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People/Legends 1

In Memory: Richard Hines, June 22, 1946 – May 11, 2021

June 8, 2021 By Carolyn

University Librarian Emeritus and former Dean of Information Resources, Richard (Rich) Hines passed away on May 11, 2021 in St. Augustine, Florida, at the age of 74.

Rich Hines
Rich Hines, 1997

Dean Rich Hines, M.S. arrived at UP in 1997 as interim director of the Clark Library and served as permanent director from 1998-2006. During those years he provided oversight for the library and Instructional Media Center. In fact, from 2002-2006, Hines assumed dual roles as Library Director and Dean of Information Resources. And was called back from retirement to continue as Chief Information Officer for five months in 2007-08.

During his years as Library Director, the main book collection was reorganized by subject with some sections reclassified by call number to the Library of Congress classification system. The library organization was restructured to meet new needs with the redesign of an access services department combining circulation, periodicals services, interlibrary loan, reference, and outreach services and user education. Additional patron-use computer workstations were increased throughout the library, and access to electronic databases and library consortium resources improved for on- and off-campus use. Dean Hines is also credited for laying the groundwork for the successful library instruction program in place today.

Rich Hines
Rich Hines, September 2001

As Dean of Information Resources, Hines was responsible for extending the reach of technology services across campus. His team introduced the UP community to the first version of the campus portal, Campus Pipeline (the precursor to today’s PilotsUP), and brought computer-lines and modem-lines to each residence hall (bringing email to the reach of every corner of campus– in the long-ago time when computers and phones need wall-connections!). Leading Information Resources, Dean Hines reorganized Computer and Telecommunication Services from audio-visual equipment services into a technical support unit of experts for infrastructure, information systems, and web services bringing on high-quality integrated technology-based services to faculty, staff, and students.

As service was the hallmark of Dean Hines’ work ethic, it seems fitting to share these words from him in an email to the library staff as he was closing up his office to begin retirement in 2006: “As I sit here doing my final cleanup before Drew [Harrington] arrives, I want to take this chance to say thanks to each and every one of you. Without a doubt, the library stands out as THE service unit on campus. There is only one reason why this is so, and that’s YOU! Your efforts have made this a far better place than it was when I arrived in 1997. Your commitment to service is known throughout campus, so much so that the Northwest Commission [on Colleges and Universities] doing the University’s 10 year review [in 2001] specifically commended us on our service ethic.”

Rich Hines and members of the Clark Library Staff in 1999
Rich Hines and members of the Library Staff, 1999

Rich Hines with Library Staff and Instructional Media Staff in 1998 https://digital.up.edu/Documents/Detail/1998-the-log/1132?item=11717

Rich Hines and Library Staff in 2001
https://digital.up.edu/Documents/Detail/2001-the-log/1144?item=14396

Filed Under: People/Legends, People/Legends 1 1 Comment

A Given Life: Entwined with Learning

June 4, 2020 By Carolyn

Br. David Martin, Christie Hall Library, 1940 (click to enlarge)

Brother David Martin, C.S.C., arrived on the Bluff in 1928. With no college degree (yet). He was immediately named the Librarian. The irony became sort of an inspiration. He was to hold the office of Library director until 1966.

Faced with many challenges, Br. David worked in stages; waiting, proposing, pushing toward the possible and making progress. First, having charge of a limited collection of books, he created a dedicated reading-room for student study by moving the library from West (now Waldschmidt) Hall to Christie Hall where there was space for reading tables.  Next, or perhaps already within that first vision, he began to plan for a Library building, an impossible ambition in those days when there was only a single dedicated classroom building (Science Hall, 1937). But Br. David was patient and persistent. And prepared not only the design of a modern college library but also himself through the years of waiting. When the Library was built in 1958 — in no small part through his own efforts as promoter and chief fund-raiser — Br. David had, in the meanwhile, picked up four advanced degrees, founded the Library Summer School, and earned the rank of Dean of the School of Library Science. 

