This site requires Javascript to be turned on. Please enable Javascript and reload the page.
Thanks for your patience during our recent outage at scalar.usc.edu. While Scalar content is loading normally now, saving is still slow, and Scalar's 'additional metadata' features have been disabled, which may interfere with features like timelines and maps that depend on metadata. This also means that saving a page or media item will remove its additional metadata. If this occurs, you can use the 'All versions' link at the bottom of the page to restore the earlier version. We are continuing to troubleshoot, and will provide further updates as needed. Note that this only affects Scalar projects at scalar.usc.edu, and not those hosted elsewhere.
A Photographic History of Oregon State University
Main Menu
A Photographic History of Oregon State University
Welcome to A Photographic History of Oregon State University
OSU's Early Years, 1858 - 1889
Builders of a Great University
Architectural Harmony and Function: Development of OSU's Campus
Academics at OSU
Producers of Knowledge
Campus Life and Culture
Campus Organizations at OSU
Student Athletes at OSU
The West Point of the West
Prominent Faculty and Alumni
Larry Landis with OSU Digital Publishing
9d087289d46d0c9b0a147e7761e40d9b5f746896
OSU Libraries & Press
Electrical and Computer Engineering Building, ca. 1988
1
2015-09-01T23:43:57-07:00
Larry Landis with OSU Digital Publishing
9d087289d46d0c9b0a147e7761e40d9b5f746896
5629
4
Electrical and Computer Engineering Building, ca. 1988. Opened in October 1988, it contains a smokestack from the 1909 heating plant that serves as a solar heated air return for the building’s heating system. The building was renamed Owen Hall in 1999, in memory of Professor Thomas Owen, chair of the Electrical and Computer Engineering Dept. and Dean of Engineering from 1990 until his death in 1997. Today it houses the School of Civil and Construction Engineering. (P3, 1989 Beaver Yearbook photos)
plain
2015-10-23T20:45:00-07:00
Keenan Ward
2cdcd8d7f43837000f1c46b62b720aeba303ca29
This page has paths:
1
2015-09-21T23:43:43-07:00
Larry Landis with OSU Digital Publishing
9d087289d46d0c9b0a147e7761e40d9b5f746896
Architectural Harmony and Function: Development of OSU's Campus
Korey Jackson
27
image_header
181595
2015-10-28T21:43:44-07:00
Korey Jackson
94cd93e587a0b4a5263c90ec4f2facaa0c913083
Contents of this path:
1
2015-09-01T23:12:51-07:00
Administration Building, ca. 1895
10
Administration Building, ca. 1895. This view, looking southwest, was taken a few years after the college moved from its downtown Corvallis location into this building, which is now Benton Hall. The trees on the left are part of the orchard that existed when the original college farm was purchased in 1871. (P25:1330)
plain
2015-10-23T20:15:52-07:00
1
2015-09-01T23:09:16-07:00
Mechanical Hall fire aftermath, September 1898
4
Mechanical Hall fire aftermath, September 1898. The fire that destroyed Mechanical Hall the night of September 26, 1898 was a devastating, but temporary, setback for OAC. Though classrooms, shops, athletic facilities, and electrical generating facilities were destroyed, the college persevered. The new gymnasium and armory, already under construction, was completed in early 1899. Through the efforts of regent and former legislator John Apperson, state funds quickly were approved for a new mechanical hall. A new powerhouse was completed in 1900, providing a stable source of electricity for the campus. (P101:517)
plain
2015-10-23T20:43:50-07:00
1
2015-09-01T16:47:58-07:00
Stock judging pavilion, 1912
5
Stock judging pavilion, 1912. This facility, designed by John Bennes, was used by the Animal Husbandry Department for the showing of animals and to afford students “an opportunity to examine, score, test, and otherwise study the splendid specimens” of the college stock and those of farmers and breeders. Unfortunately the facility burned a few months after completion due to a malfunctioning woodstove. It was replaced with a similar, but more modest, structure. The recently completed (2012) James E. Oldfield Animal Teaching Center, which has a large demonstration area, includes a number of design elements similar to the 1912 pavilion. (P25:1161)
