach Howard Westcott's young squad smashed all opposition west of the Rocky Mountains and then grappled to third place in the college divi- sion and ninth place in the university division of the NCAA's championship tournaments. Rick Sanders, sophomore, paced the Viks as he placed first in the university division and third in the college division at the 123-pound class. The Viking's impressive 14-3-'I dual meet rec- ord includes a win over the college division champion Cal Poly. Others who fell before the Viks included Pacific Athletic Conference champion Oregon State, Fresno State, Univer- sity of Washington, and Central Washington State. PSC was undefeated for the 'IO last meets of the season. These boys worked hard all season and de- served everything they won, said Westcott of the team. .1 -V .11-fv 4 In , ' n , , . . J? -ev 'Il v. ' -in - '15-10.5 ' 1 .,.3,1c, .1 12,552 ,Q ',fL'g, ,qQ ,-ivgifzd, v. -1 4-5-, 11.,:.2,-'.af,f,1:.. 1-4 K , .. -- A xy ,- V 'fi 1. ' 1:- flwfrim' '-12 --:- -ff.,g1- A. -. ',-41, . ,, ' wk- , Q:,gg5,,,, . M ',.31zff-ff: Ling! -K , ,-,,. . v . 1. if' ' :Q MB J! gh bf 5, -. ,iw NCAA Championship Results. place place college university Name division division Sanders . . . . . 3 1 Green . . . . 3 - Yatabe ..... . . 3 5 Siebenthall . . . . - 6 Calhoun ... - - Grigsby . - - Garrison .......... 5 - Team results: third place colleges division and ninth place university division NCAA championships. ll ,J ' Af E - 7 -ne, . .- , sp A I. ' ,.. A .. A Q. 1. Q sir Jr, M I ' ' L x .,, f' ms if 'E' 525: ' Y Er' ,A-A vw-.wx N 5. 1 .,. ,'f'+iu 1 3 . 71. I., 1 1 gun - , - if xi' rr.. 'Za ' f in 'ix vw. T ,,, af. W. 4 I Mm 1 fa 'N A H if I.. cv A .1 -vi g5,.'fz 4 ' . J-'51 5.-V-If .I n --I f' LA M - 5? in M -if '5' 'H 'QF' 2 , - Pa' 1 L J' Q, ia P I JF Q53 l l Portland State's Model United Nations class car- ried the flags. . .and the diplomacy. . .of several countries into the facsimile arenas of two Security Council meetings at Lewis and Clark College, and the General Assembly meeting in San Francisco. With the help of faculty advisor john E. Kovac, political science, and first term MUN president Bob Harvey, the class represented Greece at the first Security Council meeting in December. Dele- gates argued such issues as President john Ken- necly's proposal for a multi-lateral force from the NATO nations to occupy nuclear armed sub- marines, the emergency in Rhodesia, Cyprus, and the United Nations funding problem when the USSR and France would not pay their dues. The Portland Staters represented japan, the presi- dent nation, at the February council meeting. Led by Dennis Kavanagh, MUN president during win- ter and spring terms, they debated Vietnam, the Rhodesian problem, and the Arab-Israeli dispute. At the General Assembly meeting in San Francisco in April, 'I4 PSC students carried the views of the Middle East kingdom of Kuwait, of North Vietnam, South Vietnam, and the National Liberation Front, through four days of committee meetings, cau- cuses, and seminars. The Kuwait Mission of the United Nations in New York translated its interest in the MUN group into cash, sending S200 to assist in financing the trip to San Francisco. ha.. - , V - , .f 'urn nr: -.rl--Y-T l 4Z.,qfE?B..5,-gg...,f' .q13k5L5g.5'-V. 4 f-.' ,- -. Vis- ZW- I ' 'tn' 4 , , ,. ?'1-'1 r 1 A r,iiSfi3'l.fWF:.' by . , ,z , Ms , T aw 19 K? .f4?'q,I , 4,0 J .4 as Lf ll Q Q '21 xlfwui ,. i 'E' riff mil! 5 The cafeteria is still crowded, garbage seems to appear magically at the crack of dawn and pil- grims continue to'flock dazedly to the ka'aba of the littered table, dripping with the sacrificial blood of coffee, overrun with burnt sacrifices from the holy weed, surrounded with the rav- ished remains of abandoned repasts. And