Register and official announcement . tted up as a machine shop and the other four are specialresearch rooms of the Physics department. Back of these roomsare the boiler room, (No. 9) engine and dynamo room (No. 7),and a room for the storage battery cells (No. 8). The Main street entrance opens into a vestibule 14 x 17 feet,from which the stairway, 12 feet wide, leads to the main corridorsof the upper stories. Directly opposite the head of the stairs is acorridor leading to the Woodland street entrance. On either sideof this corridor are two store rooms each 13 x 24 feet. (Nos. 18-53). 84 Runni


Register and official announcement . tted up as a machine shop and the other four are specialresearch rooms of the Physics department. Back of these roomsare the boiler room, (No. 9) engine and dynamo room (No. 7),and a room for the storage battery cells (No. 8). The Main street entrance opens into a vestibule 14 x 17 feet,from which the stairway, 12 feet wide, leads to the main corridorsof the upper stories. Directly opposite the head of the stairs is acorridor leading to the Woodland street entrance. On either sideof this corridor are two store rooms each 13 x 24 feet. (Nos. 18-53). 84 Running longitudinally through the middle of the building is acorridor 14 feet wide, terminating in the towers at either end,which have stairways leading to the several stories. In the cen-tral section of the Main street front is the library (Nos. 31 and 32)32 x 44 feet, and adjoining it the reading room (No. 35) and thefaculty room (No. 36), each of which are 21 x 40 feet. In the southwest end of this floor are the rooms (Nos. 37 to 40). Second Floor. of the President, and the University Office. The Anthro-pological (Nos. 47-48), Psycho Physical (No. 51) and Neuro-logical (No. 52) laboratories with their adjoining rooms for theinstructors in these departments. In the northeast are three rooms (Nos. 26-28-30), each 21 x40,devoted to the purposes of the Physics department, one (No. 30)as a lecture room, the other two as private research rooms. Thereis also a large lecture hall (Nos. 19-21) 40 x 65 feet. The roomson this floor are 14 feet high. The third story is reached by a double flight of stairs, each sec-tion, 8 feet wide, leading to a landing 8 x 30 feet, and from this bya single flight, 12 feet wide, to the floor. 85 This floor has the longitudinal corridor as below, and eight pri-vate rooms (Nos. 59 to 62 and 67 to 70) for the instructors at thewest end. It also contains the Mathematical (Nos. 57-58) andBiological (Nos. 71-72) lecture rooms, the Morphological () an


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Keywords: ., bookauthorclarkuni, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookyear1889