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Folder contains materials related to establishing a law school at UNLV, including: "pre-law at UNLV" brochure, August 1975; lists of related archival materials; "UNLV Law" survey of previous law school studies, compiled by Jan Gould, 1976; an issue of "Factor E" magazine containing "The Law School Story," spring 1975; newspaper clippings; and other related reports and correspondence. From the University of Nevada, Las Vegas William S. Boyd School of Law Records (UA-00048).
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sod2023-031. University of Nevada, Las Vegas William S. Boyd School of Law Records, approximately 1968-2002. UA-00045. Special Collections and Archives, University Libraries, University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Las Vegas, Nevada. http://n2t.net/ark:/62930/d1542p69v
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PRE-LAW AT UNLV
Interested In a law career? Your success In law
school — and whether you're able to gain
acceptance In the first place — will depend upon
the preparations you make today as an
undergraduate.
That's why this booklet has been prepared for you
by the UNLV Pre-Law Advisory Committee. It
contains Information on the selection of a pre-law
curriculum, advice on the Law School Admission
Test (LSAT) and facts on law school costs and
admission requirements.
ADVISEMENT
From the beginning, you'll have a pre-law advisor
at UNLV who knows the trends In legal education,
who knows what the LSAT Is testing and
admissions problems you might encounter later
on. Your pre-law advisor will work with you and
an advisor from the department of your major In
planning a curriculum and testing program
tailored to your own strengths and Interests.
A LAW CAREER
A law degree can take you to worlds far wider
than the traditional courtroom. Throughout
American history, lawyers have been among the
great political and social leaders. You may have a
parallel interest in engineering or science which,
with your law degree, can lead you to a career as
patent attorney or into the field of environmental
law. Consider also corporation or tax law,
investigative and other legal work for law
enforcement agencies at all levels, or the newer
areas of poverty and consumer law. Many staff
members of the diplomatic corps and the
American delegation to the UN are required to
have a background in international law. You
might, of course, be a teacher at a law school or a
judge on the bench. The possibilities are many.
And salaries? While the average beginning
compensations may be relatively low, increases
over the years bring them substantially above
national middle-income scales.
If you are planning to practice law in Nevada, you
should know that the Nevada Bar does not
acknowledge schools in California that are
accredited only by that state. Nevada Supreme
Court Rule #53 states that to sit for the Nevada
Bar one must have graduated from an ABAaccredited
law school. In addition, Nevada does
not grant reciprocity to other states, so practicing
law in Nevada requires passing the Nevada Bar
exam.
THE LAW SCHOOL
First thing for you to be aware of is that there has
been a dramatic increase in applications to law
schools in this country. Since 1948, the number of
persons taking the LSAT has increased twentyfold;
law school enrollment has doubled; and,
after first and second year exams, 72 per cent
were still enrolled — a very high retention rate. In
the past decade, the number of women enrolled
has increased sixfold, and the number of
admissions to the bar has grown 150 per cent.
Obviously, the competition is heavy.
However, new law schools are opening,
previously non-accredited schools are improving
and gaining their accreditation, and in many
cases the established law schools are welcoming
more first-year students than before. As a result,
it may be noted that the ratio of applicants to
available seats has improved.
THE COST
The cost of a legal education, of course, Is
affected by the economy as much as any other
living cost. So, we can't predict accurately. As a
general guideline, we looked at 1975 costs at
several schools In the West. Tuition at public law
schools was approximately $500-700 for state
residents: and $1,060-2,400 for non-residents.
Books and living expenses ran about $2,500-
3,500. A sampling of private law schools put
tuition at $1,680 or more per year with living
expenses and books nearly the same as above.
Variations are expected If you are comparing
unlverslty-owned and private housing or
considering areas where costs of living differ or If
you are looking for accommodations for a
married couple or family. Even the availability of
fellowships varies from school to school. But, In
general, stipends are difficult for entering
students to obtain.
CHOOSING YOUR COURSES
There Is no single path of study that you must
follow for your pre-law foundation. Most law
schools do not specify any particular
undergraduate major as an admission
requirement. Because the law grows and
changes, because law-related careers are so
varied, your choice of a major will be decided In
part by your own Interests. Looking at the
background of others who have done well In law
school, you'll find majors In philosophy, English,
engineering, history, sociology, political science
and several of the majors In the college of
business.
We might mention three general skills you'll need
for your study and practice of law. First, there are
the verbal skills: vocabulary, accuracy, clarity,
precise and sound argumentation, the ability to
comprehend and Interpret technical material,
and a sensitivity to the semantic and logical
variations of language. Second, you'll need
knowledge of the democratic Institutions,
foundations and systems of justice, ethical
standards, political and economic systems.
Finally creative and critical Intellectual abilities
are essential, the ability to think and construct
argument with Ingenuity and Imagination.
GETTING DOWN TO SPECIFICS
Some clearly-defined skills must be attained. The
concept of an argument, its reasoning and
validity, is gained from a study of logic. Courses
such as statistics, economics and mathematics
provide skills in quantitative derivation and
interpretation of data. Writing ability is acquired
from many English, government, foreign
language, history and philosophy classes — or, in
fact, from any class where the instructor requires
high-quality essays based on readings or
lectures. Other courses you might include in your
study are accounting, ethics, argumentation and
persuasion. Above all, think in terms of courses
that are intellectually demanding, particularly in
the areas of reading and writing.
Two other categories are included: those likely to
enhance your knowledge of man, history,
society, and the present highest level of our
intellectual heritage, and those likely to enhance
your reading comprehension and writing skills.
LSAT PREPARATION
The Law School Admission Test (LSAT) will
compare you with other students across the
country who are taking the test at the same time.
Admission to almost any law school - and to all
ABA-approved law schools - requires this test.
Each person is ranked by a raw score (based on a
maximum of 800) and a percentile score. In the
latter case, for example, if you score in the 89th
percentile, this means 11 per cent of those taking
the test did better than you did. Your writing
ability is scored separately, with a maximum of
100.
In general the LSAT will examine reading
comprehension, vocabulary, reasoning, English
grammar, and ability to read material such as
graphs and statistical tables.
SUGGESTIONS
Following are some suggestions for improving
yourself in test-taking:
Pre-Testing. UNLV's Counseling and
Evaluation Center offers a great variety of
vocabulary, reasoning and verbal skill tests
which prepare you for the LSAT's. These
pre-tests are similar in type and difficulty
and they can be graded to point out your
particular strengths and weaknesses. Your
advisor may recommend that you take
these tests several times during your
college years to evaluate your progress and
your changing needs.
LSAT "dry runs." You can take the LSAT
itself a number of times. However, because
scores usually improve with such practice,
many law schools count the first score
unless a second score is more than 60 or 70
points higher. Your pre-law advisor will
guide you on this matter.
The Law School Admission Pre-Test. This
is another exam similar to the LSAT. It is
administered nation-wide several times
each year and it parallels the LSAT in
length, difficulty and conditions of stress.
While your exact program will be worked
out with your advisor, you can still consider
the following list as a sampling of courses
typical of those that may be of value to you.
ENG 110 Introduction to Semantics
ENG 201 Advanced Composition
HIS 201 American Constitutional History
HIS 202 American Constitutional History
HIS 212 United States, Birth of the
Republic, 1763-1789
HIS 213 United States, National Period,
1789-1850
HIS 220 England and the British Empire
PHI 101 Introduction to Logic
PHI 220 Logical Theory
PCS 104 Principles of Political Science
PCS 108 Introduction to Political Science
PCS 202 Public Law
PCS 204 Political Theory
PSY 234 Theories of Personality
see 231 Crime and Criminal Behavior
see 236 Sociology of Law
CRJ 232 Criminal Justice Process
ACC 151 Elementary Accounting I
ACC 152 Elementary Accounting II
ACC 210 Federal Tax I
ECO 101 Principles of Economics I
ECO 102 Principles of Economics II
ECO 251 Public Finance
BUS 202 Legal Environment
BUS 273 Business Law I
LSAT score: is that all there Is? Although a
remarkably high LSAT score might get you
admitted regardless of all other
considerations, it's more likely the law
schools will look at other factors, such as
where you studied, what classes you did or
did not complete, your grades especially
during the junior and senior years, letters of
recommendation, your resume, and the law
school's own version of a law school index
(LSI). Each law school prepares its own LSI,
a figure used to rank the hundreds of
applicants they are considering. Usually,
the LSI is a composite of LSAT scores and
GPAs, often adjusted for differences
among schools.
Example of a perfect LSI score:
(a) LSAT maximum, raw, is 800 800
(b) Writing ability maximum is 80 (xlO) 800
(c) gpa maximum is 4.0 (x200)* 800
Highest possible LSI score 2,400
Example of a score recorded by a recent
UNLV graduate:
(a) LSAT, raw, 500 500
(b) Writing ability (LSAJ) 55 (xlO) 550
(c) UNLV gpa of 3.2 adjusted by LSDAS*
was 3.1 (x200) 620
Student's total LSI score 1,670
(This student was accepted by two southern
California law schools.)
*The gpa is factored by the LSDAS (Law
School Data Assembly Service) before being
multiplied by 200.
Classes not completed. Part of the
interpretation of your transcripts involves
the "N" and "I" grades. Two or three of these
need not cause alarm, but 10 or 15 will
appear to be indications of low academic
capacity. Rather than stack up a lot of "N" or
"I" grades, either ask for help or drop out
until you are better prepared to study.
Classes taken. As stated before, no set
program is your golden key to law school
admission. Your grade point average is
evaluated according to the degree of
difficulty of the courses you took. A high
GPA in some notoriously easy program
won't get nearly the respect of a moderate
GPA in something that's a challenge which
demands extensive reading and the writing
of cogent essays. Some law schools may
indicate which majors have usually been
admitted or which tend to do well. Others
will welcome applications regardless of the
major.
Junior and senior year grades. Though
grades throughout college are considered,
it is not uncommon to do better in the last
two years. These are more accurate
indicators of your current abilities. Top
scores in a difficult major would be best, of
course, but a 3.7 GPA in the last two years of
a difficult major would probably count more
favorably than four years of 4.0 in a less
demanding field. In addition, avoid taking
pass/no grade options, as they make your
transcript harder to compare to others, and
hence, weaker.
Letters of recomtnendation. These can be
particularly valuable, giving the admissions
officer a chance to discover something
personal and concrete about you - rather
than just a statistic or GPA. Your best bet is
to request letters from professors from
whom you've taken intellectuallydemanding
courses which involved
research and written term projects, and a
letter from someone who knows you and
your work well.
Your resume. You and those writing letters
of recommendation for you will be asked to
comment on your leadership capacity, your
emotional stability, maturity of purpose,
and interests outside of school. Activities
which could indicate achievement in these
areas include holding student office,
working on the college newspaper,
participating in local political campaigns,
and involvement with church or secular
youth groups. Also important would be
community service among the poor, the
elderly or others in need of help;
commitment to programs such as VISTA,
Peace Corps or University Year for Action;
and internships in legislative or
administrative offices at the state or federal
level. Activities such as these indicate
initiative and capacity for achievement
beyond the basic intellectual abilities.
Pre-Law Advisory Committee
Ralph Roske, Director of Legal Education and
coordinator for Pre-Law advisement at UNLV,
has current information on law schools, costs,
policies and financial aid. The pre-law advisors
are Dr. Brock Dixon, Dr. Ralph J. Roske, Ms.
Sharee Schrader, Dr. Lome H. Seidman, Dr. Jerry
L. Simich and Dr. Craig Walton. The UNLV Pre-
Law Association is a student organization
concerned with these matters as well as the
possibility of a Nevada Law School. You are
invited to inquire about meetings and activities.
Bibliography
1. Pre Law Handbook: Official Law Scfiooi Guide
(Published by the Association of American
Law Schools and the Law School Admission
Council).
2. Levi, E.H. introduction to Legal Reasoning.
3. Gruber and Willdorf, Law School Admission
Test (Published by Simon and Schuster).
4. O'Donnell, Law School Admission Test.
(Published by Regency and Cowles).
5. Strunk and White. The Elements of Logic.
6. Lambuth, The Golden Book of Writing.
7. Pickering, Harold. Preview of Law Study.
8. Report of the Task Force on Project Utilization.
ABA, 1973.
9. World Peace through World Law by Grenville
Clark and Louis 8. Sohn (3rd Edition)
Harvard, 1966.
August 1975
University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Office of Information and Publications
AUG-24-95 THU 8:41 PROVOST FAX NO. 8954054 P. 01/01
LIBRARY
SPECIAL COLLECTIONS DEPARTMENT
Nancy:
Here's the list of law school materials I found in the archives. The first
number is the Archive number; the second number is the box number in that
archive; and the third number is the item number in that box. I've included
just a brief description of the material, too.
12:11:45 - "Law School Planning" (correspondence, 1968-73)
12:34:38 - background, correspondence, and support materials, 1973-74
22:10:48 - law library donations, 1974
22:27:34 - law school proposal, 1968
23: 2:37 - background materials, law school (1966 and 1973)
62:11:5-6 - Law School Study for the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (2.cc printed;
2cc 8^5x11 spiral bound manuscript)
65: 2:108 - law school advisory committee meeting minutes, 1973
68: 8:295 - single letter, 1982
88: 4 - UNLV Law School survey of studies, 1976
92: 3:7-8 - law school development account balances; law school library account
balances (computer printouts), 1983
96: 3:15-16 - law school questionnaire, 4.9.73; law school committee, 1979
Post-It* Fax Note 7671 i?- ZTH if- |1p a0g' ssk' (t ~
From 1 \ r~- Co./Dept. ~ tvfhACY H iWv. Co.
Phone #
i-3X #
L_ SOSo U-DAU
• „ .. _
UNIVERSITY OF NEVADA. LAS VEGAS 4505 MARYLAND PARKWAY/LAS VEGAS, NEVADA 89154/(702] 739-3252
Nancy:
Here's the list of law school materials I found in the archives. The first
number is the Archive number; the second number is the box number in that
archive; and the third number is the item number in that box. I've included
just a brief description of the material, too.
12:11:45 - "Law School Planning" (correspondence, 1968-73)
12:34:38 - background, correspondence, and support materials, 1973-74
22:10:48 - law library donations, 1974
22:27:34 - law school proposal, 1968
23: 2:37 - background materials, law school (1966 and 1973)
62:11:5-6 - Law School Study for the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (2cc printed;
2cc 8^5x11 spiral bound manuscript)
65: 2:108 - law school advisory committee meeting minutes, 1973
68:^^/8:295 - single letter, 1982 '
88: /¥ ~ UNLV Law School survey of studies, 1976
92: 3:7-8 - law school development account balances; law school library account
balances (computer printouts), 1983
96: 3:15-16 - law school questionnaire, 4.9.73; law school committee, 1979
•% X-'DR fV* C*v^'6\lW»
Ti
UNIVERSITY OF NEVADA, LAS VEGAS 4505 MARYLAND PARKWAY/LAS VEGAS, NEVADA 89-154/(702) 739-3252
LIBRARY
SPECIAL COLLECTIONS DEPARTMENT
Hancy;
Here's the list of law school materials I found in the archives. The first
number is the Archive number; the second number is the box number in that
archive; and the third number is the item number in that box. I've included
just a brief description of the material, too.
12:11:45 - "Law School Planning" (correspondence, 1968-73)
12:34:38 - background, correspondence, and support materials, 1973-74
22:10:48 - law library donations, 1974
22:27:34 - law school proposal, 1968
23: 2:37 - background materials, law school (1966 and 1973)
52: ii:5-6 - Law School Study for the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (2cc printed;
2cc 8%xll spiral bound manuscript)
65; 2:108 - law school advisory committee meeting minutes, 1973
58: 8:295 - single letter, 1982
3S: 4 - UNLV Law School survey of studies, 1976
92: 3:7-8 - law school development account balances; law school library account
balances (computer printouts), 1983
96: 3:15-16 - law school questionnaire, 4.9.73; law school committee, 1979
VtRSir/ OF NEVADA, LAS VEGAS 4505 MARYLAND PARKWAY/LAS VEGAS, NEVADA 89154/(702) 739-3252
Law School Archives
1. "Pre-Law at UNLV" brocure (2 c.)-
2. 62:11:5-6
Pedrick, Dean Willard H. and Professor Lome Seidman. Law
School Study for the University of Nevada^ Las Veaas.
4 c.
3. Jansen, Judge William D. Memo re Drake University
blueprints of law school, etc. Other info attatched.
January 26, 1990.
4. 88:4
UNLV law packet. Survey of studies.
5. Consolidated Students reminder letter.
6. "Factor E: Education, Existence, Emergence: In Epilog".
Spring 1975.
7. List of contents for boxes 3, 4.
8. Copy of list to Nancy re archive materials.
9. 96:3:15
Law school questionnaire.
10. 96:3:16
Law school committee.
11. 92:3:7-8
Law school development account balances; law school lobrary
account balances (computer printouts), 1983 [2 files].
12. 68:8:295
Single letter, 1982.
13. 65:2:108
Law school advisory committee meeting minutes, 1973.
14. 23:2:37
Background materials, law school (1966, 1973).
15. 22:27:34
Law school proposal, 1968.
16. 22:10:48
Law library donations, 1974.
17. 12:11:45
Law School Planning (correspondence, 1968-73).
18. Law school proposal file.
12:34:38?
Background, correspondence, and support materials, 1973-74?
Law School Archives
1. "Pre-Law at UNLV" brocure (2 c.)-
2. 62:11:5-6
Pedrick, Dean Willard H. and Professor Lome Seidinan. Law
School Study for the University of Nevada. Las Veaas.
4 c.
3. Jansen, Judge William D. Memo re Drake University
blueprints of law school, etc. Other info attatched.
January 26, 1990.
4. 88:4
UNLV law packet. Survey of studies.
5. Consolidated Students reminder letter.
6. "Factor E: Education, Existence, Emergence: In Epilog".
Spring 1975.
7. List of contents for boxes 3, 4.
8. Copy of list to Nancy re archive materials.
9. 96:3:15
Law school questionnaire.
10. 96:3:16
Law school committee.
11. 92:3:7-8
Law school development account balances; law school lobrary
account balances (computer printouts), 1983 [2 files].
12. 68:8:295
Single letter, 1982.
13. 65:2:108
Law school advisory committee meeting minutes, 1973.
14. 23:2:37
Background materials, law school (1966, 1973).
15. 22:27:34
Law school proposal, 1968.
16. 22:10:48
Law library donations, 1974.
17. 12:11:45
Law School Planning (correspondence, 1968-73).
18. Law school proposal file.
12:34:38?
Background, correspondence, and support materials, 1973-74?
sk 4 M fg / !Q
LOLAAJ OLi/tXtf, y C 5
LIBRARY
SPECIAL COLLECTIONS DEPARTMENT
ilancy;
Kere's the list of law school materials I found in the archives. The first
number is the Archive number; the second number is the box number in that
archive; and the third number is the item number in that box. I've included
Just a brief description of the material, too.
1/12111:45 - "Law School Planning" (correspondence, 1968-73)
-'r3-5-34^5-36-'- background, correspondence, and support materials, 1973-74
\/j^24-i:0r46-- law library donations, 1974
y/ ^2 T27T34~~-Hbaxr-9ehoal--pxapQsal, 1968
^2'.37~- background materials, law school (1966 and 1973)
J J /y • 62:11:5-6 - Law School Study for the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (2cc printed;
2cc 8%xll spiral bound manuscript)
j/--Tr5T"'2': 108 - law school advisory committee meeting minutes, 1973
y 8:295 - single letter, 1982
>/ S8-^;~4 - UNLV Law School survey of studies, 1976
^9-2^3;7-8——law school development account balances; law school library account
balances (computer printouts), 1983
y-96; 3:15-16— law school questionnaire, 4.9.73; law school committee, 1979
JMIVERSir/ OF NEVADA, LAS VEGAS 4505 MARYLAND PARKWAY/LAS VEGAS, NEVADA 89154/(702) 739-3252
National Need
1. 19?^ Existing Law Schools: About 40,000 Admitted
130,000 L.S.A.T. Tests Taken
110,000 Applied
Of the 110,000 who apt)lied probably 20,000 were well qualified!
2. The National number of first-year law students has doubled
from 1960-1970.
3. It is projected that by 1978-79 there will be:
214,000 L.S.A.T. papers graded
48,000 First year students enrolled
4. Most State Universitys and strong private law schools received
10 to 15 applications per first-year class positions available.
5. Capacity of the approved law schools to receive first-year law
students is exhausted,
6. 1973-74 = Virtually no empty seats in approved law schools.
7. Factors contributing to capacity enrollment,
A. Population growth (continuing relationship between 22 year
olds to first year law students)
B. Larger number minority group law students.
Mid-60's = a few hundred
1969-70 =2,500
1973-74 = 7.601
C. Substantial increase in female law students.
1963 = 1,883
1973 = 16.760
D. Relative slowdown in other professional field placement
compared to continued relatively strong law graduate placement,
"
E. Dissatisfaction with society's organization (earlier
campus riots gave way to interest in change thru the system
via the channel of law),
8. College poll re: career objectivesjIaw
YEAR SENIORS FRESHMEN
/ Males / Females / Mal^/"Females /
1966-67 5.9 %
1971 7.1 ^ 1.2 %
1973 6.7 fo 2.5
9. 1973 Nearly 11 % B.A's registered with L.S.D.A.S. seeking
law school admissions for 1973-7^.
10. There could be a substantial number less (applicants) and
still have sizeable excess of truly qualified law school
candidates,
11. Immediate future 5 years will show continued absolute increase
in applicants and continued acute shortage of available student
positions (as much as 3 times positions available in approved
schools and 8 to 10 times as many for state universities).
National Need (Cent)
Past growth in number of our society's lawyers and ability
of our society to absorb.
1951 = 1 t 696 citizens
1970 = 1 ! 572 citizens (still strong demand for law grads)
There are now 156 ABA approved law schools. At present rate,
it would require nearly 50 new law schools with first year
classes of I50 each to handle qualified applicants and receive
the additional 8,000 new students predicted by 1978-79.
STATE NEED
State statistics beneficial to law school establishment
Population doubled since i960
Increasing percentage of native-born population (higher
birth rate - lower death rate than nat'l average).
Increasing population stability
Highly Urbanized = B0.9 ^ (9th nationally in 1970)
1972-73 Nevada L.S.A.T, Applicants
160 took LSAT and registered with LSDAS
968 applications were filed (average of 5 + per person)
91 accepted (a number accepted by more than one school)
32+ enrolled (number believed higher than reported)
50-60 enrolled is closer figure probable
National norm is substantially higher"than above figures
1970 First-year enrollment, nation-wide, of 22 year olds
was 1.1 % thus
1972-72 Nevada had approx. 8000 22 year olds which should
have yielded 90 enrolled in first year law school.
Effect J Fewer young Nevadans are trying to study law.
Fewer young Nevadans are securing admission,'
Fewer young Nevadans are actually enrolling in
law school than one would expect.
Contributing Factors
A. NO VISIBLE LAW SCHOOL or law student examples, thus lack of
stimulation to study law.
B.COST of going out-of-state to law school.
Exi Calif, (draws most Nev. Law Students) Tuition.
1973-7^ Low $1,500
2,200 U. of Calif. System
Hixrh ^'^oP WcGeorge (602LSAT, 3.O5 CPA)
High 3.184 Stanford
These tuitions make total cost from $^,000 to $7,000 per year
a barrier impossible for many Nevada students, even if thev '
are accepted.
STATE NEED (cont.)
Fragmentary Survey - UNLV
130 Responses
89 Interested in attending Law School and would attend one
in Nevada.
7^ Would NOT be able to attend Law School out-of-state.
CAUSES!
A ) Cost
B.) Quota's. Active discrimination by most schools against
non-resident applicants. Restriction from 0 to 25 ^
out-of-state student limit. (197^ poll indicated
only 9 or 10 schools didn't restrict non-resident
admission. 33 did (15^ mean))
RESULTS! Young Nevadan with precisely same entrance credentials
as resident applicant will be passed over in favor
of resident.
EFFECT: Channels more non-resident applications to privatelyfinanced
law^schools making task of winning admission
even more difficult because of shear numbers of total
applicants. Thus: If our qualified students can't find
admission - why apply? NO MOTIVATION.
Qualifications
iiTS study of Nevada LSAT scores shows Nevadans as a very fair
sample of National youth. Thus, by ability level, Nevada
students SHOULD win acceptance to law school at same rate as
young people generally but, in fact, have lower rate of success,
.hus, lack of opportunity for law study within own state by
Nevada residents of sufficient ability and character, is a loss
to the entire state as well as the student.
Caused among those who do win admission due to their
differing economic advantages resulting in less affluent more
likely to be unable to accept their admission because of
overall costs.
OTAT-C. 0.aiN£.J?' 1T
Center for legal studies and research.
Provide states own law-trained graduates.
Benefits and service of professional school.
State will receive a variety of capabilities
disinterested attentionthru study and evaluation of
the state legal system and its administration.
Due to states predicted rapid growth , benefits will be received
thru research regarding (just a few examples). . .
A. law of property
B. law of landlord & tenant
C. law of real estate finance
D. laws regarding environmental nrotection
Ei laws regarding land^use planning*
7.
8.
STATS BENEFIT (cont^
Due to Nevadas predicted rapid increase in economic activity
(ax. commercial ana industrial development) benefits will be
received thru research regarding, , ,
A. law of corporations
B. law of securities regulation
C. law of commercial transactions
Research of system of criminal justice and its administration.
sjstif oJ^Nevidf' ^ legal
6.
7.
8.
IT •W I
V .
COMMUNITY BENEFIT (Attorneys)
1. Most of the same benefits as would be received by the state.
2. Adequate library facilities (Clark Co. Law Library incomplete).
3. Public Service Projects
4. Community Attorneys
A. Improve legal system
B. Continuing education
C. Improved research capabilities
nairer^^^"^^ Characteristics (32^ responses to I974 question-
A. Legal profession concentrated in urban areas.
B. 1/3 practice as individuals.
n' with partners or professional corp.
D. 69.5% are members of ABA (5th highest in nation).
Legal practice is diverse
lo"c??Jo?a?rilw°^ = business orientation,
2.) Taxation
3«) Administrative Law
Benefit minorities!
28,000 Negroes in Nevada
2^1,000 Women in Nevada
Practicing Bar recognizes that some of the most effective
continuing ed. programs comes from professional
memSbrs of law faculties, and continuing ed. is an
•ciQ A profession to the community. Some State
Bar Assoc. require continuing ed. for lawyers as a
for renewal of their license to prac^iJe/^oluntSry SonUnuing
Ikius!/"""^ updating lawjer^ .
Practicing Bar recognizes that areas of practice are mov^n^
toward specialization, thus a further benefit in having a
with continuing ed. for maintenance of
certification in a special area.
9. Adequate Library Facilities, Clark CO. Law Library incomplete.
GENERAL BENEFITS
1. Law School serves needs of society by providing law-trained
persons to administer the justice system for all members of
society.
2. Professional ed. opportunity to citizens,particularly lower
income group.
3. Professional training for public leadership.
4. Provide additional legal services, especially to lower income
groups.
5. Provide legal training and study of important problems peculiar
to or with special character in Nevada,
6. Provides independent source of critical analysis of court work,
and legislature and administrative agencies.
7. Possible para-professional training.
8. Assistance of legislature, judiciary and public administration.
9. Education of police and civil authorities regarding laws they
administer and enforcej constitutional citizen's rights.
10. Educate undergraduates, high school students and general public
about workings of legal system in democratic society.
UNIVERSITY BENEFITS
1. Enrich university image.
2. Opportunity for interdisciplinary research.
3. Almost no segment of scholarship and learning is foreign to
some tie with the law. Thus Library, legal scholars, and
capable students provide endless resourses to entire University
system.
4. Law faculty and students contribute to policy formation
legislation drafting projects along with other disciplines.
5. Sensitizing University Community to "due process of law" in
University affairs.
FUTURE - GROWTH
1. Expect continued growth in numbers (some leveling off because
of even more needed to affect percentage change).
FUTURE - GROWTH (cont)
2. Projected population of Nevada
1980 - 777,000
1990 - 1,082,000 (16 yrs. will almost double todays size)
2000 - 1,319,000
2020 - 1,564,000 (46 yrs will more than triple todays size)
3. Population distribution - area rate variations
Most growth - Clark Co. 1970 = 55.9 %
1980 = 62.7 %
Fast growth - Washoe, Carson, Douglas
4. Growth in Casino-Resort industries.
A. increased gaming tax revenues
B. increased employment
C. incomes in "support" industries
5. I97O-73 Employment in Nevada increased 3 l/2 times national rate*
6. 1970-73 Employment in Las Vegas increased 2 3/4 times nat'l rate.
7. 1970-73 Employment in rest of Nev, increased 4 1/2 times nat'l
rate.
8. Clark Co. area rapid population growth (55^ states population)^
demanding expanding justice systems, courts, prosecutors,
legal aid programs aided by clinics and intern programs in the
school.
FUTURE - NEED and
EMPLOYMENT
1. Increased admissions due to , , .
A. Larger population of young people.
B. Interest in law of minority and women,
C. Interest in public service opportunities,
2." It is believed that the Bar can absorb additional graduates.
3. It is believed that allied careers can absorb additional grads.
from a school of law.
4. Employment prospects for 1970s & 1980s Law graduates.
1970 - Attorney total in U.S. = 355,242 ) ^ ^ ny 2i
1973 - Enrollment in ABA approved schools = 106,102 ) ^^ ^
1973 - Law Degrees awarded = 27,756
1973 - Persons admitted to the practicing Bar = 30,075
5. Below you will find the answers to the following questions.
? Under present system can they be gainfully employed?
? What will happen to the status of the Bar?
? Will public suffer from an oversupply of attorneys?
? Although demand for lawyers is increasing, is its rate
rapid enough to absorb the supply?
? Are all fields of practice adequately staffed.
? Are all areas (geographically) adequately staffed.
FUTURE - NEED and
EMPLOYMENT
ANSWERS i Consider the following in answer to the before
listed questions.
A. Most of the standard arguments do not apply to a state
that has NO law school.
B. There is evidence of a change in the system of law. It
is beginning to restructure to meet needs of those not now
adequately served.
C. . Many law school graduates can and do seek employment in
affiliated fields rather than pure practice of law. Ex.
corporation legal staffs, law clerks for judges etc.
D. Employment of lawyers expected to grow moderately thru 1980s.
E. ABA Task Force 1972 "There is no conclusive evidence to
indicate that there are now, or are likely to be in the
foreseeable future, more legally-trained men and women than
can be satisfactorily and productively employed."
F. 1973-7^ law graduate placement hard to deduce because of
lack of factual information! however, law school placement
officers indicate that, due to population growth in certain
areas, placement has slowed a bit but market is relatively
strong. Placement slower in areas which show greater concentration
of law schools (east coast and Calif.).
G. Demand for legally trained persons is expected to be
sufficient to absorb supply of law grads.
H. Demand for Capacity of law schools expected to be insufficient
to accommodate qualified applicants.
I. Unlikely to be a genuine oversupply in future of legally
ed. graduates.
J. Nevada difficult to predict using national standards since
it is not a cross-section of the national economy, ie
Recreation over agriculture, mining and industry.
LAWYER POPULATION RATIO
U.S.A. / NEVADA
1970 ... Is 572 1:633
1.) Of Nevada's 773 attorneys <739 were listed in directory.
617 of 739 were in Las Vegas & Reno showing' very low
numbers in outlying counties.
2.) Of the 739 listed.
583 = private practice
139 = government service (Exec., Legis., & Judicial)
32 = private corp.
K. Future needs in Nevada are directly related to population
growth.
L. Nev. experience of past suggests need for legal services will
support placement of substantial numbers of new attorneys
each year.
FUTURE - NEED and
EMPLOYMENT
M. Nevada positions will hinge on development of new methods
for providing legal services for very much larger segments
of society* (As across entire nation;
N. Factors that will increase demand for legal services.
1.) Demand will grow in direct relation to population and
economic activity.
2.) Urbanized society draws heavily on those with legal ed.
3») Rural areas also need law services to be increased.
0. Majority of 6o to 80 new law graduates per year will find
places in conventional legal profession (parallel
experience of fast-growing Mountain States Region).
1.) Large Urban Communities
2.) Rural and smaller communities
3.) Positions wnere law training is useful but not required.
P. Possible Placement Positions
1.) Private practice
2.) Trust Officers
3*) Law enforcement personnel
4.) Court administrators etc.
5.) Insurance Operationss claims, investigation, adjustment
6.) Executive posts
7.) Police affiliated legal staff.
S.) Corrections administrators legal staff
9.) Prosecutor's Office s
10.) Public Defenders Offices To name a few
Q. Areas of possible specialization and causes.
1.) Growing number of legal questions (increased population)
2.) Supreme Court decisions extending counsel for lesser crimes.
3.) Consumer protection
) Safety
5.) Increased legal service use by mid-income groups
6.) Replace retiring lawyers & other natural openings
7.) Increased governmental regulation & legislation
-.) Changing methods of property ownership
9.) Criminal justice
10.) Counsel for indigents in misdemeanor cases
11.) Expanded counsel in civil cases
12.) Increased complexity of society in general in litigation
_ . , . To name a few
Total overall predictions Nevada new lawyers will encounter
about same placement opportunities as likely thru rest of
nation despite different nature of the states economy. One
advantage Nevada has is the expected economic expansion.
NEVADA'S FUTURE FINANCTA7,. ,
STABILITY ^
Nevada is not now spending excessively on higher ed.compared
to other states (per-capita income).
Nevada appears to have adequate economic base - compared with
other small population states supporting law schools.
NEVADA'S FUTURE FINANCIAL STA3IT.TTY (cont)
S. Nevada's economic growth provides tax resources available for
law school support.
^"'1960^197?'^^''^^^'^ percentage personal income growth in Nation
5. 1960-1970 = Las Vegas is third (3rd) city in nation in personal
income growth.
AC KN 0W LEDGEME N T
This has been a very brief summary, compiled by the Citizens
Ad Hoc Law^^School for UNLV Committee, Jan Gould, Chairman, of
portions 01 the complete and detailed Law School Study for UNT,V
which was researched and put together by Willard H. Pedrick, Dean
of the Arizona State University College of Law and Prof. Lome
Seidman, chairman, Dapt of Finance, UNLV, who gave us "their
greatly aporeciated permission to do this paper.
This paper was made as brief as possible for the rapid use of the
Nevada Legislators and other concerned citizens, and by no means does
apologies for not includinHfl o?
he valuable factual information, and the methods for deriving the
statistics herein included. ci.xvxri^ tne
Following this page are actual pages taken from the study itself
regarding the capital costs and operating expenses necessary to
establish and run a first-class law school.
APPENDIX PART VI. BUDGET PRO.JECTIONS
Budget Projections.
(a) Budget Projections for the Planning Year
(b) Budgeting for the First-Year Class
(c) Further General Budgetary Projections
(d) Physical Facilities — Temporary and Permanent
Basic Assumptions;
To project costs for the planning year and the first year of operation
for a Law School for the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, requires
certain assumptions concerning the nature and quality of the Law School
to be initiated. These assumptions will be the subject of extended
comment and explanation in the full Law School Study being prepared
for the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. For present purposes, the
assumptions will be shortly stated:
(1) It is assumed that the planning year might be the fiscal
year, 1975-76. To secure the Dean and get the planning
activity under way at the beginning of the fiscal year
will require six months or more of lead time. One must
take into account the likelihood that the Dean, upon selection,
would probably have present commitments limiting his
availability to a part-time or part-year basis. It is
probable that the planning period would occupy all of fiscal
1975-76. During 1974-75, provision should be made to cover
a salary for the new Dean, or consulting fees for his service,
during the portion of the year before he is fully
on board.' Some additional funds for travel, secretarial
services and the like may be required. In addition, some
Provision might be required in 1974—75 to begin to plan
for the permanent home to be built for the Law School.
Interim costs of the sort just described are not further
elaborated. As a rough estimate, $50,000 probably
will cover costs to be encountered in 1974-75,
apart from any law building planning costs.
t
(2) Although the ultimate size of the Law School, within
would not greatly affect the cost of the planning
year or the first year of academic operation, it may be
well to state that the Law School envisaged by the Consultants
for the University will be the smallish, mediumsized
Law School. In concrete terms, an entering class
in the 70-90-student range is contemplated as appropriate
for Nevada, with its population, economic base and probable
absorptive capacity for law graduates.
APPENDIX PART VI. BUDGET PROJECTIONS
(3) A school offering full-tirae or day classes only is contemplated.
If evening classes were to be added, additional
costs would be encountered. Total student numbers would
not seem to justify an evening program. To begin the only
Law School in the State of Nevada with both a day and evening
division school would prejudice the quality of school in
absolute terms as respects total financial costs and in
terms of prestige, taking into account of the fact that
some evening division schools are not adequately financed
and, accordingly, do not stand high in the world of education
.
(4) Although the costs of the Planning Year and the first year
of academic operation would not be much affected, the Law
School envisaged for the University of Nevada, Las Vegas,
would be a school adequately financed to undertake what
has come to be described as "Law Center" function —
embracing, among other things, responsibility for development
of programs of Continuing Education for the Bar, responsibility
for organized legal research to assist the Legislature
and other branches of Government and further functions
characteristic of Law Centers. The cost of those added
functions, which extend beyond the central responsibility
of educating law students, will appear most significantly
in budgetary projections for the second and third years of
the Law School's operation.
(5) The capital costs for the Law School, notably capital costs
for the Law Library and for the Law Building, are separately
treated .
(6) The inflation factor as to all items of cost will require
adjustment of the figures here presented to take account
on lapse of time between the present projection and the
actual incurred expenditures.
(7) The budget figures offered in this Memorandum are intended
to proyide adequate financing, even if development should
be fully on schedule. That is quite unlikely. Even though
a Dean were fully on board at the start of fiscal 1975-76,
there surely would be an appreciable delay in recruitment
of other key personnel. Accordingly, it is likely that
there will be substantial underexpenditure in both the
Planning Year and the First Year of Operation. Those
apparent economies will fade, however, as personnel and
program catch up to the planned scope of activity.
APPENDIX PART VI. BUD'^ET PROJECTIONS
(a) Budget Projections for,the Planning Year :
The salary figures used are set substantially at the level of the
median salaries for law deans, librarians and law professors. The
national figures, as reported by the Section of Legal Education of
the American Bar Association, reveal that, in the Mountain States Region,
salaries at the better law schools — Utah, Colorado, Arizona and
Arizona State -- are at or above the national median figures. It is
not contemplated that the University of Nevada should endeavor to
lead the way on salary levels in legal education. The assumption,
rather, is that salaries for law faculty in Nevada should be competitive
with the good Law Schools of the Region.