stu- dents still flock to the cafeteria for many reasons other than eating. Whatever else the cafeteria may be, it is the only place where a student feels he has escaped the thousand aca- demic rules that fence in his life. The cafeteria is a mob scene or rather a hundred little mob scenes in which the student can get away from it all. lt feels good to sit around a table with a few familiar faces, contemplating a cup of cof- fee, talking about whatever comes to mind-a sort of anonymity with company. liilllllllflil 6 4 'kv Y Q-is A W nE. i' N Gil Q.,' . Y 'HIN- F 9 'Q 'fx Q 47 IlBlIlllllSll'illlllllS Demonstrations, counter demonstrations, demonstrations against demonstration and teach-ins gave a militant look to the year. Civil rights and student discontent about PSC conditions took a back seat to the new nemeses of the New Left, Vietnam and the draft. For most at PSC the demonstrations were an interesting spectacle-nothing more than a spectator sport. They were an exercise in futility, stirring up feeling against the very causes which they espoused. But for the dem- onstrator, they were a chance to be part of a potential power group-proof that he could do something to influence policy, to offset his feelings of alienation, even though noth- ing indicated that his demonstrations changed anything, or even anybody's mind. ff! 4 5 -T3 T i! - , V 3 A. it if 9 I ' , 4.-L. 4- ig. CODE took the lead in sponsoring Vietnam demonstra- tions. Following a teach-in headed by the PSC Political Science Forum in mid-October, CODE bused interested people to Salem to take part in a protest rally on the steps of the Capitol Building. Scarcely two weeks later, the zealous protesters headed down to the Portland Induction Center for a talk-in. Protesters and speakers tried to persuade inductees to find ways to disqualify themselves from the draft. Opposition to the demon- strators was quickly focused on the induction center, and the CODE crowd found themselves in a maelstrom of counter protesters. The commotion drowned out the speakers. The demonstrators then moved to the College Center Ballroom and did not venture beyond con- ferences and discussions again. But demonstrations were not forgotten, especially by those who opposed them. The Young Republicans held a lecture-in in November, and, in February, Milton Rokeach, Michigan, fielded questions for a PSC panel, saying individual loss of identity prompts most of the student trend to protest. 151 'J i J, . A - - - . 1'-if: 1 wg vw ' R iw-L , .- ..JH r ' W if mr ,anim . 0 C1 1 rf A' If 'v ... -1 ,... - 039 .Q , .N As. ' A ,...1 ,' -' 1 . Q ' y 11' '- W f , ,fy Ii- 1. '.i,V,.,-. .nk ' ' ill ' U, f'. , , ,. 5,1--fi, N , ,.. Jwlfgv '11,-fifj. , K, yo 'I54 he campaign got off to the usual unimpeachable generali- es. The Fred Siegrist and Marv Foust slate made its pitch on eed for Change, First Business is the Business of Students, upport Athletics and Organizations. lim Westwood, still rid- g the laurels of his last yearfs captaincy ofthe College Bowl am, and Doug Capps, riding both the stars and the shards f his year with the Tim Helzer administration, stood for irect and Cordial Communication to Administration, and orward Looking Programs. hen the campaign temper and tempo blew up. Uris climbed n the platform with his hands in his pockets Uvlort Sahl set Roberts Rules of Orderl. And it became the stiff-collar oys and their issues vs the Uris visceral appeal-plus the assuring stabilizer of the Ouchida practicality. he vote was 1284, Uris and Ouchida Cfirst female to win SC's second government jobjg 687 Siegrist-Foust, 676 Capps- 'Vestwood. Kathy Bruno won the second vice-presidency ver julie Demers and Pam Van Den Bosch without much louble. There were more than 20 candidates for the Senate, record political crop at PSC. The 12 winners: Pat Ober- under, Gary Poppe, Sue Mattson, Pat Busch, Rod Barrett, ,on Campbell, Dick Crabtree, Leslie Carter, Bridget Downey, ob Handy, Terry Olson and Gary Kent. wg-5, 1 'v ix af k1yT:5,- K A Q tv ni' bfbifazif. V F Rf' -fe '41 .x: Q MW. EL: Six .