University of Arizona - Desert Yearbook (Tucson, AZ)

 - Class of 1971

Page 22 of 616

 

University of Arizona - Desert Yearbook (Tucson, AZ) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 22 of 616
Page 22 of 616



University of Arizona - Desert Yearbook (Tucson, AZ) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 21
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Page 22 text:

18 GEN BLACKJACK PERSHING AMAN MAN Above: Elsie Windsor is prepared to attend the masquerade ball, a tradition that used to be held at Herring Hall. Above Right: The freshmen and sopho- more classes of 1914 settle their traditional feud and hold the celebration known as Burying of the Hatchet. $160,200 in funds for research programs. In 1959 the amount had increased to $2,245,839. The construction period of the Harvill administration covered the years 1952-60 and spent $15,350,000 for addit- ions, remodelings, and seven- teen new buildings. In 1959, the faculty of the University had grown from the six when the University opened to 948, while the enrollment had in- creased from thirty-two stu- dents to 13,058. The figures for 1970 are faculty members and students. Two of the most recent ad- ditions, and perhaps most im- portant as far as the future of the University is concerned, that have occurred during Dr. Han ill ' s administration are the additions of the Medical College and the Pop McKale Center. Both of these addit- ions are reminiscent of the days of the 13th legislature and Tucson ' s disappointment at being turned down as the site of the state capital and re- ceiving, instead, the Univer- sity. It was a continual struggle j for funds to complete the j building of the college itself, and for more funds for the hospital at the college. It was i another hard, long struggle to j get the necessary money to I build the Pop McKale Center. ' The Center will make it pos- sible to hold large conventions I while Bear Down Gym seats ' 3,500. The McKale Center will cover an entire city block and ; will house the arena, athletic offices, and physical education classes. Most people will remember the Harvill years, not for the 1 great strides in physical growth and enrollment, the national ' prominence many of our schools and departments have achieved, or the research carried on here, but for the j change in attitude and philos- ophy of students that exists, not only here, but on cam- puses all over the United States. People will remember the panty raids and the phy- sical damage done to police cars and University buildings.

Page 21 text:

Far Left Danny Romero 22 founder of Phi Gamma Delta (and also of Bobcats) is dressed for one of the firs t Fiji Islanders. Left Yell king Robert Nugent hopped a freight to get to San Diego to cheer for the Cats in their 1921 game against Center College. He later became the first VA Vice-Preside nt. 17 third was the formal opening and dedication of the million dollar Student Union Memorial Building. The Gila Pueblo Collection, along with the other collect- ions of the Arizona State Mus- eum make up the most com- prehensive archaeological col- lection representing the South- west and adds to the prestige of the University ' s well-known anthropology department. The dedication of the Stu- dent Union Memorial Building honored 285 from students and members of the faculty who had given their lives in World Wars I and II. Two mem- orials were established to per- petuate the memory of the honored dead. One was a large bronze plaque listing their names. The other was the bell from the U.S.S. Arizona which had been sunk at Pearl Harbor. The bell is rung on occasions to reveal a message of victory. Surely one of the things that will be remembered about President Harvill ' s years at the University will be the growth in research activities. In 1952, the U of A received Center Left U A polo Team of 1927-1928. Pacific Coast and Southwest Collegiate Championship holders. Center Right Coeds learn to dive in this 1922 class. Above: In 1930 ROTC military training included horseback ridirjg.



Page 23 text:

Left DA coed mourns at the headstone of the hatchet, marking the end of the fresh men -sophomore feud. Below Left Students and faculty take a lunch break from the construc- tion of the A Below Right This UA student sent this picture home to his father tell ing him how good it felt to be wearing working man ' s clothes. People will remember the Moratorium and the marches to the draft board offices and the capture of Old Main follow- ing the Kent State incident. They will remember all of these things they will shake their heads and say, What is this generation coming to? We cannot let them forget the great growth the University has seen. We must not let them think that we, as students, do not appreciate all that has been made possible for us. The following is an open love letter to the University which appeared in the Decem- ber 7, 1964 edition of the Ariz- ona Daily Wildcat. It was writ- ten by Carolyn Niethammer, and expresses the way we feel about the University of Ariz- ona, too This is an open love letter to the University. It isn ' t a red and blue banner waving tribute to your hallowed ivy-covered halls. Your new buildings are magnificent structures, it ' s true and Old Main has a certain charm. Your dormitories look gracious and comfortable and your Maine Library seems to ooze culture; it even has the traditional ivy. But your phy- sical plant isn ' t the real Univer- sity to me.

Suggestions in the University of Arizona - Desert Yearbook (Tucson, AZ) collection:

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University of Arizona - Desert Yearbook (Tucson, AZ) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

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University of Arizona - Desert Yearbook (Tucson, AZ) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

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University of Arizona - Desert Yearbook (Tucson, AZ) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

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University of Arizona - Desert Yearbook (Tucson, AZ) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

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