(The figures are offered in terms of 1974-75 dollars.)
(1) Administration — Dean's Office
Salaries
Dean
Associate Dean
Secretary
$ 36,000 - $ 40,000
$ 27,000 - $ 30,000
$ 8,000
(Administrative
Assistant)
Clerical Assistant
(Wages) $ 6,500
Total $77,500 - $84,500
(2) Law Library — Salaries and Wages
Salaries
Librarian
Assistant Librarian
Cataloguer
Secretary
Part-time Help
$ 23,000 - $ 28,000
$ 14,000 - $ 17,000
$ 12,000
$ 6,000
(Wages) $ 5,000
Total $60,000 - $68,600
APPENDIX PART VI. BUDGET PROJECTIONS
(3) Operations — Brochure, Bulletin, Application Forms,
Travel, etc.
Salaries
Brochure, bulletin, $ 7,000
application forms
Travel $
Office equipment and $
office supplies (typewriters,
dictating
machines, desks, photo
copy equipment)
Telephone £
Total
Planning Year
8,000
8,500
2,500
$26,000
Total Planning Activity
Law Library Capital
Total
$179,100
$100,000*
$279,100
(b) Budgeting for the First-Year Class;
(Figures used here are cast in terms of 1974-1975
dollars and an inflation factor will be required.)
(1) Administration — Dean's Office
Salaries
Dean
Associate Dean
Secretary
(Administrative
Assistant)
Secretary
Clerical Employee —
technical (course
materials, reproduction)
Office A.ssistant
(Secretary for
Admissions)
Outer-Office Receptionist
and typist
Travel
Total
$
$
$
40,000
30,000
9,000
6,500
7 ,500
$ 7,500
$
(2)
12,000
9,000
$121,500
*Plus $150,000 from private funds given for Law Library development
.1
APPENDIX PART VI. BUDGET PROJECTIONS
(2) Instruction
Faculty (4)
Faculty Secretary (1)
Operations (xeroxing
and reproduction of
course materials, office
supplies, telephone,
student organizations,
financial assistance. Law
School Paper or Newsheet,
visiting lecturers' expenses
and honoraria and
annual Bulletin or Catalogue
of the Law School)
Capital equipment for instruction
(typewriters, desks,
equipment for reproduction
of course materials) $
Total
5,000
Salarigg
$100,000
$ 6,000
$ 35,000
$146,000
(3) Law Library — Operating Costs
Librarian
Assistant Librarian
Cataloguer
Reference Librarian
Secretary
Part-Time Personnel
Total
The total first-year operating budget
(excluding capital for Law Library and
Law Building).
Salaries
$
$
$
$
$
$
29,000
17,000
14,000
12,000
7,000
6,000
Law Library Capital
$85,000
$352,500
$100,000*
First-Year Operation Total Budget $452,500
*Plus $150,000 from private funds given for Law Library development
APPENDIX PART VI. BUDGET PROJECTIONS
The Law Library Capital Requirements — Planning Year and Thereafter;
Although the standards of the two accrediting organizations, the
Section of Legal Education of the American Bar Association and the
Association of American Law Schools, both specify required minimal
library holdings, it is generally recognized that accreditation of
a new law school is not likely to be extended if the library holdings
simply meet the bare minimum. This position of requiring more from
newly-organized schools is formalized in the 'Policy Statement on
Accreditation of New Law Schools" issued by the Association of American
Law Schools. The same policy is, in fact, administered by the Section
of Legal Education of the American Bar Association. Accordingly, for
a newly-organizing school, a first goal for the law library of 50,000
volumes by the end of the third year of the school's operation (which
would coincide with the graduation of the first class) is an acceptable
and feasible goal, assuming adequate financing. The second goal would
be to achieve a collection of 100,000 volumes by the end of the sixth
year of the school's actual operation.
To meet the first goal, in terms of law library development, would
require, in the early years of the school's life, capital in the
range of $500,000 to $700,000. It is difficult to estimate, in
advance, the actual cost of the beginning collection. There may be
fortuitous and advantageous acquisitions. On the other hand, more
recently published material is becoming very expensive, indeed. There
is, as well, the matter of the extent to which a new law library may
wish to go for microfiche or other book substitutes.
In the year of planning and development before enrollment of the first
class, at least $250,000 should be available for library capital ex— •
penditure (including, in that term, a modest.amount for book binding
and, of course, for shelving). An additional $250,000-$300,000 should
be available for the second year, when the first entering class
actually arrives on the scene. Thereafter, in light of the inflated
condition of the dollar. Capital outlay of $150,000 per year for the
law library should continue, at least until the second goal is reached
and probably $125,000 thereafter, as the dollar will be subject to
continuing erosion in terms of real purchasing power.
Accordingly, to arrive at the overall budgetary requirements for the
projected new Law School during the Planning Year and during the First
Year of Actual Operation, there must be added to the direct operational
costs outlined the capital needs for the library. In addition, of
course, there is the matter of physical facilities.
Ill* Further General Budgetary Projections;
After the first full year of operation, the school will receive its
second entering class. The following year, the school would be in
full operation with three classes in residence. There will be a sharp
/
APPENDIX PART VI. BUDGET PROJECTIONS
upward movement in the budget when the original entering class moves
into its third and final year. Teaching in small groups, small sections,
seminars and in clinical activities characteristic of the final year
will substantially enlarge the faculty and supporting staff. The Law
Review should then be in full operation. At that point, the school
will be fully operational and its costs will be those of other good
law schools for the Region.
In 1973-74 in the Mountain States Region, the better law schools
ran with budgets that reflected per-student costs (exclusive of
maintenance, depreciation and overhead) in the range
to $2700. A school in the 200-250 student range a bit more
expensive on a per-student basis than one in the 400-500 range.
A per-law-student operating budget cost of $3000 per student,
current dollars, is believed to be a fair price to enable quality
legal education under wise administration.
With a student body of 200 to 250, a good Mountain States Law
School in full operation at the current level of costs
costing from $500,000 to $800,000, in current dollars, depending
on the rate of Law Library growth and Law Center function activity.
Enlarged enrollment and enlarged function will require a larger
operating budget. Projecting that figure ahead five years will
provide an estimate for the then to be encountered operational
costs. By 1979-80, it is probably very optimistic to
per-student costs will be as low as $3500. A figure of $4000 for
the Mountain States Region would be more realistic, but the proD
lem basically is to gauge the pace of inflation. The Consultant
has no crystal ball on that front.
(d) Physical Facilities — Temporary and Permanent;
(1) Temporary Accommodations. In the first year or two of the life
of a new Law School, it is assumed that the school will be housed in
temporary quarters. The object here is to estimate roughly the requirements
for the temporary interim physical facilities needed fof
the beginning Law School. The space needs and the estimated requirements
for the first two years of operation are as follows:
Classroom (1) 1500 sq. ft.
Student lounge and
study area (1) 1500 sq. ft.
Offices (for Dean, ^ _
Associate Dean, four
Professors and two
Administrative
Assistants) 2800 sq. ft.
Secretarial Offices 450 sq. ft.
Reception 250 sq. ft.
Library (stack space,
- study space and
,• library staff work
space) 4000 sq. ft.
; T o t a l 1 0 5 0 0 s q . f t .
.1
APPENDIX PART VI. BUDGET PROJECTIONS
The nature of temporary housing for the first year, or two of the law
school is not of critical importance. It may be possible to find
space in an existing building not committed to other uses. On the
other hand, a number of the recently established new law schools lived
satisfactory lives in temporary housing specially erected for the
purpose. Vvhat is important is that the functions enumerated have their
space and that the space be reasonably comfortable and usable. Of
prime importance, of course, is library stack space to accommodate
the rapidly-developing law library.
Should a Law School be initiated, it is assximed that provision would
be made for a permanent home for the school hopefully by the end of
the second year of its operation, as the temporary space outlined would
not be adequate for the third full year of operation with three classes.
(2) Permanent Physical Needs. For a student body in the 200-250
student range, with the satellite functions characteristic of a Law
Center — including responsibilities in the field of Continuing Education
and Legal Research — a building in the range of 60,000-80,000
gross square feet: will be required.
It should be borne in mind that legal education is presently in a
transition period — moving actively towards skill-type instruction.
The teaching of the skills of advocacy, of pleading, of interviewing,
counseling, drafting and negotiating require a much more intensive
use of teaching staff. This means a relatively larger teaching staff
with varied needs, both for office space and teaching facilities.
Accordingly, the Law School building of 20 or 30 (or even 10 years ago)
is not really adequate for the activities to be expected as a part of
a modern law school operation. Any law building for a Law School
built in Nevada should, as well, be built both with an eye for future
expansion to cover both increased numbers of students and additional
functions on the part of the Law Center.
APPENDIX PART VI. BUDGET PROJECTIONS
SUMI4ARY OF BUDGETARY PROJECTIONS FOR LAW SCHOOL
For Pre-planning Year (1974-75); $50/000.
Planning Year (1975-76):
Operations $179,100.
Library Capital 100,000.*
Planning Year $279,100.
First Year of Operation (1976-1977):
Operations $352,500.
Library Capital 100,000.*
First Operational Year $452,500.
*Plus $150,000 each for two years from private funds given for
Law Library development
Note: As explained in the text, the actual expenditures
are likely to be substantially below the
budgeted amounts, because recruitment of personnel and
expenditure of capital for the Law Library can be expected
to lag behind the projections. No allowance is
made in these projections for the total cost of physical
facilities or such costs as building maintenance and
depreciation, nor for any share of Central University
Administration overhead costs. No inflation factor has
been built into the figures.
Finally, actual expenditures will almost surely vary
from the categories described in these projections.
Projections by budget categories are simply designed
to give a measure of reality to the estimating process.
Experience always defines the gap between the expected
and the facts of life.
Spring, 1975 seventy-five cents
Factor E
EDUCATION, EXISTENCE, EMERGENCE: IN EPILOG
"The Law School Story"
This year UNLV won "What was happening in
more than Carson City this year anyway?"
"one for the gipper". MOST of the
A year's recap of the sports Law School story
begins on page 9. on page 2.
"Why a Campus Radio Station?"
Can Las Vegas Factor E proposes its necessity
really be exempt from , , , .
the depression? UNLVs p 3
top Economic„ Professors Pr,a ge 27.
say yes. Page 25.
STAFF BOX
Factor: E: Education, Existence, Emergence; In Epilog.
SPRING, 1975
Editor Mike Navarro
Associate Editor Norm CImon
Photograptiy Editor Bill Soard
Copy Editor Gary Cortez
Layout and Design Metamorptiosis
Contributing: Dr. Bernard Malamud, Dr. William T. White, Dr.
Lon Splght, Dominic Clark, Steven B. Howard, William Becker.
This magazine is published semesterly by the Consolidated
Students of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, 4505 Maryland
Pkwy., Las Vegas, Nevada 89154 and is operated by
CSUN Publications, Bob Stodal, Editor-in-Chief. Express permission
by CSUN before any of its contents may be reproduced.
INSIDE
I The University
A Politics
1. Val Buhecker: The Year Behind 1
2. The Law School Story 2
3. The Quality of Education Inside Back Cover
4. Joe Karaffa: The Future of Student Government.. 3
B Departments
1. Jerry Crawford: Close to the Top 4
C Activities
1. The Year of Everything 6
D Sports
1. The Men Behind the Sports 9
2. Women's First Year Success 12
3. "One Game at a Time" 13
4. Ingersol: Team Defensive Leader 14
5. Meyer Recruits 16 New Players 14
6. Meeker Pleased with First Year 17
7. 8-3-3 Ain't Just KIckIn' 17
8. Rebs Start Final WCAC Season 18
9. UNLV Track Records 19
10. 24-5: Best Season In 17 Year History 20
II The Community
A Money
1. The Las Vegas Economy 25
B Culture
1. The Question of the Campus Radio Station 27
III The Universe
A Aliens
1. Extraterrestrial Life: Does It Exist? 28
The
I am grateful for the opportunity to make
this report of the year's accomplishments and
failures within CSIJN.
One year ago I ran on an Eight Point Platform.
At this time, I wish to review that platform's
results as It definitely affected the
overall direclon of CSUN.
Removal of CSUN
From Its State of Chaos
Shortly after my Installation CSUN saw one
of Its most fluent operations In Its history. I
spent roughly 35 hours a week during the
summer and first semester working In the office
to clear up the chaos. The budgets were
approved, committees were appointed and
began working, and short term goals were
achieved all In record time.
I think the key was the openness of this
administration and the hardest working Senate
In CSUN history which existed during the
summer. Together, I feel we had eliminated
the chaos In student government.
However, I must concede that after eight
months the "honeymoon" was over. With the
elections four months away, the mood of the
Senate changed, the ability to listen disappeared,
and the state of chaos returned.
The traditional "President vs. Senate" fight
evolved as It has for the past five years just
before election time. When will CSUN ever
learn?
Financial Revue
A thorough review of traditional budgets
brought about a balanced budget with new
direction. Emphasis was placed on cutting
those areas that least affect students. Increasing
budgets where students benefited most,
and Insuring new programs by earmarking
money for them.
Our estimated Income was $103,000 from
student fees and $50,000 In revenues. We
had $11,000 left over from the Wade Administration.
The general expense budget which Is strictly
overhead was cut from $22,000 to $17,000.
I removed all presidential slush funds and
travel funds and had six of CSUN's fourteen
phones taken out to help make this cut.
The activities budget was Increased as
were the Day Care Center's (by nearly 60%)
and CSUN Publications (by 30% with 20%
more added to ball out the YELL). A special
publicity budget was also established for communication
purposes. We also boosted the
organizations matching funds for additional
programming.
Athletic Events Reform
I proposed a four point plan to make the
athletic program more fair to the students.
The spouse fee option was put In effect
immediately. Students were able to take their
spouse to the games at near student rates.
This option proved very successful.
I was successful In getting the "optional
athletic fee" which Included the other two
points, guaranteed seating and season tickets,
before the student body and the Board of
Regents. This ten month negotiated plan will
probably be my greatest accomplishment.
Activities Expansion
I set up the activities board and budget so
as to guarantee Its expansion and new pro-
Val Buhecker
grams.
An outdoor recreation program was established
with camping gear being purchased.
I regret that this program Is just barely getting
off the ground but I expect It will grow.
The dance program which basically failed
evolved Into the very successful "Smaug's
Coffee House." I sincerely hope this program
will expand In the future.
The budget called for more cultural events.
This Insured ethnic programming as well as
quality cultural happenings such as GREGOR
SOKLOV.
A special events program was boosted to
catch floating opportunities and to Insure additional
programming.
The traditional successful lecturers, concerts
and movies were kept with movies being
expanded to two nights Instead of one and
film festivals being added.
The major shortcoming of activities was
the lack of planning. Too many programs
were planned at the last minute.
Development of Student Services
Through cooperation with Dr. Black and
the Union Board under Eric Sprlngall we expanded
the Student Union Information Booth
to Include many new services. The check
cashing service and the postage service have
proved to be the most successful. The Board
also developed a ceramics workshop upstairs
where the old kitchen used to be and added
a music listening room In the Fireside Lounge.
I promised to Install a Bookdrop on campus.
The Library and Union Board cooperated
In placing three of them on campus.
A mimeograph and ditto service were added
In the GSIJN Office for students and organizations
to use.
I regret the failure of the academic council
to materialize. Only a couple of students
were really willing to work on this badly
needed service.
Establishment of a
Day Care Center Boartl
I established In the summer a Day Care
Center Board made up of parents which
proved most successful.
The Day Care Center Is In Its best shape
ever with a tremendous Director, Evelyn Ludeman,
and staff. The program has evolved
from babysitting to teaching.
This program Is my pride and joy and the
"Board" made the difference. We even got
the rent lowered.
One Man, One Office
There has been a great need to spread
out the responsibilities In government so that
more students can get Involved. I have tried
to avoid appointing people to more than one
position, especially key positions.
This standard has resulted In nearly 120
people being appointed to positions which
before were either left unappolnted or were
occupied by th 35 membr In-crowd. Hence,
more students did get Involved In the program
this year.
An Investigation Into
The Agency Account
Last summer CSUN was made "an arm of
the University" and had Its accounts placed
In the Business Office. Evaluating this move
I found It basically good.
We save from $5,000 to $10,000 In this account
and receive all the services the Business
Office has to offer. The Business Office
supplies accurate Information but In exchange
CSUN Is forced to think ahead In
financial matters.
CSUN only need fear Itself. If It makes
mistakes or mismanages Its money, then the
Business Office will be there to catch It. I
think this Is also good.
Things not promised, but . . .
I regret that two proposals were prevented
this year. The Legal Aid Program (hiring a
Lawyer), and the drafting of the Student Bill
of Rights both were bogged down In Senate
Committees. Both services are needed by the
Student Body.
Other accomplishments I have been Involved
In Include reevaluatlon of the student
insurance program which resulted In Increased
benefits to meet rising medical costs. I
also established a fraternity row search committee,
a lobbying committee for UNLV programs,
and revised the organizations council.
The latter two have proved a bit disappointing
but are a step In the right direction.
The major Issue still left undone In CSUN
Is the YELL. Although many solutions are
being hinted the real Issue will soon evolve:
"Who Is going to run the paper; the students
or the University?" I caution the Student
Body to weight carefully any proposal made
In the future concerning the YELL.
I wish to thank the many people who have
taken the time to work In CSUN. This has
been a most rewarding and meaningful experience.
I have met many great people and do feel
my education has been enhanced by this past
year's activities.
I wish to especially thank my wife (whom
I married while In office) for her support and
endurance.
Last I thank the Student Body for permitting
me this opportunity, and I wish you all
the best of success In the future.
The Law School Story
Amidst a slowly dissipating cloud of confusion
lies the controversy known as the
UNLV Law School Issue. $7,000,000 figures
for one blennlum were among the "hearsay"
costs that ran amuck In the legislature this
session. What actually did happen and how
did rumor take precedence over testimony In
the state capltol? The story can best be told
sequentially.
During the fall semester. Dean Wlllard H.
Pedrick of A.S.U.'s College of Law and Prof.
Lome Seldman, Chairman of the Finance
Dept. at UNLV published the fruits of a year's
labor In their Law School Study for the University
of Nevada, Las Vegas. This feasibility
study looked at Nevada's population, economy
and Universities, the need for a Nevada
Law School, what a new law school would do
for the state, and costs. The conclusions
were extremely favorable as to Its benefits
for all Nevada, and seemingly every possible
area of concern was analyzed. Including the
cost of a building. Dean Pedrick estimated
the facility, at present, would cost $5.2 mil-
Ion. Copies of this study were sent to all
members of the legislature.
At the start of the Spring semester, the
Consolidated Students opted to take an active
position on the Issue. CSUN formed a
Legislative Action Committee and appointed
student Mike Navarro (who was In Carson City
as a registered lobbyist as per his employment)
as advisor. Mention of the law school
confronted Navarro with the $7 million figure.
According to Navarro, refutation was
Impossible, and many legislators additionally
had qualms about entering Into any new continuing
programs with the economic status of
the nation. It seems that a few years back,
the Senate and Assembly had been sold on
the need of a medical school for Nevada and
been told that the cost to them would be
about $200,000. It Is currently requiring over
a million. Little progress was made but It
was discovered that Sen. Dick Bryan had a
UNLV Law School bill In the drafters, and
that Sen. Floyd Lamb supported the measure.
Optimism prevailed among the students for
a while, but It was short lived. LAC Chairman
Al KIngam and member Dave Elklns came to
the capltol to give testimony on another matter,
and lunched with Bryan, Assemblywoman
Jean Ford, and Assemblyman Bob Craddock.
Although all three legislators supported the
Idea, they felt that no favorable action would
be taken on the law school Issue this session.
But they did offer an alternative. They suggested
that for $200,000 Nevada could enter
the WICHE Law School program, which would
enable Nevada students entering an out-ofstate
law school to have a majority of their
tuition paid by the WICHE program. KIngam
stated that It was not Ideal, but the compromise
could serve as a stop-gap measure until
the next legislative session. KIngam and
Elklns left, taking the compromise back to
their constituents.
On March 23rd, Dr. Al Johns "State Legislature"
class journeyed to Carson City with
the Intent of seeing the legislative process
first hand, and doing a little lobbying for the
Law School. Using the name "Students Concerned
with Lawmakers", the students got the
same reaction as did the LAC: "Law School
NO. But what about WICHE?" Deciding that
this may be the only action taken to aid prospective
Nevada Law Students, the group
began Ic^bylng the compromise.
But Howard Needham, one of the students
In John's group and a future law student, did
not easily accept the compromise. Needham
reported that the Assembly Ways and Means
Commltee had been '.'turned off by the $5.2
million building figure". Approximately one
week before the students' trip north, the Las
Vegas lawyers had put out a news release
regarding the excessive amount of lawyers In
N'evada already. When confronted with this
by the lawyers, Needham responded "If this
Is really true, how do you explain the backlog
In civil liberties and Indigent law cases?"
Needham reports that his impression was that
they were really confronting a North/South
Issue. "Snowy Monroe, Tom Weiss and Don
Mello all want the law school In Reno."
During their stay In the capltol, the students
also had an audience with the Governor.
"O'Callaghan says they're In a need for
other things, specifically better prisons, retardation
facilities, and medical help. He says
we don't need a law school now."
On April 4th, UNLV President Donald Baepler
gave testimony on this Issue to the Senate
Finance Committee. Baepler's proposal
was this: The program can be started In '76
for an Initial $50,000. This money will allow
us to hire a dean, who will begin formation
of the school, and a librarian, who will start
coordinating a Law library. There will be a
three year program beginning In '77, and the
total cost to the state for the three years will
be $300,000, with the other $200,000 needed
coming from the students. There will be 70
•students In each going class, at a cost to
each of $5000. per semester. The library will
cost approximately $600,000, but we already
have Its cost pledged by a major strip hotel.
Jan Gould, of the Clark County Citizens
Law School Group, In an Interview with Factor
E, threw more "fat Into the fire". She
noted that "the Marquette Law School has
80,000 current, accredited law books for sale,
attainable at a very appetizing price. These •
books would make up 80% of our needed
law library." Gould also noted that the $5.2
million building continued to stifle support.
"The legislators should be Informed that a
building cost does not have to be taken care
of In one session, or this session. All that
needs to be done Is to show a financial commitment
to one by the third year In order to
attain accreditation, and Its cost can then be
stretched over a thirty year mortgage If necessary."
Both Gould and Baepler are against the
WICHE compromise, though. They feel that
with the money going to WICHE, and the
money from the students going out-of-state,
a law school program could be accomplished,
and the benefits of a continuing education for
our lawyers, an accessible law library In the
South, and a number of other factors make
this the logical choice. With this argument
In hand, the WICHE compromise has been
dropped, and all efforts are now back to
their original position.
During the week of April 7th through the
14th, the Assembly Ways and Means Committee
approved a Veterinary School for UNR.
The relevance of this occurrence Is that UNR
did not request it, and a feasibility study, up
to this point, has not even been undertaken.
The ."^ennfe Finance Committee appears not
to be In favor of this program at present, but
Is In favor of the Law School. Ways and
Means Is not In favor of the Law School. Now,
politics. Both committees must get together
to "thresh" out what budgets, that onlv one
side has approved, will be put Into effect,
and the name of the game becomes bargaining.
On April 14th, Baepler again gave testimony:
this time to Ways and Means. He made
the same proposal, and this time Vegas legislators
voiced the cry "I'm against It." The
two loudest southern lawmakers were Darrell
Dreyer and Bob Robinson. Dreyer proclaimed
"Two years ago we talked to Zorn about It
and he told us that two existing classrooms
would take care of It. This year Dr. Baepler
shows us a spot on the campus and tells us
this is where the law school will be built."
Robinson's comments were a bit stronger: "It
seems the University system Is more Intent
on getting a law school than meeting the
needs of the students." And added "We
could get them Into any school anywhere In
the country, If we could Include law In Nevada's
WICHE participation." But Supreme
Court Justice David Zenoff noted that young
people come to him with complaints they
can't find schools which will accept them.
2
The Future of Student Government
The time has come for the Consolidated
Students of UNLV to wake up, to realize
where we are, and where we are going. For
too long the Consolidated Students have
shown disinterest and apathy concerning the
University and the Student Body. We must
now realize the Importance of each Individual
growing as a person and as an Integral part
of the future In the free society. The college
student of today Is the leader of tomorrow.
If we can consider UNLV as a test tube for
each student, we can see the relevance of a
college education. The opinions, beliefs. Interests
and desires that each student obtains
In college life and In youth will be part of
him for his entire life. We see weaknesses
In today's society yet we seem willing to
allow gross Inadequacies to continue. Apathy,
In my opinion, will be the ruin of the "free
society". Apathy will also be the destruction
of the Consolidated Students.
Let us return now to the thought of UNLV
as a test tube. The grading process commits
each student to compete against his fellow
student, there Is competition throughout the
entire University system. We find competition
In grades. In sports. In theatre, Inter-fraternlty,
for elected office, for jobs, between members
of the faculty. In the administration. In fact,
everywhere one looks on this campus there
Is competition. The final outcome of this
competition Is the essence of an Individual's
future, be he a student, professor, or administrator.
Therefore, we see the University as
a test tube for each person Involved, if he
wins he achieves. If he loses — he Is lost.
The Consolidated Students have one
strength that no other group on campus possesses.
We will all be leaving — whether It
be for graduation or for work without graduating,
we shall all leave. The question then
becomes what shall we leave for those who
follow: Shall we leave the Incoming Freshman
an organized unified Student Body or
shall we leave him chaos, with ho organization
that wants to satisfy his needs? This
should be the purpose of the Consolidated
Students: An organized Student Body, responsive
to student needs, for the mutual
protection and growth of every member. This
shall be my objective as President of the
Consolidated Students.
I draw your attention to the name of the
organization — "The Consolidated Students".
It Is my belief that most college students have
very similar philosophical beliefs about the
future. It Is readily apparent that without
change, free society's future Is bleak. Shall
we destroy ourselves by pollution, over-population,
war. Ignorance, prejudice, crime or
what. Or shall we, as the leaders of tomorrow,
start thinking less about ourselves and
more about our fellow man? The hope for
tomorrow Is In Its leaders, will the leaders be
ready or is society doomed?
Across the UNLV campus we see fellow
students striving towards excellence. In the
sports arena, UNLV students are gaining national
recognition for abilities In football and
basketball. The Theatre Department, through
Its student casts, attained the top ten in Unl-
Joe Karaffa
verslty plays throughout the entire nation. The
Hotel Department and Its students are now
recognized as one of the best schools of Its
type In the nation. Although these are only
a few examples of the excellence members of
the Consolidated Students have attained, one
fact Is obvious — the students on this campus
can compete with students on any campus.
Now, If we can only unite, as the Consolidated
Students of UNLV, we will achieve
almost anything we desire. There Is definitely
safety and strength In numbers. If seven
thousand students want something they shall
have It.
As the University grows, so should student
government. CSUN must become more efficient
and more unified to meet the growing
student needs and demands. In an effort to
meet these challenges, I shall attempt to
write the various student factions on campus.
In so doing, the elected representatives of
the Consolidated Students must also unite
for the benefit of the entire student body and
the University. I call on the CSUN Senators
to forget past differences and remember student
government's purpose. If we work together
we shall achieve.
My past year of experience as Vice-President
of the Consolidated Students has given
me the experience necessary to lead the organization.
I am thankful for the chance to
learn how the CSUN operates. It has been
a pleasure to meet the many people, to learn
how government functions from the Inside,
and to see the Importance of communicating
with Individuals. I would like to congratulate
the past President, Val Buhecker, for the work
he has accomplished. I hope I have the ability
and strength that he has shown many
times.
In the next year, many changes shall be
enacted. Changes that hopefully will enable
CSUN to operate more efficiently. The YELL
newspaper must be given Its Independence.
This shall be accomplished by a Senate By-
Law establishing a Mass Communications
Board. There shall be a Student Bill of Rights
modeled after the National Student Bill of
Rights and presented to the Board of Regents.
More Investigation of a radio station on
campus shall be completed, programming for
a radio station, licenses and hopefully establishing
a campus station In the next year.
CSUN shall attempt to secure the long overdue
need of legal services on campus. We
shall expand activities to Include a more
varied lecture program, larger concerts, expanded
outdoor recreation programs, and a
film series to Include classics, experimental
and outdoor movies.
I believe CSUN should also establish a
poll of students' Interest on a yearly basis.
The elected officials of the Consolidated Students
shall make themselves more available
to their constituents by enacting office hours
for all executive and legislative representatives.
These hours shall be posted at the
CSUN Office so each student will know when
he may see his representatives.
My administration will be designed to promote
unity, motivation, and responsibility In
government and In the Student Body. As
%
President, I shall have weekly meetings with
key Student Government Officials to coordinate
our efforts and Initiate our plans. Our
objectives shall be student oriented and
group attained.
It Is my belief that student government
should now enter the area of academics. It
Is our education, therefore, we should have
something to say about It. For this reason,
CSUN shall begin student evaluations of the
faculty. Such evaluations should deal with
professor's lectures, reading materials. Interest
In the Individual student, and his desire
to teach. These evaluations shall be partially
derived from evaluations used at other Universities.
The evaluations shall be totally
student sponsored and the results shall be
published In booklet form for students' future
reference.
CSUN shall also attempt to establish a
book co-op, thereby giving students a break
on the price of books. Bring your book In,
set your price, and If another student Is willing
to buy your book you receive your price
minus a nominal handling charge.
In order to enact these and other programs
we shall need student support. Leaders cannot
lead without supporters. For your own
sake, I now call on the Student Body to become
more Involved. I realize that most students
work, that the average age Is over 22,
and that we only have so much time in a day.
However, just by voting you become Involved.
By your willingness to speak to your representatives
he can represent you — the student.
Again, apathy will destroy the Consolidated
Students, just as It will destroy the
American way of life.
The student's way of life Is similar to that
of his peers. His philosophical viewpoints are
similar to his peers. We are all attending the
same University together. Now after many
students are dead, such as those at Kent
State, can we not unite? Can we not think
positively? Can we not enjoy our college life
together? I think so, don't you?
In that this article will come out near the
beginning of summer and most of us will be
leaving for summer fun or work, I ask you to
consider this article as a message about the
future of the Consolidated Students.
We can enjoy our college life, we can learn
and grow together. We can also wither and
die like a plant without sunlight. Enjoy your
summer, enjoy your life, but when you're old
and death seems near, be able to say I lived
my life to the fullest and the world has gained
from my existence.
3
Factor E Interview
Jerry Crawford:
Close to the Top
Jerry Crawford is, in his own words, "An
Iowa farmboy who married his college sweetheart"
and is the father of three chiidren.
He had his PhD in playwriting and has been
teaching at the University of Nevada, Las
Vegas since 1962. This year under Crawford's
direction UNLV's "The House of Bernards
Alba" was chosen as one of the ten
teach, direct, act, write. So by then I'd reached
the rank of full professor in theatre, and
since that sabbatical leave and those administrative
days I have been doing just that:
Teaching, directing, writing, and acting. I'm
tenured, age 40, and will probably be here 'till
retirement.
F.E.: Then you're happy here? I mean, would
you rather be doing something else?
CRAWFORD: Yes, I'm very happy here, and
I'd rather be sportscasting with the Cleveland
Indians.
F.E.: What's your immediate goal for the theatre
department?
CRAWFORD: My goal is to see the theatrical
arts continue to grow as a cultural force in
this community. I need to see better and
better support than I've seen to date. It's
coming, and the responsibility is ours. I want
to see the people of Las Vegas embrace the
theatre department and the Judy Bayley program
and realize, as I came to realize years
ago, that not only does man not live by bread
alone, but he does not live by science alone,
or by the material things of this world, although
we need all those things . . . you
know "man cannot See his own eyes, but he
must see himself." And the best way to do
that is to see himself as he is represented on
the stage, that mirror of his life. I think we
need the theatre. I am very much an edu-
* -fa •
top productions in the United States. On the
basis of the latter (and most of the former
with the exception of the "farmboy" part).
Factor E has decided to spotlight the man
who has brought further acclaim to the University.
FACTOR E: How did you first come to
UNLV?
CRAWFORD: In 1962 I was in California interviewing
for a teaching position when Paul
Harris contacted me from a little school called
the Southern Regional Division of the University
of Nevada in Las Vegas. I laughed,
thinking there's nothing but a school there,
and there really wasn't: there were four
buildings, desert, and Maryland Pkwy. was a
blacktop road. I came here, they told me I
could teach Shakespeare and direct, so I
signed on and I've been here ever since.
F.E.: Didn't you take an administrative post
for a while?
CRAWFORD: Yes. From '65-68 I became
Dean of the University faculty, and I left
theatre. Don Moyer was here, and he was
the first President and 1 was the first Dean
of Faculty. Well, after Harold Hanlon ... he
only lasted two months . . . that's another
story. Then I had to make a decision in 1968,
when they decided to organize the theatre
department, to go on in higher administration
or come back home. I wanted to come back
home. So I came back as Chairman of the
department. Dr. Harris was then a Dean of
Fine Arts. Did that for two years, got a sabbatical
leave, wrote a play, took it to New
York, got a professional agent in New York,
made up my mind that I wanted nothing more
to do with administration. I just wanted to
we had the largest amount of entries yet in
our seven years: over 335, competing for a
final selection of the ten most outstanding in
America, which are brought, all expenses
paid, to perform in the Eisenhower Theatre in
the spring. Then there's no further competition:
when you go to Washington, you've already
won, and it's a festival of the best ten,
performing from 2-3 productions. In "Bernards
Alba's" instance we're going to perform
four; we're performing more than any
other college or university.
F.E.: Why did you choose "Alba" this year,
and how difficult was it to stage?
CRAWFORD: Lorca's "Bernards Alba" is a
very difficult piece of material. I selected It
Because of its wonderful acting roles. I had
good tryouts and put together eighteen outstanding
actresses. I did a lot of experimental
work with the production to open that
material up, to find humor in it. Did a couple
cationalist in that sense. But in no way does
that detract from my view that theatre is first
entertainment. Sure, escape, enjoy, laugh
and cry; that's wonderful. But to me it's also
a force, in society, that makes man see his
foibles. The poets often are the seers in society.
I think it's time they were restored to
that respected position in society. That's
what I'm about.
F.E.: Well, the National Collegiate Festival of
Theatre Arts has surely done some tremendous
work in that area. How exactly is a college
production chosen?
CRAWFORD: Well, each fall an American college
or university may enter a production in
the competition by paying a fee. This year
of daring things with set design with Fred
Olsen. Ellis Pryce-Jones did a beautiful job
with the costumes. Don Schmeidel assisted
from the Spanish department. It worked out
that I got a beautiful ensemble of acting from
those girls.
F.E.: Theatre Arts are one of the areas on
campus that the faculty chose to spotlight.
Can we assume then that you have an adequate
departmental budget?
CRAWFORD: Well, I must say that we've
never felt the administration totally supported
the faculty vote as much as they should have
for his type of special treatment. We've had
to struggle along the way we always have.
We're not supported enough; we're a little
understaffed, for the size program we put on.
I don't really offer a big complaint, but I
think we need more. And I think this award
will help us get more. The greatest thing we
have going for us, and we deeply appreciate
it, is the student government's support
through the performing arts fee. Of course
they get free tickets out of it, but it's a wonderful
two-way street and we hope it continues.
F.E.: Didn't you run Into some censorship
with your production of Vonnegut's "Happy
Birthday, Wanda June"?
CRAWFORD: I think that's stating it a little
too heavily. Dr. Zorn in no way censored us,
nor has any administration. However, there
was a good deal of community criticism of
the language in that piay. We made the mistake
of not advertising the play clearly
enough, and we've done that ever since:
"Recommended for the Whole Family", or
"Not Recommended for Children". But you
know, many modern plays, as do many modern
films, have a very liberal language usage.
We're a long way from "Gone with the Wind."
But, we had enough criticism that year that
the administration asked us to reexamine our
forthcoming season, which was the first season,
therefore a very important season, in the
Bayley theatre, if you look at the program
that fall, we had scheduled right in a row
"Marat Sade", and "Bernarda Alba", in rethinking
the thing, although there was a split
opinion among faculty and students, the majority
felt that the administration was wise to
admonish us to look at it. We just delayed
those plays: "Marat Sade", one year; "Bernarda
Alba", two. It turned out wise because
the first season turned out extremeiy well, so
did the "Marat Sade" season, so has the
"Bernarda Alba" season. If you want to look
at that as pressure from the administration,
you can. Certainly not censorship, and I do
not consider this in any way a pressure or
censorious academic or civic community.
F.E.: What can we expect next year?
CRAWFOFtD: Well, that's a little premature.
We're still working on it now. But I can tell
you the types of things we're working on.
For example, the American College theatre
festival has put out a mandate, in honor of
the bicentennial, that all entries be by American
playwrights. We're considering Robert
Sherwood's "Abe Lincoln in Illinois", "Pippin",
Mr. Burgan is discussing premiering a
play by the resident playwright here, me. It's
called "The Auction Tomorrow". Oh, there
must be twenty or thirty other plays under
discussion. But basically we'll probably have
a festival of American theatre here next year.
ii.-
if i.
Top ten in nation: Crawford (center) and the award-winning cast of "The House of Bernarda Alba".
CSUN Activities: The Year of Everything During the '75-76 school year, UNLV saw
a selection of movies, concerts, lectures, and
other areas previously unparalled by student
government. Working with a budget of $56,-
000, approximately $75,000 worth of programming
was put on by the Consolidated Students.
Mike Navarro chaired the CSUN Activities
Board during the summer and fall,
and was followed In that position by Rosalynn
Barney. President-elect Joe Karaffa has
again appointed Ms. Ramey to hold that position
next year, and the following are her reflections
on the year behind.
ON MOVIES: "I feel that It averaged out to
be a very good year for movies, mainly because
of the Wednesday and Thursday movie
nights. We had more general admissions this
year, but that was most likely due to our
movie selections. Our most successful movie
was "Jesus Christ, Superstar".
On the criticism of movies that have recently
or are soon to play on T.V., Ms. Ramey
stated that they still did well at the boxofflce.
"People like a 'theatre' atmosphere. There's
a total Immersion of sorts that Is unobtainable
at home."
ON LECTURES: "Our most successful lecturer
was Gene Roddenberry. We sold out a
day In advance, and still turned away approximately
300 people at the door. But we tried
to stay away from the usual circuit this year.
We thought the special Interest people would
hit a broader range of students than the
'newsmakers'. Speakers such as Roddenberry,
Stanton Friedman, NIkkl GlovanI, and
Stan Lee offered a little something for just
about everyone."