-W N 'X iv .- -wr if 'Nw - -'55- f, , Sify- ' my w ,-' ,- , A .- -y .S wx X,-4 Y 1 ff-5 . , fxazfffm .f . 1 4 K ,,.-H.,-Q an-f ' .. A . x-H44 ,-.75 f nj fri ' f , ' ' , , . H. .. ..,,, ',,,M.Q4 N - ., .. wr.. 1 1, N,-.,m. . .D x 1 - . ' . 4 , iii' , .5 ,Q '1-V 1. J.: .-S-v 'I L L-cl 5 f Q V ,, . l. L' 1 N , V ly' icq' M ' ,v 1.1 '39 'M af ' I ,- ,J .' '- F . ' 71--' - rf .,.-. L 5 , JI ci 5 . ,A A x E , J 53:1 . V K: , - fi .I 4 .- Mya ,,,A. 1, is V if Lv ,L , - -wr' . + - '. , 1, fl li.,-'f' .A ,. ,vt -lm-vp Q ,, ' 1 ,-I .xr 4.1-4, , x' I7 :io Afh, In n In n - ,- f :E fi '.1f,'.::N' ff, , 'N .f f:'Er1'!xl9 mu' .ntsx g, :Q f :arf - A ' P H ,W -,-. , ,A K, 4 - 5 . , . 5 Muir..-1, . ffs- V ' ' s v w zf '1'SM1 . ' afggwx Efgqvx r.:f-Au:w1 ' gv 'E' ' ' -'El 'E ,. ' 4. r-4 hp, 111' W ' 1 Jw-. ff- s - :Ti-'-Sw ' , ff ,, , . s 5 S . a ff Lf- -.M ,f W' 1' S: 5i w':l3', . , F! ! ' 1 ' -2 v i V A ' . I' V r ' A 5 'cv v 4 xc: 3 X V 1 Nl fx N ' -Q IDA- t 76.-f L , E W QQ! X- -,xl Hr ,sux 'QXQ H- KW 9 LVN O U, '41 I 'ard , Y uflxlfsk U JA! A' 'Y tab 5 PS: I, 5 lB8llVtll Ill Ill!! iIl'l3 The ancient and modern faces oflapan was the theme of the 1966 Festival of the Arts in May. ASPSC Presi- dent loe Uris, Mayor Terry Schrunk, and Takegoro Sato, japanese consul general, opened the show which played to thousands of students and visitors during six days of exhibitions, films, and other events. Forms of expression basic to the japanese heritage were exhibited in flower arranging by Florence Henjyoji, dancing by Yasuko Sato, and a Noh drama by Hideo Fujii. There were lectures on the develop- ment of japanese art and temple gardens by Leonard Kimbrell of PSC and Mrs. Wallace Baldinger of Uni- versity of Oregon. 3 , A i 3, I A concert of classical and contemporary japanese compositions by the Portland Chamber Orchestra, under the direction of Boris Sirpo, dramatized the transition between the old and new japans. The orchestra was accompanied by Kimio Eto, koto mast- er, and Miss Yuko Honda, violinist. Contemporary japanese culture was reflected in art films and in exhibitions of calligraphy and Pop Art by artist Bang Wei Chen in the White Gallery. A trade fair featured displays of japanese commercial and industrial products, exhibited by members of the Portland business community. A slide-lecture, Intro- duction to Sapporo, was presented by Miss Yashmei Hasei, and a panel discussion of modern japan of- fered recent slides by Wallace K. Huntington of the PSC Art Department. A modern dance interpretation of Haiku poetry was directed by Mrs. Vaunda Carter of Portland State. Of special significance to the festival's emphasis on eastern culture was the presence on campus of Dr. Alan Watts, internationally known author and scholar of Zen Buddhism and eastern thought as it applies to psychology. A japanese luncheon at the Bush Gar- dens and a dinner at the lone Plaza were held in honor of Dr. Watts. Dr. Watts visited philosophy classes and lectured on developments in eastern thought, unifying the festival panorama. -if I 1' , ,. J- -' im., ,W-,, Eff? - 'fffl 51: faqs- 1.4.1 -mx ' avi- f5.'.f'-Vw JB -1 af rl , ffl :'1l'::i1!'