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Page 16 text:
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,:. fy - - aim -gb.: 5 jig lu , H, I PTP-P ia' Ii' ' af H l-like ...wr ' I V, L. .L1:..,g5Q,, ' ..-.:.,:f 'L':1r4g..Qgw...-nn 3 HDIllIllISlRHlIUH BUILDING Heclrl of the Cdmpuf, this building houses virtually all University offices Cincluding those of the president, registrar, business manager, seven of the eleven deans and the publicistj ,and the cafeteria, stu- dent lounge, book store and post office. It also has several class rooms and will soon have a 325,000 stu- dent study lounge, voted at the March, 1950, board meeting. EDUCATION Is EVERYWHERE IN EVIDENCE at T. C. U. There are classes meeting in all of the permanent buildings except the three new dormitories-and in addition the services of ten temporary classroom and laboratory buildings are required. However, since only two of the University's eight schools and colleges have buildings bearing their names, it should perhaps be recorded that the purpose of these pages is merely to picture the permanent buildings presently included in the T. C. U. campus- not to evidence the scope of the educational program at T. C. U. Add-Ran College of Art: and Sciencer, the largest school or college, is active throughout the campus. Its departments hold forth in the Administration Building, in Brite College of the Bible, in the barracks and Sterling House on the East campus, and even in the Gym and three dormitories-physics on the ground floor of the Gym, journalism on the ground floor of Goode, Twelve biology and geology on the ground floor of Clark, and foreign languages on the first floor of Jarvis. The School of Burinerr, second largest, is housed in East campus barracks.- The School of Education, third largest, has headquarters on the ground floor of Brite College of the Bible and holds classes in almost as many locations as does Add-Ran. Harm College of Nzzrring has its offices and advanced class- rooms and laboratories ar Harris Hospital. And the Graduate School and the Evening College locate their classes as nearly as possible in parallel to undergraduate day classes in the same subjects. AN EVER-ENLARGING, IMPROVING AND CHANGING CAMPUS is
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Page 15 text:
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Lunmurs nunms 1 Suu WHITS N ewest Dormitory for Women, it is a twin to Foster and was complet- ed in November, 1947. It is named for Dr. E. M. Waits, T. C. U. president, 1916-41, and president-emeritus until his death in December, 1949. IHRVIS Oldert Dormitory for Women, its name carries over from a building on the original Thorp Spring campus honoring J. Jarvis, board chairman, 1890-95. It has 52 rooms and houses 92 women. 1 1,4 FUSTER Fir!! of the New dormitories on the campus, it was designed to be the best in Texas and to set the pattern for those to follow. Completed in May, 1942, at a cost of 3500,000, it is named for R. Houston Foster, 15 years a trus- tee and chairman of the board at his death in june, 1941. It has 104 rooms and houses 208 women. Eleven
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Page 17 text:
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T' if 1 T W' ' are c e at f cf V 1 ' . ' -A auf, rf?-I 3 ..1 - 4 -C ix:-, e- 1 sl- . , I V 'thy :AT 1, if I I 24:2 I ,. -i.-....... T llll MI 'Ml IIII V llllfij naggg 'lun W IHHHEI .vig ..,.. 1 I I I I I . ,' ' 5. . pt- Ac' f ' . -Ge,-W.. . coins Bunntn llllillfiilliillll Favorite T. C. U. PiCL'7M'6 Subjed for 25 years has been this beautiful building completed in February, 1925. Its name honors Mary Cours Burnett, whose gift of a three million dollar trust fund to T. C. U. in 1925 made history and rendered a story unique in the annals of education. It will shortly be enlarged to accommodate the University's ever growing library. the result. Even the pictures on these pages, for example, are already out-dated to some extent. Made in the summer and fall of 1949, they do not evidence the new campus white way and the many beautification effects which have been added since then. No set of T. C. U. campus pictures could possibly portray ac- curately their subjects by the time they reached publication stage in these times. Physical facilities are being enlarged and changed too rapidly. More improvements have been made on T. C. U.'s campus in the past two years than in the previous 25. T. C. U. is in the midst of a ten million dollar building pro- gram designed to make its physical stature match that of its academic. At least seven new buildings, renovation of the old ones and enlargement of the Library are included in future build- ing program activity. THIS Is THE THIRD CAMPUS of T. C. U. First was at Thorpe Spring, where in 1873 Brothers Addison and Randolph Clark founded the school, then known as Add-Ran College. Second was at Waco, to where the school was moved in 1895 after having become Add-Ran Christian University in 1889. It was in Waco, in 1902, that the present name of Texas Christian University was adopted. On March 22, 1910, the Uni- versity's main building at Waco, which was in effect the campus, was destroyed by fire. There followed the move to Fort Worth in 1910 and to the hub of the present site in 1911. Since that time the campus has grown from 50 to the present 135 acres, from three buildings to those pictured on these pages, and the school's enrollment from 414 to the all-time high of 6,284 recorded in 1949-50. Thirteen
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