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Band directors became students at the 1956 WSC Summer Music Camp.
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A 1958 WSC Summer Music Camp orchestra poses for a photograph in Taylor Auditorium.
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One of the 1941 WSC Summer Camp concert bands poses for a photograph on the west lawn of Taylor Hall.
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The Buchtel Cadet band was one of the concert bands at the 1954 WSC Music Camp.
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Botany professor Dr. Ralph Walker and Mrs. Clarence Hurst pose in the Hurst Museum located on the third floor of Taylor Hall, ca. 1950s. One of the Henry Richter murals hangs above.
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An aviary exhibit in the Hurst Museum, located on the third floor of Taylor Hall, ca. 1950s.
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A panoramic view of the "Temporary Auditorium" in Central Hall under the present auditorium. Construction on Central Hall had begun prior to 1920, but by that year President Quigley moved scarce funds to construct (old) Colorado Hall, a badly-needed women's dormitory. Upper floors of Central Hall would be completed in 1927 connecting North Hall (WSC) and South Hall (Gunnison High School.)
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The auditorium on the north end of Normal Hall (now Taylor Hall) is set up for commencement exercises for the first graduating class of Colorado State Normal School, May 30, 1912. The mural on the wall was painted by CSNS art professor Henry L. Richter. It now hangs in the circulation desk area in Leslie J. Savage Library.
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View of the Library Room on the second floor of Normal Hall (Taylor Hall/North Hall) circa 1911. John C. Johnson notes that nearly every book owned by the college at the time is shown in the photograph.
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Art Studio, Colorado State Normal School, Normal Hall (Taylor Hall), ca. 1912. Henry L. Richter was the instructor, standing. He painted the mural behind him which was discovered in storage in Quigley Hall and now hangs in the circulation area of the Leslie J. Savage Library. The plaster cast of a Greek boy which these students are sketching was still used by the college in 1949.
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Women in a secretarial science class--located at the south end of Taylor Hall--employ the latest equipment: typewriters, adding machines, a dictaphone, and a mimeograph machine, circa mid-1940s.
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A music theory classroom in Taylor Hall, circa 1940s.
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Professor Tom Draper supervises the video control booth during the recording process in Western's television studio, circa mid-1980s.
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A new Digital Equipment Corporation (PDP-11) mainframe computer replaced the IBM 360 series machine in the 1970s at Western. The Computer Services department was located at the north end of first floor Taylor Hall.
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The science room/chemistry room in North Hall (now Taylor Hall), circa early 1920s.
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A Western student works on a chemistry project in a Taylor Hall science room, circa late 1940s.
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Twin coal stoves were the focal point of the Domestic Science room located in the northeast corner of the second floor of Normal Hall (Taylor Hall), circa 1913. The Home Economics program was discontinued at the college after the retirement of Anna Streckelberg in about 1956. Ms. Streckelberg insisted on coal stoves because her typical student would spend her life cooking on a ranch.
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Two Home Economics students pose for a photograph with their Singer sewing machines in Taylor Hall, circa 1939.
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Three of Western's Home Economics students admire a jar of preserves, circa early 1950s.