plain
2015-10-23T20:24:13-07:00
1
2015-09-01T23:29:57-07:00
Construction of the temporary war barracks, 1918
4
Construction of the temporary war barracks, 1918. The implementation of the Students' Army Training Corps (SATC) in 1918 necessitated additional housing for male students. This building was quickly constructed to the west of the Forestry Building (visible to the right) and later used as a dormitory for men (Poling Hall). The dorm rooms held from two to six men, and the basement area included a cafeteria. The dormitory was used until 1928, when a new Men’s Dormitory (now Weatherford Hall) was built on the location. (HC 1342)
plain
2015-10-09T21:02:20-07:00
1
2015-09-01T16:39:23-07:00
YMCA, Y Hut, ca. 1920
6
Y-Hut, ca. 1920. Built to accommodate a larger YMCA presence on campus during World War I, the Y-Hut was located from 1918 to 1927 where the Memorial Union is today. It was erected by the National War Work Council of the YMCA. The Y-Hut was removed in early 1927 to make way for the MU. The YWCA remained in Shepard Hall. (HC 1208)
plain
2015-10-23T20:21:36-07:00
1
2015-10-05T22:07:52-07:00
View of the Library Quad and West Campus, ca. 1930
2
View of the Library quad and west campus, ca. 1930. This photo shows several of the buildings constructed during Kerr’s administration, including the Men’s Dormitory (Weatherford Hall), the Memorial Union (dome is visible), Agriculture Hall, the Women’s Building, the Home Economics Building, Snell Hall, the Commerce Building, the Library, and the Bandstand. (P17:31)
plain
2015-10-23T21:18:40-07:00
1
2015-09-01T16:46:08-07:00
Aerial sign on the roof of the Armory, ca. 1940
7
Directional sign on the roof of the Armory, ca. 1940. This sign was painted on the roof of the Armory in the mid to late 1930s by Corvallis boy scouts. At the time it was touted as the largest airplane “road sign” in the upper Willamette Valley. (P16:828)
plain
2015-10-09T21:03:42-07:00
1
2015-09-01T16:43:07-07:00
Delivering fuel to the steam plant, ca. 1940
6
Delivering fuel to the steam plant, ca. 1940. This delivery truck from the Corvallis Lumber Company is unloading wood chips (hogged fuel). The lumber company’s mill was located at the confluence of the Marys and Willamette Rivers in Corvallis, and its mill waste was an important fuel source for the college. Hogged fuel, which also arrived by rail car for many years, was used by the steam plant into the 1970s. (P16:803)
plain
2015-10-09T21:04:43-07:00
1
2015-09-01T23:34:09-07:00
Married students at Adair Village housing for veterans, ca. 1946
3
Married students at Adair Village housing for veterans, ca. 1946. The large number of returning veterans after World War II created a severe shortage of student housing at OSC. As a temporary measure to alleviate part of the shortage, the college utilized part of the former Camp Adair military training cantonment to house returning veterans, many of whom were married. The Adair Village housing, which consisted of 326 units, opened in the fall of 1946. (HC 816 #13)
plain
2015-10-09T21:05:36-07:00
1
2015-09-01T23:33:05-07:00
Students walking by Quonset huts, ca. 1946
3
Students walking by Quonset huts, ca. 1946. Like many colleges and universities, Oregon State experienced a significant increase in student enrollment immediately after World War II. The resulting space challenges were met in a variety ways, including the use of Quonset huts as temporary buildings in many locations on campus. The buildings in this photograph were located on the west side of the Home Economics Building (Milam Hall). Quonsets were developed during the war as all-purpose buildings that could be assembled quickly and in almost any location. (P25:1807)
plain
2015-10-09T21:06:08-07:00
1
2015-09-01T23:35:52-07:00
Dearborn Hall, ca. 1950
5