Library Science Students and Faculty, 1945 (click to enlarge)

But, he wasn’t finished yet. Coincident with his retirement as Dean of the Library, the University Archives was established, with Br. David as the first University Archivist (June 1, 1966). Collating, arranging, and indexing historical files accumulated through more than sixty years of University life was to be the work, but his first order of business was again creating space and access– once again moving resources out from closet filing cabinets in West (Waldschmidt) Hall across campus to the library, and eventually to Shipstad Hall.

Br. David Martin, Archivist, 1966 (click to enlarge)

His fifty-five years of service (retiring from the Archives in 1983!) is a life-time of contributions to the growth and maturity of the University of Portland. The two developed together, Br. David and the University he loved. Br. David was ever learning and put his curiosity and knowledge into the hands of students and the University community. As his successors both the Clark Library and the Archives & Museum host digital collections available through the Clark Library web page and the historical page-posts on the Museum web page. Continuing his legacy.

Related posts about the Library:
The 1958 Library doubled in size with the 1979 addition; the 2013 renovation prioritized electronic learning and student study space.

Christie Hall Library

Filed Under: People/Legends, People/Legends 1 Leave a Comment

In Memory: Rev. Claude A. Pomerleau, C.S.C., August 16, 1938 – July 21, 2019

August 8, 2019 By Carolyn

United Nations Peace Medal given to Rev. Joseph Powers, C.S.C. by the United Nations for his efforts in establishing and promoting the Peace Studies Program at UP. (University Museum)

Peace studies began at the University of Portland in 1975. Fr. Joseph Powers, C.S.C., the then Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, acting as impresario. This program of Interdisciplinary Studies was at first an academic concentration terminating in a certificate, it continues today as the Social Justice Minor, a program of undergraduate study.

Dr. Loretta Zimmerman (History) was the first director; then Dr. Matthew Baasten (Theology), and from 1993-2008 Rev. Claude Pomerleau, C.S.C., (PhD., Political Science) headed Peace Studies, and (later) Social Justice Studies. Fr. Pomerleau died July 21, 2019. He served at the University of Portland until his retirement in 2014 — and of course was still teaching post-retirement, leading students in classroom instruction and discussion through Spring 2019. Retired, but not retiring.

Rev. Claude Pomerleau, C.S.C., 1998 Presidents Report

International Relations was his academic box; but of course Fr. Pomerleau’s reflex was to escape pigeonholes and boxes. From his arrival on campus in 1991, his courses were cross-listed with the Peace Studies Program. When he became chair of the Department of History and Political Science he was already Director of Peace Studies (he was chair of Political Science and Director of Peace Studies simultaneously, 1994-2000). He was still Director of Peace Studies when the program was renamed in 2003 and then reimagined in 2006 to incorporate service internships into the curriculum. Fr. Pomerleau continued in the director’s role through 2008. Plus, somehow, while on sabbatical in 2003, he also served as the founding director of “The Department of Diplomacy and International Studies” at Uganda Martyrs University (Kampala); and also also, as visiting professor of International Studies at the University of Chile (IEI) since 1991. Many-sided, Claude preferred international football (Futbol = soccer) to the American game. Yes, Pilots’ Soccer first of all. Many-many-sided. Priest. Teacher. Scholar. Pastoral Resident. Prison Chaplain. Musician. Friend. In every role, an encourager cheering and inspiring others onward.

A model where what is received is handed on with value-added (see, listen, act); what the Holy Cross religious tradition refers to as an Educator in the Faith.

2014 Retirement Recognition

Filed Under: People/Legends, People/Legends 1

Dr. Art Schulte: A Life on the Bluff

September 28, 2018 By Carolyn

Dr. Art Schulte, arrived in 1958, appointed Instructor in Business Administration; retired 1996, appointed Executive Vice President Emeritus and Special Assistant to the President.  A good and faithful servant.

