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Show , roll quarter deadline Builders reassemble dismantled campus BY JO ANN WONG Chronicle Staff j Photos by AARON JONES Realigning, designing, building, shuffling Campus Planners have I dismantled the campus and are j now in the process of putting ev- erything back together, i The goal is a convenient place j for everything students, staff, private donations totaling about $50,000. S The complex has classrooms in the tower level of the 14-story tower with open decks over the classrooms. The upper levels will house research and faculty offices. off-ices. Southeast of the tower will be a three-story social work branch library and a 240- seat lecture lec-ture hall. X ' .11, .. M r r- - A V . tn '-i.tini, rum il iMn.ivmi : iLimMir , Ati,.-:,! I ! ! ("" j 4!5na I j i if fug ', S" pi-i j ' j" ''" "' " ' ' '"".-u"l?'wlj ; f ' :i! ! ' ' i t 1 ..! I . f ; ' . : i ! . 1 lV : film faculty, administration, visitors and cars. Fall quarter should see many items finished. The entrance planned for the area south of the College of Business falls under this category. A fountain funded by the classes of 1968, 1969 and 1970 will be the focal point of the entrance. There will also be a walk system, a parking lot and an information center. Also due to be completed by fall quarter is the Fine Arts Center. Cen-ter. The center will have four separate sep-arate buildings. One building will house a museum and a 500-seat lecture hall. One building will be used by the Department of Art and another by the Department of An additional 400-seat lecture hall will be located south of the tower. There will be a plaza, landscaping land-scaping and a parking lot to be completed by Skyline Construction. Construc-tion. Panushka and Peterson Company are the architects. The Mineral Science Bldg., west of the Union, is behind schedule but should be completed in February Febru-ary 1971. William Thomas is the architect. Construction has begun on a new medical sciences library which will be a three-story structure struc-ture and completed in summer of 1971. About 250 units are planned to be added to University Village. They are prefabricated to c u t costs, but planners say they are of good construction material and have an improved concrete construction. con-struction. The Army Reserve Officers Training Corps building is being redesigned, as is the old gym which housed the Departments of Ballet and Modern Dance. A new lighting system is under construction in Kingsbury Hall. The old lights will not be removed, but a lighting system that would add to the lighting capacity is being be-ing constructed. The old heating plant located , west of the Union and the smoke stack will be removed. Five double court tennis courts were completed recently and are located west of the dormatories. Architecture. The fourth will be used by sculptors. The Fine Arts Center will have a deck and a two-story link connecting each of the buildings. The wooden frame buildings which are now the Department of Fine Arts will be moved up on the hill for use of the University Medical Center. Five parking lots will be ready for use by fall quarter. These lots are located near the Annex, Einar Neilson Fieldhouse, the golf course, Music Bldg. and the oil and shipping yard. Bids were being accepted Friday Fri-day for the extension of a walk system and landscaping project going south and west of the Union Un-ion where the Intercultural Center was located. The Behavioral Sciences and Graduate School of Social Work Complex as now completed to its full height of 14 stories. Total completion is estimated at January Janu-ary 1971. Furnishing the building may delay the occupancy of it until spring quarter. The Behavioral Sciences Bldg. will be furnished by many small l'ZL JK . ... 4 ? |