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Page 24 text:
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Page 23 text:
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Sars .gif-0131 this Site, t e campus MUY vict ' we he-111 inoflfgif of former years Jniversity hall. .ns the Hrst ersity since in twenty- he ChicagO ,000 will be tennial and 1ouse north he building basketball orium Seat' nd musical d between hall. Said ,n the oveff Jnced three Centennial hall will contain classrooms, libraries and offices for the College of Liberal Arts, Graduate school and the Schools of Speech, Journalism, Commerce and Education. The Chicago campus is not to be forgotten. A 592,000,000 ten story Evening Study hall there will provide class and study rooms. Included in the housing program is Sargent hall, now nearly completed in the North Quad- rangle. A men's dormitory and commons, it is named in honor of Fred Wesley Sargent, former member of the University Board of Trustees, who died in 1940 after ten years of service. The Centennial Campaign is being led by a Board ofTrustees committee, headed by Bentley McCloud, president of the First National Bank of Chicago. 111 1111 K lil lllllllll llllll HI ,fy Il Il X1 L To Better Things Memorial hall, new field house to be built north ofDyche stadium, will be used for convocations, musical programs, and indoor sports events. Centennial hall to be located at the south end ofthe campus, will pro- , . vide classrooms and oH'ices for various departments ofthe university. Sargent hall, the new men's dormitory, has been under construction dur- the fall quarter. ing this school year and will be ready for occupancy in
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Page 25 text:
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Starting Gut The center of campus activity, Scott hall is the most logical place to start a tour of the cam- pus. VVhen a student thinks of Scott he thinks of the Grill. Many students choose to major in the famous course offered there, Grillology . The friendly cup of coffee is traditional. Coke dates, first introductions to campus romance, are another reason why the Grill is dear to the hearts of all students. From the Grill to the 300 room is a long climb. Here campus organizations sponsor Fri- day afternoon dances. For an inexpensive and yet exciting date this room is open on Saturday nights, and special parties are planned. The French and German club meet here and it is in the 300 room too that the fateful ballots- are cast in the spring elections. Hardy Huddle is open as a cultural room where students may chat or study while listen- ing to classical music. From the Purple Parrot Fashion show in the fall, to the famed VVAA-MU musicale in the spring, the box oliice on the second Hoor is sold out. Tickets for all campus productions and for plays, musicales, and symphonies in Chicago are obtained at the activities window. Nearby is an information bureau, in it, in- defatigable Miss Church. In his office around the corner, Joe Miller, with the aid of student rep- resentatives, coordinates all of this into a smoothly working part of NU life. C 0 . C ff fl c -W A barn dance at the Saturday Night Club in the 300 room, with music by a real hillbilly band, highlighted social life. The Anna May Scott gardens and fountain are a meeting place in the South Quads, a well known path to the Grill mb 21
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