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Page 8 text:
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removed and a large hole was dug so that construction could be started on the new classroom-office building. BELOW: Renovations inside the Robert L. Nugent Alumni Building were ongoing to provide space for the Department of Student Housing. Other offices within the building were remodeled and relocated to facilitate the change. OPPOSITE PAGE: TOP: The new College of Law Building which was dedicated in September, offered the College the facilities to expand and improve their programs. BOTTOM: The Old Law Building was the site of the new offices for the Journalism and Oriental Studies Departments. Moving-in took time and many offices were void of decoration for some time. Expansion evident at UA this year by Paul Haeder When the University was founded in 1891. about $40.000 was spent to build the school ' s first building. Old Main. That structure stood alone on a campus that was strewn with cacti, dust and horse drawn wagons. By 1959. when enrollment wa about 12.000 more than 55 buildings worth $45 million had been built to maintain learn- ing standards for the rapidly increasing enrollments. The larg- est expansion the University experienced occured during President Richard A. Harville ' s reign ( 1941-71 ). when more than 50 buildings were erected. This building proliferation began only months after Harville ' s inauguration, when the Student Union, the BPA Building, and the Physical Resources Power Plant were completed to the tune of $2.5 million. TK University ' s largest and most expensive growth year lace in 1967 when five buildings, the University Hospi- I. the Computer Center and the Modern Languages. Psy- - iology and Mathematics Buildings were under construed totaling $34.3 million. The campus has grown since 1959. Thirty-six buildings costing more than $103 million have been built to handle the 26.000-plus full-time students currently enrolled at the Uni- versity. The $6.5 million Law Building, one of the more impressive and progressively designed buildings on campus, offering the Law College facilities that put the school in the running for top national recognition, was completed last spring and de J cated in September. The Old Law Building was subsequen T V , 4 UNIVERSITY EXPANSION
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Page 7 text:
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Fall slipped quietly into winter. As students finished finals; many left Tucson for much colder, wetter cities around the nation. Those who remained behind and who returned for the spring semester enjoyed mild weather and often took advantage of their weekends to travel north to Snow Bowl or Flagstaff to ski. The snow birds who started their migration from the east in November were out in full force at the beginning of the year, stimulating Tucson ' s econ- omy. Temperatures in the desert started rising in late February and by March winter was all but forgotten. As with the transition from summer to fall, winter became spring without much furor. Tucson soon became a sunbather ' s paradise and students fought for pool- side space in an effort to become bronzed before finals set in. Occa- sional rains came to cool things off, raise the humidity and flood the streets. Temperatures soared to the 90 ' s and 100 ' s. Summer was back. Many students examined the alternatives and left Tucson for the summer. They must have found a climate more suitable to their lifestyle. There was no doubt in anyone ' s mind that Arizona sum- mers are as hot as they come. For many students Arizona ' s climate was the University ' s biggest asset. Coming from the unpredictably cold of the east and midwest, they came to Tucson, in part, to enjoy year-round comfort. Some were shocked when the temperatures dropped and when it rained and were flabbergasted when Tucson received one of its rare intown snowfalls. Other sensed no seasonal change. Obviously they were immune to the subtleties that make living in the desert an ever- changing experience. LEFT: The ability to make such a catch comes from a lot of practice and skill. Tucson ' s warm weather encour- aged students to play on the Mall. BELOW: The beauty of the moun- tains came alive as the leaves on Mt. Lemmon changed color in late Octo- ber. OPPOSITE PAGE: TOP: As the weather got cooler, students traded in their shorts for jeans. Cool breezes made things a little chilly, but this stu- dent decided that the warm rays were perfect for a little nap. BOTTOM: Although the seasonal changes in the desert are subtle the displays are strik- ing and enjoyed by many. ASONS 3
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Page 9 text:
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The University is currently building a 95.000 square- ot classroom-office building at Second Street and ' live Road that will cost taxpayers about $7 million. Expansion was also evident in renovations in the SIo- iker Alumni Building, the Robert L. Nugent Alumni uilding and the Student Health Center. The Slonaker Llumni Building, formerly Pima Hall, was remodeled last year to provide the Alumni Association more offic space. Conversions were made in the Robert L. Nugem Alumni Building to accomodate the Department of Stu- dent Housing whose move was scheduled for the spring. Due to the lack of funding the Student Health Center found itself having to close down its in-patient clinic. The rooms were converted to offices and conference rooms for the Health Center staff. Although the University may see continued growth i the 1980 ' s. the increase will be minor because officials said the large portion of the population growth Arizona and Tucson will experience will not be college age. But this does not mean that the University has finished expanding. Several University projects are either plan- ned or have been financed: construction on a proposed S4 million Pharmacy Building is planned to begin some- time next spring. Also, proposals for a new Chemistry Building have been considered. The UA campus is considered by both alumni and isitors to be one of the more attractive campuses in the country. But the University ' s growth is contingent not only on increased student enrollment but on a strong state economy. LMVERSITYEXPANSK
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