Istratlon supports the Idea. Val Buchecker
had chosen to stay away from using that facility
because he had received quite a bit of
negative feedback from the students on that
Issue. It's my feeling though that It was the
group (The Guess Who) and not the facility
that the students protested. Since that concert,
however, the County Commissioners
have set up some pretty stringent regulations
on promoting concerts at the Convention Center.
They want you to put up a bond of an
equal amount to what you expect In ticket
sales. That It totally ridiculous to ask us to
do that because we don't have that kind of
money. But we should be able to get that
munlty."
ON CULTURAL EVENTS: "Our most successful
cultural event was probably Russian pianist
Gregor Soklov. It was a very nice evening
and we had a good turnout from both the
community and the students. We also had El
Teatro Compesino, a free-style Chlcano repertory
group and Black poetess NIkki GlovanI."
ON THE ASSASSINATION WEEK: "Yes, It
was a real killer. No, but seriously. It was a
tremendous success and that pleased us. This
was our first stab at a theme week and we
hope to have more next year. People seem
to like the Idea of focusing on one Issue for
Folk singer James Lee Stanley
an entire week. There Is definitely a market
for more. During this week we had speaker
Rusty Rhodes and the films 'Day of the Jaeckel'
'Executive Action', and 'Z'. I guess It
would have been appropriate If the week
would have bombed, though."
ON CONCERTS: "The most successful, of
course, was George Carlln/Kenny Rankin.
We were sold out In advance on that one
also. But we didn't have too much luck during
the first semester. Part of the problem
was the facility we had to work with. We
have the ballrom, period. Any act we book
In there that costs over $1000 we lose money
on. And the big acts that would be automatic
sellouts cost over $10,000, some up to
$30,000 and beyond. Previous administrations
had had some trouble using the Convention
Center, and that sort of negated our using It
this year. But we have negotiations going with
the County right now and the Karaffa admln-
Black poetess Nikki Giovani
facility at no cost and have 90% of the requirements
waived because we are part of
the University and a non-profit organization."
ON THE BERGMAN FESTIVAL: "Well, with
a festival like this, we're back to appealing
to a certain group of people. We expected
about 150 to 200 people, and we got the
turnout we expected. Hopefully next year
we can expand Into a film festival series like
this: classics, things you can't get In the com- Russian pianist Gregor Soklov
George Carlin: Encore Comedy Concerts
ON THE POLITICAL AWARENESS SERIES:
"Definitely beneficial to the entire community
as well as the students. Although not too
successful In terms of student turnout. It was
a good program and needed to be offered to
the students; again. It's part of our responsibility."
ON THE MARIJUANA FORUM: "One thing
we wanted to happen this semester was the
Marijuana Forum. There was a lot of research
done on It and a lot of time put Into contacting
the people on It. But Interest seems to
have died down tremendously on It this semester,
not necessarily from the student body,
but from the law enforcement agencies to
come In and help support It. But we do plan
to do It next year and It should be a very
comprehensive source of Information for all
concerned. We'd planned to have a number
of people come In and speak on the pros and
cons of marijuana reform, but It Is difficult
to line up people against It because they are
not as vocal right now. We do feel that It Is
an Issue In which students can get Involved,
because whether you smoke or don't you do
have a stand on It."
ON PROMOTION: "The Consolidated Students
this year have built up an Identity with the
community and they are becoming aware that
we do put on quality programming at a nom-
Stanton Friedman:
"They do exist, / tell yon."
Inal cost to them. They are starting to take
advantage of this and that can only mean
more money for more programming for the
students."
ON THE CRITICISM OVER HIGH PUBLICITY
COSTS: "We are a commuter campus. We
have a little over two hundred students living
In the dorm. The rest of them live offcampus
and come out for their classes. If
you want to reach those students you have
to advertise off-campus. I think most of our
students have three classes In the education
building (or the equivalent), never hit the
Student Union and see a Yell about once a
month; you go to your classes, you work, you
go home and take care of your family. Getting
Into those costs, though, take Soklov, for
example. Instead of spending the $200 on
advertising, we could have brought In another
movie or lecturer. But It draws away from
the quality of that program. The only facilities
for publicity we have here are the marquee,
posters and the Yell. I think the outside
advertising Is extremely justified. That's
the way you reach your students and It's
building more P.R. for he Consolidated Students."
ON STUDENT INPUT: "If a student petition Is
received, we do bring In that lecturer. It happened
once this year with the art department,
Cold Blood: Cooked' without crowds
1
Fanny: On the charts AFTER
but some art students came in and complained
that their instructor passed it around and it
was sort of 'if you don't sign this it's not good
for the class'. You can't go on that. After
talking with some students in that department,
the amount of money that would have
been spent on that particular lecturer was not
warranted. But we do need more student input.
At the beginning of the semester we
had ten people working on spending $56,000
plus revenues of the students' money, and
now we have five, plus about ten unofficial
members of the board, if a student has a
suggestion, he can come in and talk to me
in my office, if I'm not here, he can write
a note and give it to the secretary; I'll get
it. Then it's readt o the board and referred
to the person in charge of that type of event.
That person has to take and investigate the
suggestion and report back to the board on
his findings."
ON FUTURE LECTURES: "We are talking
about bringing in more lecturers dealing with
the political atmosphere in our country right
now. i think the students are with the general
public in asking themselves how the two highest
officials in our country can bypass elections.
I think the students get involved in
that sort of thing."
Proxmire: Presidential Hopeful
UNLV Coaches UNLV Sports
The Men Behind the Sports
it has been said that behind every good
man, there's a good woman, too. Well, the
driving force behind the University of Nevada,
Las Vegas athletic program is a solid, hardworking
group of determined professionals.
Both in coaching positions, administrative
posts, and support areas, UNLV has what has
to be considered one of the finest intercollegiate
athletic staffs in the entire country.
The axle for the ever-forward-turning wheel
of athletic progress for UNLV is Director of
Intercollegiate Athletics, Bill Ireland.
After five years of creating a football program
for UNLV, Ireland Is completing his second
year as the head man in the Rebel program.
As head coach, the Rebels under Ireland
posted a 26-23-1 overall record with a nearperfect
8-1 mark in the first season of competition.
After leading the Rebels to four consecutive
winning seasons, Ireland has taken
giant steps toward building UNLV to a major
college team. He was very instrumental in
pushing for the Las Vegas Stadium which
opened in the fall of 1971 and no one has
worked any harder or more successfully in
Bill Ireland
putting the community behind the still young
football program.
Before coming to UNLV, Ireland had already
established himself as a firm part of
the Nevada sports scene as an athlete and
a coach. Born in McGill, on April 29, 1927,
he was an outstanding athlete in the White
Pine County schools. After graduating from
high school he served a stint in the U.S. Navy
during World War 11, and then entered the
University of Nevada, Reno, where he competed
in football and baseball.
During his seven years in Reno, the UNLV
athletic director also became an accomplished
sportscaster. He did play-by-piay of the
Wolf Pack basketball games and had his own
Jerry Tarkanian
sports show on both radio and TV. in his
position with UNLV, he is the color commentator
for Rebel football and the radio, has his
own radio sports show and a TV Rebel Report
as well.
Jerry Tarkanian and Ron Meyer are the
men of the hour in Rebel athletics, focal
points of the interest that has been nationwide
the past two seasons in Rebel basketball
and football.
The dynamic duo are a contrast of styles
and experience. Where the 44-year old Tarkanian
has been coaching on the collegiate
level for 13 years and has a total record of
364-44, Meyer's first job was here at UNLV
and his two year total is 19-3. Though their
programs are operated in nearly opposite
manners, both have proven their ability to win
and bring forth prominence and credibility to
the UNLV athletic system.
Of ail the superlatives, the most impressive
thing one can say about Tarkanian is — he
is the winningest active major college basketball
coach in the country. After seven
seasons of coaching major college basketball
(five at Cai State, Long Beach), Tarkanian
has a coaching record of 166-31 (.843 wining
percentage). His teams have won six conference
championships, gone to the NCAA
Regional tournaments five times, and no Tarkanian-
coached team has ever won less than
20 games.
The Pied Piper of college basketball is
establishing a tradition at UNLV that will be
hard to beat. He has now won 21 consecutive
ball games on the Las Vegas Convention
Center court, including all 15 in the 1974-75
season.
Tarkanian's major college teams have had
most impressive records — 23-3, 24-5, 24-5,
25-4, 26-3, 20-6, and this season's 24-5.
The Euclid, Chio, native spent seven seasons
in the junior college ranks before going
to Long Beach. At Riverside City College
(1962-66), he had a 131-9 overall record,
which Included three consecutive state championships
and four league championships in
five years. No other junior college coach in
the history of California basketball has
achieved those heights. At Pasadena City
College (1966-68), Tarkanian was 67-4 and
bagged a fourth state title while finishing In
the runner-up spot another time.
An astonishing feature of his wins is that
they were accomplished at schools which had
never previously won a basketball championship.
Riverside was last in its conference two
consecutive years before Tarkanian; Pasadena
was last in its conference the previous
year, and Long Beach had never won a
championship in basketball.
Jerry Tarkanian is a towel-chewing, nailbiting,
hardworking Armenian who came to
Las Vegas with a COMMITMENT TO EXCELLENCE
as his driving philosophy. He will
settle for nothing less than excellence from
his players, both on and off the court. In ad-
Ron Meyer
dition to a nationally-recognized basketball
power for UNLV, Tarkanian has developed a
tutorial program for his players that paid high
dividends. Last year all five Rebel seniors
graduated and are examples of how UNLV
emphasized equally the importance of academics
and basketball to all its student-athletics.
This year's only senior, Ricky Sobers,
will graduate after the first summer session.
Tarkanian's players have gone on to establish
themselves in the pros. They include:
Chuck Terry (San Antonio Spurs), Eric Mc-
Williams (Houston Rockets), George Trapp
(Detroit Pistons), Bob Rule (Cleveland Cavaliers),
Ed Ratleff (Houston Rockets), Leonard
Gray (Seattle Supersonics), and Glen Mc-
(Continued on Next Page)
Donald (Boston Celtics).
Ttie intense coacti easily won the hearts
of Las Vegas and the Los Angeles Times
calis him an "instant Las Vegas ceiebrity."
Tarkanian is the first to give credit to his
totaily invoived, totaliy devoted wife Lois,
who guides and directs the Rebels in their
academic pursuits.
The suave, debonair head football coach
for the UNLV Rebels, Ron Meyer is building
ever-so-quickly, a high powered, weii-organized,
progressive and productive product for
the department, university and entire state of
Nevada.
Football is an extensive, and expensive
sport, and the Meyer-men have responded
with back-to-back 8-3 and 11-0 seasons, two
Fred DaUimore
Ail-Americans, and money in the bank. Football
is definitely paying its way at UNLV.
The Rebels advanced to the Division II
semi-finals last season after the brilliant undefeated
regular season and next season
seems to promise more of the same. A total
of 49 returning lettermen, including 17 returning
regulars will attest to that.
Meyer himself is a well-educated gentleman.
He won the Noble Kinzer award for
athletic/academic prowess at Purdue University
in 1963, finishing college with a 5.2 grade
point average out of a possible 6.0. He earned
his master's degree there in West LaFayette.
Ind., as well and was on the Boilermaker
football coaching staff for six years, working
with every unit at one time or another.
His only head coaching job before UNLV,
he led Penn High School in Indiana to a 5-4-
1 record in 1964.
His six seasons on the Purdue staff followed,
then his overall personality rose to the
forefront. He went to the Dallas Cowboys of
the National Football League as one of their
four talent scouts and was part of the organization
that won Super Bowl VI.
With the deftness of a Minnesota Fats, and
the approach of a combination Henry Kissinger/
Charles Finley, he has dipiomaticaliyyet-
straightforwardiy, brought Las Vegas to
develop a keen and active devotion to Rebel
football.
The titanic .UNLV-Boise State football game
last October is a living example of the in-
Al McDaniels
voivement Meyer's Magic has brought to the
Rebel gridiron program. 18,631 people
crowded into the 16,100-seat Las Vegas Stadium
to see the Rebels defeat the Broncos,
37-35. It is the largest crowd ever to witness
a sporting event in the State of Nevada.
Meyer appears to have the makings of one
of the all-time great gridiron coaches, but
time and fate will dictate much of his future.
If ever there was a man who could change
fate, it may just be this one. His highly-organized,
well-disciplined, "equal opportunity for
ail, special privileges for none" LAS VEGAS
WAY program is an eloquent example of the
great accomplishments of athletics.
Coaches develop and cultivate Ail-Americans.
At Purdue, he guided several Supers in
Gordon Edwards
Bob Griese, Leroy Keyes and Mike Phipps.
At UNLV there has been Mike Thomas and
Joe Ingersoil.
Obtaining all the little qualities that go into
making him a complete, thoroughly prepared
coach, Meyer also has a demanding speaking
tour, clinic assignment schedule, and a
weekly half-hour television show in Las
Vegas.
He is the composer and director of the
UNLV football symphony and his music is
becoming increasingly popular.
It is true that basketball and football are
the real revenue sports at UNLV, a complete,
well-rounded athletic program consists of
many sports, each with qualified, capable
professionals guiding their destiny.
In his second season as the UNLV basebail
coach is youthful Fred Daliimore. The
former Ail-American pitcher for the University
of Nevada, Reno, has set his sights at the
highest level for the Rebel baseball program.
His schedule has included at least six of
the ten teams in the nation each year, and,
although his record has not yet reached the
Mike DrakuUch
winning side of the ledger, his Rebels did
knock off the defending national champion
use Trojans, 7-5, this year.
Daliimore spent four years as an assistant
coach in the Rebel program before taking
over the reins. A native Nevadan, he has
been associated witti collegiate baseball for
13 years, four as a player, seven as an assistant,
and two as a head coach.
Daliimore started in the UNLV program as
the handy-man, assistant to Robert Doering
in the baseball program, an assistant in the
football staff, and as the equipment manager
for the athletic program.
Following three years tenure as an assistant,
Al McDaniels is the head track and field
coach for UNLV. An unquestionable worker.
McDaniels is diligently striving for a successful
cinder program for the university.
Originally from Muskogee. Okia.. he is a
graduate of the University of Nevada, Reno,
where he won the highest honor given to a
Wolf Pack athlete — the 1965 Doc Martie
award.
Since coming to UNLV, he has conducted
summer track programs for the Las Vegas
10
Vic Hicker
community, and has done a lot to promote
the growth and development of the sport in
the area.
His Las Vegas Relays attracted over 700
athletes this year, including five world record
holders. .
Dr. Gordon Edwards, who assists McDaniels
in the track program, is the head cross
country coach for UNLV. He received his
doctorate from the University of New Mexico
and is a major in the U.S. Marines.
One of the most successful sports year-in
and year-out at UNLV is golf. The iinksters
are coached by the school's first basketball
coach and athletic director, Michael "Chub"
Drakulich, and constantly turns in superior
score cards to those of their opponents.
Drakulich even has a golf scholarship
tournament in his name each year to help
raise funds for his teams.
The newest sport in the UNLV athletic
wheel is swimming. Competing on a club
basis this year, coach Vic Hecker has already
aroused a strong desire in the area for a
strong aquatics program at UNLV.
His first year men's team was 8-2 in dual
competition and that's without even having
a home pool to practice and compete in.
The 6.5 million dollar UNLV Paul McDermott
Physical Education complex was not open in
time for his inaugural season, but next year
when the sport becomes "official", he will
have one of the finest facilities on the West
coast.
Tom Khamis
Another increasingly popular sport not only
in Las Vegas, but also in the UNLV athletic
program is tennis. Guided by UNLV Alumni
Director and former assistant basketball
coach Fred Albrecht, the Rebel netters
started the 1975 season with a 10-1 dual
match record. The Rebels compete on 12
new courts on the UNLV campus.
Soccer just completed its first year of regular-
sport existence on the UNLV horizon and
the result was a very credible 8-3-3 record.
Tom Khamis, an instructor at the Las Vegas
Variety School for children, has provided the
UNLV athletic family with an exciting new
program, one that promises an extremely
bright future and the definite capabilities of
becoming a revenue producing sport.
One of the essential ingredients to a successful
recipe for athletic prowess as an institution
is the capable work contributed to
the overall program by several distinct and
very-functioning "support groups"
Dominic Clark
Rodney Poindexter has a hard-working
training room, Dominic Clark runs the everpublicized
Sports Information Office, and
Sherman Bennett keeps his hands full handling
the UNLV ticket office.
UNLV is an institution that has set very
high goals for itself, both academically and
athletically. Success is in the cards for this
athletic program in the city of lights.
Appearances would say the Rebels certainly
have dealt themselves a full house.
Sherman Bennett -j
The '74-75 Women's Basketball Team: Emma Jean Majors, Sonja Madrane, Captain Tonya
Lytle, Linda Tellefson, Renne Brown, Head Coach Barbara Quinn, Gina Gonzales, Toni Affeidti,
Kay Lemay, Jill Adamson, Jackie Alford and Jane Anne Pete.
Women's First Year Success
At the University of Nevada, Las Vegas
something new has been happening . . . it's
women's intercollegiate athletics.
Since last July when the university hired
Barbara Quinn to be the women's athletic director,
the UNLV women's program has
grown into national prominence as the word
is getting around about the excellent opportunities
for both high school and junior college
women who want to compete in intercollegiate
competition against the best
women's teams in the country.
Women's Swimming Team: Head Coach Hicker,
Terry Wendell, Sue Powers, Chris Smith,
Kathy Buchanan, Lisa Foistad, Valerie Whitmore.
During last September and October Quinn
sent out over 24,000 letters to almost every
high school in the country so that people
would know about the new program that has
arrived in Las Vegas. Ever since then the
UNLV women's program has received letters
from different girls from practically every
state inquiring about UNLV and its women's
program.
The program consists of four intercollegiate
sports at the present time and will expand
to seven sports in the fall.
The women competed in basketball this
winter and recently finished its first year with
a winning record of 8-7. The gals traveled to
such cities as Santa Barbara, Salt Lake City
and Tuscon to participate against other universities
which have established women's
prog rams.
Probably the highlight of the women's basketball
season was when the Rebels played
host to the University of California, Los Angeles
Bruin team in the 6,257-seat Las Vegas
Convention Center. The contest was the first
time women's intercollegiate basketball had
been played in the Convention Center. The
game also marked the first time that UNLV
and UCLA had ever met in intercollegiate
sports, whether it be on the men's or
women's level. Governor Mike O'Callaghan
proclaimed the contest as the beginning of
"Athletic Week for Nevada Women." Even
Women's Tennis Team: Tina Kimzer, Tina
Teadors, Christian Chan, Maisie Gibson, Head
Coach Sue Kircher, Laurie McKauley, Sally
Pallitier, and Joyce Mitchell.
though the 1,000 people in attendance saw
the Rebels take their worst defeat ever, 99-
33, the game was considered a complete succss.
It made a lot of people aware of the
new and growing women's program at UNLV.
Besides basketball, the women have just
completed its first year of intercollegiate
swimming which saw two of its participants
qualify and compete in the national swimming
finals for women that were held in Tempe,
Arizona in March.
Swimming is not only new to the women's
athletic program, but this year also marks the
beginning of intercollegiate swwimming for
men at UNLV.
With the opening of the $6.3 million Paul
McDermott Physical Education Complex, not
only will swimming create a great deal of interest,
but the entire UNLV athletic program
will do so as well.
The complex houses enormous training
and practice areas, a 50-meter swimming
pool, attractively equipped locker rooms, athletic
training rooms and saunas. Spectator
seating capacity in each of two gymnasiums
is more than 2,000 and 1,000 at the pool. The
entire facility and all equipment is equally
accessible to both men and wwomen.
Two other sports, tennis and track and
field, competed in intercollegiate competition
UNLV's top woman track star Beatrice Emodi
who came to Las Vegas from Nigeria, Africa.
this year for UNLV. The Rebel women have
seen action against major colleges such as
Brigham Young University and Utah State
University.
Recently the tennis team took a three day
road trip to Utah v/here they picked up a
win and two losses against the toughest tennis
competition in the West.
In track, the women are fortunate to have
gotten an international track star in the services
of Beatrice Emodi from Nigeria, Africa.
The 5-7 freshman is currently the second
best long jumper in her native born Nigeria
and she plans to compete for the Nigerian
Olympic team in the 1976 Olympics in Montreal.
Emodi also competes in the 60 and 100
yard dashes. Also on the track team are two
of UNLV's women basketball players, Jackie
Alford and Emma Jean Major. Both Emodi
and Major competed in this year's national
track and field finals for women that were
held in Corvallis, Oregon in May.
With the opening of the new complex, the
women will expand its program to include
three more sports: cross country, gymnastics
and volleyball. All three sports will make
their debut at UNLV in September.
Sometning new has and is happening at
UNLV. Women's athletics will continue to
grow as they continue to receive the cooperatin
of the University's administration, the
Athletic Department, the student body and
lastly the Las Vegas community.
THE WINNINGEST
YEAR YET A recap of the '74-'75 Seasons
"One game
at a time"
Playing one-game-at-a-time, the University
of Nevada, Las Vegas has completed the
1974 Division II regular football season with
a perfect 11-0 record, 33 new school records,
and the host position of the Division II quarterfinal
game on Nov. 30 at 1 p.m. in the
16,100-seat Las Vegas Stadium.
The Running Rebels of second-year head
coach Ron Meyer gave the university its first
undefeated team in seven seasons of competition
and the two-year total under Meyer
is 19-3. The Rebels now hope to play for the
national Division II Championship on Dec. 14
by playing in the Camellia Bowl, but first
UNLV must host Alcorn State University, who
themselves had a very impressive 10-1 record.
If UNLV wins the quarterfinal game in
Las Vegas, they then would advance to the
regionally televised Grantland Rice Bowl in
Baton Rouge, Louisiana, before going to the
nationally-televised Camellia Bowl.
Before the season started, Meyer was confident
that his team was good, but did not
want to get into, the prediction game. His
only remark at th'e time was, "We don't want
to get involved in any numbers game, we are
just preparing for a 14-game season."
Well, his Rebels have marched off an impressive
list of victories that included powerful
Boise State University, Division I University
of Hawaii, and arch-rival University of
Nevada, Reno.
For the second consecutive year, All-America
running back Mike Thomas led the Rebels
in scoring and rushing. Despite missing two
and one-half games with a still troublesome
ankle, the super scatback still rushed for
1408 yards and scored 19 tds and had one
two-point conversion for 116 points. His twoyear
career total is 3,149 yards and 40 touchdowns.
Diminutive senior wide receiver Steve Haggerty
also led the Rebels in two categories
and will rank nationally along with Thomas.
Haggerty returned 20 punts for a record 324
net yards for an average of 16.2 yards per
return and one touchdown. He also ran back
15 kickoffs for 280 net yards for an average
of 18.7 yards each.
Sophomore quarterback Glenn Carano had
a commendable season passing the ball for
the running Rebels as he completed 49 of 106
passes for 839 yards and a school recordtieing
11 touchdowns. His favorite targets
were junior Mike Haverty (15 catches for 251
yards and three tds) and senior Craig Bryan
(11 for 186 and three tds).
As a team, UNLV rushed for 303.1 yards
per game, passed for 85.2 for a total offensive
average of 388.3 per game and scored
a record 36.2 points per game.
Mike Thomas ran (above) and Glenn Carano
passed UNLV to a 37-35 triumph over Boise
Stale University. It was a battle of the unbeatens
and the largest crowd in the history of the
state of Nevada (18,631) witnessed the game.
UNIVERSITY OF NEVADA, LAS VEGAS FOOTBALL FINAL 1974 DEFENSIVE STATISTICS
WON 11 LOST 0
1974 a year of firsts for UNLV, and a
super crowd turned out for a Pep Rally before
the Boise State victory.
Ingersol:
Team Defensive
Leader All-American candidate Joe Ingersoll, the
1974 University of Nevada, Las Vegas "Defensive
Player of the Year," is the Rebel team
leader in defensive production points according
to defensive statistics released recently
by UNLV defensive coordinator Steve Sidwell.
Ingersoll, a junior, led the unbeaten
(11-0) Rebels with 266 total production points
from his defensive tackle position.
Averaging over 24 points per contest, IngersoM's
final 1974 stats are 567 defensive
plays, 53 tackles, 52 assists, 61 rushed
passes, four quarterback sacks, nine tackles
for a loss, two batted passes, three hits causing
fumbles, and one fumble recovery. In addition
to leading the team in production
points. "Mighty Joe" is also the leader in
tackles, rushed passes, and tackles for a loss.
Another junior, linebacker Mike Otto, was
second on the Rebel squad with 231 points.
Otto placed his name in the Rebel record
book this season by pouncing on seven fumbles
to set a new school standard. His 63 assists
also gave him the team leadership in
that category.
Mike Whitemaine, also a junior, was the
only other Rebel to amass over 200 production
points. His 207 total came as a result of
his 41 tackles, 41 assists, eight qb sacks, and
four hits causing fumbles. He led the team
in qb sacks, hits causing fumbles, and total
plays (684).
Sophomore Marlon Beavers' five interceptions
tied a school record and gives him a
two-year total of nine interceptions. He led
the Rebel secondary with 179 points this
year.
UNLV's defense, in guiding the Rebels to
its first unbeaten season in the seven year
existence of UNLV football, only allowed an
PLAYER TP T A
(LINEMEN)
Joe Ingersoll 567 53 52
Greg Willis 413 36 31
Julius Rogers 292 29 30
Scott Orr 113 20 27
Randy Rizo 208 22 21
Earnest Dancer 140 9 8
Mike Davis 167 11 9
Karl Riley 140 8 11
(ENDS)
Mike Whitemaine 684 41 41
Tim Melcher 429 24 25
Lucien Hardy 257 16 14
Stuart Giles 100 8 4
Dave Beall 129 9 10
(LINEBACKERS)
Mike Otto 671 42 63
Tony Sandone 539 51 53
George Gaynor 288 25 26
Paul Jones 141 11 19
Sam Hontoya 187 16 13
Mike Savage 205 14 19
Jack Zaher 41 4 1
(SECONDARY)
Marlon Beavers 516 45 34
Gary Van Houten 469 36 33
Eddie George 475 34 29
Ronnie Bell 471 28 15
Donnis Watson 315 23 14
Jimmie .Andrews 189 13 13
Mike McLellan 119 10 12
Andre Jones 90 9 6
Sonny Brockman 64 6 4
Ysadore Martinez 91 6 2
(OTHERS)
Jim Thayer 3 1 2
Mike Haverty 2 1 1
Roy Callahan 3 2 1
Bruce Watkins 2 1 0
Clint Cator 7 1 0
Bob Braner 2 2 0
Craig Bray 2 2 0
Robert Starbird 1 1 0
Brad Hoffman 1 1 0
Leon Drummer 1 1 0
Mike Dye 1 1 0
Terryl Thomas 1 1 0
Mark Fikany 1 1 0
PT. VALUE KEY:
6-TD -Touchdown 3- I •
BK PR TFL BP CF RF TP TOTAL
61
43
42
60
0 36
18
14
12
24
14
5
1
1
3-BK -Blocked Kick 3-RF -
3-BP -Blocked Pass 3- S -
3-CF -Caused Fumble 3-TFL
Interceptions
Recovered Fumble
Sacks
-Tackle For Loss
0 266
0 188
0 179
0 156
0 108
0 59
0 54
0 49
0 207
0 114
0 69
0 32
0 32
231
189
85
56
54
48
12
179
133
111
92
91
63
41
35
22
20
2- T -Tackles
1- A -Assists
1-PR -Pass Rush
0-TP -Total Plays
average of 138.9 yards per game rushing and
only 318.6 total offensive yards per contest
for Rebel foes. In addition, they set a new
school standard with 23 pass interceptions
and held the 11 opponents to a total of 180
points or just 16.4 points per ballgame.
14
THE RECORD (11-0) (1-1)
UNLV OPP. ATT.
28 Weber State College 10 11,013
31 Northern Arizona University 14 7,800
20 University of Montana 17 11,524
51 University of Santa Clara 19 11,112
63 Prairie View A & M 28 8,915
37 Boise State University 35 18,631
33 University of Hawaii 8 15,418
52 New Mexico Highlands 14 5,587
24 South Dakota State 21 9,662
28 University of Nevada, Reno 7 17,119
31 Idaho State University 7 8,654
35 Alcorn State University • 22 12,689
11 Delaware University 49 10,000
MEYER RECRUITS
16 NEW PLAYERS
Hoping to bolster his team in needed
areas. University of Nevada, Las Vegas football
coach Ron Meyer recently announced
the names of 16 new recruits who have inked
national letters-of-intent to play for the Rebels
starting this fall.
Meyer reported, "We feel we have done a
commendable recruiting job and the addition
of these out-of-state recruits, combined with
the already-released instate recruits gives us
a good selection of talent for our 1975 Rebel
team."
The Rebels, undefeated in 11 games during
the 1974 regular season and 12-1 overall,
have 46 returning lettermen and 18 starters
returning to join with the new prospects to
give UNLV a balanced and talented team, on
paper, at least.
Linemen head the list of new talent for the
Rebels with seven, followed by three running
backs, two wide receivers, a pair of quarterbacks,
one fullback, and one linebacker.
Defensive secondary coach Chris Ault landed
five recruits during the recruiting season,
led by GIF 4-A Player-of-the-Year, Brian Bethke,
from South Hills High School in West
Covina, California. Bethke, 5-10, 182, guided
his team to the 4-A Southern Section championship
with a 13-1 overall record. Not only
did he run for over 1,000 yards, he also passed
for 600 more and proved to be a triple
threat as he was his squad's place-kicker as
well. His longest field goal was 37 yards. He
was an All-America selection as a prep.
The Rebels also landed, through Ault's
efforts, two of Bethke's talented teammates,
Mike Vargas and Doug Smith, Vargas is a
6-2, 225 pound middle guard, who was selected
as the AII-CIF-4-A Defensive Player-ofthe-
Year. Current Rebel defensive whiz,
Randy Rizo, was also the GIF 4-A Defensive
Player-of-the-Year in 1973.
Smith, 6-3, 200, will play at defensive end
for the Rebels after a two-way prep career at
fullback and linebacker. He was also an All-
San Gabriel Valley pick, like his teammates,
and like Bethke, was a high school wrestler,
earning all-league honors in that sport as
well.
Alphonso Williams, 6-1, 215, is an all-city
fullback from Banning High School in Wilmongton,
California. He is considered as an
excellent blocker and did run for 650 yards
last season for his 7-2 team.
A very strong prospect for the offensive
line will be 6-4, 225, Jeff Dill, from Redlands
Mike Thomas and the Rebels ran over Hawaii, 33-8
(California) High School. Dill also plays tight
end and for three years earned all-CIF 4-A
honors. He also competes in track as a 50-
feet plus shot putter.
Another five talenfed newcomers have been
recruited by offensive co-ordinator Larry Kennan
and receiver coach John Chura. A tall
quarterback is 6-2, 185 Tom Miller, from Burrough's
High School in Burbank, California.
He led his team to a 12-1 season record, running
for 500 yards and passing for 1,500
more. His team was a GIF 3-A semifinalist
and he will share the quarterbacking with
Bethke for the North team in the prep Shrine
game this summer.
A pair of running back hopefuls signed by
Kennan are Willie Russell, 5-11, 205, and
Jeff Caldwell, 6-0, 195. Russell ran for 1,300
yards at Redwood High School in Visala, California
and Caldwell is an all-conference player
from Capital High School in Boise, Idaho.
Both have been clocked in 9.9 in the 100
yard dash.
Wesley Austin is a very talented player
from Compton High School in Compton, California.
He was all-league twice and has played
split end, defensive safety, and linebacker.
Split end will probably be his position for the
Rebels.
Assistant head Rebel coach Doug Carder
has brought in four future Rebels, all considered
very good prospects for college football.
Gerald Scott is an all-league tackle from
(Continued on Next Page)
Delaware brought the Rebel season to a
screeching halt in the Grantland Rice Bowl in
famed Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge, Loidsiana
. . . but it was a great season . . . and next
year is fust around the corner.
UNIVERSITY OF NEVADA, LAS VEGAS 1975 FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
Date Opponent (Series History) Location Time
Sept. 13 — Northern Iowa University (0-0-0) — Las Vegas —8:15 p.m. PDT
Sept. 20 — Idaho State University (2-1-0) — Pocatello, Idaho 8:00 p.m. MDT
Sept. 27 — University of Montana (1-0-0) — Missoula, Montana 1:30 p.m. MDT
Oct. 4 — Jackson State College (0-0-0) — Las Vegas 8:15 p.m. PDT
Oct. 11 — University of Nebraska, Omaha (0-0-0) — Las Vegas 8:15 p.m. PDT
Oct. 18 — Boise State University (2-1-0) — Boise, Idaho 7:30 p.m. MDT
Oct. 25 — University of Idaho (0-0-0) — Las Vegas 8:15 p.m. PDT
Nov. 1 — Northern Arizona University (2-1-0) — Las Vegas 8:15 p.m. PST
Nov. 8 — South Dakota State University (1-0-0) — Las Vegas 8:15 p.m. PST
Nov. 15 — Weber State College (1-2-0) — Las Vegas 8:15 p.m. PST
Nov. 22 — University of Nevada, Reno (3-3-0) — Reno, Nevada 1:00 p.m. PST
' Home Games Played in the 16,106-Seat Las Vegas Stadium
1
Berkeley High In Berkeley, California. Scott
is 6-6, 250 and is the largest of all the Rebel
recruits this season.
A 9.7 running back from Ells High School
in Richmond, California, is prep Ail-American
Eddie Miller. All-Northern California and All-
East Bay, Miller, 5-9, 180 ran for 1,250 yards
his senior season. It is very possible he will
be a wide-receiver for the Rebels.
Mike Duckworth is a 5-11, 185 running
back from Oakland High School in that California
city and has been clocked in 9.8 seconds
for the 100. He was also all East Bay,
honorable mention Prep-All-America as he
toted the pigskin 150 times for 1,175 net
yards his final high school year.
A candidate for the center of the offensive
line is 6-3, 225, Jack Concannon. From Hayward
(California) High, he was a definite allleague
pick and was also honored as team
captain his senior season. He should help
the Rebel offensive line as a freshman this
fall.
UNLV defensive co-ordinator Steve Sidwell
has brought in three more Colorado players.
The new Colorado Rebels, who will join 13
others on the UNLV roster, are all from the
Denver area and were each selected as allleague
and all-Metro selections.
Randy Ramsey, 6-2, 215, is a lineman with
excellent 4.8 speed in the 40 and appears to
be a scholar-athlete as he is carrying a 3.4
grade point average at present. He also plays
basketball and was fourth in Colorado in the
shotput as a junior. He is from Westminster
High School.
A new linebacker for the Rebels is 6-0,
218, Greg Spencer. Spencer was injured in
the first game of his senior season but has
recovered according to his doctors and
coaches. He is a league-champion wrestler
(two years) and was second in the same state
track meet in the shot put that Ramsey was
in as a junior. He is from Lincoln High.
Russ Strecker, 6-3, 210, is a 4.7 defensive
tackle also from Lincoln. He was all-league
and all-metro in football and could possibly
play several defensive positions for the
Rebels.
The Rebels now have 27 recruits for 1975,
and Meyer is confident that the Rebels will
ink the allowabie three more for a total of 30
between seasons. Heading the iist of 11 instate
recruits are Ail-Staters Henry Vereen
from Clark High, Manny Rodriguez from
Bishop Gorman and Darrell Beavers from
Rancho High School. Vereen is a speedy
running back, Rodriguez is a fullback-linebacker
and Beavers is a linebacker.
The new recruits will report for the fall
practice, which begins August 20, but the returning
Rebeis will have Spring practice,
March 31 through May 2.
The Rebels will open the 1975 season at
home on September 13 when Northern Iowa
University visits.
BEST IN THE WEST
1974 UNLV RUNNIN' REBELS
W 11 L 0
1974 UNLV RUNNIN' REBELS — Front row (left to right): assistant
coach Chris Auit, assistant head coach Doug Carder, Ronnie Bell,
Jim Thayer, Mike Davis, Scott Orr, Craig Bray, Steve Haggerty, Mike
Dye, Cliff Conedy, Boh Braner, Julius Rogers, head coach Ron
Meyer, and assistant coach Jim Anderson. Second row: coach John
Chura, coach Bill Drake, coach Larry Kennan, coach Marty McGuffey.
Brad Hoffman, Mike McLellan, Clint Cator, Tony Grantz, Ysadore
Martinez, Kurt Schnahel, Shannon Russell, Courtney Bossert,
Mike Pry, Roy Callahan, Hugh Cunnigham, Mike Otto, Stuart Giles,
Tony Sandone, coach Clayton Bywaters, coach Doug Johnson, coach
Steve Sidwell, and coach Ron Smeltzer. Third row: Bucky Core,
George Gaynor, Jack Zaher, Earnest Dancer, Mark Eikany, Mark
Richardson, Robert Starbird, Joe Ingersoll, Rick BehrCndsen, Boh
Chess, Kevin Gray, Terry Mastey, Lee Levy, and Karl Riley. Fourth
row: Marlon Beavers. Dave Beall, Glenn Carano. Mike Whitemaine,
Tim Melcher, Ricci Prock, Mike O'Callaghan, Donnis Watson, Dusty
Satterfield, Doug Darlington, Bruce Watkins, Cliff Conedy, Randy
Rizo, Chris Davis, Mike Kelly, and Blanchard Carter. Top row: head
trainer Rodney Poindexter, trainer Ronnie Nold, trainer Frank Zazoni.
trainer Tom Pugh, manager Greg Payne, manager Rick Christopher.
manager Larry Chin, equipment manager Floyd Browning.
UNLV Swimming
HECKER PLEASED
WITH FIRST YEAR
"I am extremely pleased with our team's
performance throughout the entire year. For
a bunch of walkons, the University of Nevada,
Las Vegas swim team will have to go down
in history as one of the better groups of
young collegiate swimmers." Speaking: Vic
Hecker, UNLV's swim coach after the first
year of collegiate competition in swimming
at UNLV.
The Rebeis, who swam as a "club" sport
this year but will have full intercollegiate
status next year, were 8-2 in dual competition.
Even though the dual season is over for
the Rebeis, Hecker is still extremely busy
preparing six UNLV swimmers for the 26th
Annual Southern California Invitational AAU
meet on March 14-16 in Los Angeles.
Comprised almost totally of walkons, or
people who were not recruited and often have
very little competitive experience, the UNLV
swim season would have to be classed as
successful. "Although this is not the route
we like to take, it is nice to know that with
some dedication and work the students attending
UNLV have the ability to produce on
a collegiate level," Hecker stated.
He was very pleased with the men's performance
all year long and said, "the men
just about had to win every event because of
a lack of depth in order to win the meet."
