In 1929-1930, Oregon State offered physical eduction classes in field hockey, as well as intramural competition. This image was taken in the library quad. Agriculture Hall (now Strand Agriculture Hall) is in the background.
Buildings included in or around the quad are the Bandstand, Agriculture Hall (now Strand Agriculture Hall), the Dairy Building (now Gilkey Hall) and the Library (now Kidder Hall).
Theta Sigma Phi is a national professional society for women in journalism and communications. Oregon State’s Alpha Eta chapter was established in 1924, replacing a predecessor organization called The Scribe. The national organization, now known as the Association for Women in Communications, allowed men to become members in 1972.
This view of Oregon Agricultural College from the lower campus shows (from left to right): Waldo Hall; Education Hall; Fairbanks Hall (cupola visible on skyline); Strand Agricultural Hall; the Women's Building; Benton Hall; and Apperson Hall. Fourteenth Street was not extended across lower campus until the 1960s.
The Serpentine Dance makes a brief comeback after OSC won the Civil War football game, clinching the 1942 Rose Bowl berth. Another view is shown on the cover of the January, 1942 issue of The Oregon Stater (Vol II, No 4). The photograph is taken from the Memorial Union balcony. Milam Hall sits on the left, with a view of Gilkey and Strand Agricultural Halls to its right.
Includes Benton Hall in foreground and Strand Agriculture Hall and Gilkey Hall in the background. Bicycle leaning against the exterior wall of Benton Hall.