. -4- x2.g1g 7 A 2-.lla '- ' NWS 1f4f','2-!': uw' il? EE' 4 -2 iii 'JILL 1 -1, 162 lI'iIBll Enthusiasm and teamwork were the keynote as Coach Ralph Davis and his track squad ran over the opposition. Davis compared the 1966 squad with the PSC championship squads of 1960, 1961, and 1962g and credited this year's team with more spirit. Standouts for the Vikings this season were: Roger Sandvold-100-yd. dash, mile relay, 440-yd. dash, 220-yd. dash, and the long jumpg Harold Strong-220-yd. dash, 440- yd. dash and mile relayg Ron Dalrymple-triple jumpp jim Heard-discusg and Gary Young- shot put and discus. L ,,7,, W Q7 xc- I , iii 't ' 'A' X l T433 'i k Q A .f ,rf Portland State's golf team did well against teams of comparable NCAA status. The Viks were led by Pete Taylor, jim Orr, Mike O'Toole, and Steve Mc- Donald who were all often in the low seventies and alternated for honors as medalist. The PSC effort was assisted by Dave Gibson and Bill Bristol. Viking vic- tories included wins over Gonzaga and Western Washington State. .nl 11:1 I ,ffrw,',. ., ,. 1 .A .gk-,W ' f-af ,,M,, ,f1f7:,,, ,J-rx. 45.5. H X r -. ortland State's tennis team had a so-so eason. The Vikings were led in the ngles by Ron Secord, Gene Stainbrook, Dthers who aid the Viks in the singles re George Gust and Bob Upson. loubles teams for the Vikings were on Secord and Gene Stainbrookg and 'red Woodard and Mike Harmon. , A ' . 'QT' 711' I ' , ' . I b .Ax , -,-':'.- ' Q - V Q4 , -,.f,,1. N . - N -2 ..- .. . ' , - ,. .1.L,4.5,. 170 1 n. Fig!! 111: ,Vu ,AV -V V ,af . , 11 ' if fe- ' .-S' VV lf ff: W, ' Af- A ' , VJ' al 'Q Yi ,-EEVJJ V 4194 jir' A Q , fn L , V fb! V V . fy 'ilff . K L.. A 1, wi ',, I '-Q Pg'- ex, - V .V-,V .., . ., X J.-,,.L,Jg,: V- Wm V . V .ff.,1Vg1 . ' - - - -M..r..- -'--nf -- f -. . . V .....,,: K . ,l.V,.V V' Q-5 , ... 8, A VN .V ' - . Q. . 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A doubleheader sweep in Seattle where the Viks rapped out 35 hits sent them on their way. lim Schmidt was leading the hitters with a .370 mark, while lim Frazier and Dave Hatch were also above the .300 mark with .339 and .302 averages. Slugging shortstop Paul johnson was leading the team in home runs with three while Carrying a .286 mark. Other stalwarts were Pat Hergert, Bill Heckaman, jim Leahey, George Vass, and Rodger Siler. iazz lBSllliiIl jazz music bopped into Portland State Colleg at least by proxy, on May 20 and 21, allowir fans of the adlib idiom to hear the far out soun of Miles Davis or the closer-to-the-middle piaij artistry of Vince Guaraldi. The Second Annu PSC jazz Festival met with success this year the Oriental Theater. The mustachioed Guaral and his trio treated the young student orient audience to a light, swinging concert of jaz fluctuating his rhythms and tempos to pleas: the most discerning, or least knowledgeab jazz buff. Guaraldi opened the jazz festiv earlier in the day, on Friday, with an inform jazz seminar. The discussion panel, peopled h four outstanding jazz critics, a disc jockey, t newspaper columnists and an aesthetics teach from PSC, was held in front of a standing-roo only audience in the College Center. The se nar occasioned some lively dialogue betwe Guaraldi and the panel, then Guaraldi and t audience. The incisive, succinct blowing of Miles Davl trumpet-fluegelhorn-playing leader ofthe Da Quintet, hypnotized the Saturday evenill crowd. Whispering, muted ballads were counter balanced by the hardswinging, rapid, stacca tempos of progressive jazz. Melodies flow from the cornucopian horns of Davis and lj lyrical cohort, tenorsaxist Wayne Shorter, fi two hours as the polite but receptive capaci audience heard Miles Davis for the first two jam festivals at Portland State. john Wendebor introduced emcee Ray Horn and promised Poi land that PSC would help make the Rose Ci the jazz capitol of the northwest. 