"I was surprised," he added, "that we were
able to accomplish what we did without a
regulation facility." The team was unable to
•Vs.**-
Larry Miller: his breaststroke helped UNLV's swimming program get off the ground and into
the water.
8-3-3 Ain't Just KIckin' Things are never easy for a first-year team,
no matter what the sport. Soccer at the University
of Nevada, Las Vegas has definitely
been no exception to this rule.
Under the direction of Head coach Tom
Khamis and assistant coach Mitch Preus, the
first-year UNLV soccer Rebeis (8-3-3) fared
better than most first-year programs.
Comprised almost totally of former Las
Vegas area high school soccer players, with
a dozen of the 17 man roster being freshmen,
neither the Rebeis nor the head coach had
any collegiate soccer experience prior to the
opening of the 1974 campaign.
Forced to learn the hard way, the Rebels
learned very quickly. Although failing to win
in the first three outings, ail on the road,
UNLV came home and proceeded to win four
straight contests and six of the seven game
homestand. Highlighting the homestand were
a shutout victory over Brigham Young University
and a 4-2 win over previously unbeaten
Woodbury College.
After a road trip to Arizona resulted in two
ties, the Rebels came home and blanked
' .
.•'•V Ir-.t
Utah State 4-0. The Rebels finished the season
with an 8-3-3 mark after drubbing East
Los Angeles 2-1.
Co-captain Roy Sparks led the Rebels with
eight points on five goals and three penalty
kicks. Also tallying five goals were Louis
Lavietes and Dave Kennedy. Both Sparks and
Lavietes led the team in assists with three
apiece.
Goalie Bob Singer, in his first year as a
goalkeeper in college, recorded two shutouts
and only allowed 25 goals in the 14 contests.
The Rebels scored 32 goals against the
opponents' 25.
The road to success has never been an
easy one to travel. For the UNLV Rebels,
the journey has just begun. In a season designed
to determine the competitive ability
of the Rebeis, the team fared exceptionally
well against some very tough competition. Not
only did the Rebels prove that they can compete
on the collegiate level in soccer, they
proved that a first-year team does not necessarily
have to be a "patsy" on its opponents'
schedules.
Mike Rohm: on three UNLV relay teams
which placed in the top four in the Southern
California Invitational AAU in March.
use UNLV's new olympic-sized pool this year,
as they had planned, due to construction delays.
Another interesting sidelight to the program
was that two Rebel women swimmers,
Chris Smith and Cathy Buchanan, qualified
for the women's championships.
Hecker is now, in addition to preparing for
the Southern California Invitational, busy recruiting
and formulating the schedule for next
year. "I am looking forward to everyone returning
next year and am anxiously awaiting
the chance to combine our talent with some
new people," Hecker stated. He also added,
"We are upgrading the program next year by
scheduling such tough opponents as Arizona,
Arizona State, and Brigham Young University."
In addition to swimming next year, UNLV
will also have a water polo team. The Rebels
will start spring water polo practice in April
and Hecker is anticipating a good turnout for
this new sport. UNLV will host a 16 team
water polo tournament in October.
1974 UNLV Soccer Team: Varut Komalarajan.
Cliff Tabor, Bob Singer, Pat Clark, Wayne
Pederson, Mike Thompson, Bill Briare, Roy
Sparks, Louis Lavietes, Tom Khamis, Chuck
Martin, Bob Boehmer, Rick Ingram, Dave
K e n n e d y , M i t c h P r e u s . - j y
The '75 UNLV Baseball Team: Fred Dallimore, Rick Weber, Mike Slavinski, Terry Smith,
Gerry Okuda, Mike Whitemaine, Tom Tellmann, Bob Yount, Jerry Goeneche, John Schilling,
Brian Bills, Mike Cochran, Tom Ciilligan, Ralph Ulivarri, Pat Tiedeman, Glenn Page, Mike
McLellen, Mike Vaughn, John Wolfe, Clint Cator, Joe Vargas, Manny Abeyata, Monte Mendenhall,
Ed Draper, Dennis Deck, Pete Twyman, Bob Braner, and Glen Willard.
18
UNIVERSITY OF NEVADA, LAS VEGAS BASEBALL 1975 STATISTICS
RECORD: WON 12 LOST 10
PLATEtt G F B 2» IB SC 8? -4
Pat TladaMuiit ii H 2^ 5 0 I i i li
16
11 11 .sis 80 i? 9 >9M
Garry Okuda 22 76 16 24 0 4 1 1 2 0
15 13 .314 27 77 16 .867
John Schilling 21 81 15 25 2 1 0 3 2 0 12 14 12 .309 32 2 2 .944
Tla Culligan 20 79 U 24 6 1 2 1 0 1 12 11 16 .304 19 1 6 .769
Bob Tount 20 67 12 18 3 0 0 2 1 0 14 15 9 .269 34 1 4 .897
Mlka Cochran 22 86 12 23 4 0 1 1 1 2 6 a 9 .267 68 86 3 .981
BrUn Bills 22 83 12 22 6 0 0 1 4 1 9 8 13 .265 175 5 4 .978
Tatty Sfldth 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1.000 0 1 0 1.000
Rick Wabar 14 48 7 15 5 0 1 1 2 1 8 12 13 .313 17 28 8 .849
Mlk« Slavenakl 16 43 12 12 1 0 1 3 1 1 8 10 3 .279 21 1 3 .880
Joa Vargas 17 40 6 11 3 0 1 0 0 0 8 11 12 .275 58 8 3 .956
John Wolfe 11 26 3 7 1 1 0 0 0 0 4 5 3 .269 27 2 0 1.000
Hike McLellan 12 24 6 5 1 0 0 2 1 0 1 7 2 .208 8 2 0 1.000
Ralph Ulivarri 5 11 1 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 6 0 .182 16 3 1 .950
Ed Draper 4 13 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 1 .077 0 0 0 .000
(PITCHERS) FIELDXHG. • • • 9 47 6 .903
mv 22 754 132 217 3ti 7 y 15 18 7 120 136 119 .288 591 291 65 .931
OPPONEHTS 22 776 150 206 37 15 5 31 23 10 92 108 120 .265 568 251 32 .962
PITCHING
PLATER G GS CG SV IP -H BB so HP WP R ER ERA W-L
Glenn Willard "1 0 0 0 2/3 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0.00 6-0
Hcmty Mandenhall 3 2 2 0 18 2/3 11 4 16 0 2 7 4 1.93 2-1
Manny 7 3 1 1 26 1/3 21 5 13 1 2 16 12 4.10 1-1
Dennis i/ccn. 9 5 3 0 51 1/3 56 29 23 1 3 33 24 4.21 4-0
Mike Whitemaine 5 4 2 0 38 45 9 23 3 1 28 20 4.74 1-2
Tom Tellmann 5 4 1 0 30 34 7 8 3 2 23 16 4.80 1-3
Clint Cator 4 0 0 0 11 2/3 14 11 9 0 1 16 9 6.94 1-0
Joe Vargas 4 3 1 0 15 17 15 13 1 5 19 15 9.00 2-2
Pete Tvyman 3 0 0 0 3 3 5 2 0 0 4 3 9.00 0-1
Mike McLellan 2 1 0 0 2 1/3 4 7 1 1 0 4 4 15.45 0-0
UMLV 22 "22 10 1 197 204 92 l68 10 16 ISO 107 4.89 12-10
OPPONEMTS 22 22 9 1 189 1/3 217 129 136 7 14 132 115 5.47 10-12
RESULTS:
UHLV OPPONENT OPP UNLV OPPONENT OPP
4 Northern Arlsona 3 11 Southern 7
3 Nerthem Arisooa 6 4 Brlgham Toung Unlv* 15
4 iNortbam Arlsona 9 18 Brlgfaam Young Univ. 15
8 #U.C. Irvine 6 7 use 5
3 #U.C. Irvine 4 6 LaVeme College 9
2 U. of Oklahoma 7 0 U c. Santa Barbara 16
4 #U. of Oklahoma 7 4 fOregon State 3
9 U« of Oklahoma 4 5 Air Force Academy 3
1 Southern Utah 0 9 0 .c. Berkeley 4
5 Arlsona State 9 5 fOonsaga Unlv» 4
7 Southern Utah 1 11 Lavish-dark State CaXit 13
#EZTRA INNINGS
Rebs Start
Final WCAC
Season
Playing 22 tough preliminary games, the
University of Nevada, Las Vegas baseball
team began its final season in the West Coast
Athletic Conference by traveling to Malibu,
Calif., recently for a three-game series against
defending conference champion Pepperdine
University.
Coach Fred Dallimore's Rebels will carry
a 12-10 record, including four victories in
their last five games, against the Wayne
Wright-coached Waves, who are rated in the
top 20 in the nation with their healthy 18-6
record.
UNLV will also be out to improve on its
disappointing 5-13 record in the WCAC in
1974. Pepperdine won the league title with
a 15-3 record after losing the first game in
conference play to the Rebels, 8-7 in extra
innings. The last time the Rebels went to
Mallbu, UNLV defeated Pepperdine three
straight times, 4-2, 3-1, 3-1.
While Pepperdine has outstanding defense
this year, UNLV has commited 65 errors in
22 games, and this certainly will be a key
factor in the series.
At the plate, the Rebels have four players
hitting over .300 and a very solid .288 team
batting average. Junior catcher-third baseman
Pat Tiedemann, from Vacaville, Calif.,
leads the Rebel bat parade with a .355 average.
He leads the squad in runs scored (19),
base hits (27), homeruns (2), and base-onballs
(21).
Shortstop Jerry Okuda, who is another junior
college transfer in the UNLV lineup, is
hitting .316, while leftflelder John Schilling is
hitting for a .309 average, and designated hitter
Tim Culligan leads the team in RBI with
16 and carries a 3.04 average at the plate.
Another area of improvement for the Rebels
this season has been on the mound,
where the Rebel pitchers have hurled 10
complete games so far, three more than the
team had all of last season.
The Rebels will open league play with junior
Dennis Deck (4-0, 4.21 ERA) on the
mound. In Saturday's doubleheader lettermen
Mike Whitemaine (1-2, 4.74) and Manny
Abeyta (1-1, 4.10) wili start. Pepperdine will
throw Mike Scott (5-2) on Friday, and Mark
Lee (9-1) and Tony Cameron (1-0) in Saturday's
twinbill.
The '75 UNLV Tennis Team: Fred Albrecht,
Dan Knight, Eric Dondlich, Doug Johnson,
Craig Crell, Paul luoring, Bruce Stubbs, Jim
Scott, and Frank Kosic.
Loaded with talent, depth and maturity, the '75 Track and Field Team at UNLV could well be the best in Rebel history. The Rebels are expected
to be very strong in the sprints, middle distances and relays by head coach AI McDaniels, who also expects many school records to
fall and many team members to make a name for themselves and the University. Pictured are Bradley Cruz, Roger Kersh, John Osborne,
Levant Carey, Eric Schlacks, Bob Weaver, Warren Hill, Beatrice Emodi, Craig Falk, Dale Campbell, Jerry Gates, Andre Jone, Fred Tredup,
Joerg Herbrechtsmeier, Luis Livingstone, Gene Hardaway, Mike Whiting, Gordon Edwards, Jimmie Chapman, Mike Newton, Mark Metcalf,
Lloyd Mitchell, Jeff Baird, Mel Turner, Marv Turner, James Moa and Al McDaniels.
UNLV Track Records
100 — Derek Cardwell, 9;6 (1974)
220 — Dan Coppola, 21.6 (1973)
Derek Cardwell, 21.6 (1974)
440 — Mel Turner, 49.0 (1973)
880 — Gary Elam, 1:55.2 (1969)
1 Mile — Dale Campbell, 4:18.0 (1974)
2 Mile — Blaine Clarke, 9:54.3 (1971)
3 Mile — Bob Weaver, 14:57.7 (1974)
6 Mile — Doug Clarke, 34:45.2 (1971)
120 HH — Lloyd Mitchell, 14.4 (1973)
440 LH — Bill Jones, 53.5 (1969-70)
Steeplechase — Bob Weaver, 9:30.0 (1974)
440 Relay — Joel Porter, Lloyd Mitchell,
Mel Turner, Luis Livingston, 42.2 (1973)
880 Relay — Luis Livingston, Charles
Cooper, Lloyd Mitchell, Mel Turner, 1:29.8
(1973)
Mile Relay — Bill Jones, Bill Spencer,
Gene Kendricks, Gary Elam, 3:20.8 (1969)
2 Mile Relay — Blaine Clarke, Rick Miller,
Doug Clarke, Ed Brown, 8:05.5 (1971)
Sprint Medley — Mel Turner, Lloyd
Mitchell, Luis Livingston, Ed Cantu,
3:30.5 (1973)
Distance Medley — Jeff Baird, Terry
Downey, Bob Weaver, Dale Campbell,
10:30.4 (1974)
Cross Country — Richard Milan, 25:15
(1972), Home Course - 5 Mile
UNLV Basketball 24-5: Best Season
in 17 Year HIstor Helping Jerry Tarkanlan maintain his pace
as the winningest coach in major college
basketball, the Runnin' Rebels of the University
of Nevada, Las Vegas ended the 1974-75
season as the finest in the 17-year history at
the university with a 24-5 overall record.
The West Coast Athletic Conference Champions
were 2-1 in the NCAA playoffs, defeating
San Diego State, 90-80, losing to Arizona
State, 84-81, and bouncing back to topple
the University of Montana, 75-67 for third
place in the Western Regional tournament
recently in Portland, Ore.
Coach Tarkanlan, who now has a sevenyear
major college coaching record of ISOSI
for a .843 winning percentage, commented,
"This year's Rebel team has played closer
to its potential than any other team that I
have coached, and, I am very proud that we
accomplished what we did with a sophomore
team."
Looking forward to becoming an independent
Division I team next year after withdrawing
from the WCAC as conference champion,
the Rebels were led by five sophomores, a
junior and one senior to the most victories
in the school's cage history.
Senior team captain Ail-America Ricky
Sobers set three UNLV records and three
Conference records, but the remainder of the
squad is expected back for the 1975-76 season.
The 6-3 WCAC Piayer-of-the-Year has been
invited to, and has accepted, to play in the
fourth annual Pizza Hut Classic in Las Vegas
on April 15. He leaves UNLV as the all-time
record-holder in assists as he compiled 166
this season for an average of 5.7 per game.
He also set a new Rebel mark from the freethrow
line, converting on 105 of 127 attempts
for a superb .828 percentage. He finished his
two-year Rebel career with 855 points, good
Bouncin' Boyd Batts came from Hawaii, wasn't eliaible until January, but he definitely made
his mark and was the Rebels' most improved player in 1974-75.
REBEL ROUSERS — The 1974-75 spirit-rousing
cheerleaders were front: Nancy Oesterle;
middle: Marrie Archuleta, Heidi Neal, and
Cathy Seggerson. On top: head cheerleader
Chris Martinez and Pat Washington.
enough for 11th on the ail-time UNLV scoring
charts.
Heading the list of returning stars for UNLV
is 6-7 sophomore Eddie Owens who led
UNLV in scoring this past season. Scoring
534 points for an average of 18.4 per game.
Easy Eddie has already moved up to 16th on
Ail-time UNLV scoring charts with 797 points.
He still has another two years with the Rebels,
too.
Center Lewis Brown, another sophomore
this year, ended the season with 20 points
and 13 rebounds against Montana to finish
third in scoring for UNLV and first in rebounding.
For the year, he averaged 13.1
points per game and ripped off 11.7 rebounds
per contest. He is 24th on the UNLV scoring
parade with 557 points after his first two
years with the Rebels.
Two more sophomores. Glen Gondrezick
and Jackie Robinson, also contributed greatly
to the Rebel success story. Gondrezick, who
was hampered at the end of the season with
a thigh injury, finished with 11.8 points per
game and 5.9 rebounds while Robinson completed
his second year with 11.6 ppg and 9.6
rpg, both promising greater futures.
The best Rebel performance in the NCAA
regionals in Portland was by 5-10 sophomore
Robert Smith, who started both games for
UNLV after being the sixth man ail during
the previous 27 games. Smith, who was
named to the Aii-Regional tournament team
for his play, scored 25 points in the two
games, had 10 assists, four steals, and nearly
single-handedly broke the Arizona State
press as he brought the bail up-the-court
nearly all of the time during his completegame,
40-minute display of ball-handling.
Smith finished the year with 9.5 points per
game and 93 assists and was the Rebels'
leading field goal shooter as he sunk 110 of
213 for a .516 percentage. He also shot a
very accurate .818 (54-66) from the charity
stripe.
Junior Boyd Batts, who did not become
eligible until conference season play started,
ended a solid season with 16 points against
Montana and a very healthy 9.2 scoring average.
Batts was a key factor off the bench
for UNLV several times during the season
and will return next season as the team's
only regular senior.
The Runnin' Rebels were also the bestshooting
team in the school's history, hitting
.479 from the field (1087) of 2270) and .733
from the charity stripe (467 of 637).
20 21
UNIVERSITY OF NEVADA, LAS VEGAS BASKETBALL 1974-75 FINAL STATISTICS
(Compiled by Dominic Clark)
PLAYER G FGM-FGA PCT FT>t-FTA PCT REB AVE PF-FO TP AVE A
EDDIE OVrtlNS 29 211-427 .494 112-148 .757 140 4.8 77- 4 534 18.4 53
V/CAC 14 102-210 .486 57- 72 .792 57 4.1 37- 3 261 18.6 28
RICKY SOBERS 29 209-421 .496 105-127 .828 108 3.7 101- 9 523 18.0 166
WCAC 14 102-198 .515 48- 57 .842 52 3.7 46- 4 252 18.0 88
LEWIS BROWN 28 170-370 .460 27- 50 .540 328 11.7 95- 3 367 13.1 24
WCAC 13 81-177 .458 7- 17 .412 156 12.0 47- 0 169 13.0 14
GLEN GONDREZICK 29 135-207 .470 71- 92 .772 172 5.9 115-11 341 11.8 76
WCAC 14 76-151 .503 30- 35 .857 99 7.1 53- 5 182 13.0 39
JACKIE ROBINSON 27 131-264 .496 50- 83 .602 260 9.6 67- 1 312 11.6 38
WCAC 12 58-110 .527 16- 24 .667 115 9.6 35- 1 132 11.0 17
ROBERT SMITH 29 110-213 .516 54- 66 .618 36 1.2 53- 1 274 9.5 93
WCAC 14 55- 94 .585 23- 28 .821 18 1.3 26- 0 133 9.5 41
BOYD BATTS 18 71-155 .458 24- 33 .727 74 4.1 59- 3 166 9.2 22
WCAC 14 52-120 .433 20- 27 .741 57 4.1 43- 2 124 8.9 16
DON IrtlMER 20 15- 43 .349 8- 15 .533 53 2.7 48- 5 38 1.9 4
WCAC 9 3- 12 .250 3- 8 .375 20 2.2 18- 2 9 1.0 3
MIKE MILKE 15 11- 31 .355 10- 12 .833 12 .8 9- 0 32 2.1 16
WCAC 9 9- 20 .450 10- 12 .833 5 .6 8- 0 28 3.1 10
JOHN FREEMAN 12 9- 17 .529 2- 3 667 4 .3 8- 0 20 1.7 0
WCAC 7 8- 12 .667 2- 3 667 1 .1 6- 0 18 2.6 0
MATT PORTER 9 6- 13 .462 3- 4 750 4 .4 0- 0 15 1.7 3
WCAC 6 6- 10 .600 3- 3 1 000 3 .5 0- 0 15 2.5 3
DON SILCOX 7 1- 3 .333 0- 2 000 17 2.4 2- 0 2 .3 2
WCAC 5 1- 3 .333 0- 000 11 2.2 0- 0 2 .4 2
JEEP KELLEY 7 8- 26 .308 1- 2 500 9 1.3 7- 0 17 2.4 4
(TEAM REBOUNDS) 147-58
UNLV 29 1087-2270 .479 467-637 733 1364 47.0 641-37 2641 91.5 501
WCAC 14 553-1117 .495 219-287 763 649 46.4 315-17 1325 94.6 261
OPPONENTS 29 927-2012 .447 464-673 689 1343 46.3 640-28 2318 79.9 442
WCAC 14 431- 959 .449 266-354 751 599 42.8 294-10 1128 80.6 217
MINUTES PLAYED;
TEAM (5,800)--Sobers (1002), Gondrezick (861), Robinson (855), Owens (854),
Brown (796), Smith (659), Batts (370), Uelmer (182), Kelley (75), Milke (62),
Porter (32), Freeman (28), Silcox (24).
TEAM (483)—Sobers (120), Brown (70), Owens (71), Smith (64), Robinson (51),
Gondrezick (48), Weimer (26), Milke (14), Batts (13), Kelley (4), Silcox (1),
Freeman (1), Porter (0).
Tricky Ricky Sobers (No. 40) passed and shot (see previous page) his wny into the UNLV record book ... He wai the Rnnnin' Rebels' first
All-American . . . MVP of the West Coast Athletic Conference and the UNLV team ... He was the Rebel team captain ... He played in
the Coaches All-Star Game in Tiil.sa, Oklahoma in April and the Pizza Hut Cla.s.sic in Las Vegas in April . . . He was the Man of the Hour
for UNLV basketball.
22
RECORD: OVERALL W 24 L 5; WCAC W 13 LI (HOME: 15-0; AWAY: 6-3; NEUTRAL: 3-2)
RESULTS; 126 *UNIV. OF NEVADA, RENO 87 Owens- 22 Robinson- 13 6,257 SELLOUT
84 *SEATTLE UNIVERSITY 62 Owens- 21 Brown- 20 6,257 SELLOUT
UNLV OPPONENT OPP LEADING SCORER TOP REBOUNDER ATTENDANCE 106 *SAINT MARY'S COLLEGE 94 Sobers- 23 Brown- 12 6,257 SELLOUT
75 CAL STATE, FULLERTON 56 Sobers- 16 Brown- 17 5,228 77 *Seattle University 63 Sobers- 20 Robinson- 14 3,000
80 U. of Arizona 85 Gondrezick- 21 Brovm- 8 11,123 81 *Saint Mary's College 75 Gondrezick- 19 Robinson- 13 1,800 SELLOUT
77 Univ. of Oregon 94 Robinson- 17 Robinson- 9 10,000 SELLOUT 103 *Univ. of San Francisco 113 Owens- 26 Brown- 23 5,488
84 U.C, SANTA BARBARA 81 O^^ens- 26 Owens- 12 3,859 81 *Univ. of Santa Clara 74 Sobers- 31 Brown- 9 2,335 SELLOUT
94 UNIV. OF RHODE ISLAND 80 Rcbinson,0\yens-20 Bro^m- 12 3,592 123 *PEPPERDINE UNIVERSITY 86 0wens,Robin8on-16 Robinson- 15 6,257 SELLOUT
101 BUFFALO STATE COLLEGE 74 Robinson— 20 Robinson,Brown- 9 3,624 93 *LOYOLA MARYMOUNT UNIV. 81 Gondrezick- 26 Brown- 15 6,218
99 ILLINOIS STATE UNIV. 88 Broi-m, Sobers-22 Brown- 22 5,981 98 *Univ. of Nevada, Reno 88 Sobers- 30 Gondrezick- 12 3,500
99 tfUNIV. OF SOUTH ALABAMA 80 Owens- 30 Rob inson, Broim-15 6,257 SELLOUT 114 PORTLAND STATE UNIV. 100 Sobers- 32 Robinson- 16 6,237
80 //FRESNO STATE UNIVERSITY 64 Sobers- 23 Brown- 14 6,227 90 +San Diego State 80 Sobers,Owens- 21 Brown- 12 14,733 SELLOUT
78 (®Texas A&M University 80 Owens— 20 Pobinson- 17 5,673 81 •Arizona State 84 Sobers- 20 Brown- 9 9,797
89 0Univ. of Hawaii 77 Brown,Sobers-22 Brown- 11 8,825 75 +Univ. of Montana 67 Brown- 20 Brown- 13 8,534
82 *Loyola Marytnount Univ. 69 Owens,Sobers- 20 Brown- 15 2,123 SELLOUT
94 *Pepperdine University 82 Sobers- 24 Brotm- 11 2,950 HOME GAMES IN ALL CAPS
77 *UNIV. OF SAN FRANCISCO 75 Owens- 20 Brown- 11 6,257 SELLOUT //Las Vegas Holiday Classic OHouston Blueljonnet Classic *"csc Coast Athletic Conference
100 *UNIV. OF SANTA CLARA 79 Owens- 23 Brown,Gond rezic k- 9 6,257 SELLOUT -NCAA riaycffs ATTENDANCE: 46; HOME: 84,765; Home Averases 5,651.
REBEL BASKETBALL SQUAD — The University of Nevada, Las Vegas Rebels' 1974-75 basketball team is pictured here. They are, from
left to right (front row). Assistant Coach Gil Castillo, Mike Milke, John Freeman, Jackie Robinson, Matt Porter, Ricky Sobers, Robert
Smith, and Assistant Coach Dan Ayala. Back row: Head Coach Jerry Tarkanian, Don Silcox, Boyd Batts, Don Weimer, Lewis Brown, Phil
Parainore, Eddie Owens, Glen Gondrezick, and Assistant Coaches Lynn Archibald and Ralph Readout. 23
Jumpin' Jackie Robinson was always around the basket this year.
Big Lew Brown was the Jans' delight and the opponents' nightmare
as he rebounded better than anyone the Rebels played and led the
team during the season.
24
Easy Eddie Owens led the Rebels in scoring for the year and in
league play, and, he was only a sophomore.
r
Robert "Slick" Smith was the Rebel Super Star . . . He made the
Western Regional All-Tournament Team with superb play against
Arizona State and the University of Montana.
The Las Vegas Economy
by Dr. Bernard Malamud and Dr. William T. White
For economists, Las Vegas is one of a kind
—an especially interesting kind. Witfi its
focus on recreation in a world of ever-increasing
affluence, Las Vegas presents a
glimpse at the world of the future, sometimes
in a usefully exaggerated form. Economists
at the University of Nevada, Las Veaas. of
course, have special interests in the Las
Vegas economy and in recreational economics
generally. Yet local economies have been
sparsely treated in national economic literature,
and in the author's belief, too sparsely
treated at our university as well. To correct
this, the authors will offer a seminar on the
Las Vegas economy during the second 1975
summer session. This article presents a preview
of some facts and issues to be treated
in that seminar, with particular attention paid
to the challenging questions posed for economics
by events in Las Vegas.
We shall first examine the Las Vegas economy
as a whole, In terms of Its overall growth
thus far and as projected into the future.
There will be some surprises in these projections.
The remarkable resistance of many
aspects the Las Vegas economy to recession
receives attention next. Then, just to keep
from being too pleasant about prospects, we
shall discuss Las Vegas's remarkable ability
to have an unemployment rate persistently
higher than the national average.
In treating specific industries, our study
separates "export" industries, which bring
income from outside areas, from supporting
industries, which serve local residents.
The export resort industry receives the
special treatment it deserves, with particular
attention given to its behavior during national
recessions. We also give some idea of future
resort industry growth in the world economy.
The non-resort exporting industries deserve
and receive some brief comment, particularly
as they involve rather recession resistant governmental
activity; the Test Site and Nellis
AFB.
As in every community, "exporting" industry
employees are served by a very large induced
support industry involving everything
from barber shops to housing to food stores.
This supporting industry, while certainly characteristic
of any city, has unique features
here. Housing construction for a rapidly increasing
population is of particular interest.
We shall discuss some of these features as
best we can in the space available to us. We
promise much more for the seminar, of
course, including participation by persons expert
in each of the fields covered.
GROWTH AND FORECAST GROWTH
IN LAS VEGAS
In the period between 1960 and 1970, Nevada
grew more rapidly than any other state
in the Union — a 71.3% rate, which was almost
double that of its nearest followers,
Florideu and Arizona. Nevada's 70-F%
growth compares with an overall United
States population of growth of a little over
13.3%. Employment in Nevada has increased
3y2 times more rapidly than overall U. 8.
employment from the beginning of 1970 to
1974. The strong overall growth trend clearly
continues in the 1970's.
A recent study of automobile licenses exchanged
for Nevada plates Indicates that Nevada's
immigrants are coming overwhelmingly
from California, but other states are strong
sources of Nevada immigrants as well. Significant
numbers are coming from all states,
particularly the richer states.
In explaining Nevada's growth, and the
growth of Las Vegas which largely accounts
for it, most Las 'i/egans would cite job and
business opportunities and the high "quality
of life" enjoyed here as the primary reasons
new residents have been attracted.
Most economists, while impressed with the
quality of life reasons for growth in an increasingly
affluent world, still would place
primary emphasis in explaining growth on the
business and job opportunities available.
These in turn are primarily influenced by
changes in the export industries — the resort
business, Nellis AFB, and the Test Site. Of
the three export industries, increases In the
resort industry activity not only Is of first rank,
but in more recent years has compensated
for declines in the Test Site and little change
in Nellis activity. Over the period from 1953
to 1973, the average annual percentage rate
of growth in resort employment has been almost
8% (7.88%). Essentially, that which is
to be explained in accounting for Las Vegas'
rates much over five percent lead to strains,
distortions, and capacity constraints which
alter those situations to bring about some
lower rate of growth. Among such factors
one can already perceive In Las Vegas is
the end of the days when a tourist could
move from his hotel to any other without considering
traffic problems and travel times. As
another example, the increase in stoplights
on one two-mile stretch on Maryland Parkway
from one to five within the past three years
shows the effects of growth on the very
things which helped to permit growth — easy
movement from home to job for Las Vegas
residents.
Our retreat from high growth prediction
does not mean that we do not foresee very
strong growth in the future. Even with a gradual
reduction of annual resort growth from
8% to a more realistic 5.4%, resort employment
can be reasonably expected to reach
more than 105,000 by 1990, a 133% over
present levels. The expected growth in resort
employment and the multiplied effects this
employment would have on overall employmm
i i l l l l l l ' i f ' i " • i
From sin to savior: the gambling and resort industry may exempt Las Vegas from the surrounding
recession.
growth is the growth in tourism.
The 20-year persistence of growth of nearly
8% in resort employment and the high resulting
rate of growth in Las Vegas population
over the past two decades tempts an expectation
that something like an 8% growth rate
should be expected for the forseeable future.
We do not believe such an expectation is
warranted, however. In the main, we are dissuaded
from expecting such growth to continue
by the consequences anywhere at anytime
of such fantastic growth rates as Las
Vegas has had in the recent past. When it is
realized that 8% growth leads to the doubling
of size every nine years and a quadrupling
of size every 18 years, something of the consequences
of sustained growth at 8% can be
seen. By 1991, we would expect that there
be four times as many cars on the roads of
Las Vegas, four times as many houses, perhaps
three times as many school children,
four times as many hotei rooms, etc. Experience
in similar situations conform that growth
ment is very strong, indeed.
There is a second temptation in observing
Las Vegas growth to consider that future
growth will vary considerably depending upon
decisions not yet made and not predictable.
Thus, it might be argued that MGM's decision
to build the Grand Hotel, and Hilton's decision
to expand its hotel could conceivably
have been reversed, with a consequent radical
impact on resort employment. The data
suggests, however, that expansions in hotel
capacity which appear at first to be the result
of decisions by particular persons or
firms which might have decided otherwise,
probably would have occurred in any case,
other entrepreneurs moving in to meet a
valid demand. This fact, coupled with the
realization that some building which at first
appears to be overbuilding Is more correctly
perceived as "early" building, supports rather
smooth curves of expansion as the proper
basis for predicting long term growth.
(Continued on Next Page^^
RECESSIONS AND LAS VEGAS
EXPORT INDUSTRIES
The behavior of the Las Vegas economy as
general business conditions change, and
especially in recessions, is at least as important
as long term growth. Considering the
recessions of 1958, 1960-61, 1970-71 and the
current recession insofar as data are available,
Las Vegas resort business has only
slowed in growth rather than actually turned
downward. Only in 1960 did gaming revenues
adjusted for inflation actually decline from
the previous year and this decline was less
than two-tenths of one percent. In the current
economic downturn, which is considerably
more serious than the others, gaming
revenues in money terms have grown more
than enough to match inflation.
There is considerable difference in recession
impacts on Casino Center gaming as
compared with Strip gaming, with the former
thus far seemingly escaping any effects of
recession. Further analysis of impact patterns
of recessions will be required before definite
conclusions in this regard can be made, particularly
with respect to cause. There is limited
statistical support for a conclusion that
Strip business was significantly affected by
stock market changes, whereas Casino Center
business did not, and this might in part
reduce recession responsiveness of the latter.
A second reasonable speculation, still
to be checked, is that Casino Center business
is largely from Los Angeles, with a low
"ticket" price (minimum price of the trip),
whereas Strip business involves patrons from
more distant locations and a resulting higher
ticket cost. These facts, if they are confirmed,
coupled with the recently noticed high
sensitivity of high "ticket" items to recession,
would be a useful explanation of the apparent
greater recession sensitivity of Strip gaming
compared to that of Casino Center gaming.
Further research into the reasons that
recession impacts less on hotels than on the
less expensive and smaller motels also is
needed.
Within the limits of current information and
the analysis which has been made of it, the
non-resort export industry appears largely to
follow the recession pattern of government
employment elsewhere, i.e., limited impact.
There is some prospect that in a recession
considerably deeper than the current recession,
programs of defense spending such as
those envisaged by the Department of Defense
in its anti-recession budgeting last year
could make Nellis AFB and/or the Test Site
counter-recessionary, but nothing of this nature
has occurred thus far. Naturally, any
new employment associated with the proposed
nuclear waste storage facility, if it
should be located in Nevada, would add to
Las Vegas employment. There will also be
some multiplied effects of such employment
in terms of supporting employment. Caution
is called for in estimating the impacts of both
Test Site and Neilis expenditures on the local
economy. Many of the Site and Neilis expenditures
involve very little purchase of local
materials; highly sophisticated equipment
(e.g., aircraft) are brought in from outside
sources and constitutes major fractions of
total expenditures. Appropriate treatment of
Neilis and Test Site expenditures in terms of
impacts on the Las Vegas economy must be
based on employment and materials purchases
made locally. It is expected that estimates
of local materials purchases can be
obtained for the summer seminar and combined
with already available local employment
expenditures to refine estimates of Test Site
and Neilis impacts on the local economy.
SUPPORTING ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
Workers in the support sectors of the Las
Vegas economy serve export industry employees
and each other. Most supporting activity,
such as derived numbers of children
in the public schools, retail store business,
and other service businesses are reasonably
predictable, not only from stable relationships
with the export industries, but from the relatively
smooth growth curves presented by
their histories. A typical case is that of tele-
•phone demand, which has increased at an
essentially constant growth rate. The fact
that this smooth growth has occurred despite
such seemingly radical discrete events as the
construction of the MGM and the Hilton addition
reinforces the conclusion previously
stated that Las Vegas growth can be expected
to be relatively independent of decisions
on individual expansion projects.
The relatively light impact of recessions
on Las Vegas' primary export industry, the
resort industry, normally would be expected
to be accomplished by a lower level of recessionary
unemployment in Las Vegas. In
fact, the opposite seems to be the case. Las
Vegas unemployment figures are higher than
the national average both in recession and
in upswings, and further rise more rapidly
than national unemployment rates when the
latter rise. Information from the Nevada
Employment Security Department suggests
that Las Vegas unemployed are augmented
by persons becoming unemployed elsewhere
who move to Las Vegas hoping to find work
or at least to collect unemployment compensation
in a recreational surrounding. In a resulting
carburetor-like effect, the reservoir of
unemployed would be quickly filled to a high
level even if almost every person now unemployed
were hired. Very recently, however,
there are indications that a larger than usual
fraction of the newly unemployed in Las
Vegas were locally generated.
One of the most important of the support
sector industries, housing, has not been
stable. For the most part, the problems of
this supporting industry are reflections of
national problems as housing starts declined
from a level above 2.4 million per year in
1972 to less than 900,000 per year at the present
time. However, in the hot distant past,
there have been some housing industry problems
essentially of local origin, particularly
in overbuilding and in housing finance practices.
Currently, the consequences of these
past practices are mixed. Las Vegas housing
is far less overbuilt than many other communities,
with such overbuilding as does exist
being concentrated in condominium projects,
which also are badly overbuilt on a national
basis. Housing finance practices have been
conservative in reaction to the earlier problems,
which led local savings associations
into negative net worth and placed them
under lending restrictions.
The financial institutions sector of the Las
Vegas economy has not yet shown any known
signs of difficulty from the current recession
or other causes, despite the problems in
housing. There were some minor difficulties
associated with the gold, silver, and other
commodities options purchases, with firms
involved proliferating in 1972 throuah 1974,
and with several major firm bankruptcies
eventually occurring. The total level ot these
activities and loss of actually invested funds
(as distinct from reinvested paper profits) has
not been sufficient to create a significant disturbance
in the Las Vegas economy.
THE CHALLENGE OF RELEVANT
WORLD TRENDS
As indicated at the outset, all of the foregoing
concerning the Las Vegas economy
constitutes a segment of a widespread international
movement into levels of affluence
which have brought not only Nevada but
also other recreational areas into the highest
levels of growth in modern society. There is
little effective literature on the long run consequences
of this increased demand for recreation
and the form in which recreational
demand ultimately best will be met. The long
run potentialities of automation and information
systems show clearly that product manufacturing
as well as most routine paper work
will increasingly occupy smaller shares of the
work force. Additionally, these most important
technological improvements, particularly
in communications and transportation, can
be expected to free many types of economic
activity from locational constraints, to the further
benefit of communities providing recreaion
and other aspects of a high quality of
life. The meaning of these trends for the Las
Vegas economy can be perceived only dimly
now. It is clear, however, that its better perception
will require not only the work of economists,
but the work of all of the disciplines
concerned with the nature of human society
and specifically with the nature of self satisfying
activity in a world increasingly able to
afford leisure time.
' • - • p i ' x f . V . - , „ —
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Ml'.'KOW TiUNS«tS»tt!N- K!^TRSII>f:. C-^LiF. _
Business Bulletin '
A Bcckip'oun'*
On Trenila Ir
Warnings oj impending disaster: will an economic crunch hit the United States?
The Question of the
Campus Radio Station A Factor E White Paper
In 1940, Las Vegas was a desert community
of eight thousand or so people. Even as
late as 1960, the city was still of a relatively
modest size.
Now it's 1975, and the metropolitan Las
Vegas area has, by recent census figures, a
popuiation of 300,000. A good size city, and
it's still growing.
Naturally, the number of goods and services
needed to support a city of this many Is
vastly greater than what was needed in 1940.
So, along with the increase in size, there has
been a corresponding increase in the logistics.
Now, social aggregations, once they
achieve a certain level of material well-being,
tend to look beyond physical needs and to
concentrate on the aesthetic and spiritual
side of their collective personality. In short,
they develop a more elaborate culture which
goes beyond economic needs.