Doctor Arthur Schulte receiving the Culligan Award from Father Richard Rutherford.
Dr. Schulte receiving the Culligan Award from Rev. Richard Rutherford, C.S.C., 1990
Doctor Arthur Schulte.
Dr. Arthur Schulte, Dean of the School of Business, 1965
Doctor Arthur Schulte standing next to Father David Tyson seated at his desk.
Dr. Arthur Schulte and Rev. David Tyson, C.S.C. University President, 1992
Officers of the University of Portland in academic regalia.
John Goldrick, Dr. Schulte, Rev. David Tyson, C.S.C. President, Roy Heynderickx, Br. Donald Stabrowski, C.S.C., Tony DiSpigno, 1996
Doctor Arthur Schulte and two students sitting at a desk in his office.
Dr. Schulte with students, 1967
Doctor Arthur Schulte.
Dr. Schulte as Financial Vice President, 1971
Doctor Arthur Schulte sitting with faculty and staff members in the Chiles Center seats.
Front: Bob Fulford, Dr. Schulte, Louis Masson, Rev. George Bernard, C.S.C.; Back: Mike Johnson, Bob Duff, Richard Harris, Mauro Potestio, Nick Bauman, Manuel Macias, 1987
Doctor Arthur Schulte.
Dr. Arthur Schulte, Acting President, 1981
People standing at the front row of chairs at a dedication ceremony.
At the Renaming of West Hall to Waldschmidt Hall, 1992
Doctor Arthur Schulte and Father Paul Waldschmidt lifting the corner of Columbia Hall.
Dr. Schulte and University President, Rev. Paul Waldschmidt, C.S.C. move Columbia Hall, 1976
Doctor Arthur Schulte with the telephone at his left ear and right hand positioned at his desk calendar.
Dean of the School of Business, 1967
Alan Timmins, Robert Pamplin, Jr., Doctor Arthur Schulte.
Alan Timmins, ’81, Robert Pamplin, Dr. Art Schulte, ca1980
Doctor Arthur Schulte and Robert Pamplin, Jr.
Dr. Schulte and Robert Pamplin, Jr.
Father Thomas Oddo seated in chair in front with University of Portland officers around him.
University President Rev. Thomas Oddo, C.S.C. and Rev. George Bernard, C.S.C., Hal Westby, Dr. Schulte, Guy Sievert, 1986
Arthur and Ruth Schulte.
Art and Ruth Schulte, 2003

Filed Under: People/Legends, People/Legends 1

In Memory: Dr. Arthur Schulte, Jr., March 15, 1928 – September 24, 2018

September 28, 2018 By Carolyn

100 Years of Service to UP: Dr. Manuel Macias, 34 years; Dr. Arthur Schulte, 34 years; Dr. James Covert, 32 years in 1992

Dr. Arthur A. Schulte, Jr., died September 24, 2018 at age ninety in his sixtieth year as a Pilot. Which is not to say that his priorities were strange, though there is a hint of madness topping the list when asked in 1998 how he would choose to be remembered and Dr. Schulte confessed:

“Well, I’d like to be remembered as a man who loved the University and the people he worked with, as a man who worked and prayed each day for the University’s success. As a man who worked hard to keep the University’s progress as a whole in mind, and bent all his efforts to making it secure so it could grow safely and responsibly.  As a good steward of the Church I loved.  As a father who loved his daughters deeply.  And as a husband – a good one, I hope, but there you’ll have to ask Ruth. God blessed me with Ruthie.  Or that I used the tools God gave me to make the University better than it was when I started.  I helped the place change for the better, I hope.” (Portland Magazine, Spring 1998)

In truth, that hope was full and realized.  Dr. Schulte’s work earned him the University’s highest faculty honors and national recognition for his scholarship.  And also the University’s trust, twice steering the University in crisis times, appointed Acting President following the resignation of Brother Raphael Wilson, C.S.C., and once more after the tragic death of Rev. Thomas C. Oddo, C.S.C. in 1989.  In fact, he served as Executive Vice President for 25 years in total, from 1971-1996.