175 'i'?' C 1- , lwwwv- 6 .Q SCHOOL OF SOCIAL WORK The School of Social Work is PSC's only full-fledged graduate school. Established in 1962, it now has 33 first year students, 21 second year students, and 11 instructors. One of the unique things about the school is its Field Intern Program where students have the opportunity to apply classroom concepts. First year students spend two days a week on their field assignments and second year students spend two and a half. Of the major social welfare agencies in the Portland area, 14 provide positions for interns. Serving double duty as social workers and super- visors are 17 field instructors, most of whom are not paid by PSC. Their role is crucial in training the intern, for they scrutinize every aspect of the student's at- tempts to help people with emotionally-based prob- lems, even down to word for word examinations of the intern's interviews. Mrs. Phyllis Burnham of the Portland Public Schools is the field instructor for lim Brown and Mrs. Arm- strong, two second year SSW interns at Markham and Capitol Hill grade schools. Mrs. Armstrong and Brown try to help children having emotionally rooted academic or behavioral problems. Teachers, princi- pals and even parents refer children to the social workers. After preliminary sessions with the child and his parents to see if he really has a problem, the school principal, counselor, nurse, the referring tea- cher and the field instructor discuss the child's prob- lem with the intern. If they decide that professional help is needed, they can refer the child to a treatment center or psychoanalyst. The actual treatment begins with several sessions in which the social worker tries to get acquainted with his child and his family. 179 The child wishes to be helped, but is not articulate enough to express his problem. His basic honesty is only thinly covered by defense mechanisms and he uses methods other than talk to show the worker his problem. The intern trys to provide media for the child to talk to him-water paints, clay, blackboard and chalk, dolls, or playhouses help the intern to see the problem facing the child and to begin treatment of the child and of his family. It is usually two years before the child's problem has been solved, but the intern who treats him stays only a year. Reassignment of the child to another intern or referring him to an- other agency usually solves this problem which the gap between training and treatment creates. The ln- tern Program thus treats and trains at the same time, benefiting both student and community. The chil- dren in these photos are models. if 181 EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY The basement in an old apartment house is not usually anything special, but to the Psychology Department, the basement of Frances Manor is a dream come true. The Psychology Depart- ment, one of PSC's oldest, faced a space crisis in developing an adequate program in experi- mental and physiological psychology until fall, 1965. Rats, cats, and professors were jumbled together in a cramped room of an ugly little house by State Hall. Rat cages, cat cages, bookcases, an operating table, and several desks in one room plus having to do cat experimentation in a broom closet placed a strain on the professors. Last fall when they acquired the new space, the psychology professors went after a grant to provide equipment needed to make experi- mental psychology a laboratory science. They were awarded the grant. The basement of Frances Manor was remodeled into two class- rooms, a workshop, a darkroom, an operating room for cat-rat surgery, rooms for animal experi- mentation, and, last but not least, rooms with some of the poshest quarters for cats and rats in this locality. There are even automated cages which clean themselves, feed and water their inhabitants according to a computerized schedule. The grant filled the empty rooms with thousands of dollars worth of equipment including the cages, surgical equipment,a polygraph, darkroom apparatus, machine tools, and a microprojector. 