Dearborn Hall, ca. 1950. Constructed in 1949, it was the home of OSU’s electrical engineering program for many years. It was the last of three interconnected buildings on Campus Way; the others were Batcheller and Covell halls. It was named for Richard H. Dearborn, head of the Electrical Engineering Dept. from 1914 to 1934 and Dean of Engineering from 1935 to 1944. (P82:430)
plain
2015-10-21T22:30:09-07:00
1
2015-09-01T23:37:35-07:00
College Playhouse, ca. 1951
4
College Playhouse, ca. 1951. The old armory and gymnasium building was converted to a playhouse for Oregon State’s excellent theatre program in 1950. It was renamed Mitchell Playhouse in 1961, in memory of C.B. Mitchell, longtime chair of the Speech Dept. and director of the theatre program. The building was used as the playhouse until 1990, when fire safety concerns closed it for that purpose. In 1992 it was restored with gift funds from the Wayne and Gladys Valley Foundation, and reopened as the Gladys Valley Gymnastics Center. (P16:814)
plain
2015-10-23T20:33:46-07:00
1
2015-09-01T23:10:59-07:00
Freshman co-ed with new campus street signs, fall 1953
3
Freshman co-ed with new campus street signs, fall 1953. This student showed off the new street signs that were installed on campus. The signs were orange with black lettering – the inverse of today’s orange on black street signs. (P82:64 #1473)
plain
2015-10-09T21:08:09-07:00
1
2015-09-01T23:38:47-07:00
Chemical Engineering Building, February 1957
4
Chemical Engineering Building, February 1957. The building, designed by Portland architect Herman Brookman, was constructed in 1955. It was named in 1986 for George Gleeson, Dean of Engineering from 1944 to 1970. (P82:17 #2154b)
plain
2015-10-23T20:35:58-07:00
1
2015-09-01T23:39:57-07:00
Oceanography Building, July 1965
4
Oceanography Building, July 1965. Built in 1964, the building was the home of OSU’s rapidly growing oceanography department. It was named Burt Hall in 1987 after Wayne Burt, who was instrumental in establishing OSU’s oceanography program in the 1950s. (P57:3680b)
plain
2015-10-23T20:38:12-07:00
1
2015-09-01T23:41:14-07:00
Clearing snow on campus, January 1969
3
Clearing snow on campus, January 1969. OSU rarely shuts down due to snowfall. This is due in part to the work of campus crews to keep sidewalks, parking lots and roadways clear of snow and ice. This front loader was clearing snow on Monroe Avenue after a major snowstorm in late January 1969. (P3:1711)
plain
2015-10-09T21:09:31-07:00
1
2015-09-01T23:42:10-07:00
Crop Science Building, 1981
7
Crop Science Building, 1981. This building was completed in 1981 as the home of OSU’s crop science program, which included work in wheat and hops breeding. It is one of a few buildings on campus not named for an OSU donor, faculty member or administrator. (P57:6817)
plain
2015-10-23T20:17:51-07:00
1
2015-09-01T23:43:57-07:00
Electrical and Computer Engineering Building, ca. 1988
4
Electrical and Computer Engineering Building, ca. 1988. Opened in October 1988, it contains a smokestack from the 1909 heating plant that serves as a solar heated air return for the building’s heating system. The building was renamed Owen Hall in 1999, in memory of Professor Thomas Owen, chair of the Electrical and Computer Engineering Dept. and Dean of Engineering from 1990 until his death in 1997. Today it houses the School of Civil and Construction Engineering. (P3, 1989 Beaver Yearbook photos)
plain
2015-10-23T20:45:00-07:00
1
2015-09-01T23:45:16-07:00
Industrial Building fire, July 1992
5
Industrial Building fire, July 1992. The fire destroyed half of this building, including most of OSU Printing & Mailing Services’ facilities and equipment. The losses were valued at $1.9 million for the building and $4 million in printing equipment. The Industrial Building was originally constructed in 1947 to house the Forest Products Lab. The destroyed portion of the building was reconstructed in 1996, and the entire building was renamed Cascade Hall. (P120, Accession 2009:011)
plain
2015-10-23T20:26:40-07:00
This page has tags:
1
2015-10-14T20:54:23-07:00
Keenan Ward