Therefore, very much a good-steward as in the quotation above, but remember those words were delivered in the Alumni magazine, and large heart is able to answer more than one duty.   Dr. Schulte’s family also earned the full devotion of a full heart.  And after their children were grown two Schulte scholarship funds were established at the University assisting a new and expanding generation of the Pilot family learning, living, and growing at UP.  From 1996 to date, the Dr. Arthur A. Schulte, Jr. Endowed Scholarship and the Tessa Ruth Schulte Endowed Scholarship funds have provided a helping-hand for nearly eighty students attending UP.

Gallery of photos from the University Archives

Dr. Arthur Schulte Scholarship recipients
Tessa Schulte Scholarship recipients
Dr. Schulte and his wife, Ruth, with scholarship recipients, 2004

Filed Under: People/Legends, People/Legends 1

Thank you Bill Reed

May 1, 2018 By Carolyn

Bill Reed, 2012
Bill Reed, 2012

Bill Reed, Director of University Events, will retire this summer after years of service to his alma mater.

Sigma Tau Omega (Bill in front row), 1970 Log

Bill is rooted on the Bluff.  Rooted.  Hooked.  A fixture.  From the simple beginning of coming to UP for college, and then after the usual it-seemed-like-no-time-at-all-flash, graduated in 1972 with a B.A. in Education.  And teach he did, serving 9 years in local Catholic elementary schools, then as Director for Camp Howard/CYO 1981-84.   

Bill Reed, Alumni Relations Director, 1985

He came home as Executive Director of the Alumni Association in 1985.  He’s still here 33 years later, changing job titles becoming the Director of Special Events (now University Events) in 1990.

Bill Reed, 2009
Bill Reed, 2009

As Events Director, Bill has had a hand in seemingly every internal and external campus event / happening / celebration / jubilation during the past three decades, utilizing every building and space on campus at one time or another.  And still teaching in the UP way.   Welcoming, helping, easing, and always smiling.  He cannot stay in the office.  With his signature white shirt and UP lanyard around his neck, Bill is ever crisscrossing campus, hoofing it with a smile of greeting for all those he encounters along the path.  Bill’s hospitality, professionalism, and genuine smile conceal the ease with which he manages events to achieve operational specifications and program success.  His calm generates calm, guiding events large and small — from visiting dignitaries and speakers from around the world, to academic scholars and conferences, athletes and athletic contests, commencements (high school through college) as well as behind-the-scenes support and advice and back-up double-checking for student sponsored events from Welcome Weekend to Weekend on the Bluff.

Rev. E. William Beauchamp, C.S.C. presents Bill Reed with the Spirit of Holy Cross Award, 2012

Theological handbooks mention that God is ubiquitous in power and ever unseen.  We sometimes catch a glimpse of William O. Reed, III, BA ’72.  And it has been a pleasure.  And he will be missed.  No one deserves retirement, the commendation of a job-well-done, and our blessings and gratitude in quite the same way as this hidden worker and indispensable friend.

Thought experiment:  If an activity tracker / pedometer recommends 10,000 daily steps;  calculating Bill’s  average at 25,000 steps per day (conservatively); then the total is 255,500,000 footsteps accumulated these 28 years as campus host!

Bill Reed sitting on office desk.
Bill Reed, Alumni Relations Director, 1985
Brother Donald Stabrowski, Father Gary Chamberland, Bill Reed.
Bro. Donald Stabrowski, C.S.C., Rev. Gary Chamberland, C.S.C., Bill Reed, November 2013 Beacon
Bill Reed.
Bill Reed, UP Graduation Photo, 1972
Bill Reed, Ryan Reed, Meghan Reed, Suzanne Reed.
Bill and Suzanne Reed with their children, Ryan and Meghan, 2012
Bill Reed (wearing glasses) and three others.
Bill Reed, 1972 Log
Bill Reed (right) with three others sorting through flower petals for a parade float.
Decorating UP’s Rose Festival Float, 1988
Bill Reed.
Bill Reed, 1990
University Events staff in front of a Christmas tree.
Susan Etzel, Bill Reed, Sean Ducey in back; Christina Salisbury, Sarah Espinosa, in front, 2016
Alan Timmins, Bill Reed.
Alan Timmins, Bill Reed, 2016
Bill Reed.
Bill Reed, University Events Director, April 2000

