_ 6 THE STATE UNIVERSITY.
Z, fO1` women. The third floor is divided into two literary-society halls
  andthe AlumniHall. All tl1ese rooms are commodious and finely Ph
° adapted to their purpose. The right wing, which is 48 x 95 feet, is
, used as a drill room during bad weather. The basement of the left on
* wing is set apart fO1' baths, lockers for men, wash stands, closets, an
A- and a swimming pool. The second floor, the gymnasium proper, is
A ;`_ equipped with the best apparatus that could be procured. SO
  Education Bzzz'Zdmg.—Tliis building, one of the handsomest on the bu
  campus, erected for the use of the Departments of Education and _ ba
  Domestic Science, has been occupied by these Departments since fl.,
» -. September 1007. The construction is of pressed brick and Bedford fo
  stone, and the design follows the most approved style of modern W
  school architecture. The building contains ten class-rooms, astudy-
-‘ room for young women, and one for youngmen, a departmentlibrary- CVO
  room, two offices and a very large room for the Department of
Education Literary Society. The completion of this building sup- _
V [ plies a long—felt need of the Department of Education and it marks lu
_. the most important step in the twenty-seven years of its history.
_   Lf[)}'((l'[/.—·Tl]lS building, which is due to the munifioence of that “'
` ;. prince of benefactors, Andrew Carnegie, was begun in 1007. lt is YG
_ QL, located on the court between the Main Building and the President’s
it House, is 50 feet square, two stories high, including the tall base- d<
_.   ment of range-ashlar, is built of pressed brick, trimmed with terra
  cotta, and will cost $27,500. lt will be completed by Sept. 1908. ]O
· _ A ~ A_q1·icul£imzl lIuIl.—This building, for the erection of which pro-
  vision was made by the Board of Trustees at their meeting in D
_ 5 V Deceniber 1000, has just been completed at a cost of $35,000 and was tl
V first occupied in the early summer of 1008. Designed to be a wing
· of the larger structure which it is expected the College of Agriculture
  will eventually require, it is three stories in height, 45 x100 feet in (ll
. size, and constructed of pressed brick and Bedford stone. ,  
_' The basement contains large rooms arranged for farm machinery, (it
  general farm mechanics, potting and propagating, and for the heat- it
  ing plant. On the first floor are the office of the Dean, the general H
‘ and advanced plant laboratories, the Horticultural lecture-room 2L1l(l t_
Horf,i<·ultural laboratory. On the second floor are the offices for the {
  Professor of Animal Husbandry and the Professor of Agronomy, ii
_, and an attractive reading room and society hall. The third floor af-  
i __ fords space for an Agricultural Museum, a commodious assembly 2)
_ room for the Grange and other agricultural society meetings and ex- tl
hibitions, and a photographic laboratory with dark rooms, both for tl
` student use and for department work. V