'E' hiv' L, .1 A :Qu BBW k 64:5-M.. A , -: ,:f,., VY...- V4-L44 X., -1-rf FEV53 1, WL 1' J f -,fitrxf-'25,-, , 1. sa Y I ' 1 rc. N, - 4 ll 'hiv --cf 1, ,N i s Psychology's new facilities and furnishings have given promising undergraduates the opportunity to work on original research under the guidance of a staff member. A special Honors in Research course added to the curriculum several years ago may now finally reach its potential. Students may, at last, become familiar with the techniques and phenomena of psychological research. The new equipment has greatly facilitated faculty research such as Dr. Cord Sengstake's on the function of the brain, and has laid the base for a future gradu- ate program. lt has made Experimental Psychology at PSC what it should be-a laboratory science. if-Q . 1-.3 .VN ,- ?i,v,g' ?TT '- ' .. P-ifQ,,,,Q'ff5592??1'j'gf -:Life u .Y-1, .-g in X ' 1 'wx in Xf ,1. . p Q I I gl 187 ! 188 I 189 Z' 35,1 . ' WWA .Aff 'Q .- -K .-..,. . ,. .f .-L ,H , . fr .-.. H BHP 1 5 1 'xg . .9 I. N W s , , , f,. 1, v -...Mr 72 :pl 7 ,f- ' 'V ,V :- ,'f'- .fx v 1 , . +1 f' , .r 'f ' fl .f'57g',Z.vV' r ' Ilfwf 4 '..- ' f':,- ' ' ' , if If X ll lv' . I Y' If I 1 1 A If '- It s.' 7' , Q' .1 ' ,A ' 'v l W. x .1 4 , A, . J :-:- WJTPTQTQ, I'- -'r' 5 LR'-. '25 , ..--...W 1, - if' ' ' mf,-4.1, 'u. fr 1 . 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'f-5 ,Q ' x .ads n Adams, Glenn Allen, Ellen Anderson, Carol Anderson, Gill Ansari, Hossein Archer, James Babich, janet Barnet, Lois Bayer, Nancy Beasley, Kenton Beckett, Gerald Beiser, Cathryn Bennett, Donna Bertman, Roger Bjornson, Brian Blair, James Jr. Blakeley, Gary Blank, Donald Blew, Karen Bloomquist, Rodney Braden, Robert Breil, Stuart Briece, Rod Broderick, David Brumage, Paul Burns, Carole Buzzelli, Donald Byrd, Dee Jr. Carlson, Ann Carpenter, Carol Case, Patricia Casper, Grear Caudle, Ronald Caudell, William Ceika, Joe Chadd, Judith Church, Norman Clark, Larry Coddo, Kathryn Colfelt, Robert Conn, Josephine Cook, Dennis Cook, Jennie Corwin, Doreen Corwin, Edward Courtright, Geoffrey Craig, Gerald Cramer, Arthur Cromwell, Joan Curtis, Judith Bus Adm Chem FL German Chem Bus Adm Art Soc Gst Hum Gst Soc Sci Bus Adm Soc Gst Hum Math Econ Gst Soc Sci Geog Bus Adm Art Earth Sci Soc Physics Pol Sci Bus Adm Bio Bus Adm Bus Adm Math Elm Ed Pol Sci Eng Math Bus Adm Bus Adm Bio Math Gst Sci Bio Elm Ed Gst Sci Elm Ed Elm Ed Bus Adm Bus Adm Bus Adm Psych Elm Ed Elm Ed ' , fvf J.. . I 'H '1 ' Li A - , . ,M A ' 1 A-5 bi I ' - I ' 1 up l! 4 A 195 Daae, Konrad De Busman, james De Chaine, Thomas Deckers, Lambert Deckers, Linda Dempster, David Dernbach, jean Douglas, Mary Dudgeon, Marilee Easley, Linda Ebel, Richard Eckwortzrl, Lorelei Edwards, loan Elle, james Engeldinger, Eileen Enger, Richard Eno, Paul Fahey, Michael Falaschetti, Richard Farnsworth, Michael Fidler, Artha Fink, judith Foote, Kenneth Fouch, Thomas Franklin, Donald Fraser, Allan Frederick, Neil Frisk, Lucille Gainer, Linda Gallahen, Loyd Gaskell, Owen Glanz, Eline Goblirsch, Herbert Godfrey, john lr. Graham, ludy Green, Terrence Gress, Althea Grill, Betty Groom, Shirley Hahn, Beverly Hammack, jan Hanson, Ruth Hartley, Charles Hawthorne, Gary Hayes, Robert Hearn, Roger Heath, Richard Hejsacker, Ramond Helzer, Timme Hesla, Marilyn Art Math Psych Pol Sci Math Gst Soc Sci Soc Med Tech GST Hum Bus Adm Psych Bus Adm Bus Adm Hist Elm Ed Gst Hum Math Earth Sci Gst Soc Sci Econ Chem Pol Sci Gst Sci Art Econ Bio Econ FL German Psych Bus Adm Gst Hum Elm Ed Physics FL German Math Bus Adm Psych Eng 97 I I Hiber, Charles Hoffman, Gary Hoffman, Larry Holstrom, joan