So it is with Las Vegas. People from diverse
backgrounds, looking for a way to live,
for a way to understand themselves through
that which they have built and will build
around themselves.
There are theatres, a library system, and
cuitural centers. There are clubs and organizations;
groups that bring in dance and
theatre troupes; groups that put on rock concerts
and classical music concerts. There
are ail the wonderful jazz artists who spread
themselves around the town. There's the
Strip with its glitter and glamour. And, of
course, there's the University. All symbols of
the culture which is Las Vegas.
Finaliy, there are the media. Sometimes
overlooked, they nevertheless have a vital
role in the acculturation of us, the inhabitants.
They are a sort of external nervous
system which keeps the city linked to itself
and to the country and the world around it.
As such they are the eyes and ears of the
community.
The aim of this paper is to present a challenge
to the student body of the school, and
the community at large. As a member of the
Mass Communications board, I would like to
see interest in an on-campus radio station
revived. There have been efforts made in the
past to start stations, various proposals made,
ideas put forth about how a station might be
financed, operated, programmed and so on.
All met with failure. But perhaps the time is
right to try again.
Why the University? As the purveyors of a
goodly share of the Las Vegas cultural environment,
it certainly makes sense. U.N.L.V.'s
Judy Bayley theatre has, since its inception,
proved to be a smashing success. From its
dramatic presentations, to the impromptu
jazz ensembles on lazy fall days, to the multitude
of art and music festivals, it has attracted
patrons by the hundreds. Witness the
rush for tickets with the announcement of
each new play.
The sports teams have, of course, provided
a focai point for community interest. With
the fine seasons they enjoyed, they brought
national acclaim to themselves, and, consequently,
recognition to our school, and city.
Also, the university, as a whole, has some
fine educators, many of whom are deeply involved
at the local level in making Las Vegas
a better place. Some have attained high professional
standing and national reputation
and, as such, are rightly to be considered as
resources of the community.
What does all this have to do with a radio
station? Simply this; we have all the talent
needed to successfully run and program a
quality station. The concerts, sports activities,
lectures, etc. . . . ; the important social
and economic issues, both national and local,
as perceived through the eyes of the university;
the latest scientific developments and
technical innovations; these would surely provide
a solid base for at least a small part of
the programming schedule.
In addition, I count myself among those in
the city who feel that much of local radio
programming has failed miserably to cater to
the listening needs of a large portion of the
area population. And, while I understand that
the economics of the matter tend to severely
limit what is commercially feasible, I don't
think this adequately explains the fact that
there has been little innovative music programming,
be it classical (literally non-existent in
any form), rock, jazz or c&w. In addition, the
trend towards total package programming is
a bad one and can only lead to greater mechanization
of the listening environment.
Could we do any better? I don't know. I
do think that it deserves a try, though.
Now, if I've left the impression that it would
be "easy", let me dispel it right now. Just
finding a viable means of financing a station
on a continuing basis is a monumental task,
especially when the limited financial resources
of any student government, ours no
exception, are taken into consideration.
It follows that any proposal put forth and
acted upon would have to be perfectly timed,
weli co-ordinated, and would have to suffer
no major setbacks from its inception to
its finaiization.
But given that this levei of pianning couid
be achieved, what wouid the odds be? I'd
say very good. In fact, by all rights, U.N.L.V.
should have a station on the air right now.
Two years ago a proposal was drawn up
by members of the then current student government.
It was relatively complete, in that
it fulfilled most of the government requirements.
Let me expiain. The government has provisions
on the books (and as far as I have
been able to find out, stiil does) for threequarter
funding of the initiai set-up costs of
any station which it judges to be educational
in nature. While these costs are by no means
staggering, they would create a large drain
on the cash reserves of an organization as
small as 0.S.U.N. So if the applicant is able
to provide sufficient assurances that the station
has been properly organized, the government
is willing to help start it up.
And therein lies the problem with the proposal
of two years ago. For, while it was
complete in most respects, it was lacking in
some vital areas:
1) It was judged that the programming
schedule might perhaps be lacking in
educational material, and that It was too
tenuous In nature.
2) the feasibility study, a pre-requisite to
any proposal, was not sent along.
3) adequate means of funding a staff
were not provided for e.g. funding on a
continuing basis.
The last two of these were the real sticking
points, if my reading is correct. It is my
understanding that a feasibility study had
been contracted, but that, for some reason,
the proposal was sent along without it. Also,
the Federal Communications Commission requires
that any station of comparable power
output (the proposal called for 10,000 watts,
f.m.) have a permanent engineering staff of
three, including a full-time station manager.
While the regulations clearly state this, it
does not seem to have been given the proper
weight by those who drew up the proposal.
Perhaps it was their inexperience in handling
the technical details of such a situation. At
any rate, the proposal was rejected. And
though the letter of rejection seemed to imply
that a better planned effort would be welcome,
none was forthcoming.
I'm not arrogant enough to think that under
the same set of circumstances, we would do
any better. But this is not the same set. We
now have a very good idea of what is needed;
naturally, since they told us. And there
is no reason to believe that the kind of effort
described earlier wouldn't work.
Before any such plan can be put forth,
however, there will have to be some very
serious discussions between the executive
officers and the student senate, especially
in the matter of funding any such effort. Anyone
who can add two and two has probably
already decided that it is no small matter to
have a full time radio engineer or two at your
service.
Of course even such objections can be
overcome if we realize that, ideally, such a
crew would be supplemented entirely by a
student part-time staff. And while I haven't
talked to the Engineering department, I don't
think it would be unreasonable to expect
them to be enthusiastic about the prospect.
Practical experience is much to be desired.
Indeed, the chairman of the Communications
department has expressed an interest
in having the programming aspects handled
by his students.
It is my intention to formulate, with the
help of the other members of the Mass Communications
board, the student government
leaders, and the student senate, another proposal,
to be ready for presentation to the students
by the time the fall semester starts.
New student body president, Joe Karaffa,
has expressed a strong interest in doing just
this. In fact it was part of his platform to try
to get a radio station on campus.
So while I admit to a definite bias, I think
the prospects are good that with a sound
proposal, including an adequate funding
mechanism, we might expect a good shot at
getting a station started before the holidays
next winter. The most important element is
student support.
As I stated in the beginning of the paper,
the media form a vital part of any community.
I think U.N.L.V. could be part of the Las
Vegas nervous system. And the change
would be a healthy one.
27
EXTRATERRESTRIAL LIFE:
Does it exist? Nestled In the green hills of Puerto Rico
Is a 1000 foot radio-telescope capable of
sending and receiving signals from its equal
anywhere in our Galaxy. Its existence testifies
to our having arrived at the beginning of
a new stage in the development of civilization
on this planet. For the first time in its history
mankind is now capable of communicating
with the stars. But is there anybody out
there with whom to communicate? Do extraterrestrials
exist?
Few ideas are as exciting in their implications
for the future of mankind as the possibility
of extraterrestrial life, is man alone in
the Universe, or are the stars scattered liberally
with life? Are there planets on which
dwell intelligent civilizations equal or superior
to our own? Obviously no definitive answer
can be given at the present time. Nonetheless,
most people who have thought much
about it have a ready opinion, which in a
surprisingly large number of casts they are
eager to share. However, must we be content
with merely stating a prejudice pro or
con in the matter? Or are there some criteria
by which we might logicaliy establish some
reasonable estimate of how many intelligent,
communicating civilizations there might be
in the Galaxy? We might ask ourselves what
factors have led to the emergence of our own
species' civilization and culture, the only single
race of intelligent beings we know of for
certain that is capable of and at least somewhat
interested in communicating with others.
We should include only general factors, however,
since it is apparent that if we consider
too specific factors responsible for our own
particular emergence we shall only too easily
eliminate ail but our own detailed, inimitable
existence.
Several years ago Frank Drake of Cornell
University did just this. He suggested that
one could reasonably estimate the total number
of intelligent civilizations in the Galaxy
capable of and interested in communicating
with each other by considering ail the necessary
evolutionary steps, astronomical, chemical,
biological, and social, that are requisite
for the appearance of such a civilization, e.g.,
our own. These factors he summarized in the
formula
N = R.fpn,fifif,L
where R. is the rate of star formation averaged
over the lifetime of the Galaxy; fp is the
fraction of stars which have planetary systems;
nj is the mean number of planets within
such planetary systems which are ecoiogicaliy
suitable for life; fj is the fraction of such
planets on which the origin of life actually
occurs; fj is the fraction of such planets on
which, after the origin of life, intelligence in
some form arises; fp is the fraction of such
planets in which the intelligent beings develop
to a communicative phase; and L is the
mean lifetime of such technical civilizations.
It is strikingly evident that the problem is
in the truest sense an interdisciplinary one.
Note how the parameters of N cut across traditional
disciplinary lines. The first two factors,
R»and fp , are the exclusive domain of
astrophysics, while np involves astronomy,
chemistry, and to a degree biology. The
fourth factor involves both chemistry and biology,
as well as a bit of geology. The fifth
factor, f| , seems to be the domain of biology
alone, while the sixth involves perhaps
some biology but is probably more the domain
of sociology and anthropology. Obviously
the seventh factor, L, is exclusively
the domain of anthropology and sociology.
In the space available to us here we cannot
systematically, logically evaluate the factors
in Drake's formula. However, for those
interested in the carefully reasoned scientific
arguments leading to possible evaluations I
would recommnd several books on the matter.
For those with little technical background
Carl Sagan's Cosmic Connection, available
now in paperback, provides a mind-expanding
evening's reading, though it does not get into
Drake's formula itself. Equally readable but
much more extensive in its coverage of material
pertinent to the problem is a "fat"
paperback. Intelligent Life In the Universe, by
I. S. Shklovski and Carl Sagan. For those
readers with more technical background,
Interstellar Communication: Scientific Perspectives,
edited by Cyril Ponnamperuma and
A. G. W. Cameron, would be appropriate; it
consists of a set of essays by various scientists
addressing themselves to specific factors
in the Drake formula. For readers interested
speoifically in the biological and chemical
aspects of the problem, Stanley Miller and
Leslie Orgei have written an outstanding
though somewhat technical book entitled
The Origins of Life on the Earth. Finally, for
those who would really like to get their feet
wet and sample the flavour of scientific debate
in its unpolished, most excitingly human
form, I strongly recommend the published proceedings
of the First International Conference
on Extraterrestrial Life, held in Soviet Armenia;
this book, Communication with Extraterrestrial
Intelligence, edited by Sagan, is
available only from the MIT Press in Cambridge,
Massachusetts.
So what is the final result of all this learned
debate? How many intelligent, communicative
civilizations are likely to exist in our Galaxy?
Without acceding anything to the "flying
saucer" fanatics, our Milky Way Galaxy
alone, containing as it does somewhat more
than a hundred billion stars, probably is home
to somewhere between 100 and 5,000,000
civilizations at or beyond our own level of
development. The range of numbers reflects
the difference between basically conservative
and liberal approaches to the scientific information
available. I emphasize, however, that
it does not reflect just wishful thinking on
the part of estimators but instead is the result
of a carefully reasoned, rational approach to
the subject, one based on critical evaluation
of the best substantiated scientific information
available to us at our own present stage of
development.
If the actual number of communicative civiiiizations
is somewhere near five million, then
the chances are that the nearest one is located
within some fifty light years of us. In
astronomical terms that means essentially in
our own backyard. If one hundred is closer
to the mark, then the nearest is probably
some ten to fifteen thousand light years away
at least. In either case, the distances are vast
beyond any terrestrial experience, clearly precluding
any extensive direct physical contact
between us. Such distances would make even
radio contacts between civilizations lengthy,
drawn-out affairs, even though radio waves,
travelling at the speed of light, are the fastest
way of communicating information known to
us today. It would take at least a century to
send a message and receive an answer to
even the nearest civilization under the best
statistical circumstances.
The underlying question in all these considerations,
whether intelligence Is a normal
and expected result of natural biochemical
evolution, persists; at our present level of
understanding of these phenomena we again
have only one example to work from, the
human race. Even presupposing it is, does
intelligence alone always lead to an interest
in interstellar communication? Probably not,
since even on Earth we have what seem to
be exceptions; dolphins and perhaps whales
seem to have highly developed intelligence
but are not as obviously interested in extraterrestrial
communication as are humans. Apparently
judgments in this must remain for
the time being the sheerest speculation. It
certainly is possible that biological evolution
leading to intelligence need not necessarily
imply the development of the capability or
even desire to develop an interest in interstellar
communication. There is some suggestion
that even within the family of man
the aggressive Western variation of technocracy
is just one type of cultural activity rather
than a generally achieved stage of biological
evolution itself. How much less certain the
developmtnt of technological cultures might
be in the course of social development on
other planets is totally unknown and unknowable
to us presently. Indeed, even if
intelligence and an interest in communication
does deveiop, it might even then be only a
passing phase of short duration in the total
history of a civilization. On the other hand,
if a civilization were far beyond our own present
level of technical development, it seems
quite plausible that they might not have any
interest at all in communicating with such
primitive beings as ourselves. Consider how
much effort we ourselves expend in trying to
communicate with, let us say, ants, except in
a few specific and special cases.
Contact with other civilizations seems a
more realistic possibility with each passing
day. it is no longer just a science-fiction
theme. Even though extraterrestrials may be
wildly different from ourselves, they will likely
have experienced many of the same physical
and social problems with which we have and
will be confronted. We all live in the same
Universe, after all. If and when we finally do
make contact, it may be one of the most significant
events in the history of mankind. Even
if we receive a signal and consciously choose
not to respond, perhaps to minimize the possible
cultural shock we might experience, it
will precipitate a traumatic realization of our
place in the Universe at least as significant
as the Copernican revolution. Certainly the
commonality of all Earthlings would become
more apparent, if nothing else. If we were to
choose to communicate, or even just to
eavesdrop passively, what might we gain or
lose? Despite ail the science-fiction stories to
the contrary, the economics of interstellar
space travel preclude the realistic possibility
of physical "invasion". That is not to say we
should not proceed with caution, though; the
history of human impetuosity and guiiibiiity
would certainly suggest, on the contrary, that
we should proceed very cautiously. We might
gain simply advanced technological information,
which might or might not stultify or stimulate
our own efforts in that direction. Certainly
we would stand to gain new and significant
insights in the arts and humanities,
different aesthetics and realizations that must
become increasingly important and desirable
as our own civilization on this planet becomes
The Quality of Education
by Norm Cimon
Thanks to the sports program, U.N.L.V. is
starting to get a name for itseif around the
country. A recent visitor from back East mentioned
to me upon his arrival, that he was
looking forward to seeing the Rebels in action.
He was sincerely disappointed to learn
that the basketball team had finished out
their home season. (They were at that time
preparing for the playoffs.)
And last year, while back home (Massachusetts),
I noted that many of the people
who asked me where I was going to school
were familiar with the University of Nevada
at Las Vegas either from their reading of the
basketball polls or the college division football
standings.
i imagine there are still those who envision
slot machines next to the whirlpool in the
training room, and keno runners in the dining
hails of the "Las Vegas" team. But all
in ail, it's a good feeling to make a dent in
the national consciousness.
So what does ail of this mean? Weil, a
better all-around sports program for one thing.
It's long been common knowledge in university
athletic departments that in order to develop
a complete program, it was first of ail
necessary to establish interest in the major
team sports, such as basketball and football.
This has been accomplished here.
it's not surprising, then, that lately we've
been hearing more and more of the good
swimming team the university can expect to
field (or float), of the track and baseball
teams, and of the good season enjoyed by
the women cagers. The opening of the new
gym will, of course, aid immensely in the effort
to legitimatize the entire sports picture.
Aside from this, however, it also means
that we've drawn the national eye towards us
and that we are in an excellent position to
use the exposure as a way of attracting people
interested in getting an education to this
school. So in the end, it will be the quality
of the learning experience that determines
what type of school we are and will become.
What I would like to do in this paper, then,
is to consider some of the possible implications
of this new found public image, is there
any way to determine what type of students
the university will attract, or how many? Can
we expect unlimited growth? What do we
have to offer prospective students? All of
these subjects could, admittedly, fill pages
and pages all on their own. And I won't
even pretend that I can cover most of these
matters at anything but a superficial level.
Yet I do feel that it's important that they be
discussed openly. Obviously, there are going
to be quite a few decisions made in the next
few years which will determine the kind of
institution which U.N.L.V. will be. And once
these decisions are made, the choices will
be gone and we'll have to live with what
we've got.
Now Las Vegas is different from other cities,
both in its economic structure, and in
the way this structure shapes the lives of a
large number of the people who live here.
It's no secret that many cities have been hit
pretty hard by the recent economic woes.
Unemployment in Detroit is supposed to have
gone well over twenty percent.
And yet, while we have not been totally
immune from these problems ourselves, the
fact is that we had a good year, and the
gambling industry had a great one, at least
if gambling receipts are any criteria. So the
city thrives, and the state thrives, and there is
money for financing state projects including
the state universities and this means U.N.L.V.
When this fact is combined with the downturn
in the financial picture of most other
universities, one thing becomes clear; now is
the time for the school to build what is a
good faculty into a better one, and to increase
the scope of its curricula to include solid
graduate programs.
The latter is especially important. For, in
the world of higher education, a world which
is at least as high powered as any other top
echelon activity, the measure of a school is
the kind of graduate it produces. A school
moves into the "big time" when it can, for
example, produce a few psychologists who
are at least as good a grade of mathematician
as what might be turned out by the mathematics
department of the average school.
Or when it can produce graduates in the
entire range of specialties associated with
any given discipline.
The opportunity is wide open to produce
these types of programs here, at this university.
An interest in these matters by a large
enough segment of the local populace is ail
that is needed to insure that the proper consideration
will be given to funding for increased
faculty and improved programs when
these matters come up before the legislature.
Logically, the next question is "Granted
that we can afford more teachers and better
programs; do we need them?"
Enrollment has been steadily increasing
every year that I've been here, i walked into
the bookstore at the beginning of the current
semester and was confronted by wall to wall
books and counter to counter chaos. (In fact.
Dean Black recently made mention of this
situation, saying that serious consideration
would immediately have to be given to expanding
the facility.) This really brought home
the point to me.
If anything, the current economic situation
is only going to add impetus to the movement
of bodies onto the U.N.L.V. campus. People
tend to migrate where the money is. And
there's money here, money so that they can
put themselves through school. So the increase
will probably continue. And there'll
be a consequent amount of strain on the facilities,
and the staff.
The kind of student that is and will be attracted
to here will, in large part be determined
also by the types of programs offered.
So we move from questions of quantity to
questions of quality.
U.N.L.V. offers, of course, the complete
range of courses needed to complete requirements
in forty separate majors leading towards
bachelor's degrees, and in twenty-three
majors leading to master's. Naturally, some
of these have better reputations than others.
The hotel school, for example, offers one
of the most complete programs in the country,
including some eight hundred hours of
practical experience. As such it has attained
nationwide recognition.
The College of Allied Health Professions
offers both two and four year nursing programs.
It also trains for degrees (again both
two and four years) in radiologic technology,
and offers the associate's degree in medical
records. In other words, it has developed all
of the programs necessary to provide the
technical help needed to staff local hospitals.
The biology department has one of the better
graduate programs and, with the addition
of the life-sciences building to the campus,
should now have the facilities to match.
The theatre arts department has been attracting
much attention locally and on a national
level with the high quality of its productions.
And the music department, drawing
from a iarge pooi of iocal talent, has produced
some fine musicians.
It could have been argued a few years ago
that it was not logical to expect high enrollment
in the more technical disciplines such
as mathematics, physics, chemistry, geology
and engineering. Yet even this now seems
questionable.
The mathematics department recently received
authorization to hire two more full
time staff members, the geology department
two more, and the physics department added
two members iast year.
in passing, let me make one more remark,
i still haven't answered the question of how
much growth we can expect. I believe that
one depends on the rest of the questions in
the paper. Because we will, of course, end
up with exactly the kind of students we deserve;
and we'll deserve exactly what we've
planned for.
even more homogeneous.
All of this will be moot, however, unless we
find some way to avoid destroying ourselves
in either our own refuse or our recurring
wars, before contact is made.
it is ironic that the most critical factor in
evaluating N, the number of intelligent, comtnunicative
civilizations in the Galaxy, turns
out to be L, the mean lifetime of a technical
civilization. The values for the other parameters
are ail reasonably evaluatable, but
when it comes to deciding on the value of L,
everybody is really in the dark. The best educated
guesses reduce Drake's formula to
N = 0.1 L
that is, the number of technical civilizations
is roughly equal to 10 percent of the mean
lifetime in years of such civilizations. What
value should be used for L, then? if advanced
civilizations manage to survive on the
average a few million years, then the number
still around at this particular time in the history
of our Galaxy must be roughly a million
or so. If, on the other hand, civilizations tend
to have short duration, then we ourselves
might be one of only a handful of such civilizations
in the Galaxy at the present time.
How sobering it is to find that the greatest
uncertainty in the caiculaion of Drake's formula
arises not from the study of nature itself
but instead from the uncertainty of our
knowledge about social systems. Do technological
civilizations tend to destroy themselves
almost as quickly as they arise? Again
we have only one example on which to base
our estimate, and that is our own civilization.
The daily newspapers and our nearly suicidal
history over the last thirty years do not give
us grounds for optimism. We seem to exhibit
an absolute genius in developing weapons of
mass destruction and conditions for ecological
and population disasters. On the other
hand, as a civilization we have had the capability
of sending and receiving radio signals
from other stars in our Galaxy for only about
ten years. Curiously, that puts a lowest bound
on N of one, ourselves. It is also interesting
to note in passing that, like it or not, we on
Earth have already been inadvertently sending
signals out to the stars for the last several
decades through leakage from our TV,
radio, and radar signals.
Lon D. Spight
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HOME OF THE $100,000 MINT 400 DESERT RACE
;;Fr^ 1B -f Z. WbWe not committing to ; a Public Works Board members
• might he persuaded to cn^ge_u i* ^ Raggio said construction of a promised
;!he can be shown sufficient funds J Neva^llrja . a de
,a law school ai uini-iv .
^ aijlaw school, in Neva
•,are available. v 7', J gosirable.
• :, : But Assembly leaders vlf^re' note^
.ifti
i .
1 to do a chemical study,
and decision location
esirable. will«be^ mhde in^cbii^
, are one, of two stater fhat by the LegislatU|rg'&i|ntenm rii'optimistic.
, .yd i y doesn't have aUaw school^®^ nance Committee.
: "-The House of I^rds has prob- ^ university system," heSSAd., Arbertr alsor dispelled persis-
•jlenw with said ,^8epWrCo-r~ Southern N;eYada l?^ak- ^tent,,su&ota
' '"Q. .Ray Raw8o)if;;ftf as V , . ^.ISZn .9.
. 6„»,, ' dn th^yj^j^y because in 1969 th^^gis-- gifloe opens. Hd pointed out
••building expansion may be B7«;; lature decided to put a statS nied' ^2,1 million wantie spent to
". last matter resolved before Legis- , ^t the University oP gj^gnd the East Sahftpa office.
N.vada.Ren„. the k.y. co^tnac,
In*another matter, legislators
committed $5.3 million to bhild a.
• Among key • construction
projects for Southern Nevada are
a juvehilO mental health facility
i.nJ , Las'.V.-C'el g• a-1s c/o• st• i.n• g $8.^ 8ad 1m« •< rivl lion,
' the weekend of June 24-25.
: The building expansion plan
I'could become a bargaining chip^ full-service Department of'Motor
•to induce Assembly members to yghkles office in Hendersoh.;But 7n7'-;vn«ndinB the
; .„pp„r, favored pro.aot. of 4 eoncern
•'""luring the hearing, lepslatorf;, fe «*
. of both houses won Support of nd|, D-Las Vegas, s^d the, a WLV hbraiy ^ & il>4.y mii
merous small building , p^opoged site ' may be ch^icallyi hbfi cosfc . fr
: that tacked $3 million onto the J' ^ '5: j'
vtotalconstructionptbgram. - -
• Ways and Meahs Chairmarv
' Morse Arberry,' D-Nofth Las W"
• gas, sought the laW school study '
• to carry out a commitment he
' once made to the late Sen. Nick
• Horn, D-Las Vegas. Horn wanted
— ' ' r .f' V . .
L^#V«gas Revi«i\i«r«Joumal
• Assembly m^ttlbers Willf
h a v e t o m a k e c j B ' . f b r n b w :
with smaller quarters than •
their Senate counterparts.
By Ed Vogel
Donrey Capital Bureau
CARSON CITY — A joint Senate
and Assembly panel on Thursday rejected
a $16 million expansion ot the
Legislative Building but approved an
•'pii^gl?^'for 1995-97. ^
• ' A'rbe"'''1>uilding pro^m includes a,„
$500,000 appropriation to study the
feasibility of establish
ing a law school,
probably at the
University of Ne- j .iir,. . «ni . r i
vada,'La8 Vegas.
Also'included in
the statewide prograr
is $60 million for pn^''ex- ^
pansions and $78 nd|^[ioii' in
on new
of the University and Commumty College
System of Nevada.
The construction program was
adopted by members of the Senate Finance
Committee and the Assembly
Ways and Means Committee. About
half of the construction will be financed
by bond sales, while the remainder
will be paid out of surplus
state funds.
But Senate Majority Leader Bill
Raggio, R-Reno, told his Assembly
rMn nrmpur. f= rnmouses
now support a plan to add an 84,0^-
square-tbot' addition to the Legislative..
Building in Carson City.
That $16 million expansion project
would have given the 42 Assembly
members offices of comparable size to
those of the 21 senators. Senators now
have offices about twice as large as
those of most Assembly members.
Assembly Ways and Means Committee
members reluctantly went along
with Raggio's wishes after he said he
Please see BU1LDINQ/2B
Sprmg, 1975 seventy-five cents
/ •
3U3A:i j.
"The Law Schoo! Story"
The Law School Story
Amidst a slowly dissipating cloud of confusion
lies the controversy known as the
UNLV Law School issue. $7,000,000 figures
for one biennium were among the "hearsay"
costs that ran amuck in the legislature this
session. What actually did happen and how
did rumor take precedence over testimony in
the slate capitol? The story can best be told
sequentially.
During the fall semester, Dean Willard H.
Pedrick of A.S.U.'s College of Law and Prof.
Lome Seidman, Chairman of the Finance
Dept. at UNLV published the fruits of a year's
labor in their Law School Study for the University
of Nevada, Las Vegas. This feasibility
study looked at Nevada's population, economy
and Universities, the need for a Nevada
Law School, what a new law school would do
for the state, and costs. The conclusions
were extremely favorable as to its benefits
for all Nevada, and seemingly every possible
area of concern was analyzed, including the
cost of a building. Dean Pedrick estimated
the facility, at present, would cost $5.2 miiion.
Copies of this study were sent to all
members of the legislature.
At the start of the Spring semester, the
Consolidated Students opted to take an active
position on the issue. CSUN formed a
Legislative Action Committee and appointed
•Student Mike Navarro (who was in Carson City
as a registered lobbyist as per his employment)
as advisor. Mention of the law school
confronted Navarro with the $7 million figure.
According to Navarro, refutation was
impossible, and many legislators additionally
had qualms about entering into any new continuing
programs with the economic status of
the nation. It seems that a few years back,
the Senate and Assembly had been sold on
the need of a medical school for Nevada and
been told that the cost to them would be
about $200,000. It is currently requiring over
a million. Little progress was made but it
was discovered that Sen. Dick Bryan had a
UNLV Law School bill in the drafters, and
that Sen. Floyd Lamb supported the measure.
Optirnism prevailed among the students for
a while, but it was short lived. LAC Chairman
Al Kingam and member Dave Elkins came to
the capitol to give testimony on another matter,
and lunched with Bryan, Assemblywoman
Jean Ford, and Assemblyman Bob Craddock.
Although all three legislators supported the
idea, they felt that no favorable action would
be taken on the law school issue this session.
But they did offer an alternative. They suggested
that for $200,000 Nevada could enter
the WICHE Lav/ School program, which would
enable Nevada students entering an out-ofstate
law school to have a majority of their
tuition paid by the WICHE program. Kingam
stated that it was not ideal, but the compromise
could serve as a stop-gap measure until
the next legislative session. Kingam and
Elkins left, taking the compromise back to
their constituents.
On March 23rd, Dr. Al Johns "State Legislature"
class journeyed to Carson City with
the intent of seeing the legislative process
first hand, and doing a little lobbying for the
Law School. Using the name "Students Concerned
with Lawmakers", the students got the
same reaction as did the LAC: "Law School
NO. But what about WICHE?" Deciding that
this may be the only action taken to aid prospective
Nevada Law Students, the group
began Iqfbying the compromise.
But Howard Needham, one of the students
in John's group and a future law student, did
not easily accept the compromise. Needharn
reported that the Assembly Ways and Means
Cornmitee had been ''turned off by the $5.2
million building figure". Approximately one
week before the students' trip north, the Las
Vegas lawyers had put out a news release
regarding the excessive amount of lawyers in
Ntevada already. When confronted with this
by the lawyers, Needham responded "if this
is really true, how do you explain the backlog
in civil liberties and indigent law cases?"
Needham reports that his impression was that
they were really confronting a North/South
issue. "Snowy Monroe, Tom Weiss and Don
Melio all want the law school in Reno."
During their stay in the capitol, the students
also had an audience with the Governor.
"O'Callaghan says they're in a need for
other things, specifically better prisons, retardation
facilities, and medical help. He says
we don't need a law school now."
On April 4th, UNLV President Donald Baepler
gave testimony on- this issue to the Senate
Finance Committee. Baepler's proposal
was this: The program can be started in '76
for an initial $50,000. This money will allow
us to hire a dean, who will begin formation
of the school, and a librarian, who will start
coordinating a Law library. There will be a
three year program beginning in '77, and the
total cost to the state for the three years will
be $300,000, with the other $200,000 needed
coming from the students. There will be 70
•students in each going class, at a cost to
each of $5000. per semester. The library will
cost approximately $600,000, but we already
have its cost pledged by a major strip hotel.
Jan Gould, of the Clark County Citizens
Law School Group, in an interview with Factor
E, threw more "fat into the fire". She
noted that "the Marquette Law School has
80,000 current, accredited law books for sale,
attainable at a very appetizing price. These
books would make up 80% of our needed
law library." Gould also noted that the $5.2
million building continued to stifle support.
"The legislators should be informed that a
building cost does not have to be taken care
of in one session, or this session. All that
needs to be done is to show a financial commitment
to one by the third year in order to
attain accreditation, and its cost can then be
stretched over a thirty year mortgage if necessary."
Both Gould and Baepler are against the
WICHE compromise, though. They feel that
with the money going to WICHE, and the
money from the students going out-of-state,
a law school program could be accomplished,
and the benefits of a continuing education for
our lawyers, an accessible law library in the
South, and a number of other factors make
this the logical choice. With this argument
in hand, the WICHE compromise has been
dropped, and all efforts are now back to
their original position.
During the week of April 7th through the
14th, the Assembly Ways and Means Committee
approved a Veterinary School for UNR.
The relevance of this occurrance is that UNR
did not request it, and a feasibility study, up
to this point, has not even been undertaken.
The "Senate Finance Committee appears not
to be in favor of this program at present, but
is in favor of the Law School. Ways and
Means is not in favor of the Law School. Now,
politics. Both committees must get together
to "thresh" out what budgets, that only one
side has approved, will be put into effect,
and the name of the game becomes bargaining.
On April 14th, Baepler again gave testimony:
this time to Ways and Means. He made
the same proposal, and this time Vegas legislators
voiced the cry "I'm against it." The
two loudest southern lawmakers were Darrell
Dreyer and Bob Robinson. Dreyer proclaimed
"Two years ago we talked to Zorn about it
and he told us that two existing classrooms
would take care of it. This year Dr. Baepler
shows us a spot on the campus and tells us
this is where the law school will be built."
Robinson's comments were a bit stronger: "It
seems the University system is more intent
on getting a law school than meeting the
needs of the students." And added "We
could get them into any school anywhere in
the country, if we could include law in Nevada's
WICHE participation." But Supreme
Court Justice David Zenoff noted that young
people come to him with complaints they
can't find schools which will accept them.
UNLV regents make law
building third priority
(Continued from Page 1)
McCullough, who said he was pleased with the
priority ranking of the library addition.
The library addition was added as the
number 12 request on the $23.9 million building
proposal for 1975-79. The regents suggested
that $10 million of the needed money
could come from the federal slot machine tax
rebate, $1.8 million could come from capital
improvement fees paid by students and $12.1
million could come from the state treasury.
At the top of the priority list is the acquisition
of 48.4 acres of land from the Nevada
Southern University I^and Foundation in 1975
at a price of $590,000.
The second of the 12 priorities is a $3.7
million expenditure for 29 campus improvements
at the University of Nevada, Reno.
Moved into the third priority spot, replacing
the law building, is $1.5 million for campus
improvements at UNLV.
Other priorities set by the regents include
$300,000 for improvements at the Clark County
Community College, $250,000 for site improvements
at a proposed Desert Research
Institute laboratory in Boulder City and an
$8.7 million addition to the Western Nevada
Community College in Reno.
The long range planning portion of the fouryear
capital improvements program includes
16 possible future projects, such as a professional
schools complex at UNLV and a new
Claik County Community College facility on
West Charleston Boulevard.
The program adopted by the regents also
seeks legislative funding to insure the total
completion of current projects which have
been hampered by inflationary increases in
the construction industry.
Proposed law school
held back by regent
ByMaryHausch
R-J Staff Writer
The construction of a law school at the
University of Nevada, Las Vegas was
dropped from immediate university building
plans Saturday.
The regents adopted a capital improvements
program request for the 1975-77 biennium
which removed plans for a $5.8 imllion
law building as the number three building
priority in the university system and placed
die facility on a long-range planning list for
later funding.
The request will be submitted to the 1975
Legislature, which could decide to make the
law building a higher priority and provide the
necessary funds for its construction in the
next two-year spending period.
The Legislature will also be receiving a
feasibility study from the regents calling for
the creation of a law school along with a
recommendation that the program itsetf be
considered for funding in the next biennium.
That proposal was approved by the regents
Friday at their meeting at UNLV.
UnivCTSity Chancellor Dr. Neil Humphrey
said lowering the building priority for the law
school makes sense because the proposed
facility should be designed by the law school
dean and faculty who will have to u^ it.
If a law school staff is funded in the next
biennium the faculty members will be kept
busy planning their academic program, the
chancellor said.
Regent James Buchanan II of Las Vegas
cast the only dissenting vote to removing the
law building as a top priority. Suggesting that
tha-e might be a state budget surplus of $50
million for this biennium, Buchanan said the
regents should request that the building be
funded if there is adequate money in the State
General Fund.
UNLV Preadent Dr. Donald Baepler sai
the placement of the law building at the top o
the long-range planning list would serve as a
signal to the Legislature that it would be a top
priority item during the 1977 legislative session.
While the law building was removed from
the priority list for the next Legislature a $7.6
million addition to the UNLV Dickinson
Library was added to the list.
Baepler said the request for a library
addition dates back to 1968. "To substitute a
law school building for the library would be to
disrupt the priority process," he stated.
Baepler also told the regents that the law
school could generate ill will on campus if it
lopped off a project like the library addition.
That prediction was supported by UNLV
University Senate President Dr. Joseph
(See UNLV, Page 8)
March 22, 1974
TO THE STATE BAR OF NEVADA:
The Chairman of the Liaison Committee with
Nevada Legislative Commission on the Nevada Law School
suhm.its the following report.
This committee was established as a liaison
committee by the Board of Governors with that committee
appointed by the Governor to carry out the intent and
effect of Nevada Assembly Concurrent Resolution No. 48.
Since there is widespread misunderstanding as to what
was done in Assembly Concurrent Resolution No, 48 it was
the feeling of the chairman of your committee that this
resolution should be set out in full and it herewith
follows:
Assembly Concurrent Resolution No. 48 — Messrs.
Schofield, Lowman, McNeel, Bremner, Rickey,
May, Dini, Barengo, Glover, Smalley, Crawford,
Howard, Demers, Hayes, Ullom, Craddock, Broadbent,
Mrs. Gojack, Messrs. Huff, Jacobsen,
Banner, Bickerstaff, Prince, Bennett and
Mrs. Brookm.an
WHEREAS, The legislature finds that a law
school is needed in the University of Nevada System;
and
WHEREAS, The legislature finds that it is for th
best interests of the state and of the university
that a law school be located at University of Nevada,
Las Vegas; and
WHEREAS, The legislature at this time desires
to have more information in regard to the cost of a
law school at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas;
now, therefore, be it
RESOLVED BY THE ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF NEVADA,
THE SENATE CONCURRING:
1. That a law school be established in the
future in the State of Nevada at the University of
Nevada, Las Vegas.
2. That the board of regents of the University
of Nevada are authorized to employ a person v/ho
would be qualified to serve as a dean of a lav; school
from funds not appropriated by the state legislature
to develop plans for the physical facilities of a
law school, including a law library, and for the
faculty and staff of the law school to be located
at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.
3. That the information developed be submitted
to the board of regents of the University of Nevada,
the governor and 58th session of the legislature.
Pursuant to this resolution the Governor appointed
a committee referred to as the Law School Advisory Board
whose members are as follows:
Dr. Ralph Roske, UNLV, Chairman
Dr. Bruck Dixon, UNLV
Dr. Lome Seidman, UNLV
John W. Diehl
Don W. Driggs
Hon. John P. Foley, State Senator
Robert M. Galli
Clark J. Guild, Jr.
Dr. Laurance M. Hyde, Jr. (Resigned)
Jerome Mack
Hon. John Mendoza, District Judge
Mrs. Herb Nail
Hon. William Raggio, State Senator
Hon. Jack Schofield, Assemblyman
E. Parry Ihomas
Mrs. Mary Woitichek
Hon. David Zenoff, Justice of the Supreme Court
On June 29, 1973, your chairman and the liaison committee
was appointed.
As soon as the undersigned was appointed I felt
it was necessary to decide two fundamental questions, to
wit; (1) what were we as a committee to do, and, (2) what
was to be our relationship with the committee appointed
by the governor to implement the concurrent resolution.
It was agreed by Mr. Dickerson, as the representative
of the Board of Governors, and our committee
that the Bar committee should formulate an answer to the
following three questions:
1, Should we have a law school in Nevada?
2, If we do, what will be the estimated capital
cost thereof and what will be the annual
cost for support?
3, How will the money be raised for the capital
costs and for the annual support?