2cdcd8d7f43837000f1c46b62b720aeba303ca29
OSU Buildings
Keenan Ward
2
google_maps
2015-10-21T22:24:09-07:00
Keenan Ward
2cdcd8d7f43837000f1c46b62b720aeba303ca29
Contents of this tag:
1
2015-09-01T23:12:51-07:00
Administration Building, ca. 1895
10
Administration Building, ca. 1895. This view, looking southwest, was taken a few years after the college moved from its downtown Corvallis location into this building, which is now Benton Hall. The trees on the left are part of the orchard that existed when the original college farm was purchased in 1871. (P25:1330)
plain
2015-10-23T20:15:52-07:00
1
2015-09-01T23:42:10-07:00
Crop Science Building, 1981
7
Crop Science Building, 1981. This building was completed in 1981 as the home of OSU’s crop science program, which included work in wheat and hops breeding. It is one of a few buildings on campus not named for an OSU donor, faculty member or administrator. (P57:6817)
plain
2015-10-23T20:17:51-07:00
1
2015-09-01T16:39:23-07:00
YMCA, Y Hut, ca. 1920
6
Y-Hut, ca. 1920. Built to accommodate a larger YMCA presence on campus during World War I, the Y-Hut was located from 1918 to 1927 where the Memorial Union is today. It was erected by the National War Work Council of the YMCA. The Y-Hut was removed in early 1927 to make way for the MU. The YWCA remained in Shepard Hall. (HC 1208)
plain
2015-10-23T20:21:36-07:00
1
2015-09-01T23:35:52-07:00
Dearborn Hall, ca. 1950
5
Dearborn Hall, ca. 1950. Constructed in 1949, it was the home of OSU’s electrical engineering program for many years. It was the last of three interconnected buildings on Campus Way; the others were Batcheller and Covell halls. It was named for Richard H. Dearborn, head of the Electrical Engineering Dept. from 1914 to 1934 and Dean of Engineering from 1935 to 1944. (P82:430)
plain
2015-10-21T22:30:09-07:00
1
2015-09-01T16:47:58-07:00
Stock judging pavilion, 1912
5
Stock judging pavilion, 1912. This facility, designed by John Bennes, was used by the Animal Husbandry Department for the showing of animals and to afford students “an opportunity to examine, score, test, and otherwise study the splendid specimens” of the college stock and those of farmers and breeders. Unfortunately the facility burned a few months after completion due to a malfunctioning woodstove. It was replaced with a similar, but more modest, structure. The recently completed (2012) James E. Oldfield Animal Teaching Center, which has a large demonstration area, includes a number of design elements similar to the 1912 pavilion. (P25:1161)
plain
2015-10-23T20:24:13-07:00
1
2015-09-01T23:45:16-07:00
Industrial Building fire, July 1992
5
Industrial Building fire, July 1992. The fire destroyed half of this building, including most of OSU Printing & Mailing Services’ facilities and equipment. The losses were valued at $1.9 million for the building and $4 million in printing equipment. The Industrial Building was originally constructed in 1947 to house the Forest Products Lab. The destroyed portion of the building was reconstructed in 1996, and the entire building was renamed Cascade Hall. (P120, Accession 2009:011)
plain
2015-10-23T20:26:40-07:00
1
2015-09-01T23:39:57-07:00
Oceanography Building, July 1965
4
Oceanography Building, July 1965. Built in 1964, the building was the home of OSU’s rapidly growing oceanography department. It was named Burt Hall in 1987 after Wayne Burt, who was instrumental in establishing OSU’s oceanography program in the 1950s. (P57:3680b)
plain
2015-10-23T20:38:12-07:00
1
2015-09-01T23:09:16-07:00
Mechanical Hall fire aftermath, September 1898
4
Mechanical Hall fire aftermath, September 1898. The fire that destroyed Mechanical Hall the night of September 26, 1898 was a devastating, but temporary, setback for OAC. Though classrooms, shops, athletic facilities, and electrical generating facilities were destroyed, the college persevered. The new gymnasium and armory, already under construction, was completed in early 1899. Through the efforts of regent and former legislator John Apperson, state funds quickly were approved for a new mechanical hall. A new powerhouse was completed in 1900, providing a stable source of electricity for the campus. (P101:517)
