[LOGO] 1950-1954

1951

Nursing program brochure cover


 


Frieda Al Peterson and R. Eline Kraabel (Morken) establish the nursing department.

Students must travel to Emmanuel Hospital in Portland, Oregon, for hands-on experience until a Tacoma hospital partners with PLC years later.


1952


Professor Walter Schnackenberg

Walter Schnackenberg,
Dean of Men during World War II,
returns as a faculty member
with a Ph.D. in history.




The CMS building (now Eastvold Chapel)




The Chapel-Music-Speech Building, now renamed Eastvold Chapel, is built.


Moving pianos into practice rooms of the new CMS Building

Chapel becomes mandatory for the first time; attendance is taken and seats are assigned.


The Drama-Music Festival of 1952

Program from the Seattle symphony performance at the Drama-Music Festival of 1952

The first drama-music festival is held in the Chapel-Music-Speech building. The Metropolitan Opera (featuring mezzo-soprano Irra Petina), Shakespearean actor Clarence Derwent, and the Seattle Symphony perform.

The festivals continue to bring world-class artists to campus until 1957, when the program becomes the student-subsidized Artist Series.


1953

Marianne Sunset '53

Marianne Sunset is the first nursing graduate.


Page from the fall 1953 'School Daze,' an orientation handbook



 





The fall 1953 orientation handbook explains PLC Christmas customs.


1954

North (now Hong) Hall


North and South Halls, the first dormitories, are built.
Until now, students had lived in Old Main or boarded with Parkland families.


South (now Hinderlie) Hall

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