The question as to what our relationship to the
committee appointed by the governor has been answered as
a result of a conference between myself and Dr. Ralph
Roske of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, who serves
as chairman of that committee. Dr. Roske has been
extremely cooperative and has indicated that all members
of the committee appointed by the Bar were welcome at the
meetings of the committee established by the governor as
well as all subcommittee meetings. Further, he has extended
to us the courtesy of sending to us all material which has
been made available to the legislative comraittee. In
making this report I cannot overstate the cooperation that
I have received from Dr. Roske and the other members of
the committee appointed by the governor. They have been
fully cooperative in seeing that our membership has the
opportunity to attend their meetings and participate fully
in their discussions.
The committee appointed by the governor has
resolved itself into three subcommittees, to wit; a subcommittee
on facilities, 3 subcommittee on staff and
programs and a subcommittee on development.
There have been several meetings of the main
committee appointed by the legislature and at least one
meeting of the subcommittee concerning facilities. I
think it is a fair statement to make that there is no
facility presently available at the University of Nevada,
Las Vegas which will meet the beginning needs of a law
school on other than a very temporary basis.
Both the primary legislative committee and the
liaison"boiTimittee have been furnished with the feasibility
studies vhich have been done at the various universities
that have been considering law schools over the last seven
years. These reports are voluminous and each member of
our liaision committee has been furnished with these
reports.
As a result of these reports, the material sent
to us by the President of the State Bar, and that made
available to the legislative committee it was deemed
advisable by all concerned that a feasibility study be
prepared. In reaching this decision and in establishing
a panel from which to select a properly qualified person
the legislative coimnittee and the liaison conunittee were
advised by Professor Millard H. Ruud, Legal Education
Consultant for the American Bar Association and the
Association of American Law Schools. Professor Ruud
serves on the accreditation committees of both the
American Bar Association and the Association of American
Law Schools. Caesars World, Inc., the parent corporation
of the Caesars Palace Hotel in Las Vegas, has made available
for that study, and for the uses and purposes of the
legislative committee, the svim of $200,000.00, payable
$50,000.00 quarterly commencing January 1, 1974. In
addition, Caesars World has pledged the svim of $300,000.00
towards the creation of a law school library providing a
law school is to be established. Several other persons and
organizations have contributed substantial sums of money
or pledged substantial sums of money towards the creation
of a law school contingent upon a feasibility study.
Early in 1974 after an extensive review of the
qualifications of the candidates was completed, upon
recommendation of the legislative committee and Acting
President Donald Baepler of UNLV, William H,. Pedrick, Dean
of the College of Law at the Arizona State University at
Tempe, Arizona, was selected by the Board of Regents to
conduct a feasibility survey. Dean Pedrick had also
prepared the survey at the University of Delaware which
led to the establishment of the University of Delaware
Law School. That survey was an exemplar in establishing
a factual basis for projected costs. The undersigned,
as well as several of the members of the Bar liaison
committee have met Dean Pedrick. We have also been in
contact with him since his appointment in connection with
the various factual data which he is gathering for the
survey. We feel encouraged that the survey will be done
on a professional and thorough basis.
The next meeting of the legislative committee
is to be on March 22, 1974, at which time Dean Pedrick will
present a progress report on the factual material that he
has been able to develop. It is contemplated that at the
• meeting of the Board of Regents of the University on May
10, 1974, a full budget analysis of a proposed law school
will be submitted by Dean Pedrick. Some time in the middle
of June, 1974, Dean Pedrick will submit his full report to
the legislative committee for discussion and action, which
action will then be submitted to President Baepler of UNLV
for submission to the Board of Regents at their July, 1974,
meeting. Presumably their action, if any, will be submitted
to the governor and the legislature.
In addition to evaluating the various materials
which the Board of Regents committee has developed, your
committee has also submitted a questionnaire to the admittees
for the Nevada State Bar in 1972 and 1973. There were
-7-
151 admittees pursuant to information received from the
Executive Secretary of the State Bar. We have received
90 responses from the questionnaires. The questions asked
and the number of responses to that questionnaire are as
follows:
Yes No,
1. If there had been a law school
established at the University of Nevada
at Las Vegas at the time you were ready
to enter law school would you have
attended that institution? 15 68
2. If there had been a law school
established at the University of Nevada
at Reno at the time you were ready to
enter law school would you have attended
that institution? 28 54
3. At the time you entered law school
were either your parents or your wife
Nevada residents? . 43 42
4. At the time you entered law school
were you a resident of the State of
Nevada? 45 41
5. Since you entered law school have
your parents become Nevada residents
or have you married a Nevada resident? 13 62
6. Would your answer to Question #1
be different if that law school had
charged fees and tuition comparable to
those charged by a private rather than
a state-supported law school: 8 73
7. Would your answer to Question #2
be different if that law school had
charged fees and tuition comparable
to those charged by a private rather
than a state-supported law school? 12 71
since the questions are not necessarily mutually exclusive
the numbers of answers do not necessarily coincide. There
were many individual comments too numerous to mention.
The members of the Liaison Committee are deeply concerned
over this entire question. The creation of a law
school in Nevada will be an expensive problem initially
and it will be a continuing expense to the University of
Nevada system. The problem of gaining entrance to a law
school at this time for a non-resident applicant is a
considerable problem. Many state law schools have closed
their doors to non-residents and therefore the principal
opportunity for Nevada residents is to enter private and/or
sectarian law schools. The McGeorge Law School in California
has openly sought an affiliation with Nevada. McGeorge Law
School is a private school.
I think the central issue which concerns the members
of the Bar committee is that if Nevada is going to have a
law school that it not have a law school which is established
as a "second rate" law school so that Nevada residents
who cannot meet requirements elsewhere can go to law school.
I think it is becoming increasingly evident that the
quality of the Nevada Bar is distinctly above the quality
of the Bar in many adjacent states. For Nevada to establish
a law school solely and only for the purpose of "substandard"
law school applicants from Nevada or elsewhere
to gain admission to law school would be a mistake in the
opinion of the undersigned. At the same time we feel
that the legislative committee must demonstrate that
there are substantial numbers of fully qualified Nevada
residents who cannot gain admission to law school
because of other states adoption of restrictive nonresident
policies before the legislature should agree
to the expense of substantial sums of moneys which will
be necessary for the establishment of a Nevada law
school.
Unfortunately, the feasibility study of Dean
Pedrick has not been completed. I seriously doubt
if enough of it will be completed by the meeting of
the State Bar for either the Bar or the Board of Governors
to take any kind of intelligent action. As soon as that
study is completed, together with whatever other information
the Board of Governors requests of its committee,
it is the undersigned's opinion that the Board of
Governors should state their recommendations to the
State Legislature at the earliest possible time.
It is my understanding that early consideration will be
given to this matter by the office of the Governor and
other interested parties. If the opinion of the organized
-10-
Bar is to have an effect it should be enunciated to
all concerned individuals promptly upon receiving final
and definitive reports.
Respectfully submitted.
ALVIN N. WARTMAN, Chairman
Vo DeVoe Heaton
Paul H. Schofield
Jack G. Perry
Richard W. Horton
Rex A. Jemison
Thomas A. Foley
Loyal Robert Hibbs
UNIVERSITY OF NEVADA, LAS VEGAS
4505 Maryland Parkway Lae Ve^as, Nevada 89154
•adleoaomiM Dapartawnt of Fiaanc*
(703) 730-3650
TO:
FROM:
RE:
Dr. Gentile November 13, 1974
Vice President for Academic Affairs
Lome Seidman
Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education (WICHE)
THE WICHE PROGRAM
As a Nevada resident considers the pursuit of legal education, he
is discouraged by several factors, one of which is the high cost
of law school tuition. State schools charge out-of-state (nonresident)
students an additional fee and private schools, not
receiving state support, impose what, to many Nevadans, is an
impossible financial burden. The purpose of a WICHE program is
to mitigate the impact of high tuition charges.
A WICHE Law Program would create a system by which the State of
Nevada channels allocated state funds to participating law schools
attended by Nevada residents. In exchange, the participating
schools reduce the tuition which they would otJieirwise charge the
properly certified Nevada resident. In the case of participating
state schools, Nevadans are charged "resident tuition" and in the
case of participating private schools, tuition is lowered, perhaps
by crediting the amount received through WICHE against the normal
tuition charge. In either case, money is distributed to out-ofstate
law schools. WICHE is not a program that provides direct
financial aid to students. ,
The current "support level" provided by WICHE for legal education
is $2,500 per student per yectr. This "support level" is not an
arbitrary figure—it is designed to approximately equal tJhe
"operating cost" of a law school in this region on a per student
per year basis. "Operating costs" typically include the following:
1. Instructional costs—primarily the salaries of instructors
and secretaries but supplies are also included.
2. Administrative costs.
3. Library support.
The $2,500 "support level" provided by WICHE has been maintained
for two years and I have been told that, in the face of increasing
TOSts, it will be "reviewed" in the near future. By comparison the
$2,500 is now slightly less than the "operating costs" on a per
student per year basis at Arizona State University's College of
Law and is $500 less than the projected per student cost of a law
school here.
Unjywrtty of ?(«»• -«{« fiyntean
The WICHE Prograan
Page 2 - Continued
Success of the WICHE Law Program is difficult to measure. At this
time 24 accredited law schools, located in 9 states, participate
in the WICHE Law Program. Alaska is the sole contributing state
and now indirectly supports 43 students in 12 of the partiexpatxng
schools. The annual cost to Alaska is presently $105,000 which is
in addition to the $28,000 charged by WICHE for state participauion
in their programs generally.
j^ithouc^ a thorough study on the establishment of a law school in
Alaska is now only in the olanning stage, it aopears to me that
with only 43 WICHE exchange students able to take advantage of
the WICHE orogram many able Alaskans remain unable to attend an
out-of-state law school. It should be noted, however, that this
is Alaska's second year of participation and that while only 11
Alaskans entered the WICHE program as first year law students in
the first year the number increased by over 100% to 25 in the
second year of oarticipation. Seven students were apparently
already enrolled in oarticipating schools and were "picked up"
when the WICHE orogram commenced operation.
IMPACT OF WICHE IN NEVADA
In addition to lower tuition charges for Nevada residents attending
WICHE law schools, oarticipation in the WICHE law program would
provide some advantages to both Nevada residents seeking law school
admission and to Nevada taxpayers generally.
Taxpayers would only be called upon to pay the approximate operating
cost incurred by a law school while educating Nevadans. They would
be spared the expense of constructing a law school building and
contributing to the initial cost of assembling a law library.
a
Some financial incentive would be provided to induce out-of-state
law schools to accept Nevada residents, primarily for those private
schools that have held their operating costs on a per student basis
below the WICHE support level. The direct benefit, if any, to a
public law school would depend on the budgeting policies of the
individual states. Impact of any incentive, however, should be
viewed with caution. A good quality school is not likely to operate
for much less then the WICHE support level and because most state
law schools enforce restrictive quotas on the number of nonresidents
accepted for admission. In fact, assuming that ^izona State Univer
sitv's College of Law is typical of WICHE participants, the preference
for'resident students is openly stated.
While the qualified advantages discussed above are inherent in WICHE
participation, several other factors should be considered, specifi-
From a taxpayer's point of view, it may appear unwise to
pay the salaries of Californians and support libraries in
Arizona, If Nevadans are to pay the operating costs of a
Center for Legal Education they may prefer to take the full
step—construet a law school building, stock a library, and
The WICHE Program
Page 3 - Continued
create a Center for Legal Education in Nevada for the
benefxt of Nevadans. The advantages for a Center for
Legal Education in Nevada are discussed in Chapter III
of the Law School Study for the University of Nevada,
^s Vegas and it should be noted that over $300,000 in
private money" is already available for law libraacv
purposes. ^
2. The presence of a NICHE program still would not permit
]^y qualified Nevada students to attend out-of-state
law schools. Many students will be married to spouses
with secure emoloyraent in Nevada or have part-time
employment available to them here. The cost of movina
may in itself be prohibitive. The hardships involved
in relocating are real and perhaps are reflected by the
fact that only 43 Alaskans are currently able to participate
in their WICHE program.
3. Participation in the WICHE Law Program would not provide
a Center for Legal Education in the State of Nevada. As
mentioned above and discussed thoroughly in Chapter III
of the Law School Study for the University of Nevada
Las Vegas, a Center for Legal Education does more than
merely tram students—it can enrich the State of Nevada.
The functions of a Center for Legal Education, can, in "
part, include; - r - ' ±ii
a. A center for legal scholarships designed to study and
improve Nevada's institutions;
b. The maintenance of a law library in the State of Nevada
with research capabilities;
c. Enrichment of a variety of educational research and
instructional programs in Nevada;
d. Continuing education of the Nevada Bar;
e. Provisions of legal services to the citizens of Nevada,
especially the lower income groups;
f. Programs to educate law enforcement personnel amd
other civil authorities.
CONCLUSION
WICHE progr^ results in Neyadans paying the
operating cost of other states s law schools, but not enjoying the
Center for Legal Education or providing an opportunity
to all Nevadans who are qualified and eager to attain a legal
education.
The WXCHE Proqreun
Page 4 ~ Continued
Considering the fact that hundreds of thousands of dollars are
now available to create what would be Nevada's first and much
needed law library with in-depth research capabilities and considering
the fact that the construction of a*law school building
will cost more every year we delay, I must reaffirm my confidence
in the validity of conclusion 9, found on page 2 of the Law School
Study for the University of Nevada, Las Vegas which states;
"To provide opportunity for legal eduaticn for young Nevadans
to provide a Center for legal studies and research for Nevada
to provide Nevada with its own law-trained graduates to serve
in public and orivate assignments, to enrich the University
and to provide the State of Nevada with a professional school
of great promise of public service and benefit to the State
of Nevada, we recommend that the University of Nevada,. Las
Vegas, establish a Law School now."
UNIVERSITY OF NEVADA SYSTEM
NEIL D. HUMPHREY
Chancellor
Suite 340, Arlington Towers
100 N. Arlington Avenue
Reno, Nevada 89501
(702) 784-6801
October 6, 1969
I .
Mr. Thomas Cooke
PresIdent
Nevada State Bar Association
One East First Street
Reno, Nevada
Dear Mr. Cooke:
PRESIDENT'S OFFICE
OCT'? 1969':
Univerb.iy or Neva, a, Las Vegas
From newspaper coverage of the recent Nevada Bar Association
meeting In Las Vegas, I understand that you will soon appoint
a committee to "evaluate the feasibility (of a law school In
Nevada) and recommend a site." As I am sure you know, both
the University of Nevada, Reno and the University of Nevada,
Las Vegas have proposed the establishment of law schools In
their ten year plans. These plans have been "accepted" by the
Board of Regents but not "approved." We are In the process of
reviewing proposed new academic programs and had anticipated
that a preliminary proposal concerning a law school would be
presented to the Board of Regents by each campus early in 1970,
The Board of Regents would then decide whether to authorize
UNR or UNLV (or neither or both) to proceed to the second
phase In our process for review of proposed new academic programs.
Please be assured that the administration of the University of
Nevada System welcomes the interest of the Nevada Bar Association
In this matter and we will be pleased to cooperate with
your conmilttee In every way.
Cordially.
Nell
Chancel lor
NDH/pr
cc: Mr. Procter Hug, Jr.
President N. Edd Miller
- President R. J. Zorn
ACADEMIC AFFAIRS
jssg
University of Nevada, Reno University of Nevada, Las Vegas
• , •
, Desert Research Institute Community College Division
UNIVERSITY OF NEVADA, LAS VEGAS
Office of the President
DATE:
Your In^rmation ______ ^5 Requested Your Signature
For Review Note and Return Other
Your Comment —Necessary Action ••• •••
y«Mj
j ' /.tiNb A.U HOC COmiTTEE FOR A LAW SCKCOL
1515 Westwood Drive, Las Vegas, Nevada
LEGISLATIVE INFORMATION; LAW SCHOOL POTENTIALITIES
J A 2 9 19 7 3
University of Nevnda. Las *fn,„
0-
:3
Law schools are usual components of a state university. For instance,
this is true of all Big Ten Universities—with the single exception of Purdue
University, which began as an agricultural and technical school. The state
universities of the Pacific coast also have established law schools, and in
the Rocky Mountain area the Universities of Colorado, Utah, New Mexico, Idaho,
Montana and Wyoming all include them. In Arizona both the University of
Arizona and Arizona State University each have a law school.
s. 'CL"""
Role and Importance
In most jnature universities, the law school is a major unit in professional
education. Not only does the law school provide access to professional
careers for young adults, but it also is an important aid to practitioners in
the field as it brings them seminars and short courses to up-date them concerning
new developments in the field of law.
Moreover, it is important to all members of the community who engage
the services of an attorney. The University law library as a nearby resource
center for attorneys can allow them more efficiently and cheaply to research
difficult or unusual points of law for their clients. Since knowingly or
unknowingly all who engage the services of attorneys must pay their counsels'
research expenses, many members of the general community directly benefit
from the presence of a law school.
Furthermore, a law school is useful to the total campus and community.
A modern law school like that of the University of Utah does not exclusively
teach law courses to law students. Instead its professors, as part of their
regular teaching assignments, teach the business law, environmental or consumer
law, and some law enforcement classes to students of various colleges
2
of the University.
General Statement of Need
There are two factors of outstanding •importance causing the current
unprecedented awakening of interest in legal training throughout the United
States. First, despite the recently falling birth rate, the rapid growth
of population into the university student category (age 18-22) will continue
into the twenty-first century. Second, there is a great rise in the demand
for legal services because of the growing complexity of governmental,
business, and particularly social affairs, and a moi'^it-ing concern that
Americans of all elements of the population should have opportunity to
obtain needed legal assistance.
The 149 law schools approved by the American Bar Association have
recently increased their total enrollment, but have cut the size of their
freshmen classes by 2.9 percent, that is from 36,171 students last year to
35,129 this year. This decrease in freshmen occurred because most law
schools have overadmitted new students in the recent past, and their enrollment
had swelled beyond their capacity. In addition, flunkouts and dropouts
have declined.^ This situation reflects full capacity at existing law schools
and inability to accommodate increasing volume of applicants.
There is now an unmet need for opportunity to attend law school for
Nevada students. In 1972, a committee of interested citizens made inquiries
with the purpose of determining the need in the state for such a facility.
They sent letters from a P.O. Box (for anonymity) to each high school in
Nevada inquiring about the number in each class that indicated to counselors
1 "Higher Education and National Affairs," January 19, 1973
an interest in law school.
The total response was:
Sophomores - 100
Juniors - 113
Seniors - 118
331
Distribution by areas polled:
Clark County 47.43%
Reno 25.37%
Remainder of state - 27.20% ^
A Department of Education study of data, concerning 9th to 11th graders in
Nevada reported that 447 listed law as their first career choice and 315
O
indicated law as their second choice.-^ The number of pre-law students at
UNLV who can be identified as such totals 100 at present. UNR may have
approximately as many. Therefore, the need for a law school to serve the
aspirations of Nevada's youth is clearly demonstrated.
Difficulties of Access
Formerly if a Nevada college graduate had the financial means he could
gain admission to some accredited law school. Now many schools have 8 to 10
applicants for each opening and 20 or more applicants for each opening may
4
soon become the norm. At present a B or B+ grade average and an L.S.A.T.
(pre-law) score in the top 20% is required. Unless law school capacities
are expanded, eligibility standards may soon demand a straight A or A- average,
coupled with an L.S.A.T. score in the top fifth or tenth percentile.^ The
present outlook for prospective law students is hopeful for only a relative
2 Citizens Ad Hoc Law School for Nevada Committee study
3 Department of Education Study
4 59 American Bar Association Journal 62, January 1973
5 Ibid
few; only those at the top of their college classes can qualify. Meanwhile,
other good applicants are being denied access.
Added to these conditions Nevada residents must bear an additional and
almost insurmountable burden. Typically, state schools give admission
preference to their own residents. For example, the University of Montana
Law School now admits no non-Montana residents. A state statute enacted in
1971 does not allow admission of a non-resident when his admittance would
6
exclude a qualified resident student. Other western law schools have notgone
so far as to codify their non-resident exclusion policies, but a study
of their enrollments reveals few Nevadans. The University of Oregon has one
Nevadan, a third-year student.^ No Nevadans have been admitted during the
g
last two years. The University of Idaho has no Nevadans enrolled, and the
University of New Mexico has no Nevada law students.9 The University of
Arizona at Tucson has one second-year and one third-year Nevada student
enrolled,and no Nevadan has been admitted since 1971. U.C.L.A. admitted
its last Nevadan in 1970. Until last year Utah recruited Nevadans. The
University of Utah does have 14 Nevadans but there is no breakdown by year.^^
If their admissions follow the same pattern as the other schools surveyed,
in all probability only one or two or perhaps none was admitted in 1972.
In view of this bleak situation, last year four desperate Nevadans applied
to the University of Mississippi Law School but none was admitted.
6 Revised Codes of Montana 75-8601 (2)
7 Letter of 18 December, 1972. Admissions Officer
8 Letter of 5 December, 1972. Dean
9 Letter of 6 December, 1972. Assistant Dean
10 Letter of 1 December, 1972. Admissions Officer
1973^^^ ^ February, 1972, and personal inquiry. Admissions Officer 11 January
12 Letter of 28 November, 1972, Academic Secretary; and Letter of 11 December 1972
Assistant Dean '
13 Letter of 20 September, 1972. Dean
In brief, the foregoing indicates that even the best Nevada students are
being precluded from obtaining a legal education. Those students are being
denied the opportunity to become members of the legal profession. This has
serious consequences to them and their parents. Additionally, Nevada as a
state will suffer for in the future the Bar will be composed of virtually all
non-Nevadans. Many citizens feel that the present Bar is even how too remote
from the people. If no law school is opened Nevada's legal system will be dom
inated by non-natives only vaguely in touch,with the needs of Nevadans.
Costs
In general, of all types of professional schools a law school is the
least costly—much less than medical or dental sch- ls, and only modestly
more than most doctoral programs in the arts and letters.
First, in reference to physical plant, a building to house classrooms,
faculty offices and a law library would probably cost a million dollars in
terms of 1973 construction.^^ However, since law schools do not require
laboratories and special equipment, already existing campus buildings could
temporarily house law school operations. During biennium 1975-77, the UNLV
campus plans replacement of its overcrowded library, enabling reassignment of
a modern structure needing only minor adaptation as a law school facility.
Second, the only specialized instructional resource-that a law school
needs is a library having an initial collection of 40,000 volumes costing
approximately $500,000 in 1966-67 prices. Probably ten per cent should be
added to this figure for inflation of prices to date.^^ Library acquisitions
would be phased over a three year term.
14 "Guideline Statement on the Establishment of New Law Schools" (Association
of American Law Schools, Washington, D. C. 1972) pp 15-16
15 "Guideline Statement on the Establishment of New Law Schools." p. 18
6
Sf
Third, operating costs for the first year can be realistically estimated.
Probably the smallest practical basis for the opening class would be 40
students.
Based on this first year enrollment, the initial year's operating cost
would be:
6 faculty salaries (inc. a Dean) $150,000
3 classified employees 18,000
Equipment, supplies, and travel 20,000
First 1/3 of basic library ' 150,OOO
Scholarships 5 oOO
$343,000
By the third year, with 110 students as a result of attrition in the
first two classes, operating costs would be:
11 faculty (inc. Dean) $275,000
5 classified employees , . 30,000
Equipment, supplies and travel ' " 40,000 '
Last 1/3 of basic Library 150,000
Scholarships 10,000
$505^000
The fourth year (at full scale) and thereafter:
11 faculty (inc. Dean) $285,000
5 classified employees 31,000
Equipment, supplies and travel 40,000
Annual increment for Library 60,000
Scholarships 10,000
$426^000
If it were desired to enlarge the student body, the faculty to students
ratio of 1:15 would be the best guide to expanded costs.
* * * * * * * * * *
Thus from the standpoint of both need and cost it appears to the Citizens
Ad Hoc Committee to obtain a Law School for Nevada that the establishment of
this facility in the near future is a wise investment of state resources.
A law school deserves the serious consideration and study of all state
officials.
16 Above figures are given or derived from information in "Guideline Statement
on the Establishment of New Law Schools."
Clamor For U
By COLLEEN BENTLEY
SUN Staff Writer
Vowing that "I'll fight for it to the end," Lise Wyman, UNLV student body vice
president, has outlined plans for the UNLV law school presentation before Friday's
Board' of Regents meeting.
Meeting at 10 a.m. at Clark County Community College, the regents are expected
to appoint a committee of up to 15 persons to raise funds for the school.
Some funding already has been pledged, said Wyman.
Claude Howard, a local businessman who has donated millions to the medical
school at University of Nevada, Reno, has promised more than $500,000 if construction
begins by Jan. 1. Caesars Palace has pledged a similar sum.
Nevada and Alaska are the only two states without law schools,'
Private funding must be sought because the Legislature has refused to allocate
any state funds, Wyman said.
UNLV has tried to get a law school since the early 1970s. A 1974 feasibility study
conducted by university officials pointed to the need for its establishment.
However, the 1975 legislature defeated a measure in support of the school.
In 1976, the pre-law association became actively involved in the issue, and has since
pushed the Legislature and the regents for support.
The study was updated last December at the request of the regents. They wanted
later figures on the number of students interested and construction costs.
With the updated study in hand, UNLV students spoke before the 1979 legislature
in support of SCR-24, a bill sponsored by Sen. Jean Ford and Sen. Floyd Lamb
supporting the law school. The bill was defeated by two votes, Wyman said.
5 The students turned to private donors. Wyman said they've received pledges of
close to $2 million.
Wyman said more money has been promised if regents establish the committee
because "many persons won't give money until sometlring firm is'established."
The law school would be privately funded and not assisted by state money. Wyman
Las Vegas Sun
9/20/79
P. 13
said it may be more expensive for students to attend, but, "It still will be less than
going out of state." '
The prelaw association did a survey in 1978 of out-of-state schools and found that
the average cost at a private institution is between $3,000 and $5,000 per year. Public
universities, it found, add additional out-of-state fees of $1,200 to $1,600 per semester,
he survey also confinped that many out-of-state universities have quotas as on
e number of out-of-state students. Thus, Nevada students wishing to go to law school
are restricted in where they can attend. •
Nevada students, having an in-state school, are in effect discriminated against both
in terms of economic and attendance factors, Wyman said.
Costs of operating a Nevada law school would vary, depending on whether a new
building must be constructed at UNLV or if the student union can be reconstructed
The updated study suggests its placement in the student union at a cost between
$3.5 and $4 million.
Cost of a new building approximates $7 to .$8 milUon, according to the study.
" : • ; i ' - •
A consideration is when a new student union could be built. University officials
say that's being studied.
Wyman said many persons have expressed an interest on serving on the law school
committee.
Some of those who are willing to serve include Fred Lewis, Summa Corp
executive; Judge John Mowbray, chief justice of the Nevada Supreme Court; Gerald
Moffitt, local architect who would draw the plans should a new building be required'
John Foley and A1 Marquis, local attorneys; Irwin Molasky, Paradise Development
Corp.; and Leo Puccinelli, an Ellm attorney.
Wyman said building the law school in Las Vegas once was debated because many
thought it should be in the north, near the seat of state government
Northern students now have "banded together" with southern students, she said
because both groups realize they can accomplish more if "they stick together."
^ The United Students of the University of Nevada System (USUNS) will assist in
the presentation to the regents.
naWS oUir«d<iU
University of Nevada, Las Vegas
12-5-79
Contact: Mark Hughes 739-3101
#248
Law School
^Baskets & Carapus Mail
• Locals (Red) ^
• Events (Eluc) /f/l , , . , ,
^Statewide (Green)
• Nationals (List attached)
• Special-interest pubs: _Uia_
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Prooicd by:
The board of directors of the University of Nevada,
Las Vegas Alumni Association has passed a resolution calling
for the establishment of a law school at UNLV.
The resolution, approved at the most recent regular
meeting of the group, asks for a school which would offer
legal programs for both full- and part-time students.
The vote was taken after the association members
reviewed a feasibility study which was carried out five
years ago at the directive of the Board of Regents.
A UNLV law school, according to the alumni resolution,
would serve not only to provide basic legal education, but
would enable practicing attorneys the opportunity of conntinuing
their educational development.
The resolution cites the fact that by 1980, Clark
County is expected to have 63 percent of the state's total
population. It also points to the university's growth of
faculty, physical facilities and enrollment as additional
factors in support of a law school.
-30-
co msoiii' Jaied StuKileiiiis
UNIVERSITY OF NEVADA, LAS VEGAS
4505 MARYLAND PARKWAY 89109
TEL. 739-3477
LAW SCHOOL RESOLUTION
WHEREAS WE THE SENATE BEING DULY ELECTED AS
REPRESENTATIVES OF THE CONSOLIDATED STUDENTS OF THE
UNIVERSITY OF NEVADA-LAS VEGAS DO OFFICIALLY ENDORSE
IN THE FORM OF THIS RESOLUTION THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A
LAW SCHOOL ON THE UNIVERSITY OF NEVADA-LAS VEGAS
CAMPUS AT THE EARLIEST POSSIBLE TIME.
•/:
r-l/'
Val S. Buhecker
CSUN President
Ubs'-eph J€. Karraffa
C-SUN Vice-President &
Presiding Officer
The above resolution passed unanimously by the CSUN
Senate on July l6, ISfh. CSUN Senate members present
Curtis Haggard
Raymond Carrillo
Susan Deems
Gary Abbott
Rafael Lara
Rosalynn Ramey
Gale Geer
tJohn Tofano
Eugene Belin
John Goris
Shirley Lindsey
Lynn Squires
Carlton Collins
v^ick Cuellar
v.^avid Elkins
Howard Needham
Carol Stapleton
Craig Ball
Kevyn DuMay
Ron Arnoldsen
John Rice
7/17/74
; Lei's Sfeii to •
Hevacia Law School Now
I It appears that the Legislature, serve as examples, many young Ne-
Iwhen it meets in January, will be vadans who might otherwise be stim-
' confronted with the question of wheth- ulated into thinking about law as a
er our university system should include possible career simply do not give it
a law school. serious consideration.
This newspaper has supported the Obviously, many students who do
creation of a law school here since 1974 consider law are discouraged by the
when a university-sponsored study high cost of going out of state to a law
showed it to be both feasible and school.
desirable TO HAVE YOUNG Nevadans of
WE ABE EVEN more supportive of character and ability excluded in -
i the concept today, and for that reason substantial numbers because of a lack
: are pleased to note that the Board of of,opportunity for law study within our
^ Regents has just voted to endorse the own borders means a genuine' loss to
f l L C
5 < r H o o L
[ A law school for Nevada?
i It's not a new issue, but certainly one
^that deserves to be examined again.
by the state.
But, with no law school in existence
here, with no law students visible to
The Valley Times
December 11, 1978
p. 4, Sec. A
Lel^s Start to Build
i^evada Law School Now
f i L i . :
V • A law school for Nevada?
^ It's not a new issue, but certainly one
^that deserves to be examined again.
' It appears that the Legislature,
'when it meets in January, will be
' confronted with the question of whether
our university system should include
a law school.
This newspaper has supported the
creation of a law school here since 1974
when a university-sponsored study
showed it to be both feasible and
desirable
WE ARE EVEN more supportive of
the concept today, and for that reason
are pleased to note that the Board of
Regents has just voted to endorse the
, creation of a law school.
The seed work for a law school can
' and should be started now — so that in
five or 10 years Nevada law students
and the people of this state are
benefiting from it.
: The arguments against it are, we
; believe, harrow and unthinking. It will
cost too much. There are too many
lawyers in Nevada. Nevada students
. can easily attend other, out of state law
schools. Nevada is too small a state for
; a law school. There aren't enough
Nevada students to justify it.
1 "We have plenty of attorneys in
Nevada and do not need to go into the
business of training more." That was
the simplistic, fifth-grade level thinking
that marked the Review-Journal's
opposition to the law school the other
• day.
• The number of attorneys in Nevada
[ is not determined by whether or not we
• have a law school. It is determined by
• the number of lawyers who apply for
•admission to the Nevada State Bar and
'successfully pass its test.
THERE CONTINUES to be across
the nation, and here in Nevada, a
steady increase in the numbers of
students seeking admission to law
schools.
But the capacity of the better law
schools to receive first year students is
exhausted. One estimate is that there
annually are upwards of 25,000 well
qualified applicants nationally who
want to go to law school but are not
I accepted by a single law school to
[which they apply.
Recent figures aren't available, but
I in 1973 about 160 Nevada students
I sought admission to law schools across
I the nation. They submitted more than
joOO applications to law schools, some
lapplying to more than five separate
Ischools. It is estimated that only 60
[actually started law school.
Project these figures on the basis
[that Nevada's population is expected to
jtop one million persons by 1990 and the
[clear need to start building the law
I school now is evident.
NOW, IT MAY BE contended that on
[a practical basis today the interest of
I only a few hundred Nevadans annually
in entering law school is not sufficient
to warrant such a major commitment
by the state.
But, with no law school in existence
here, with no law students visible to
serve as examples, many young Nevadans
who might otherwise be stimulated
into thinking about law as a
possible career simply do not gjive it
serious consideration.
Obviously, many students who do
consider law are discouraged by the
high cost of going out of state to a law
school.
TO HAVE YOUNG Nevadans of
character and ability excluded in
substantial numbers because of a lack
of,opportunity for law study within our
own borders means a genuine loss to
them, and to the fabric of this state.
Now, we fuUy recognize that it is not
reasonable to expect a small state to
provide every professional course and
every advanced educational opportunity
for all segments of its population.
But law education seems to us to
be one area where Nevada can easily
meet the need.
Beyond that, there are added dimensions
to what a law school, or more
properly a law center, can mean to
Nevada.
It will go beyond the training of
Nevadans for the legal profession. It
will be a tremendous resoiu-ce to the
university and to the state. It will bring
together a group of dedicated law
teachers, legal scholars, and a law
library — all of which will result in
focusing more attention on the legal
system and administration of the
courts in Nevada. It will be a resource
for the continuing education of Nevada's
lawyers.
DO WE HAVE too many lawyers in
Nevada? That's a ridiculous question
on the face of it — particularly if we
believe in the freedom of every
individual to pursue the career of
profession of his or her choice.
But, just for the record, Nevada has
had in the past a lower ratio of lawyers
to population than the national average.
Nevada is one of the two or three
states in the nation that docs not have
its own law school.
Somehow we are able to afford to
build athletic departments for gpreat
basketball and football teams, but are
told that a law school would cost too
much.
The fact is that other states, with
fewer financial resources than we have,
have built small but exceptionally fine
law schools for 200 to 5O0 students.
A UNrVEESITY of Nevada law
school can be launched at a relatively
modest cost. One estimate is about
$850,000, much of which pre bably can
be raised from private sources.
Let us make a commitment to build a
university system of substance and
depth. Let's expand our horizons for
the Nevada of tomorrow. A law school
will help do that. It's timff* to start
hiiilHintr now. - it
The first signs of competition
between the two campuses of
the University of Nevada over
a projected law school are expected
today as the regents
hear a ten-year plan for development
at Nevada Southern
University.
The Las Vegas school's plan,
which will be presented by
Chancellor Donald Moyers, will
include a law school proposal
that will rival one outlined Friday
for the'Reno campus. •
Details of the NSU plan were
unavailable to the press Friday.
Chancellor N. Edd Miller of
the Reno campus outlined a
proposal for a Reno law school
which would do more than just
train lawyers.
"There are two present thrusts
in our society which a program
of legal education should deal
with — social interpretation and
attitudes toward the law
brought about by civil rights
and Supreme Court decisions
and the increasing complexity
of governmental administration.
No law school now has this
major focus."
Regent Procter Hug noted that
some schools offering this type
of education were turning out
lawyers unable to practice law.
Miller replied, "I'm not saying
the standard law degree
should be eliminated. Law students
should still study torts
and contracts."
Miller said the law school
seemed "the most likely professional
school to be developed
within the next ten years on
the Reno campus."
As a selling point for locating
the legal school in
Reno, Miller cited the existence
of the National College
of Trial Judges at Reno and
its law library of 22,000 volumes.
In keeping with the broad
scope of the school proposal in
the plan, he said the existenca
of strong graduate programs in
psychology, sociology, political
science, and business would help
in the development of this type
of law program.
He said such a program could
produce specialists with more
than just conventional law degrees.
The university should
seek- to establish a distinctive
program rather than competing
with existing schools on traditional
grounds, he said.
I Miller said although the law
school would require assistance
from the state, it would
cost less than most professional
schools which might be proposed.
The law school could
open in 1970, he said.
Other features of the tenyear
plan included the estab-.
lishment of an honors college
which would include individualized
instruction for exceptional
students. The college,
which would include
.about 200 to 300 students, had
a projected opening date for
1978..
Nevada IState Journal
January 13, 1968
Miller; said conservative projections
indicate an enrOliment
of 9,240 at the Reno campus in
1978. He said the university
should strive to have a graduate
enrollment of 35 per cent of the
entire student body at that time.
To that end the plan also included
development of 30 new
graduate degrees.
The Reno campus ten-year
plan also included a physics
building, a television and com-
I munication arts building, an art
building, museum, gymnasium
and a library addition as well as
other construction projects.
Miller said the plan is not
final and will "probably require
changes in priority and modification
in the future."
Neither of the plans is the
final document for ten-year development
at the university.
That final plan will be developed
by the regents for presentation
to the legislature. It
will then be amended every
two years.
Las Vegas Review-Journal, January 13, 1968
RENO (AP) — Chancellor N.
Edd Miller of the University
o f N e v a d a p r o p o s e d F r i d a y
the establishment of a law edu
c a t i o n c e n t e r o n t h e R e n o
campus within the next ten
years.
Miller told the regents the increasing
number of students in
pre-law programs, the presence
of^e National College of Trial'
Judges and its library and the
proximity of the state capital
are reasons for establishing the
legal facility in Reno.
"THE PROPOSAL is to develop
a center on legal, educat
i o n a t • t h e u n i v e r s i y t h a t
would capitalize on the national
college's present programs,
t h a t w o u l d i n v o l v e a m a j o r
cross-disciplinary approach to
'the teaching of law and research
Into law, and, finally,
to develop a law school with
a major emphasis on governm.
ental legal practice and gove
r n m e n t a l s e r v i c e , " M i l l e r
said.
RENO (UPI) — The University
of Nevada board of regents
opened a two-day meeting Friday
to act on a site for the
proposed medical school, financing
of new buildings and a 10
year program projection for
development of the university
The recommended site for the
two-year medical school was a
42-acre site on the northeast
section of the Reno campus.
ACTING dean Dr. George
Smith and Chancellor N. Edd
Miller said a site feasibility
survey team which included
deans of medical schools in
other states unanimously cho.se
the campus site. Earlier, a site
adjacent to Washoe Medical
Center had been proposed as a
possible location..