Bill Reed, Portland Magazine, Autumn 2010

Filed Under: People/Legends, People/Legends 1

Honor and Remembrance

November 9, 2017 By Carolyn

Each Veterans Day Air Force and Army ROTC cadets from the University of Portland keep a 24-hour vigil at the Praying Hands/Broken Wall Memorial near Christie and Kenna Halls.  The Memorial Circle remembers those from Columbia Preparatory School, Columbia University, and the University of Portland who gave their lives in war-time.  In this post we remember one of those men, Second Lieutenant David R. Kingsley, Columbia Prep student from 1933-1936, who fought and died in World War II.

2d Lieutenant David R. Kingsley (right) (Kingsley family photo)

Columbia Prep Junior Class, 1936 Columbiad (University Museum – click to enlarge)

David Kingsley knew about sacrifice from the early age of 10 or 11 after his father died from an automobile accident while helping a neighbor, AND after putting aside his own need for medical treatment insisting that his passenger be seen first.   And again, when David’s mother was paralyzed from cancer, and he assumed the role of father and mother to care for his seven younger brothers and sisters, giving up sports and study at Columbia Prep one year short of his graduation.

But the sacrifice which cost the young lieutenant his life came when Kingsley’s crippled plane was under attack over Romanian oil fields during World War II in June 1944.   When crew members were hit by enemy fire, Kingsley tended to the wounded on board.  Under orders to bail out of the badly damaged plane, Kingsley placed parachutes on the injured, but when too few were found, he removed his own parachute in favor of an injured soldier and released him to safety.  Without a chute for himself, Kingsley perished with the plane — four days before his 26th birthday.

Columbia Crusader, vol. 8, no. 6, February 1945 (University Archives)

The Congressional Medal of Honor was posthumously awarded to 2nd Lieutenant David R. Kingsley on April 9, 1945.  (Full citation)  In 2004, the David R. Kingsley Memorial was erected near the crash site in Suhozem, Bulgaria. 

Kingsley Field Air National Guard Base in Klamath Falls, OR is named to honor his valor.

Kingsley Memorial, Suhozem, Bulgaria (Wikipedia)

 

 

 

 

For related posts on the Broken Wall and Veterans Day Observance:
https://sites-dev.up.edu/museum/veterans-day-observance/

https://sites-dev.up.edu/museum/broken-wall-memorial-1990-2015/

https://sites-dev.up.edu/museum/broken-wall-memorial-is-broken/

Sources:
“The Making of a Hero” by Christopher Boehme, Portland magazine, Summer 1989;
Wikipedia; United States Army Center of Military History

 

 

 

Filed Under: People/Legends, People/Legends 1

In Memory: Brian Doyle, November 6, 1956 – May 27, 2017

June 1, 2017 By Carolyn

Brian Doyle, 1996 (University Archives photo)

Brian Doyle was recruited to come to the University of Portland and edit Portland Magazine, our alumni newsletter, in 1991.  In his twenty-five years of service, the magazine became an award winning literary journal through essays and profiles highlighting University Events, Accomplishments, Alumni , and all the stories of why the University of Portland is a home and community for students, faculty, and all who belong to the Bluff.

Brian died on May 27, 2017.  He was an award winning editor, a widely published and award winning author, and, for the students who worked at publications and journalism on campus, Brian was a spark, friend, inspiration, and mentor.

He was a pied-piper, who wrote an annual public-service announcement for The Beacon calling students to the vocation of writer, life-participant:

(from January 24, 2013)

Question: you like telling stories, don’t you?  I mean, that’s why you have friends, and that’s why people enjoy your company, and that’s why you enjoy their company, largely because you share stories that make you laugh and think and sometimes even move you to the bottom of your soul.
So why not work for The Beacon?