plain
2015-10-23T20:43:50-07:00
1
2015-09-01T23:43:57-07:00
Electrical and Computer Engineering Building, ca. 1988
4
Electrical and Computer Engineering Building, ca. 1988. Opened in October 1988, it contains a smokestack from the 1909 heating plant that serves as a solar heated air return for the building’s heating system. The building was renamed Owen Hall in 1999, in memory of Professor Thomas Owen, chair of the Electrical and Computer Engineering Dept. and Dean of Engineering from 1990 until his death in 1997. Today it houses the School of Civil and Construction Engineering. (P3, 1989 Beaver Yearbook photos)
plain
2015-10-23T20:45:00-07:00
1
2015-09-01T23:37:35-07:00
College Playhouse, ca. 1951
4
College Playhouse, ca. 1951. The old armory and gymnasium building was converted to a playhouse for Oregon State’s excellent theatre program in 1950. It was renamed Mitchell Playhouse in 1961, in memory of C.B. Mitchell, longtime chair of the Speech Dept. and director of the theatre program. The building was used as the playhouse until 1990, when fire safety concerns closed it for that purpose. In 1992 it was restored with gift funds from the Wayne and Gladys Valley Foundation, and reopened as the Gladys Valley Gymnastics Center. (P16:814)
plain
2015-10-23T20:33:46-07:00
1
2015-10-07T23:01:55-07:00
Cadets in Front of Benton Hall, ca. 1892
4
Cadets in front of Benton Hall, ca. 1892. What is now known as Benton Hall was the first building constructed on the original college farm, and has been the centerpiece of the eastern side of campus ever since. The cadet corps is in formation in front of the building in this photograph, perhaps to welcome the college's new president, John Bloss. In 1872 the college became the first in the Pacific Northwest to offer military instruction. (HC 38)
plain
2015-10-21T22:36:05-07:00
1
2015-09-01T23:38:47-07:00
Chemical Engineering Building, February 1957
4
Chemical Engineering Building, February 1957. The building, designed by Portland architect Herman Brookman, was constructed in 1955. It was named in 1986 for George Gleeson, Dean of Engineering from 1944 to 1970. (P82:17 #2154b)
plain
2015-10-23T20:35:58-07:00
1
2015-10-07T22:50:07-07:00
Residents in the Margaret Snell Hall Living Room, ca. 1925
3
Residents in the Margaret Snell Hall living room, ca. 1925. Snell Hall (Ballard Extension Hall) opened in 1921 as residence hall for women. Like Waldo Hall, it included a large, comfortable common living room area complete with fireplace. This image appeared in the 1926 Beaver yearbook. (P16:995)
plain
2015-10-21T22:38:26-07:00
1
2015-10-05T22:35:14-07:00
Teaching in the New Wing of the Home Economics Building, January 1954
3
Teaching in the new wing of the Home Economics Building, January 1954. This new wing and remodeled parts of the existing building provided students with a wide range of facilities, including food, nutrition, textiles and home furnishing laboratories and spaces for family meal service instruction and food demonstration. (P 82:42 #1574)
plain
2015-10-23T21:07:29-07:00
1
2015-10-05T21:22:23-07:00
Cadet Corps and Band in Formation on Lawn in Front of the Administration Building, 1916
3
Cadet Corps and band in formation on lawn in front of the Administration Building, 1916. Colonel McAlexander, Commandant of Cadets, is in the front row, far left. (HC 85)
plain
2015-10-23T20:46:02-07:00
1
2015-10-07T22:48:57-07:00
Students and Faculty Assembled in the Administration Building, ca. 1905
3
Students and faculty assembled in the Administration Building, ca. 1905. The assembly hall, sometimes referred to as the chapel, was located in the middle of the second floor of what is now Benton Hall. In the first few years after the building was opened, the space was used for chapel services, which students were required to attend. It was also used for general assemblies, as well as lectures and musical performances. This area later became the library reading room. (P16:699)