The school was a bitterly contested
issue during the 1967
legislature. It caused a northsouth
split among lawmakers
and raised some opposition
among the regents. The Legislature
approved a conditioned
go-head after industrialist Howard
Hughes said he would contribute
$6 million over 20 years.
The board also was to act
on revised financing for a physical
science building at Renoj
and a chemistry building at '
Nevada Southern.
"The programs of the college
for trial judges and, m.ore recently,
for appellate judges has
called national attention to the
^pjversity as a center for this
kind of specialized legal education."
Miller said the National College
of State Trial Judges re-
I tains a library of m.ore than
; 22,000 volumes, providing one
' of the most expensive features
of a law center.
"THE COMPONENTS of this
! center would be a law school,
a-nd research engaged in by
lawyers, judges, psychologists,
social workers, sociologists,
journalist, historians, teacher.
. .", Miller said.
01-Lli Reno Evening Ga^'
I 5. 1 3T r - * *R(W }n B
LJillR/CISlif :
By MIMI LaPLANTE
, A proposal to establish a
;Iaw school on the University
of Nevada Reno campus
by 1971 was to be
presented to the board of
regents today.
The proposal is included
in a 16-page report outlining
the needs of the university
dui-ing the next ten
years..
Prepared by Dr. N. Edd Miller,
Reno campus chancellor,
with the help of administrators,
i faculty members and students,
the report also calls for:
: The establishment of sfac new
bachelor degree programs, 15
master degree programs, 15
programs leading to a Ph.D.,
and a gradual increase in associate
degree, technical
^counses;
i An honors college for 2a3 to
300 top students at the university;
An increase in the present
305 faculty members to 584 to
meet the needs of approximate-
|ly 9,240 students expected to
'enroll by 1978;
And a number of new buildings
including a high rise parking
lot, a new dhiing commons,
a television and communications
arts building, additional
housing for married students
and an art and museum center.
A faculty-composed educational
planning committee report
on the law school says it "is
the most likely professional
school to be developed during
the next 10 years.
"The need for the school is
attested by the growing enrollment
of undergraduates in prelaw
programs."
The committee report says
the Reno campus is specially
qualified to start a law projgram
because:
-The National College of
State Trial Judges is already
established at the university
and has the support of the
American Bar Association:
—The college has a 22,000
volume law library — 2,000 vol-
(Turn to Page 2, Col. 3)
(Continued from Page 1)
umes over the 20,000 minimum
needed for a school.
"Thus, one of the most expensive
features in the development
of a law school — an
adequate library — is already
present through the support of
the Max C. Fleischmann Foundation
of Nevada;"
—Strong graduate programs
in areas which could' supplement
the school (psychology, sociology,
political science, business)
would allow the school
to attempt new and broader approaches
to legal training.
The. committee suggests the
university establish a distinctive
program rather than competing
with established schools
on the same grounds.
"Unhampered by vested interests
or by conventional restrictions,
a Nevada law school
could consider such proposals
as combining a master of arts
degree in a related discipline
with law training in order to
provide some of the specialists
s o c i e t y i s d e m a n d i n g . . . A
program which would prepare
the lawyer for government service
might be of special ernphasis.
"The proximity of Reno to
both Carson City and Sacramento
(governmental centers)
would be helpful in such a program."
Financial support of the state
would be required, the committee
acknowledges.
"But becau-se of existing facilities
and the possibilities of
some outside funding, it would
be less expensive than most
professional schools which
might be proposed for the university."
Miller says the revolution of
law and its interpretation and
the increasingly complex nature
of governmental and public administration
should be considered
in developing a law program.'
Miller says a center for the
study of law should include a
law school, research facilities
for lawyers, judges, psychologists,
social workers, sociologists,
journalists, historians and
teachers.
A teaching program should
be developed for trial attorneys,
penal workers, juvenile
authorities, police officers and
others. A library and resource
center should be developed for
teachers and researchers, he
adds. V
It is also proposed that the
center develop programs leading
to the traditional degree
programs ranging from associate
degree in law enforcement
to masters and Ph.D. degrees
in associated areas.
"In-service training of judges,
attorneys,. police and juvenile
authorities would be an important
part of the program," Miller
says. '
"Special short courses and
seminars for practitioners in
these areas should be developed
. .!. public meetings and
c o m m u n i c a t i o n s p r o g r a m s
should be developed."
The cpst of the law school
and the other programs is not;
included in the report. ,
Neil D. Humphrey, acting
university president, says the
financial' report will be given
to regents later when the 10-
year budget is completed and,;
as a result, he will recommend
that the board not act on the
proposals today.
Carson City Appeal
January 12, 1968
Reno (AP) . Chancellor N.
Edd Miller of the University
of Nevada proposed Friday
the establishment of a law
education center on the Reno
campus within the next ten
years.
Miller told the regents the
Increasing number of students
in pre-law programs,
the presence of the national
college of trial judges and its
library and the proximity of
the state capital are reasons
for establishing the legal
facility in Reno.
"The proposal Is to dev.
elop a center on legal educa.
tion at the university that
would capitalize on the nat.
tonal college's present programs,
that would involve a
major cross . disciplinary
approach to the teaching of
law a^d research into law,
and, finally, to develop a law
school with a major emphasis
on governmental
legal practice and governmental
service," Miller
said.
"The programs of the college
for trial judges and,
more recently, for appellate
judges has called national attention
to the university as
a center for this kind of
specialize legal education."
Miller said the National
College of State Trial Judges
retains alibrary of more
than 22,000 volumes, providing
one of the most expensive
features of a law centei
"The components of this
center would be alaw school,
and research engaged ir
by lawyers, judges, psychologists,
social workers, sociologists,
journalists, historlians,
teachers.,.," Miller
said.
Miller said the number of
both faculty members and
students could be expected
to double within the next
ten years.
RRNO (UPl) — The Board of Regents
yesterday received a 10-year projection
of University of Nevada growlh which
the drafting committee called "both
. frightening and gratifying."
It said enrollment would double present
size as would the faculty. There
should be a law school as well as the
medical school which is in the formative
stage. Many other buildings should ^as Vegas Sun
be built to serve the students and the January 13, 1968
state. There should be a wider curriculum,
and more selective entrance requirements.
"The university should develop the
necessary graduate and professional
progi'ams without weakening undergraduate
instruction," said the Educational
Planning Committee, composed of faculty
members. "The depersonalization
which afflicts most large universities
should be avoided."
Reseai'ch activity should be encouraged,
and, the Reno campus for the
foreseeable future will continue to be
the logical place in the state for the
location of carefuUy screened graduate
and professional programs," it said.
It said a School of Law seems the
most likely professional school to be
developed here during the next 10 years.
. It said it could cooperate with the National
College of, Trial Judges ali-eady •
e.stablished on campu,?, which has developed
a law library of 22,000 volumes.
. Anticipated construction included highrise
parking, dining commons, physics
building, auditorium and music building,
ait and museum building, business
a^dministration building, gymnasium, nuc
Gar GngincGring building, HGVV dormitory
facilities, administration building
humanities building, and television and
. communications arts buildings.
It did not speculate on financing of
the projected program, but said "significant
increases in operating and equipment
budgets can be expected."
_ "These projections are both frightening
and gi-atifying: frightening because
of the necessary financial support increases
they will call for, and gratifying
because they represent a continuing
endeavor on the part of the university
to meet the needs of the state and its
young people," the committee, said.
Regents took no specific action on the
report. .v-
Regents aLso were asked to 'approve
a recommendation that the medical
The school caused a bitter debate in
JheMsW LegislaUire but got a conditional
go-ahead when billionaire Howai'd
Hughes promised $5 million over 20
years.
school be built on a .22-acre site on the
Reno campus. The site was favored by a
committee which included deans of
medical schools in other states.
Regents discus.sed financing of a physical
science building here and ch.emistry
building at NSU. Federal economy
cuts will delay grants to build the projects.
Regents have authorized the administration
to a.sk Gov. Paul LaxaJt to place
the sale of revenue bonds for them on
the special Legislative session agenda.
o g. g ^ _
2.&ar-S
IB »(l
U i i i v / d t j a i I
mf
Unappropriated surplus funds
of the University of Nevada
have dropped to "a dangerous
point," according to a firm of
certified public accountants.
Leroy G. Bergstrom, of Kafoury,
Armstrong, Bernard and
Berg.strom, advised regents Friday
that the surplus should be
at the half-million dollar level
each year.
Neil D. Humphrey, acting university
president, said today the
yearly balance is usually about
$100,000.
"Wfr are concerned with this
because we realize that certain
revenues don't always materialize,"
Bergstrom said. "We feel
the need for a reasonable resei-
ve against unrealized revenues
is a desirable and necessary
thing.
"Try to build this up. These
unexpected occurrences do happen.
The only thing you can do
is to try and look ahead.
"We recognize the nature of
the beast — that you can't
put it all back at once. But try
to put it back gradually so you
will have more of a cushion."
The accountant also recommended
implementation of a
strong internal adult procedure.
"Presently, satisfactory implementation
awaits adequate funding
for the position required.
... Only when substantial internal
auditing is done and
proper working paper documentation
is maintained, will it become
possible for independent
auditors to rely on such work,
thereby materially reducing the
extent of the tests of the university's
records, which are presently
necessary."
He also urged regents to have
a strong systems analysis program
and team to keep up with
the growing necessity of data
processing.
His firm also recommended:
—A coordination of student
fee audit procedures on both the
Las Vegas and Reno campuses;
•
—A perpetual inventory of
university property and equipment;
: —And the employment of a
deputy controller to provide for
more accurate financial statements.
iaei
University of Nevada regents,
told Friday that the Reno campus
wants a law school, were
to hear the same thing today
— about Las Vegas.
Regents were also to find
out late this afternoon that Nevada
Southern University
wants a school of dentistry and
other, assorted new academic
programs by 1978.
And they were to be informed
that an outside, educational consulting
firm thinks it is "at
least reasonable" that Las Vegas
have a medical school —
the present, pet project of the
Reno campus.
The report, prepared by Davis-
MacConnell-Ralston, Inc. of
Palo Alto, Calif., indicates that
Nevada Southern, once considered
the university's stepchild,
will have 17,500 students by
1978.
That's just under three times
the number of youngsters expected
, to enroll on the Reno
campus 10 years from now and
it is sLx times the number of
students Las Vegas had in fall
1957.
The report says approximately
950 faculty members will be
needed for teaching and research
at NSU in 1973 and faculty
salary costs will rise from
the present $2.8 million to $19
million in 10 years.
Regents were told Friday that
the Reno campus v/ould need
about 584 faculty members for
a projected 9,240 students in
1978.
The consultants predict that
Nevada Southern will need a
yearly operating budget of $30
million in 1978 and that between
now and then the combined
yearly operating costs
and capital expenditures will be
over $33 million.
Nevada Southern's budget
this year is $4 million. The
1967-68 budget for the entire
university system, including
both campuses, was $16.3 million.
• The report proposes 22 new
bachelor degree programs, 35
masters programs, 10 new
Ph.D.'s, and 17 associate degree
programs by 1978. It calls
for the establishment of a law,
school by 1974 — three years
later than the one proposed for
the Reno campus. It proposes
that the school of dentistry
open in 1976-77.
The consultants also say Nevada
Southern's long range
planning should include programs
in international transportation,
and research activities
into urban development, environmental
conditioning, arid
land studies, transportation, nuclear
research, creative ap-
(Turn to Page 2, Col. 6)
s i
Takes Post
On Campus'
Raymond L. Finehout has
been appointed director of development
for the Reno campus
of the University of Nevada by
the board of regents.
Finehout, who has been university
director of alumni relations
for both campuses since
July, will report to the office o!
the Reno campus chancellor
rather than to the university
president.
Last summer, the regents announced
that Finehout would
succed former Nevada Gov.
Charles Russell as development
director.
But Finehout said Friday the
regents decided he, should confine
his activities to the Reno
campus. A similar position is
expected to be established at
Nevada Southern University in
Las Vegas.
1
Confirmed . /
For il
A lO-acre site, in the northeast
corner of the University of
Nevada's Reno campus, was
approved Friday by regents as
the site of a proposed, two-year
medical school.
The site was recom.mended in
December by a team of medical
consultants who were in
Reno to confer with Dr. George
Smith, acting dean of the proposed
school.
Earlier plans called for building
the school adjacent to
Washoe Medical Center but Dr.
Smith said Friday that consultants
feel the medical student
should feel he is a part of the
campus community.
Reno Evening
Gazette
January 13,
1968
i (Continued from Page 1)
proaches to public and higher
education and data ;-etrieval.
The report specifically points
out that Nevada should plan for
a law school.
"Further," the report says,
"based upon an analysis of legal
activity in all of the counties
in Nevada, it seems evident
that tlie Las Vegas area
should become tire geographic
. locale for such a school.
"Not only is this area now
more active in legal concerns
than all other counties in the
state, it seems reasonable to
expect that in the years to
come Clark County will continue
to outstrip other areas in
its need for legally-trained men
and women and its continually
expanding urban mass will increasingly
provide the necessary
milieu of. attorneys' office,
courts and cases."
And the firm turns to billiona
i r e i n d u s t r i a l i s t H o w a r d
Hughes, who has pledged $300,-
000 a year for 20 years for the
Reno-based medical school, as
a reason for a school in Las
Vegas.
Although the consultants say
it might be reasonable to have
the medical school in Reno and
the dental school in Las Vegas,
1 , >
.d
Ml
i
lo
d
they caution that iTughe's provides
"an unknown factor" in
the medical school situation.
The report says that if
Hughes decides to build a major
medical center in Las Vegas
"it would then seem at
least reasonable for the univer-'
sity to consider placement of
a medical school as well as a
dental school in Las Vegas.
"The consultants are not recommending
that a medical
school, already • built on one
campus, be suddenly uprooted
and moved simply because of
the decision of one man.
"They are simply suggesting
that the university keep the
greatest degree of flexibility in
its planning up to the point at
which funds are actually committed
and spent for a particular
enterprise on a given
campus."
The firm, which emphasiEes
the need for continual planning
in its 85-page report, also took
a look at administrative organization
and the relationship between
the two campuses.
"In this regard," the report
continues, "t h e consultants
wish to stress as strongly as
possible the combined concepts
of autonomy and coordination.
"To define the precise line
between autonomy on the one!
hand and control from a high-i
er board on the other is diffi- -
cult at best . . . however it is
possible and indeed important
to point cut that while tlie
board of regents has the ultimate
responsibility for the University
of Nevada system, and
while it'also possesses the ultimate
authority in this area,
it is, by definition, a board .. .
and must be concerned with
policy rather than operating decisions.
"In a like manner, the chief!
executive officer at each campus
must, under the policy
guidelines established, by the
board, have sufficient autonomy
to carry out the program
of the institution under his own
leadership so that the institution
may move forward, as it
should, on its own steam." !
The consultants say the re-'
gents may expect the chief executive
of each campus to re-'
spect their ultimate authority.
But it says the board "must!
nevertheless have enough con-i
fidence in these chief executive
officers so that the occasions!
upon which it will have to ex-^
ercise constraint of higher au-'
thority will be rare."
?Memo
F ROM THE DESK OF
JUDGE WILLIAM D. JANSEN
January 26/ 1990
Larry:
As per your telephone conversation with my
secretary/ Donna/ this date/ please find
attached the information I received from
Drake University pertaining to blueprints
of the Law School/ Law Library and Legal
Clinic .
Also attached is an article setting forth
construction costs regarding law schools/
law libraries/ in 1989 within the United
States.
Sincerely
!.) rai; .'..• Un i vc i i: y
TO; DirccCor o f . tnCif^iival
;:K,C;'-:f oivacXcv o f . the Physical PL^ut
Slf?}JJ;C'C; Updacc of -euaxe roo^fi^e of nropeTrties -33 pari o£ Va:'
t;a>.versJ.ly cainpny
Ti, .•oor.^T'U.i.c:: wj-vh the DcpsTUwant of xRati'oitioaaJ. Uooeorch ''hyr.xc-ii^
?;cr:- >.r-3d;3>-iri?. its records oti al-. properties !7,el;3te:Luea a part ot '.aa
i;i:sikc- U-ivwrsity cefcpes.. Thiri baisic forsi letter viii. be iorvardca to
'••'cicb pro.;r c••'" it rw 3 evfsd. i' tca.sc- chccX t.b<i flcto of each aC~'.-?.-. -'-t
ref.'.'ec updetv •
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iiAS-blE.G-.l.E.-J- AW:-.L.iB,E^Ry:.
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2. The gross-tquare fooropa of UaU property ii?; .n^,-sr- *-to ft 6 ^ -cr
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rs^rie: '';.iT^ tot.oi aqcare feet o£ the real prcperty divxccd
be dj.ioO square rcct ii equal to the acres,)
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vOi.lch f/ao done, or, or .coOrc _
>'io'>;-e discsrd ycnir previooa inforoiatioa o£!n .jso '..aso ietcer re v-pdcte yots,
re-..ocdO: '0:0 cbitc of the letter shonld lieicrcino nhen the oats ivaa Autecncloolod.
^ '
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Dr/ik:; 'Jaivcr.'.'.ily
a!' Ins;?.: ?l<;;?^.arch
FROM; Divri'.r.r-or c.f th/i 'AbVoic-fti Vlaut.
SUajtCT: Updaca. of. q-.sare iooisii^Q uC properMos maintaitie-. as part of: the Drake
University catapup
In c-C'C-perafjcD «i th thi; Depr. rs:;-neu?.'oC iitacitntio'irul lU^search thr I'hyrjical
Plonf. is updating It.s on «ii. properties maintained as -3 port n.f tlio
Drake University eaajpus,. Tnj.s basic form letter will be fon/axded to you aa
each property is reviewitdc I'lcasc ciieck the date of each iGf-ter fo" the uiost
recent update=
Attached is a drawing of prop-ert}/ iocaved at:
•21'^^5T.4 CAR-P-ENrER.
riAgTWRl&HT LAW_,S,.G.H.C20L-
2, TJie K7.0S;:-'square footage -or thi> p-ioperty- is:
gross scjuare i'eet.
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i, "lie to oi a:-.tienable suuore. footage of this prc.-pervy is: V
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4= "^'fhc land area e;c this property is:
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^livriuraT'square feat" ol the-: real prcperf.'/ divided
by 43,!)60 square font -i r equal rc the acretr )
5, The aost. rec>arit. r-;n/ j..s.'.oes rva;oc<ei .r-jg^ or rea sa'; grraeni: si space ii-;
t h i s a t r n c t . e r e L a a s f r s l l o w s -
vhich vas done on ov: obou
(Dctcl
Pierre c'i.>Ci','rd vO'':t v"--evi.oiis i.n£ovf<-i.at.ioj?. aiio 'et-e rhia ie;'---;. '-a v-j^,J.tv..e
records. The dace of bhe. H.e.tt.e:c should detertuf.iKV when -bne data vtns -r.uthewt
i c ft r 0 'h
Vf ore rsny oocatlcrw;., please coutacf: Ray 'Ja^oshanker, iinteno;vPr^ y-'-y:
>v .'SCnl'-.C
P.'xectcr a.f '.d;c- davs:-
•' -C d-'
Two months of catastrophe in a year
of magnificent construction
RUINS AMONG
THE SPLENDOR
LIBRARY BUILDINGS 1989
•
By Betle-Lee Fox with
Michael Rogers, Ann Burns, & Reginald E. Pruitt
THE UNBRIDLED enthusiasm
we usually display in
L7's annual Architecture Issue
must be tempered this year with
thoughts of ei that can destroy a
beautiful, functional building in the
blink of an eye. As we compiled the
statistics for the 1989 feature it became
evident that some of the finished
projects might actueiy lie in ruins
in the Carolinas and on the West
coast. Indeed, some of this year's
newly completed buildings may reapp>
ear in 1990 as renovation projects.
Our coverage of the devastation
from Hugo and the earthquake that has
befallen numerous libraries this past
autumn (News, LJ, November 15, p.
15,16; this issue, p. 20) has taught us a
lesson. To blithely ignore the vagaries
of nature and the en vironment that can
turn million-dollar buildings to rubble
is, to say the least, foolhardy.
But there is still a great deal to be
enthusiastic about in 1989. One hundred
eleven new public libraries were
completed between July 1, 1988 and
June 30, 1989, the greatest number
since 1979. Over $347 million was'
used to fund 235 building projects (including
134 additions and renovations)
in 44 states.
Forty academic projects are
highlighted here. The largest is the
Medgar Evers College Library of the
Bette-Lec Fox is Managing Editor;
Michael Rogers is Assistant News Editor;
Ann Bums is Staff Editor; and Reginald E.
Pruitt is Production Editor, U
Oliver Wendell Holmes Library, Phillips
Academy at Andover, Mass.
City University of New York in
Brooklyn, a $17 million building that
encompasses 34,(XK) square feet. The
largest academic addition and renovation
project is the Cornell University
School of Law Library, which
cost over $15 million dollars.
There wasn't the usual rush for
energy efficiency this year. Indeed,
not a single library mentioned specifically
energy-eflficient apparatus. Perhaps
energy efficiency has become so
accepted that it is,no longer considered
an unusual or unique aspect of
building design.
Two divergent considerations
for construction were at the core of
many buildings in 1989. Several projects
sought to provide access to
physically challenged patrons and
staff. Others confronted the challeifge
of remodeling old buildings to
blend with their surroundings while
maintaining old-style charm and architectural
features.
We are pleased to note that this
year the usually small contribution
made by state government increased
to $55 million—due mainly to the new
State Library of Michigan in Lansing,
which cost S43 million.
Local funding was up 28 percent
in 1989, accounting for 71 percent of
total funding. But funding was up in
all categories over 1988 figures.
And lastly, our Library Projects
in Progress section (p. 65) lists 949
new buildings in some stage of proposal
or construction. That is an increase
of 19 percent over the 796
buildings in progress in 1988, and it
promises some exciting architectural
issues in years to come.
Academic Library Buildings
The largest academic
project in 1989
is the new Medgar
Evers College
Library, CUNY,
Brooklyn: $17,000,000
Harry C. Trexler Library, Muhlenberg College,
AUentoum, Pa.
McGraw-Page Library, Randolph-Macon
College, Ashland, Va.
New Libraries
lUmt of liutltirtkiii Project
Cost
truss
Aru
Sq.FL
Cast
Crxistrvctioit
Cost
Equipment
Cost
Book
Capacity
Seating
Capacl^ Architect
Medgjf Evers College, City University of New Yort;, BrooUyn
Eastman School of Music. Unrversity of Rochester, N,Y.'
Muhlenberg College, Allentown, Pa.
Indiana University at South Bend
$17,000,000
12,195,755
11,B00,000
8,000,000
34,000
45,261
71,468
86,500
$114.70
195.00
127.64
83.25
$3,900,000
11,226,200
9,122,310
7,200,000
$%6,000
969,555
1,536,723
800,000
125,000
500,000
300,000
750,000
125
199
486
1,012
Harry Simmtjns jr.
Macon & Chaintreuil Assocs.
Geddes Brecher...
Edward Larrabee Barnes
Mercer University, Macon, Ga.
Tennessee Technological University, Cookeville
Mary Washington College, Fredericksburg, Va.
South Rorida Community College, Avon Park
7,600,000
7,600,000
5,375,972
3,000,000
94,750
122,000
70,081
23,864
64.38
57.38
59.41
92.19
6,100,000
7,000,000
4,163,346
2,200,000
1,500,000
1,073,000
1,212,626
800,000
500,000
n/a
550,000
40,000
750
n/a
385
238
Dunwody, Beeland & Henderson
Swenson Assocs/ScaH Assocs.
Vickery, Moje...
Cal Peck & Steve Clark
Engineering Library, Michigan State. East Lansing
Hopkins Marine Station, Stanford University
Part College, Parkviile, Mo.
Pinu Community College, Tucson, Aril
1,867,779
1,530,000
1,500,000
821,215
12,593
9,137
45,000
7,600
137.00
120.39
41.24
100.00
1,725,241
1,100,000
1,855,934
760,000
142,538
55,000
215,309
61,215
100,000
31,000
2oaooo
25,000
184
42
288
140
Albert Kahn Assocs.
Esherick Homsey...
none
Rex Willoughby
' Project cost includes 17,MO sduart feet assigned to mall on first ftoor; 62,701 is gross square feet for computing square foot cost.
South Florida Community College, Avon Park
Franklin D. Schurc Library, Indiana University at South Bend
Additions and Renovations
lUau of Iftstitirtioi
^ "
Project trass St.Fl Censtrvctian Equipment Book Seating ifchftwct
Cost Area Cest Cost Ccst Capacity Capact^ Al WiMivVA
Cornell University Lew School, Total n/a 192,000 980.73 915,500,000 n/a 500,000 490 Shepley Bulfinch...
Ithace, N.Y. new 67,000 n/a 14925 10,000,000 n/a 320,000 104
Renovated n/a 125,000 44.00 5,500,000 n/a 180,000 386
Wichita State University, Kans. Total 10,775,000 192,973 49.09 9,473,000 400,000 965,500 800 Schaefer, Johnson...
New n/a 80,985 n/a n/a n/a 115,500 n/a
Renovated n/a 111,988 n/a n/a n/a 850,000 n/a
Canlsius CoUege, Buffalo, N,Y, Total 6,554,289 %,000 5626 5,410,709 1,143,580 750,000 724 Theodore J. Wofford
New n/a 62,000 n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a
Renovated n/a 34,000 n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a
Phillips Academy at Andover, Mass. Total n/a 55,500 108.11 6,000,000 n/a 200,000 450 Shepley Bulfinch..,
fncetw-— n/a 30,000 n/a ' n/a n/a n/a n/a
Renovated n/a 25,500 n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a
University of Richmond, Va, Total 5,000,000 55,500 n/a n/a 540,000 365,000 216 Marcellus Wright...
New n/a 48,000 n/a n/a n/a 350,000 288
Renovated ^n/a 7,500 n/a n/a n/a 15,000 28
Coe CoUege, Cedar Rapids, la. Total 4,252,099 57,969 59.50 3,448,854 803245 300,000 619 Ben Weese
New n/a 38,110 n/a n/a n/a 290,000 371
Renovated n/a 19,859 n/a n/a n/a 10,000 248
Additions and Renovations (cont.)
Kami of Institirtioi
Project tms SK-FL Canstniction Iqulpment look Saattftg ircJittscf Cost Arta Cast Cost C^ Capacity Capacity tm IwWkWi
Randolpb-iyiacoci College, Ashland, ¥a. Total ;4,ooo,ooo 52,108 567,17 53,500,000 5500,000 260,000 532 Shepley, Butfmch...
New n/a 27,929 n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a
Renovated n/a 24,179 n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a
Embiy-Riddle Aeronautical University, Total 2,350,000 48,000 35.91 1,723,590 230,030 90,000 800 Kenneth McGee
Daytona Beach, Fla. New n/i^' 28,000 61.56 1,723,590 200,000 30,000 530
Renovated n/a 20,000 0 0 30,030 60,000 270
Francis hlarion College, Florence, S.C. Total 2,300,000 75,135 24.48 1,824,000 356,000 294,500 596 McNair, lohnson
ILCMM 2,150,000 24,448 71.54 1,749,000 276,000 125,600 229
Renovated 150,000 50,687 1.48 75,000 - 80,000 168,900 367
George Fox College, Newfrert Oreg. Total 2,203,311 35,310 50.09 1,768,623 222,529 175,000 302 We Group Architects
New n/a 17,748 n/a n/a n/a 129,000 189
Renovated , n/a 17,552 n/a n/a n/a 46,000 113
Conservatory of Music, Total 2,133,319 "18,606 86.62 1,611,670 177,097 150,000 152 Gunnar Birkerts
Oberiin College, Ohio New 1,736,078 11,745 115,87 1,360,898 71,758 70,000 77
Renovated 397,241 6,861 36.55 250,772 105,339 80,000 75 -
Hartvrick College, Oneonta, K.Y. Total 2,050,000 84,100 24.38 2,050,000 0 275,000 520 Remick Architects
New n/a 33,575 n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a
Renovated n/a 50,525 n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a
Huntington College, Montgomery, Ala. Total 2,000,000 19,752 89.47 1,767,266 17,000 103,000 126 Parsons, Wible.,.
New n/a 18,190 n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a
Renovated n/a 1,562 n/a n/a n/a Uy n/a
Houston Baptist University Total 1,080,000 44,560 880,000 120,000 205,000 440 Farrell 8 Assocs.
New 697,000 07,200 35.87 617,000 80,000 150,000 240
Renovated 383,000 27,360 9.61 263,000 40,000 55,000 200
College of Applied Sdetrce, Total 930,000 14,000 n/a n/a 110,000 65,500 131 Glaser Assocs.
University of Cincinnati loCT* 690,000 9,200 n/a n/a 72,000 54,000 96
Renovated 240,000 4,800 n/a n/a 38,000 11,500 35
University of Mairse at Machias Total 760,000 "^000 80.00 640,000 50,000 100,000 65 Rea Design Assocs.
New a/i 6,400 n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a
Renovated n/a 1,600 n/a n/a A/a n/a n/a
Clearwater Christian College, Fla. Total 177,000 10,000 15.00 150,000 27,000 125,000 88 Ralph Sherer
New 167,000 3,000 46.66 140,000 27,000 67,000 0
Renovated 10,000 7,000 1,43 10,000 0 58,000 88
Colorado Mountain College IFIC, Leadville ~ —ToUl 75,153 4,569 15.41 70,423 4,729 18,360 45 ' , Crowe Architects
New n/a 486 n/a n/a 3,104 4,248 5
Renovated n/a 4,083 n/a n/a 1,625 14,112 40
There were 47
academic projects
in 1988; there are
40 in 1989
Andrew L. Bouwhuis Library, Canisius College, Buffalo, N.Y.
;r. -
' I I . . I ;
Burrow Library, Rhodes College, Memphis, Tenn.
Stewart Memoi-ial Library, Coe College, Cedar Raptds, la.
Additions Only
Name of Institution
Project
Cost
Cross
Area
SiiJl
Cost
Constniction
Cost
Equipment
Cost
Book
Capadtj
$satin(
Capacity Architect
Niajara University, N.Y. $794,000 7,000 $31.43 $220,000 $574,000 100,000 100 Keith Ait, Canon Design
Renovations Only
Name of institution
Project Cress Sq.FL Construction Equipment Book Seating
Cost Area Cost Cost Cost Capacity Capacity
Schlesinger Lib. on the History of Women in America, $3,400,000 23,038 $118.41 $2,728,000 $40,000 30,000 90 Shepiey BulfLnch ...
Radciifie College, Cambndge, Wass.
Georgetown University, Washington, D.C. 2,450,000 28,686 58.63 1,682,000 768,000 110,000 334 Kam Charuhas.,.
Rhodes College, Memphis. Tenn. n/a 40,200 33.66 1,352,971 347,029 50,000 60 Crump Rrm
Bohr Bldg., University of Michigan 1,200,000 9,539 n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a not reported
Ursinus College, Collegeville, Pa. 1,000,000 57,000 13,16 750,000 n/a n/a n/a none
Krrksville College of Osteopathic Medidne, Mo. 600,000 11,390 36.73 418,400 97,000 90,000 119 Garett Warner
federal Mogul Library Annex, 250,000 17,000 8.82 150,000 100,000 500,000 0 none
Wayne State University, Detroit
loom College Law Center, Huntington, N.Y. 19,000 1,800 1.66 3,000 16,000 9,000 36 Newman AssocsTPhillips
Hartford Graduate Center, CL 7,920 2732 3.54 7,920 0 0 34 none
Public Library Buildings
The largest new
public project is the
State Library of
Michigan in Lansing:
$43,000,000; the
smallest is the
Pioneer Memorial
Library, Harman,
$44,126
SBytattdMqu aCroUAret:; fMin^^uMicaiAn LLiibbrraarryy;; BMSS^—SrMoMaicnh AA SSyjstUUmm Btad^grun; S—SysUm HtadqusrUn; nla-^-nat a*ailabU
Elizabeth Jones Library,
Grenada, Miss.
Pleasanton Library, Calif.
New Buildings
P»p.
lnM
1
10
Code
M
R
Project
Cott
S4S7^
752,770
Const
Cost
S410,250
494,282
tms
Sa-R
7,090
7,168
Se-Fi
c^
J57.86
68.96
Equip.
Cost
845,079
57,000
Sits
Cost
Owned
140,000
Other
Cests
832,000
61,488
Volumes
28,000
35,000
Reader
Seats
45
60
Federal
Funds
0
0
Stita
Funds
S118200
154,400
Lacal
Funds
S369,129
401,370
cm
Funds
0
197,000
Archltact
Carieton G. McCuny
PHI Architects
BjdtiaiM C*t
7
3
M
M
250,000
235,520
n/a
n/a
3,800
4,161
n/a
n/a
n/a
2,220
Owned
Owned
n/a
n/a
20,000
n/a
22
n/a
126,500
177,760
0
n/a
126,500
n/a
43,000
n/a'
Cleave-Lundiren
Georje Myets
r«it R 196.498 152,984 3,500 43.71 27,381 Owned 16.133 15,000 22 81,812 0 0 114,686 Chllders Anderson
Miniwi*-
fWMOl ' •
Ll Jol»t:,T. -
lasAntdej
UJAnjelc'
Locan* ViBey
.FVISMAX..
Saowwb"
Sill L»is Obupo
S«R|W»'
WWitj'
170
*3
16
20
N/a
5
50
64
40
37
16
MS
B
B
B
B
B
B
B
MS
B
B
12,393,929
3,304,870
642,658
1,507,139
n/a
326,756
5,200,000
2,104,136
4,061,844
3,179,000
815,000
10,000,620
917,250
540,000
1,080,532
n/a
218,357
3,780,000
1,539,194
3,406,609
1,951,000
650,000
97,000
10,000
6,081
5,900
2,500
3,000
30,000
12,211
31,455
18238
7,500
laio
91.73
88.80
183.14
n/a
7279
126.W
126.05
10820
106.97
86.67
1,393,100
300,000
62,658
2,500
40,000
39,399
670,000
286,749
313.301
200,000
95,000
Owned
1,500,000
Owned
320,517
leased
50,000
Owned
Owned
Owned
850,000
Leased
1,000,209
587,620
40,000
103,590
n/a
19,000
750,000
278,193
341,934
178,000
70,000
300,000.
35,000
30,000
32,000
6,000
15,000
150,000
50,000
100,000
60,000
22.000
300
70
41
30
20
25
180
88
128
100
80
570,889
0
0
1,507,139
0
188,378
0
0
198,300
0
407,500
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
11,733,040
1,504,870
642,658
0
40,000
138,378
5,200,000
2.104,136
3,863,544
2,329,000
407,500
130,000
1,800,000
0
0
n/a
0
0
0
0
850,000
0
Simon, Martin-Ve|ue...
Mosher Drew Watson...
Roger Gniike
Eugene Kinn Choy
diary Terasawa
Gary Milter
Wurster, Bernard!.,.
Alan Oshima
Bruce Eraser
CIrftord Moles Assocs.
James Brummett
COLOUM - .
6 M 769,265 392,104 3,750 104.56 87,281 240,441 49,439 20,000 34 75,000 0 18,376 675,889 George King
hajtoo* -• 5 M 691,337 569,411 5200 109.50 72,426 Owned 49,500 n/a 30 100,000 220,000 371337 0 King & Tuthill
G^atwwii-.
1 ' 3 B 95,707 78,375 2,000 39.19 16,356 Leased 976 10,000 8 0 25,300 59,995 10,412 none
ilittsA
OeLind Jit •
f«t Reret
KeyUfu-.'-
Uam bimji
Timpa
monoteUBf.
50
10
10
10
20
30
B
B
B
B
B
B
2,631,597
993,900
906273
750,657
54,000
860,000
2,059,500
576,000
27,592
503,584
24,000
564,000
25,600
10,000
12000
5,500
800
8,000
80.45
57.60
230
91.56
30.W
70.50
168,000
159,000
97,984
58,789
11,000
69,000
246,097
Leased
777,457
150,000
12,000
owned
158,000
258,900
3,240
38,284
7,000
227,000
80,000
30,000
60,000
38,000
15,000
30,000
162
66
62
66
14
32
200,000
200,000
0
0
0
860,000
170,000
0
0
0
0
0
2,100,000
760,900
777,457
580,657
54,000
0
161,597
33,000
128,816
170,000
0
0
Gee & Jenson
John M. Faster
Bentley Engineers
Educated Design
Hillsborough County
Fletcher, Valenti, Chillura
CUKIA > rj.
AlSan, T-'
Ashbimi >> HMtt '•}£-
Wlanti ' r'i-
Colouia Ji-
Dohith
ESijon Xv;
Fl. Saine -^'"'
Nofcroa 1'^
Richtand •»*.
Rosweil Ji"-
Sylvaiiia -jwfe'.
Trentoa
WoodDBdil.-'
--Sw
12
10
30
25
7
49
- 6
4
49
2
26
16
14
27
B
B
B
B
B
B
B
B
B
B
B
M
B
B
668,088
554,000
1,280,185
2,135,628
497,828
1,416,815
. 264,176
335,156
1,849,631
357,857
3,080,224
1,297,190
521,706
976,139
507,753
356,661
842,364
930,182
337,883
890,290
189,117
258,648
1,230,346
270,249
1,695,999
1,023,481
378,514
628,656
6,045
7,000
10,000
10,000
5296
10,499
3,460
3,828
14,852
4,000
20,000
12,376
7,896
10,000
84.00
50.95
84.24
93.02
63.80
8420
54.66
67.57
82.84
67.56
84.80
82.70
47.94
62.87
94,416
119,054
180,502
170,593
51,487
190,934
40,804
43,466
300,066
46,867
357,778
224,351
101,000
141,714
Owned
34,000
171,638
929,960
35,000
276,957
10,000
10,000
218,853
15,000
785,208
Owned
Owned
75,000
65,919
44,285
85,681
104,893
73,458
58,634
24,255
23,042
100,366
25.741
241,239
49,358
42192
130 769
25,550
43,500
56,000
50,000
25218
47,500
14,000
15,000
50,000
9,500
100,000
67,600
30,000
46,000
44
58
n/a
n/a
34
80
25
25
110
27
n/a
177
44
92
125,000
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
470,953
463,333
0
0
401,739
0
225,000
292,500
1,019,523
308,571
0
812.080
465,331
707,142
72,135
0
1380,185
2,135,628
61,089
1,416,815
7,500
0
830,108
49,286
3,080,224
485,110
56,375
180,997
0
90,667
0
0
35,000
0
31,676
42,656
0
0
0
0
1,427
88,000
David Maschke A Assocs.
Thomson A Assocs.
Harris A Partners
Na Mann Viehman
Thomson A Assocs.