(answering objections, in January 23, 2014)

I don’t have the time …

Yes, you do.  Look at yourself right now, in those ratty pajamas, watching the “Burn Notice” episode for the ninth time.  Good Lord, man, get out of your room.  And pick up that towel off the floor before you go.

I have no experience…

Yes, you do.  You collect stories.  You share stories. You trade stories.  You remember stories.  You are stories.  Your family, friends, pursuits, thrills, adventures, ambitions, dreams — all stories.  Why not put that curiosity and hunger for stories to work, on, say, the yearbook staff?  Wouldn’t it be cool to try and catch the joys and shivers for a year on The Bluff in stories and photographs and paintings for the Log?

We remember his service at the university primarily through his work as a writer.  Brian Doyle was also a great audience.

http://www.upbeacon.com/article/2017/05/a-few-words-on-brian-doyle-from-a-student

2010-11 UP Authors Reception (Clark Library photo)

One of Brian’s essays in a Museum blog post, July 16, 2014:
https://sites-dev.up.edu/museum/in-the-beginning-day-one/

Filed Under: People/Legends, People/Legends 1

In Memory: Rev. Charles David Sherrer, C.S.C., September 21, 1935 – April 13, 2017

April 20, 2017 By Carolyn

Rev. Charles David Sherrer, C.S.C., died at the age of 81 on Holy Thursday, April 13, 2017 at home at Notre Dame surrounded by members of the Congregation of Holy Cross.  Fr. Sherrer studied at Notre Dame as a seminarian, taking his BA in 1958.  He set foot in a UP English classroom for the first time in 1962.  In 2005, he retired from UP, Professor of English and distinguished administrator.  Between these beginnings and ends, Fr. Sherrer did a lot of stuff along the way, but always and first, understood himself as Holy Cross religious, priest, and teacher.

English and Foreign Languages Faculty, 1999. Front row: Trudie Booth, Kate Regan, Louis Masson, Rev. Jeffrey Cooper, C.S.C., Sr. Joan Saalfeld, SNJM; Back row: Lora Looney, Rev. David Sherrer, C.S.C., Ralph Genske, John Orr, Herman Asarnow

At UP he occupied multiple lecterns.  In classrooms, at many faculty functions, and serving as master of ceremonies for many, many Commencement exercises during the years when Fr. Sherrer carried the duties of Graduate School Dean and, later, Academic Vice President (1987-1995).  A full-professor from 1991 until his retirement. 

Brian Doyle, the editor of Portland Magazine, caught and highlighted the following words in which Fr. Sherrer describes the dynamic and rewards and humility of the teacher’s art:

“Of all the hours in my day the most rewarding are those in class, and it is my conclusion after forty years that it is never a bad day in class as long as I learn something, which I do every class, so there you are.” (Portland Magazine, Spring 2005, p. 13)

(Photos from the University Archives, click on image to enlarge)

Father David Sherrer.
Rev. David Sherrer, C.S.C., English professor, 1963
University of Portland President and senior administrators all wearing academic regalia.
University President, Rev. David Tyson, C.S.C. and Vice Presidents, 1996 Commencement
Father Charles David Sherrer standing next to a person in a lion costume.
Rev. David Sherrer, C.S.C., President of Kings College, and lion mascot, 1980 or 81
Father David Sherrer standing on stage at a lectern while wearing academic regalia.
Rev. David Sherrer, C.S.C., Academic Vice President, ca1996 Commencement
Faculty members and administrators seated around a conference table.
UP Deans Meeting, 1983
Father David Sherrer.
Rev. David Sherrer, C.S.C., at Desk in Buckley Center, 1974
Father David Sherrer.
Rev. David Sherrer, C.S.C., in Chapel of Christ the Teacher, 2015
Father Charles David Sherrer.
Rev. David Sherrer, 2005

Filed Under: People/Legends, People/Legends 1

In Memory: Rev. Ronald Wasowski, C.S.C., March 31, 1946 – December 5, 2016

December 13, 2016 By Carolyn

Rev. Ronald Wasowski, C.S.C., 2001 (University Archives)
Rev. Ronald Wasowski, C.S.C., 2001 (University Archives, Click to enlarge)

Rev. Ronald J. Wasowski, C.S.C., associate professor of Environmental Science, passed away unexpectedly the evening of December 5, 2016 at the age of 70; in phased retirement and his last year of classroom teaching.  At UP since 1998, offering general and upper division science courses, and contributing to student life as Mehling Hall Pastoral Resident, Voice for Life Chaplain, and more.