plain
2015-10-23T20:46:54-07:00
1
2015-10-07T22:52:26-07:00
Waldo Hall Reception, ca. 1910
3
Waldo Hall reception, ca. 1910. Waldo Hall included a large living room area that was suitable for events such as this reception. Some of the columns are still visible on Waldo Hall’s second floor. (P25:1220)
plain
2015-10-21T22:33:42-07:00
1
2015-10-05T20:58:53-07:00
Construction of Quonset Huts, July 1946
3
Construction of Quonset huts, July 1946. These were constructed on the south side of the Engineering Laboratory (Graf Hall) – one of many locations where Quonset huts were used on campus. A few of the Quonset huts built during this time period remain on campus today, most notably the Naval ROTC Armory. (HC 932)
plain
2015-10-23T20:48:25-07:00
1
2015-10-07T22:44:03-07:00
Students Sunbathing on the Roof of Snell Hall, ca. 1962
3
Students sunbathing on the roof of Snell Hall, ca. 1962. OSU students to this day “catch some rays” on the first warm and sunny days in the spring. Snell Hall was used as a women’s residence hall from 1958 to 1973. (P57:1152)
plain
2015-10-23T20:49:19-07:00
1
2015-10-05T22:38:37-07:00
Students Working with Farm Equipment in the Farm Mechanics Building, ca. 1912
3
Students working with farm equipment in the Farm Mechanics Building, ca. 1912. The building featured space for demonstration and operation of heavy farm equipment, machinery for testing farm equipment, and included a wide variety of representative machines. The 1914-15 college catalog stated “all of this expensive equipment is available to students in Farm Mechanics in the regular and short course work.” This building is Gilmore Hall today. (P47:1)
plain
2015-10-23T21:03:22-07:00
1
2015-10-07T22:18:26-07:00
OSU Antarctic Station, 1974
2
OSU Antarctic Station, 1974. OSU oceanographers studied Antarctic under-ice water temperature, currents and salinity as part of a National Science Foundation research grant. The four-member team lived in one of the ten feet by twelve feet huts in the photo; the other served as their workspace. In September and October 1974, the crew experienced air temperatures with a wind chill of more than minus 100 degrees Fahrenheit. This photo first appeared in the January 1975 Oregon Stater. (P57:4948)
plain
2015-10-07T23:45:13-07:00
1
2015-10-05T22:04:57-07:00
New Kerr Library and the Old Bandstand, 1963
2
New Kerr Library and the old Bandstand, 1963. This photograph depicts the “old” and “new” OSU – the bandstand, which was a class gift and built in 1910, and the new library, which opened in 1963, representing the modern research university. The bandstand was demolished soon after this photograph was taken. (P82:45 #2814)
plain
2015-10-23T21:11:17-07:00
1
2015-10-05T22:06:21-07:00
Dedication of the Chemistry Building, December 2, 1939
2
Dedication of the Chemistry Building, December 2, 1939. President Peavy (front row, right), Governor Charles Sprague (front row, center) Chancellor Frederick M. Hunter (second row, second from left) and members of the State Board of Higher Education attended the dedication of the building – one of a handful of buildings built at any public higher education campus in Oregon in the 1930s. Board member Beatrice Walton Sackett is in the front row, left. Linus Pauling (not pictured) was also at the building’s dedication. (P16:733)
plain
2015-10-23T21:16:31-07:00
1
2015-10-05T22:07:52-07:00
View of the Library Quad and West Campus, ca. 1930
2
View of the Library quad and west campus, ca. 1930. This photo shows several of the buildings constructed during Kerr’s administration, including the Men’s Dormitory (Weatherford Hall), the Memorial Union (dome is visible), Agriculture Hall, the Women’s Building, the Home Economics Building, Snell Hall, the Commerce Building, the Library, and the Bandstand. (P17:31)
plain
2015-10-23T21:18:40-07:00
1
2015-10-12T21:18:22-07:00
Keenan Ward
2cdcd8d7f43837000f1c46b62b720aeba303ca29
1980s
Keenan Ward
1
plain
2015-10-12T21:18:22-07:00
Keenan Ward
2cdcd8d7f43837000f1c46b62b720aeba303ca29