Hood, Norman Hornibrook, Sandra Hughes, Luella Hurl, William lr. Hval, Terry A Johansen, Gwenith johns, Ursula johnson, Alma johnson, Carol jonas, Stephen jones, Michael jones, Robert jones, Thomas 1ones,Valeria judkins, David justen, Linda Kay, Ronald Kearns, Thomas Kegley, Larry Kells, Eleanor Kerr, Steve Kincard, james Kinser, Patricia Kinzie, Kathryn Kisinger, Barbara Kneeland, Luanne Kolb, Kenneth Konts, Donald jr. Koping, Roy Koppen, Margaret Laberge, Douglas Larsen, Darris Lee, Ruth Lefson, Elizabeth Leppert, Judith Ligon, David Lillie, Kenneth Lindquist, Helen Lindsey, Gerald Lostrom, Marion Loulow, Bruce Low, Richard Lowe, Margaret Lund, Charles Lund, Linda McClendon, Ida Gst Soc Sci Bus Adm Art Elm Ed Bus Adm Elm Ed Bus Adm Hist Art Eng Elm Ed Soc Gst Sci Hist Bus Adm Elm Ed Bio Eng Gst Sci Pol Sci Chem Soc Math Elm Ed Elm Ed Elm Ed Econ Elm Ed Bio Elm Ed Elm Ed Pol Sci Bus Adm Elm Ed Geog Eng Eng Elm Ed Math Gst Hum Bus Adm Soc Econ Geog Psych -.bg Appl Sci McGarrigle, Roger McGinnis, Donald McG rew, james McKinley, Robert McMonagle, Carol McMurchie, Gail McNaught, William MacKay, Ronald Magorian, Cheryl Malek, Michael Maroutsos, George Martin, Charles Martin, Ellen Martin, lack Martin, joy Martin Kenneth Matson, Patricia Maynard, Thomas Mehl, Kathleen Mei, Leonard Mendenhall, Charles jr. Meyer, Paul jr. Michaud, Leonard Miller, Fred Miller, Raymond Mistler, Kenneth Mitchell, Sharon Mittelstedt, Daniel Morris, Marie Morse, Violet Mulvey, Marcia Muters, Clifford Muune, Andrew Nastron, Dorrothea Neeley, Douglas Nelson, Grant Nelson, john Newkirk, Gary Nordling, loAnne Oberlander, Patricia Ochal, james Olson, Sharon Orino, Sharon Ormsloy, George lr. Owens, Hugh IV Papkoff, David Parham, Helen Parkinson, Mary Payne, Stephen Pearson, Neil Appl Sci Bus Adm Elm Ed Elm Ed Pol Sci Pol Sci Elm Ed Hst Gst Hum Gst Soc Sci Bus Adm Elm Ed Bus Adm Hst Bus Adm Gst Hum Art Gst Soc Sci Hst Bus Adm Hst Gst Soc Sci Art Elm Ed Elm Ed Art Gst Soc Sci Bus Adm Econ Gst Soc Sci Bio Pol Sci Pol Sci Bus Adm Gst Soc Sci Hst Art Elm Ed Bus Adm Bus Adm Hst Math Gst Hum Gst Hum Bus Adm Bus Adm 2 Y .,x , JE f ,. 11 , 1 u .nj W , ' 1 - ' f nf , !-'V 201 Peter, Sally Peters, Peggy Pinkerton, Allen Polos, john Pooler, Larry Prideux, Wick Pugh, john Pugliese, Anthony Quaempts, Paul Raley, Sandra Rankin, Idabelle Reese, Edre Rice, Richard Rogers, julie Roise, Stephen jr. Romanski, james Roos, William Rosentreter, Lynn Rass, Eleanor Roth, Harriett Rutherford, Clyde Sakshaug, Elen Sandhu, joanne Sandmeyer, Ardena Sandoz, Rodney Saxton, Terry Schlicker, Bethene Schmidt, Karmen Schmidt, Susan Schmurr, Roger Scott, Dorothy Sexton, Vivian Sheridan, Michael Sherman, Joyce Shoemaker, joyce Simer, Kathleen Slaybaugh, Donald Smith, Claude Smith, Dianne Smith, Donald Smith, Leighton Snively, Gloria Snyder, Clifford Spence, David Starkovich, Victor Stevens, Daniel Stewart, Greg Sturgill, jay jr. Sugihara, Alice Sund, Gordon Pol Sci Elm Ed Hst Appl Sci Math Bus Adm Gst Hum Math Bus Adm Art Hst Pol Sci Hst Elm Ed Bus Adm Gst Soc Sci Gst Soc Sci Eng Soc Elm Ed Math Pol Sci Eng Soc Soc Gst Soc Sci Eng Bio Elm Ed Econ Art Elm Ed Bus Adm Hst Gst Soc Sci Bus Adm Hst FL French Appl Sci Pol Sci Elm Ed Geog Hst Art Bus Adm Earth Sci Math Pol Sci X, W D .- X .A ' X w' V ' ., , L. - at - ' 'un ml V W-4 ' W + .iii f L4 g + . 