Dr. Walter Reif, students, and faculty sitting in Price Chapel in Old College Hall and listening to an electronic organ. Dr. Walter Reif was Pacific University's Chaplain.
Designed by Robert C. Skippen from the shell of a former Camp Adair building and named for Tabitha Moffat Brown, the building was the Student Union building and book store for a time during the mid-Twentieth Century. Brown was later called the Mother Symbol of Oregon and was a co-Founder of Pacific University.
Architectural drawing of the renovation of Brown Hall. Designed by Robert C. Skippen from the shell of a former Camp Adair building and named for Tabitha Moffat Brown, the building was the Student Union building for a time during the mid-Twentieth Century. Brown was later called the Mother Symbol of Oregon and was a co-Founder of Pacific University.
Photo of the renovation of Brown Hall at Pacific University. Designed by Robert C. Skippen from the shell of a former Camp Adair building and named for Tabitha Moffat Brown, the building was the Student Union building for a time during the mid-Twentieth Century. Brown was later called the Mother Symbol of Oregon and was a co-Founder of Pacific University.
Photo of Dean Levering Reynolds reading a citation for Dr. Harold Benhamin, who is receiving a Litt.D.(Doctors of Letters) degree at Pacific University. This degree is usually given as an honorary degree in recognition of outstanding scholarship or teaching merits. President M.A.F. Ritchie is standing to the left.
On Pacific University's Founders Day, President Ritchie and Dr. Graham Griswold listen while Dr. Raymond Walker reads the citation for Mr. Griswold's Distinguished Citizenship Award.
Exterior and angled view of Pacific University's Carnegie Library, also known as Carnegie Hall, with two students in foreground. The building was built in 1912 and named after Andrew Carnegie, who donated $20,000 for the project as part of his Carnegie Library Foundation initiative.
Exterior and angled view of Pacific University's Carnegie Library, also known as Carnegie Hall, with two students in foreground. The building was built in 1912 and named after Andrew Carnegie, who donated $20,000 for the project as part of his Carnegie Library Foundation initiative.