Which sounds sort of ordinary, maybe even dull.  How about this?  For the past three years, Fr. Wasowski was part of the University of Portland archaeological team, the Pollentia expedition, spending part of each summer in Mallorca, Spain.  The excavation is uncovering a Roman-era city.   Fr. Wasowski’s contribution to the team was the use of drones in Archaeology (tracing the outlines of city-walls, building foundations, and streets from the air), and nick-named “Father Drone” by expedition colleagues.  He flew drones and taught classes where students spend class-time and homework FLYING camera-drones.  Helicopter camera-drones, all too cool for the catalogue, where the course title is listed as ENV 384 / BIO 384 / CE 458 Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems, listed within the academic degree concentration Quantitative and Spatial Methods, which also requires course-work in Vector Calculus and Ordinary Differential Equations (bring on the drone lab).

He also knew far too much about rocks, minerals, meteor showers, and regular weather.  Sharing enthusiasm and abiding inquiry with students and friends both.

Fr. Wasowski taught at the University of Notre Dame, King’s College, Wilkes-Barre, and the University of Portland, earning tenure twice (he departed Notre Dame when their Earth Sciences/Geology program folded).

Clark Library Digital Collection about the 2015 Pollentia Expedition
http://up.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/landingpage/collection/p16472coll4

Fr. Ron Wasowski’s Aerial Photography – 2015 Pollentia Expedition
http://up.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/search/collection/p16472coll4/searchterm/Aerial%20Photography/field/subjec/mode/all/conn/and/order/nosort

Photo gallery, click to enlarge images

Father Ron Wasowski, C.S.C. with Drone, Pollentia Expedition (Maria Erb photo)
Father Ron Wasowski, C.S.C. with Drone, Pollentia Expedition (Maria Erb photo)
Holy Cross First Profession Class (Back row, 3rd from left, next to Tom Oddo), 1966 (University Archives)
Holy Cross First Profession Class (Back row, 3rd from left, next to Tom Oddo), 1966 (University Archives)
Fr. Wasowski with a drone, Pollentia Expedition, 2015 (Clark Library digitial collections)
Fr. Wasowski with a drone, Pollentia Expedition, 2015 (Clark Library digitial collections)
Back row: David Kroon, Lewis Lum, Rev. Ronald Wasowski, C.S.C., Rev. John Kurtzke, C.S.C., Front row: William Fuller, Michael Akerman, David Cresap, Steven Vegdahl, 1998 (University Archives)
Back row: David Kroon, Lewis Lum, Rev. Ronald Wasowski, C.S.C., Rev. John Kurtzke, C.S.C., Front row: William Fuller, Michael Akerman, David Cresap, Steven Vegdahl, 1998 (University Archives)
Holy Cross Retreat at Mt. Angel Abbey Rev. Ronald Wasowski, C.S.C., Rev. James Connelly, C.S.C., Rev. James Lies, C.S.C., 1998 (University Archives)
Holy Cross Retreat at Mt. Angel Abbey Rev. Ronald Wasowski, C.S.C., Rev. James Connelly, C.S.C., Rev. James Lies, C.S.C., 1998 (University Archives)
Rev. Ronald Wasowski, C.S.C., 1998 (University Archives)
Rev. Ronald Wasowski, C.S.C., 1998 (University Archives)
Fr. Ron Wasowski, Junior Parents Weekend Mass, 2013 (Marketing & Communications)
Fr. Ron Wasowski, Junior Parents Weekend Mass, 2013 (Marketing & Communications)

Filed Under: People/Legends, People/Legends 1

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