Contents of this tag:
1
2015-09-01T23:42:10-07:00
Crop Science Building, 1981
7
Crop Science Building, 1981. This building was completed in 1981 as the home of OSU’s crop science program, which included work in wheat and hops breeding. It is one of a few buildings on campus not named for an OSU donor, faculty member or administrator. (P57:6817)
plain
2015-10-23T20:17:51-07:00
1
2015-08-20T20:47:01-07:00
Judy Spoelstra, 1982
6
Judy Spoelstra in action against Montana State, 1982. Spoelstra played at OSU for two seasons, 1982 and 1983, earning Kodak All-American second team honors in 1983. She led the team to the 1982 Women’s NIT title and an appearance in the 1983 NCAA tournament. Spoelstra returned to OSU in 1995 to inherit basketball head coaching duties from her former coach, Aki Hill. She coached the team for ten seasons, compiling an overall record of 133 wins and 158 losses. Her teams played in the 1996 NCAA tournament and in the WNIT from 2001 to 2004. Spoelstra received the John R. Wooden Pac-10 conference coach of the year in 2000, and was named to the OSU Sports Hall of Fame in 1994. (P57:6979)
plain
2015-10-09T20:15:36-07:00
1
2015-09-01T23:43:57-07:00
Electrical and Computer Engineering Building, ca. 1988
4
Electrical and Computer Engineering Building, ca. 1988. Opened in October 1988, it contains a smokestack from the 1909 heating plant that serves as a solar heated air return for the building’s heating system. The building was renamed Owen Hall in 1999, in memory of Professor Thomas Owen, chair of the Electrical and Computer Engineering Dept. and Dean of Engineering from 1990 until his death in 1997. Today it houses the School of Civil and Construction Engineering. (P3, 1989 Beaver Yearbook photos)
plain
2015-10-23T20:45:00-07:00
1
2015-10-05T22:45:34-07:00
Wilma Mankiller with the Officers of the OSU Native American Student Association, Fall 1988
2
Wilma Mankiller with the officers of the OSU Native American Student Association, Fall 1988. The Native American Student Association sponsors the OSU Powwow. Mankiller, third from the right, was the chief of the Cherokee Nation, a position she held from 1985 to 1995. She was on campus in the Fall of 1988 to lecture and attend the OSU Powwow. She returned to lecture again at OSU in April 2007. (P94, Accession 97:100)
plain
2015-10-07T23:40:51-07:00
1
2015-09-22T01:10:56-07:00
Women’s track coaches Will Stephens & Joni Huntley, 1981
2
Women’s track coach Will Stephens conferring with assistant coach Joni Huntley, 1981. Stephens developed a strong women’s track and field program at Oregon State, assisted by Huntley in 1981. Photo by Mike Shields (P57:6211)
plain
2015-10-09T20:15:11-07:00
1
2015-10-26T21:49:57-07:00
Delta Upsilon fraternity’s 60th anniversary celebration invitation, January 1982
2
Delta Upsilon fraternity’s 60th anniversary celebration invitation, January 1982. Linus Pauling was the keynote speaker for the fraternity’s celebration. Pauling was a member of the fraternity during his student days at OAC. The OAC chapter was chartered on Jan. 14, 1922. (MC–Delta Upsilon)
plain
2015-10-26T21:53:56-07:00
1
2015-10-07T22:45:14-07:00
Winners of the Six-Kilometer Homecoming Fun Run with Benny Beaver, 1983
2
Winners of the six-kilometer Homecoming Fun Run with Benny Beaver, 1983. Sponsored by the Alumni Association Student Council, the fun run is typical of more contemporary homecoming events. (P57:7363)
plain
2015-10-09T20:33:29-07:00
1
2015-09-22T18:07:03-07:00
Karl Van Calcar, ca. 1985
1
Karl Van Calcar running against Washington State, ca. 1985. Van Calcar, who ran at OSU from 1984-1988, was a five time All-American for Oregon State – three times in track and twice in cross-country. The 1500 and 5000 meter runs and the 3000 meter steeplechase were his specialties. He won the steeplechase at the 1988 NCAA Championships – the last Beaver to win an individual national title before track and field was eliminated. (Photo by Mike Shields, courtesy of OSU Athletic Communications)
plain
2015-09-22T18:07:03-07:00