Southeast View of Manufactures and Liberal Arts Building
Photograph of the Manufactures and Liberal Arts Building, in which the Catholic Educational Exhibit was installed.
1893
Courtesy of the Catholic University Archives
https://cuislandora.wrlc.org/islandora/object/achc-columbianexpo%3A1
https://cuislandora.wrlc.org/islandora/object/achc-columbianexpo%3A47
1948 – New Red Gains Follow World War II
anti-Communism
Pope Pius XII
John F. Kennedy
J. Edgar Hoover
Poster No. 5 in the series of teaching aids on The Errors of Communism. Map of the northeast hemisphere with Russia, Mongolia, North Korea, Poland, and various other eastern European countries colored red to symbolize the spread of Communism.
George A. Pflaum
1961
Courtesy of the Catholic University Archives
https://libraries.catholic.edu/special-collections/archives/collections/finding-aids/finding-aids.html?file=americancit#series3
English
https://libraries.catholic.edu/special-collections/archives/collections/finding-aids/finding-aids.html?file=americancit#series3
One Flag, One Language, One School
Anti-Catholicism
Catholic schools
A pamphlet from the Truth and Light series, issued monthly by the Iconoclast Publishing Company in Chicago, IL.
C. A. Windle [Sir Bertram Charles A. Windle]
Pre-Vatican II Pamphlet Collection, Rare Books Collection
Iconoclast Publishing Co. (Chicago, IL)
ca. 1921
Courtesy of the Catholic University Rare Books Collection
English
https://www.lib.cua.edu/rarebook/node/8737
St. Rita School
Photograph of young, male Catholic school students posing in a line with their sister-teacher.
Elizabeth Kuhns Douglas Nuns’ Habit Research Collection, Box 1, Folder 1
ca. 1950s
Courtesy of the Catholic University Archives
Interview in 1973
Envoy Magazine, The Catholic University of America
Atlas Xu
Dr. Chang and his peer Chinese scientists during their studies at Cal Tech, early 1940s.
Five scientists with distinctive career paths.
The Online Museum of the Chinese Academicians
early 1940s.
Atlas Xu
The Qian family in 1955
Allegations that Qian was a Communist effectively led to the suspension of his security clearance with the US Army, but his actual political allegiance at that time remains a mystery today. He was under house arrest for three years before leaving for Communist China in September 1955. He led a remarkable career there and became the father of the Chinese missile program. Qian’s cousin, Qian Xueju, chose to become a U.S. citizen and later a chief engineer at Boeing. Xueju’s son, Roger Y. Tsien, was an acclaimed American chemist who won the Nobel Prize in 2008.
Online museum of the Chinese Academicians
September 1955
Atlas Xu
Chinese Soldier and the Marco Polo Bridge
China Plus
1937
Atlas Xu
Scientists Ludwig Prandtl, Qian Xuesen, and Theodore von Karman
Ludwig Prandtl (German scientist), Tsien Hsue-sen (Chinese scientist), Theodore von Kármán (Hungarian-American scientist). Prandtl served for Germany; von Kármán and Tsien served for US Army; after 1956, Tsien served for China (Tsien was deported by US government to China in 1955). Notice that Tsien had US Army rank. Prandtl was doctoral advisor for von Kármán; von Kármán was doctoral advisor for Tsien.
1945
Atlas Xu
1944 US Navy Map
Boston Rare Maps
1944
Atlas Xu