01. EEE Eze .4 X X , H, w nf W L. gi :gi LW 203 Swanson, Donna Tanner, james Taylor, Raymond Teresi, Charmiel Theil, Richard lr. Thomas, Kathleen Thomson, David Thorland, Curtis Train, Rachel Trebelhorn, Richard True, Sherrilyn Trzil, lan Tucker, Robert Tuncer, Ali Tuncer, lanice Usher, lo Anne Uttley, Thomas Vail, Nancy Van Demarr, Lee Vanderzanden, Donald Van Woerkom, David Van Winkle, Jerome Vernon, Carol Vollmer, Edwin jr. Waggoner, Beatrice Walker, Victor Ward, Delma Wasson, Robert Wedring, Gary Wehling, Frank Weinberg, Sharon Wendeborn, john West, Larry Westerberg, Sue Whitman, Kim Wilkinson, Anna Williams, Dorcas williams, can Willoughby, Paul Wilson, Donald Wittke, Walton Wittmayer, Woodrow Wood, lo Ann Woody, Robert Wulf, Roger Yasutome, james Yoshida, Susan Young, Margaret Math Bus Adm Speech 84 TA Bus Adm Elm Ed Hst Bus Adm Anth Hst Pol Sci Pol Sci Psych Math Hst Geog Bus Adm Appl Sci Bus Adm Art Psych Phil Bus Adm Elm Ed Hst Bus Adm Elm Ed Hst Appl Sci Gst Sci Pol Sci Elem Ed Elem Ed Gst Hum Pol Sci Bus Adm Math Psych Soc Appl Sci Elem Ed Art Elem Ed Math A nf f 1 M , bu u ' . 205 INDEX Academics I Academics Il .... Academics Ill Art ............ Baseball .............. Basketball ............... Business Administration ... Cafeteria ............... Chess Club ........... Cross Country .... Dances . . ......, Demonstrations .... Elections ............. English Composition ..... Experimental Psychology Festival of the Arts ....... Finals ...,............ Football ......... General Science .... Geodetic Science ... Geology Field Trip .... Golf .............. Homecoming .... Human Rights .... Introduction .............. jazz Festival ................ Middle East Studies Center... Model United Nations ....... Music .................... New Facilities .....,....... Physical Education Classes Physics and Chemistry .... . Preface ............... Printing Notations ... Publications .......... Registration ........... School of Social Work .... Seniors ............... Speakers .................... . . Staff ...................... State Board of Higher Education Student Government ........ Taming of the Shrew ........ Television Classes ..... Tennis ........ Track ........... White Gallery ....., Winter Carnival .... Wrestling ........ 206 16 96 1 76 108 1 70 52 98 142 70 46 80 146 152 30 182 158 186 34 26 104 48 166 42 62 4 1 74 112 140 110 92 22 100 3 208 124 12 1 78 194 84 207 32 74 128 18 1 68 162 88 116 134 Editors-in-Chief: Graphic Design: VIKING STAFF David Ball Corinna Campbell Werner Bittner Corinna Campbell David Harriman Sports Writers: David Buell Staff Writers: Vi Robert Henselman rginia Campbell Don Cioeta Leighton Smith Staff Photographers: Acknowledgments: David Ball Brian Bell Eva Bushman George Cully james Felt Clyde Keller joe Melena Steve Overton Doug Riese james Bishop Gordon Clark David josephson Fawzi Khoury Sam McKinney James Mitchell Pat Oberlander Linda Torrey john Wendeborn Cover Design: Corinna Campbell Endsheet Design: David Harriman Advisors: Wilma Morrison and Gerald Penk, editorial: Arvid Orbeck, art and design. 207 PRINTING NOTATIONS Printing House: Agency Lithograph Company, Portland, Oregon Type Face: Optima Headline Face: Aurora Condensed Cover Stock: Riverside, Group C Paper Stock: Colonial Sonata Kidskin Book Insert Stock: Lamiluke Endsheet Stock: Colonial Sonata Kidskin Cover 208 Ill I v -1- 15 Jw A1 my ,N-pb. 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Suggestions in the Portland State University - Viking Yearbook (Portland, OR) collection:

Portland State University - Viking Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 1

1963

Portland State University - Viking Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

1964

Portland State University - Viking Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

1965

Portland State University - Viking Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

1967

Portland State University - Viking Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

1968

Portland State University - Viking Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

1969


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