Buck Lindsey A Assocs.
Tombertin Assocs.
Jinright A Ryan
Cbeny, Roberts
Ward A Wetherington
Suemore Floyd
Ed Maddrn
Associated Architectural
Steve Ashworth
ICM:
Jo.
ISUK
Ct!
Hf
Iff
NISI
_U
W*.
B;
C.
Df
kk
Uit
KET fc
E!
fr
H(
JLt
LOU
_R
lU!
_*
tUll M
v i
MIC
L
L
Lc
mi: \
u.
T,
Commimtty
Pt>p.
iliH lode
Prolect
Cost
Canal
Cott
Emsa
Sd- a
Sd.FL
Coat
Equip.
Coat
Slta
Coat
Other
Coats Volumes
Reader
Seats
Federal
Funds
Stati
Funds
Local
Funds
cm
Funds Architect
IDUO
Boisc^ M me,896 $670,393 14,200 $70.84 $80,783 $35,000 $60,720 70,000 54 0 0 $846,896 0 Dennis Fitzgerald
tlUltOiS
Oka JO
Heywoftt;
Towanda
3900
3
1
B
M
M
3,810,000
336,042
252,796
2,800,000
261.292
1«,958
18,000
4,800
3,362
155,56
54.44
43.12
250,000
24,263
26,053
360,000
19,700
16,698
400,000
30,787
65,087
80,000
20,000
40,000
121
46
26
0
0
78,240
250,000
134,442
1,609
3,560,OO0
144,810
155,206
0
56,790
17,741
Bureau o( Architecture
Paul Young
Young i Nice
INDUUU
100 M 6 248 397 4,518,366 48,000 94.13 658,336 482.000 589,695 220,000 250 0 0 5,938,397 310,000 Pecsra Jdlifie.,.
im
Baywj
Dartuvillt
DeWitt
kmi!
I
1
5
"1
M
M
M
M
133,200
158,062
948,697
108,771
89,700
130,066
699,677
85,276
3,400
2,400
7,500
2,170
'2638
54.13
93.29
3930
33,500
9,645
79,153
11,889
10,000
6,000
97,730
6,052
0
12,351
72,137
5,554
13,353
10,598
14,224
5,381
n/a
n/a
60
14
0
0
185,000
0
0
0
0
0
0
10,157
97,730
47,024
133,200
147,905
665,967
62.347
not reported
ieff Hempen
Brown Healey Bock
Weber Pollard $ Assocs.
uxus
tteCrjcken ! M 60,000 53,000 2,000 26.50 0 Owned 7,000 6,000 25 24,618 0 0 33,000 Steckldn & Bitingardt
itamicrr
/kshland
Eltton
Frankfurt
Hebron
e
12
<2
10
?04
BS
M
M
B
MS
461,502
164,343
102,645
742,466
9 816 043
363,670
63,192
73,991
546,025
6.902.02!
4,460
3,250
2,000
6,300
110,400
81.54
19.44
37.00
86.67
62.52
71,042
23,744
20,358
70,349
1370.500
4,483
70,000
Owned
77,400
644,900
22,307
7,407
8,296
48,692
998,622
25,000
20,000
20,000
30,000
500,000
15
50
16
52
293
159,769
0
50,353
0
0
0
80,125
0
170,000
0
162,231
84,218
52,292
49,014
9,816.043
150,000
0
0
523,452
0
John Meyers
Keith Sharp
Gobiin Porter 4 Assocs.
Robert Hayes 4 Assocs.
Sherman Carter Bamhart
LWISIAM Ifi B 837 110 597,238 7,000 85.32 145.000 26.164 68,708 39,000 55 0 0 837,110 0 N-Y Assocs.
KJUK
Wesfo.-ook 20 M 1,748,991 1,555,135 16,000 9730 87356 Owned 106,000 85,000 170 100,000 0 1,534,600 114,391 JSAInc.
lUSSAtBUStm
Mansfield
Whitman
16
13
M
M
2,500,000
973,478
1,855,022
835,978
23,000
11,700
80.65
71.45
184,100
45,000
Owned
Owned
460,878
92,500
100,000
39,661
84
84
0
110,960
0
6,767
2,500,000
812,918
0
42,833
Design Partnership
Wilson Rains
WCHtU)
Lake Orion'
Lansinf"
Livonia''
Saginaw
24
250
105
12
M
M
MS
M
3,670,750
43,000,000
8,667,869
493,000
2,684,502
39,500,000
7,046,042
389,000
29,042
312,000
64,000
7,356
92.44
126.60
110.09
52.88
590,000
1,700,000
647,416
69,000
45,750
Owned
Owned
Owned
350,498
1,800,000
974,411
35,000
100,000
5,000,000
150,000
26,850
168
0
220
52
0
0
0
95,000
0
41,500,000
200,000
0
3,670,750
0
8,458,869
250,000
0
1,500,000
9,000
148,000
Minoni Yamasaki Assocs.
Wm. Kessler 4 Assocs.
Kamp-DiComo Assocs.
Austin 4 Assocs.
HIMUOTIt
tafte Bend
McGrcfor
Minnetonka
F^ican Rapids"
3
3
44
3
B
B
6 M
57,714
125,000
679,033
257,414
57,714
104,000
505,712
192,744
3,108
2,350
4,500
3,100
18.57
44.25
112.38
62.18
0
8,000
54,472
17,029
Owned
5,000
11,504
32,568
0
8,000
107,345
15,073
12,000
6,000
30,000
10,000
12
24
30
26
0
0
191,231
84,810
0
0
0
0
5,000
15,000
487,802
60,000
52,714
110,000
0
112,604
not reported
Wold Assn.
Boatman 4 Assocs.
Dan W. Elton
MlSStSSIPfl
Grenada 21 M 883,531 751,925 12,800 58.74 85301 Owned 46,405 75,000 70 70,000 0 583,531 300,000 Dardaman, Jones
»SSOV?J
Kansas City 51 B 1,500,000 1,050,000 15,000 70.00 126,000 284,000 40,000 50,000 106 0 0 1,500,000 0 Devine Architects
KOinUA
Poison 12 M 516,000 460,000 10,500 43.81 16,000 Ownet 40,000 50,000 70 46,800 0 0 469,200 Fos, Ballas, Barrtrw
•IfVUi
Moapa Town
Seardilijtrt
1
1
8
B
60,000
65,000
55,000
60,000'
550
1,200
100.00
50.00
5,000
5,000
Owner
• Owned
0
0
3,000
7,500
11
19
0
0
D
0
60,000
65,000
0
0
Mark Schrader
Leo Boms
unrjBtsCT
Bogota
Gloocester
8
50
M
B
930,035
1,256,550
820,000
913,650
6,530
10,000
125.57
91.36
30,039
"~^6,000
Owner
179,OOC
80,000
87,90C
45,000
35,000
28
60
0
100,000
184,890
0
745,149
966,500
0
200,000
Remick Architect
John Kaiser
The largest addition
and renovation
project is the
Waukesha Public
Library, Wise.:
$14,385,000; the
smallest is the
Harrington PL in
Delware: $10,113
New Buildings (cont.)
Bucks County Library Center at Doylestoum, Pa.
1
Comffluottr Code Project
Cost
Const
Cost
Cross
S(|, Ft
SR.a
Cast
Euui|i,
Cost
Site
Cast
Otber
Costs Volumes Reader
Seats
Federal
Funds
State
Funds
lecal
Funds
Clft
Funds Architect
KEWTOn
BjbyRxi
Grand Island
Middle Island
Syracuse
Vooftieesville
26
17
45
25
7
M
M
M
B
M
82.632,100
2,077,366
4,433,796
1,114,534
921,759
81,891,000
1,528,868
3,361,040
858,503
740,800
24,000
12,504
31,212
8,000
8,490
J78.79
12227
107.68
107,31
8726
J227,100
429,000
285,707
87,753
64263
S260,1X)0
Owned
225,000
76,717
30,000
$254,000
119,498
562,049
91,561
86,696
125,500
50,000
200,000
28,000
43,000
124
90
50
45
70
$15,013
39,0%
0
180,582
172341
0
0
31,000
0
0
$2,617,087
2,038,270
4,402,7%
933,952
749,418
0
0
0
0
0
Gibbons, Heidtmann,,,
ScafTidi 8 Moore
Gibbons, Heidtmann,,,
Ouinlivan, Piert,,.
Bender Assocs,
Mimi CAROUM
Gamer
Wendell
n/a
n/a
B
B
1,800,000
351,000
1,562,000
293,870
2,310
1,724
676.19
170,46
238,000
57,130
Owned
Owned
0
0
250,000
30,000
150
50
0
0
0
0
1,800,000
351,000
• 0
' 0
Hager, Smith i Huffman
Haskins, Savage,,,
WIO
Chesterland
Qndnnab'
Columbus ~
Dalton
Mansfield
Matysvtlle
Sprinffield"
17
42
66
2
15
8
150
B
B
B
B
B
M
M
1,700,000
1,246,643
2,831,242
216,025
280,800
1,613,061
6,761,000
1,345,600
740,636
2,117,243
138,951
220,000
1,260,567
4,816,000
22,000
5,000
20,372 yjao
3,500
15,000
51,000
61,14
J48,13
103,93
55.14
62.86
84,04
94,43
170,115
80,371
251,442
29,408
40,000
182,460
543,000
Owned
258,454
294,701
38,000
Leased
60,000
897,000
184285
167,182
167,856
9,666
20,800
110,034
505,000
130,000
30,000
100,000
15,000
24,000
65,000
250,000
106
54
146
26
40
60
200
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1,670,000
1,246,643
2,831,242
216,025
280,800
1,613,061
6,411,000
30,000
0
0
0
0
0
350,000
David Holzheiroer
John W. Spencer
Moody/Nolan
Aleiander-Sediel
Alexander-Seckel
Freytag 8 Assocs,
Loreru 8 Williams
oKumm
• Shawnee" 91 M 1,557,000 1,100,000 22,000 50,00 323,500 127,000 6,500 75,000 100 0 40,000 215,000 1,302,000 Price Group
OREEH
Hermiston
"Wilsonville
15
8
M
M
729,459
923,120
609,209
788,003
14,000
7,500
43,51
105,07
53,000
94,620
27,250
Owned
40,000
40,497
40,000
25,000
80
44
95,543
95,543
0
D
504,131
824,230
129,785
3,347
Robert J, Smith
Itagao 8 Otoyan Assocs,
poKmvwu
Doylestown"
Lewtsburj
PtrlBsie
Sayri
72
32
36
7
MS
M
B
M
4,848,519
811,800
867,741
664,534
4,282,199
575,800
711,477
556,744
50,000
14,000
8,000
5,320
85.64
41,13
88.93
104.65
566,320
108,000
111,264
59,890
Owned
100,000
Owned
Owned
0
28,000
45,000
47,900
125,000
50,000
40,000
30,000
140
95
60
a
0
0
0
258,125
D
0
0
0
4,848,519
0
400,000
0
0
811,800
467,741
406,409
Bohlin Powell,,,
Robert A Lack
Diseroad 8 Wolff
Ritchie Organization
SOUTH uxoum
RccR Hill 12 B 499,965 289,362 5,100 56.74 88,798 40,428 81,377 20,000 27 52,500 0 360,428 87,037 Craig, Gauldin, 8 Davis
romtssEE
Slinal Mountain 20 M 295,000 235,000 6,700 35,07 44,000 Owned 16,000 100,000 40 0 12,000 250,000 33,000 Carroll Henley
rous
Allen
Houston"
Ptano
WelllngtDn
22
1600
47
4
M
B
8
M
2,555,000
3,940,000
2,879,424
675,864
1,878,409
1,400,000
2,218,134
441,222
20,000
23,000
40,000
8.500
93,92
6087
55,45
51.91
245,000
760,000
305223
137,270
Owned
1,620,000
130,680
45,000
431,591
160,000
225,387
52,372
100,000
65,000
100,000
30,000
170
184
147
89
200,000
0
0
147,455
0
0
0
0
2,355,000
1,560,000
2,814,084
280,541
0
2,380,000
65,340
247,868
Wm, H, Hidell
Mark A Stewart
Hidell Architects
B.G.R, Architects
mEmul
tebanon
Richmond
32
25
MS
B
289,890
2,010,471
219,273
1,489,371
9,998
12,672
21,93
11783
51,852
160,000
Owned
Owned
18,765
361,100
27,750
60,200
59
140
51,852
0
0
0
1%,009
2,010,471
42,029
0
Joel Harrison
Bailey 8 Gardner
NJISMIIETOI
Blaine
Tacoma
Tacoma
Tacoma
6
10
19
25
B
B
B
B
430,000
749,100
949,938
2,350,594
280,000
536,506
591,218
1,552,798
5,400
4,397
4,397
15,487
51.85
122,02
134,46
10026
30,000
99,550
95,670
224,110
90,000
11,474
158,418
249,514
30,000
101,570
104,632
324,172
18,000
20,000
20,000
100,000
47
35
35
124
150,000
0
77,000
0
0
0
0
0
150,000
674,100
872,938
2,350,594
130,000
75,000
0
0
J, Scott Piper
Elaine Day LaTourelle
Elaine Day LaTourelle
Reed Reinvald
WESTYUSmiA
Harman 1 M 44,126 42,926 640 67.07 856 Leased 344 6,000 10 16,000 0 26,126 2,000 none
wiscoiisn
Grafton
Mitwaukee"
Oostburt
13
50
3
M
B
M
1,578,974
1,882,000
477,000
1,413,474
1,546,000
376,714
24,000
15,000
7,700
58,89
103.07
48.92
39,000
161,000
40,000
50,000
50,000
15,000
76,500
125,000
45286
50,000
60,000
17,000
70
102
52
0
125,000
125,000
0
0
0
607,974
1,707,000
350,000
971,000
100,000
2,000
Ross Potter
Kahler Slater Tptphy
Bray Assocs. •
WTDtURE
Buffalo 7 M 871,136 617,350 9,616 6420 107,755 75,000 71,031 35,000 a 224,000 250,000 377,136 20,000 DehnertyRichardson
56 LIBRARY JOURNAITDECEMBER 1 9 8 9
Additions and Renovations
Comiminitjr
Pop.
In K Code Project
Cirst
Const
Cost
tross
Sd-FL
SqK
Cost
Epulp.
Cost
Site
Cost
Other
Costs Volumes Reader
Seats
Federal
Funds
Stats
Funds
Local
Funds
cm
Funds Architect
UAEUU
Wetumpka <7 M SS4,4«7 S66,051 1,200 555.04 58,303 (^ned 510,133 8,500 18 533,026 0 543,159 58,303 Wheat 8 Assocs.
tusu
Haines
Juneau
3
30
M
M
150,040
3,820,350
132,551
2,960,000
3,526
18,110
37.59
163.45
6,353
268,150
Omied
Owned
11,136
592,200
15,900
77,000
40
99
0
403,413
140,000
1,400,000
10,040
1,981,837
0
35,100
Graham Associates
Paul Voelckers
UllZOlU
Lake Havasu Dty
Hogales
21
20
6
14
194,265
425,000
175,368
413,000
2,639
2,900
66.45
142.41
38,760
0
Owned
Owned
18,897
12,000
45,000
0
52
0
100,000
165.000
0
0
133,025
260,000
0
0
Joseph Gabriel
The Architecture
UOMUS
Danlanelle
Pocahontas
69
17
B
B
116,896
119,102
99,709
70,357
8,210
11,958
12.14
5.88
7,853
5,447
Owned
35,000
9,334
8,298
10,000
40,000
38
40
58,000
38,274
0
0
0
62,259
58,896
18,569
Saxton Smith Assoc.
Arnold 8 Stacks
CALIFOIillU
CarmeJ-by-the-Sea
fort Brajj
Greenville
Pasadena
hancho Cucamonei
Santa Paula
Whittier
5
15
<
132
100
2<
4
B
B
B
M
B
M
B
2,739,272
759,660
51,000
314,064
80,313
220,099
964,470
640,337
574,860
47,000
258,392
74,441
41,478
398.582
8,892
6,000
560
2,086
810
14,560
5,463
72.01
95.81
83.93
123.87
9.19
2.85
72.96
121,960
184,800
4,000
6,372
5,872
177,421
25,031
1,750,000
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
450,000
226,975
0
0
49,300
0
70O
90,857
21,000
17,000
500
3,500
3,500
75,000
30,000
50
68
40
34
18
100
50
0
0
0
0
0
0
338,280
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1,304,334
709,660
37,000
0
80,313
167,115
626,190
1,434,938
50,000
14,000
314,064
0
52,983
0.
Flesher 8 foster
not reported
Plumas Cty. Engineerinj
William Henry Taylor
Wolf, Lane, Chnstopher
William Crouch
Los Angeles Intl. Sva.
DOtWUtE
Hamnjtx
Seitjyville
16
4
M
M
10,113
n/a
8,598
n/a
1,400
3,842
6.14
n/a
1,515
n/a
Owned
Owned
0
n/a
10.000
30,000
22
30
0
0
0
6,000
7,731
0
2,382
64,500
not reported
Jennifer Thompson
FLORIU
Jensen Beach
Lake Placid
Larp
22
6
71
B
B
M
164,949
50,000
994,993
80,514
40,000
870,013
4,700
1,200
12,500
17.13
33.33
69,60
79,494
10,000
0
Owned
Owned
Owned
4,486
0
124,980
12,000
12,000
137,000
55
20
158
0
0
200,000
0
0
0
85,000
0
746,993
79,494
50,000
4i,000
John M. foster
Richard JAorey
Educated Design
CEOttU
Bowdon
Bremen
Cairo
Cartersville
Hadison
Stone Mountain
3
4
21
60
14
50
6
B
M
M
B
6
385,135
416,704
1,290,626
553,735
882,884
682,421
322,354
331,151
998,656
404,650
598,047
423,046
6,500
7,500
18,000
7,000
14,000
9,300
49.59
44.15
55.48
57.81
42,72
45.49
29,236
51.148
176,577
101,400
166,161
164,574
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
33,545
34,405
115,393
47,685
98,676
94,801
21,400
29,400
110,000
10,000
45,000
38,500
75
89
160
15
58
83
0
0
0
0
300,000
0
329,656
386,957
903,664
500,OM
485,605
469,480
7,000
0
75,900
51,920
69,490
203,201
56.143
42,995
311,062
1,815
7,790
9,740
Southern Engineering
Southen Engineering
W. Frank McCall Jr.
Bracket Associates
W. Lane Greene
Lowell lOrkman Assocs.
Funding in 1989,
for eight fewer
projects, totaled
$100 million more
than in 1988
Walker Memorial Library, Westbrook, Me.
Ionia Community Library, la. Clark County Public Library, Springfield, Ohio
t ?DP A PV V A 1 IPRQ 57
The total project
cost in 1988 was
$248,416,654
for 242 projects;
the total project
cost in 1989 is
$346,731,172 for
235 projects
Paris-Bourbon County Public Library, Ky.
Additions and Renovations (cont.)
Community
hip.
ioM Code Protect
Cost
ConsL
Cost
truss
$(), FL
S<l,Fl
Cast
EDulp.
Cost
Slta
Cost
Other
Costs Yolumos
Reader
Seats
Federal
Funds
State
Funds
Local
Funds
cm
Funds ArchltKt
IDAHO
Coeur d'Alene 23 M $67,059 $62,959 800 $78.70 n/a
\
n/a $4,100 n/a n/a $31,500 0 0 $35,559 Monte J. Wller
OUMtS
Beileville
Psks Heijtits
St Chartes
South Bdiot
A2
n
32
A
B
M
M
M
375,525
750,000
A,257,992
60,047
340,264
672,726
3,019,513
54,712
7,093
11,140
54,234
5,067
47.97
60 J9
55,68
10.80
0
0
413,987
0
Owned
Owned
441,000
Owned
35,261
77,274
383,492
5,335
27,000
40,000
246,000
50,000
40
75
315
38
150,000
250,000
250,000
48,037
0
0
0
0
225,525
500,000
3,947,992
12,010
0
0
60,000
0
W.H.6J(. Inc.
Carow Architects
INendt Cedartwira,,.
Richard L Johnson
HRUAM
Anderson
Anderson
Hammond"
Union City
SO
SO
87
5
B
M
M,B
M
596,669
7,A6A,361
5A,780
92,865
338,669
5,344,593
50,A6A
86,831
16,400
125,000
n/a
4,100
42.76
59,71
n/a
21.18
10,000
517,544
0
5,014
250,000
1,119,303
Owned
Owned
n/a
482,921
4,316
1,020
150,000
500,000
254,433
24,000
30
530
436
50
158,000
250,000
32.500
0
0
0
0
0
190,669
6,533,304
20,431
59,971
250,000
681,057
1,849
32,894
Montgomery I Assocs.
Montiomery 8 Assocs.
Nutton i Hutton
General BIdg. Contractors
IOWA
Mair
Columbus Jnctn.
Jefferson
Uvermoft
togan
Tipton
Wapello
S83
1
5
1
3
3
2
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
21,A08
12,250
67,371
13,850
188,180
367,252
52,A17
13,939
10,750
48,303
13,850
181,239
319,345
43,847
540
600
7,620
672
2,400
3^00
3,720
25,81
17.92
6.34
20.61
75,52
99.80
11.79
7,076
1,500
10,671
0
0
22,053
'-4,048
0
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
393
0
8,397
0
6,941
25,854
4,522
9,000
10,500
31,868
8,066
n/a
24,101
35,000
n/a
33
70
n/a
n/a
40
n/a
0
0
0
\
30,180
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
18':623
0
41,731
0
74,000
0
25,838
2,500
12.250
26,000
13,850
84,000
367,252
26,579
Fanner's Lumber
not reported
liRIF
John K. Berte & Sons
Anderztion Amhitects
Neumann Monson
Ron Meyers
UlSAS
Americus
Independence
- Ubeal
Overland. Parti
Roseland Part
Ster1in(
2
15
ts
71
lA
3
M
M
M
B
B
M
• 72,166
208,891
920,687
78,A07
90,A85
3A,000
65,901
193,811
838,058
62,315
73,658
34,000
1,200
n/a
16,809
17,569
16,183
n/a
54.92
n/a
49.86
3.55
4.55
n/a
825
0
9,616
0
0
0
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
5,440
15,080
73,014
16,092
16,827
0
7,200
55,000
100,000
n/a
n/a
n/a
18
60
106
n/a
n/a
n/a
24,500
66,844
141,772
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
11,841
142,047
435,067
78,407
90,485
34,000
35,825
0
343,844
0
0
0
J. Trevor Lewis
Leonhard Cafllsch
Thompson 8 Associates
Kurt von Achen
Kurt von Achen
none
AEnucn
Eminence
Nevrport
Parts
13
32
13
M
B
M
276,000
308,000
A40,79A
206,029
248,000
370,074
8,000
9,300
11,341
25.75
26.67
32,63
55,478
32,000
50,320
Owned
Owned
Owned
14,493
28,000
20,400
38,000
26,000
45,000
40
28
88
0
113,000
170,000
138,000
0
0
138,000
195,000
270,794
0
0
0
J. Ouintin BiagI
J. Michael Kinseila
Pearson, Bender, Jolly
lOOtSIAJU
Coushatta
Galliano"
Slideil
10
5
AS
M
B
M
195,679
0
2,167,822
147,577
0
1,217,822
4,815
3,600
21,750
30,64
0
55.99
29,089
0
300,000
Owned
0
500,000
19,013
0
110,000
26,000
15,000
150,000
26
16
253
95,203
0
0
0
0
0
90,476
0
2,167,822
10,000
0
0
Alliance Inc.
not reported
Sam Fauntleroy
MAIK
CasUne 1 M 136,000 111,000 1,400 79^9 0
J
0 25,000 10,000 15 23,000 0 25,000 88,000 Civil Engineering Services
KASSACHUSnTS
Andover
Holden
Lanesborough"
Lexington
Lincolo
Sturbddge
West Newbury
2S
15
3
29
5
7
A
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
6,800,000
2,218,000
5A0,0O0
168,750
3,100,000
1,A75,000
1,243,552
5,200,000
1,809,074
nia
143,000
2,680,683
1,248,765
845,197
55,000
20,000
n/a
38,000
18,341
7,460
7,785
94.55
90.45
n/a
3.76
146.16
167,39
108,57
300,000
147,273
n/a
7,000
22.659
90,000
26,478
235,000
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
1,065,000
261,653
0
18,750
396,658
136,235
371,877
250,000
60,000
10,000
208,546
76,000
75,000
40,000
160
• 82
14
220
76
78
56
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
22,281
0
0
0
6,800,000
2,218,000
540,000
146,469
2,500,000
1,275,000
1,203,552
90,000
0
0
0
600,000
200,000
40,000
Shepley Bulfinch ,..
Jacpues Fauteux
Barry Architects, kic,
Davi« 8 Bibbins
Graham Gund Architects
Douglas Godman
Architects Design Group II
Mississippi
Forest 5 B 196,027 170,257 8,000 21i8 13,365 Owned 12,405 35,000 65 0 0 188,027 8,000 James C. Lee
HISStXfld
Ladue S16 MS 8,250,000 7,250,000 107,100 67.69 500,000 Owned 500,000 708,780 290 0 0 8250,000 0 not reported
TTt>r».«pvTr>»*r»v'»» 'T^r''^T~*/r>rT> »rvon
Lanier Lib: ary 'Association, Tryon, N.C. Memorial Hall Lib., Andover, Mass.
Communit; POIL
in M Code Protect
Cos;
Canst
Cast
Srnss
SR, Ft
S4.A
Cast
ERUIR.
Cast
Siti
Cast
Other
Casts tfolumas Reader
SaiU
Federal
Funds
State
Funds
Local
Funds
cm
Funds Hvchttect
HOKTAIU
B M 861,400 858,200 325 ! 179.00 0 Owned 13,200 35,000 40 S29,100 0 S32,300 0 Page Werner
KEW (UmPSKIK
Ctr. Strafioni
Goflstown
Uctxtia
Mereditti'
North Cwsay
Orfonl
Sanbom'crr"
2
U
16
6
B
1
2
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
27,723
16,871
64,635
885,400
122,548
118,670
38,740
27,723
15,951
33,495
723.403
107,15?
113,625
36.220
768
910
' 1,069
9,000
1,540
1,736
400
36.10
17.53
31.34
80.38
69.58
65.45
91.00
0
0
26,140
77,000
12,459
0
0
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
0
920
5,000
85,000
2,932
5,045
2,520
6000
0
0
30,000
4,263
25,000
3000
14
0
0
93
23
16
12
0
7,600
26.500
750,000
45,044
36,500
14,000
0
0
0
0
0
0
c
7,862
9,271
38,135
0
77,504
0
24,740
19,861
0
0
135,400
0
82,170
0
not repotted
Alan Shulmar
Steven Stokes
Christopher Williams
Howard Miller
Don Met!
George Hickey
NEW JUtSC
hscataway NS M 3,006,363 2,468,819 28,500 87,00 273,374 Owned 264,170 130,000 170 255,808 154,692 2,537,347 58,516 Jamil E. Faridy
NEW TOM
Borfen
Churchville
Cutchofue
E. Syracuse
Hampton Bays
Loudonville
Melville
New Berlin
New City
New Yorii
Rego Part
Schenectarty
Staten Island
Warsaw
5
4
10
12
9
75
*3
1
40
3C
31
21
360
5
M
M
M
M
14
M
e
M
M
8
BS
B
B
M
%,S92
118,015
150,000
294,959
389,990
600,000
1,147,000
185,000
2,493,200
890,000
218,640
47,997
3,404,000
535,686
74,992
112,555
110,000
238,813
349,990
472,000
902,000
185,000
2,003,000
635,000
150,573
38,990
2,754.174
433,293
1,330
1,300
2,300
7,000
3,200
2,800
3,900
3,050
14,200
10,000
7,500
2,146
20,800
3,000
56.38
86.58
47.82
34.11
109.37
168.58
231.28
60.65
141.06
63.50
20.07
18.17
132.41
144.43
15,050
0
40,000
20,061
10,000
38,000
100,000
0
163,900
200,000
68,067
9,007
352,000
29,638
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
Leased
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
6,950
5,460
0
36,085
30,000
90.000
145,000
0
326,300
55,000
0
0
297,826
72,755
20,000
24,000
25,000
23,000
50,000
150,000
50,000
15,000
160,000
35,000
100,000
23,000
57,000
35,000
10
20
25
68
60
173
40
15
156
59
50
25
135
42
25,466
0
10,310
43,851
84,565
143,841
121,541
0
8,000
0
49,700
0
0
83,072
0
15,300
0
0
270,425
0
0
25,625
40,000
0
0
25,793
212,000
- 0
71,526
102,715
114,690
203,000
0
456,159
1,025,459
0
2,441,200
740,000
168,940
22,204
3,192,000
402,614
0
-•0
25,000
48,108
35,000
0
0
159,375
4,000
150,000
0
0
0
50,000
URB Group, Inc.
Richard Randall
Ward Associates
Sargent Webster...
Donald A. Denis
Gibbons, Heidtmann...
Gibbons, Heidtmann ...
Thomas Natoli
Alan Ballou
David W. Prendergast
Engineering Facilities StafI
Engineenng 8 Public Works
David P. Helpern
Sear-Brown Assocs.
NORDI TAXOUM
Charlotte
Raleigh
Salisbury
Spruce Pine
Tryon"
480
23
106
8
1
US
B
M
MS
M
11,736,440
300,000
3,792,504
175,485
184,405
8,865,565
240,000
2,956,816
164,485
151,300
160,000
9,360
47,500
2,000
1,587
55.41
25.64
62^4
82.24
95.34
998,567
60,000
577,574
0
14,661
987,635
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
884,670
0
258,114
11,000
18,444
800,000
35,000
150,000
15,000
3,280
342
50
200
n/a
6
0
0
182,069
0
0
125,000
0
110,568
81,000
0
1,153,187
300,000
3,073,533
64,500
0
458,250
0
426,334
29,985
184,405
Middleton, McMillan ...
Kurt Eichenberger
Ramsay Assocs.
William Moore
Holland Brady
NORDI DtROTl
Bismarck 60 M 4,270,451 3,808,810 73,000 52.18 146,000 Owned 315,641 450,000 190 113,000 0 3,931,451 226,000 Arnold L Hanson
OHIO
Bellevue
Blancbester
Coshocton
Fremont
Georgetown
Mansfield"
Iitrin
50
15
36
63
32
120
40
M
M
M
M
U
M
M
945,327
643,121
378,602
3,027,000
366,290
5,873,650
595,085
714,154
550,000
302,306
2,619,000
306,800
4,400,000
542,437
9,054
10,800
5,900
28,132
2,800
62,933
8,000
78.88
50.93
51.23
93.10
109.57
69.91
67.80
69,301
50,000
47,934
250.000
9,990
1,000,000
5,200
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
20.000
Owned
Owned
161,872
43,121
28,362
158,000
29,500
473,650
47,448
80,000
40,000
29,700
100,000
45,000
150,000
120,000
78
44
28
125
50
247
103
0
270,784
170,603
0
40,000
0
0
0
0
0
0
310,490
0
0
945,327
359,337
179,671
3.027,000
0
5,873,650
405,066
0
13,000
28,328
0
15,800
0
190,019
not reported
Gerald Hartey
Charles W. Gallagher, Inc.
Munder Munder 8 Assocs.
HcGill, Smith, Panshen
Aleiander Seckel Architects
Monger, Munger 8 Assocs.
OKUHOIU
Grove
Ponca City**
Woodward
Tale
15
30
15
2
M
M
M
M
290,322
1,660,881
268,588
53,811
88,400
1,313,216
246,685
51,138
5,000
10,000
9,886
900
17.68
13h32
24.95
56.82
15,000
204,385
0
0
175,000
Owned
Owned
Owned
11,922
143,280
21,903
2,673
16,500
90,000
35,000
n/a
20
111
32
n/a
100,000
0
146,000
50,000
0
23,246
0
0
190,322
1,212,635
33,000
1,482
0
425,000
89,58?
2,325
Grafton, Tull, Span 8 Toe
Howard 8 Porch Inc.
Beck Assocs. .
Dean Irby
PENNSTlYUtU
Penn Wynne 8 M 376,250 269,889 4,500 59.97 48,732 11,747 45,882 33,000 40 121,524 0 0 254,726 C.W. Fo Assocs.
RHODE tSLUB
Cranston"
No. Smithfjetd*
13
10
B
M
1,800,000
911,139
1,439,406
664,826
15,000
6,985
95.%
95.18
101,547
80,593
Owned
86,592
259,047
79,128
50,000
40,000
66,
55
200,000
430,000
782,000
0
0
95,000
818,000
386,139
Frederick Love
Herman E. Bouwman
<0
There are 949 library
projects in progress
in 1989 over 796 in
1988
Pone a City Library, Okla.
Nu-
Nu'
So
So
»E>
AR'
KD
Rli
Gale Free Library, Holden, Mass.
Additions and Renovations (cont.) b
fwnmmilty Mil Code
Project
Cost
toosL
Cost
Cross
SILFL
Sq.a
Cost
Ecuip.
Cast
Stta
Cast
Other
Costs Volumes
Reader
Seats
Federal
Funds
State
Funds
Local
Funds
cm
Funds Architect
TQKna
tbndtcstef
UL Juliet
Shell^le
Talehoma
41
25
29
41
M
B
M
M
{284,649
104,559
188,815
330,577
{225,246
93,478
142,931
265,386
5,330
2,700
3,258
5,613
{42.26
34.62
43.87
47,28
{39,934
3,700
31,832
43,567
Owned
Owned
Owned
Owned
{19,469
7,381
14,051
21,624
63,500
25,000
50,000
67,500
58
18
55
66
{100,000
48,475
70,420
100,000
0
0
0
0
{120,000
20,000
0
150,000
{64,649
36,084
118,395
80,577
"Gingles i Hums
Conley i Co.
Davis, Stokes Collaborative
Hickerson Fowlkes
ra«
Oitha
Gartand
Vkte
960
183
14
M
MS
M
563,709
1,243,923
55,000
371,372
852,476
55,000
15,000
61,000
1,850
24.76
13.98
29.73
111,058
308,964
0
Owned
Owned
Owned
81,279
82,483
0
100,000
400,000
35,000
119
230
62
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1,243,923
'45,000
563,709
0
10,000
F i S Partners, Inc.
Tom Barrett...
Ken Nagal
TOMn
Esse" 8 M 537,423 480.253 6,677 71.93 0 Owned 57,170 12,000 31 75,133 0 462,290 0 Horton-PtasrynskI
TIKIKU
.Chesapeake 26 B 565,830 465,000 6,946 66.95 55,430 Owned 45,400 40,000 50 510,400 0 55,430 0 Design Collaborative
WKSLUUTM
Tacsma
Tacoma
17
26
B
B
1,059,035
2,242,477
707,996
1,616,868
7,475
16,932
94.72
95.49
142,785
281,900
111,241
Owned
97,013
343,709
25,000
100,000
55
113
0
0
0
0
1,059.035
2,242,477
0
0
Seifert 8 Forbes
McGranahan Messenger...
Wm VIKMU
Gtenville
. Huiricane
ML Stom
8
4
3
M
M
B
82,332
136,333
38,000
71,336
103,914
38,000
1,250
2,000
768
57.07
51.96
49.48
2,896
27,410
0
6,000
Leased
Leased
2,100
5,009
0
10,000
24,000
12,000
20
24
20
25,000
56,000
0
0
20,000
20,000
57.332
60.333
18,000
0
0
0
Wilson 8 Golf
Wilson 8 Goff
none
wtscmM
Osceola
Plynxxrtti
Vefora
Waukesha
4
11
11
52
M
M
M
US
236,000
1,169,308
414,030
14,385,000
143,000
830,536
365,628
2,900,000
3,700
16,790
6,000
60,000
38.65
49.47
60.94
48.33
24,000
190,164
0
11,100,000
57,000
Owned
Owned
Owned
12,000
148,608
48,402
385,000
30,000
43,500
25,000
196,900
20
109
51
346
0
125,000
124,209
0
0
0
0
0
0
919,308
289,821
14,385,000
236,000
125,000
0
0
Bray Assocs.
Noble Rose
William King
HSR Assocs.
Buildings Not Previously Reported
CeaaHnit; Pop.
M i l Code Project
Cost
Coast
Cost
Cross
Sd.FL
Sd.FL
Cost
Muip.
Cast
Slta
Cost
Other
Costs Volumes Ruder
Seats
Federal
Funds
State
Funds
Lncal
Funds
cm
Funds Architect
Irvine, CA (1988)
LoveUnd, CO (1988)
Bnjston, GA (1988)
Betvk^ I (1987)
Hatch*, M4 (1988)
West Chester, OH
(1988)
110
48
3
15
7
28
B
M
B
M
M
B
{2,240,000
2,631,895
196,143
1,326,294
248,700
360,493
{1,600,000
1,750,041
149,793
997,239
228,700
272,172
18,000
28,800
2,000
14,985
3,390
5,646
{88.89
60.76
74.90
66.55
67.46
4821
{540,000
240,173
29,000
154,894
0
. 81,421
Leased
Owned
10,000
Owned
Owned
Owned
{100,000
641,681
7,350
174,161
20,000
6,900
120,000
120,000
15,000
60,000
10,000
23,000
95
187
40
116
n/a
25
0
0
0
0
60,000
0
0
0
141,429
250,000
100,000
0
{2,240,000
2,631,895
44,714
1,076294
29,000
360,493
0
0
10,000
0
59,700
0
Anthony 8 Langford
Barker, Rinker, Seacat
O'Steen 8 Sutties
Noble L Rose
Alley 8 Assocs.
Voohris. Slone, INelsh
Six-Year Cost Summary
Number of new bidgs.
Number of ARRs'
S<). ft new bIdgs.
So. ft. ARRs
new BLDGl
Construction cost
Equipment cost
Site cost
Other costs
Total—Project cost
ARRs—Project cost
NEW t AJIIt PlitUECT COST
FUND SOURCES
federal, new bldgs.
Federal, ARRs
Federal, total
State, new bldgs.
State, ARRs
State, total
tj>cal, new bldgs.
Local, ARRs
Local, total
Gift new bldgs.
Gift ARRs
GifL total
TOTAL FUNDS DSEl
FltcallSM FIauI 1985 Flual 1886 Flical 1387 Flical 1881 FUcal 1888
«
63
000,252
523,963
99
125
852,831
1,227,063
71
120
1,141,957
1,189,319
101
150
1,370,479
1,582,106
101
142
1,449,397
1,280,321
111
124
1,760,743
1,612,495
{64,370,118
6,451,298
1,622,534
6,397.740
{52,799,143
6,585,913
4,085,764
5,728,714
{73,092,317
9,799,996
4,211,461
10,869,097
{101,016,870
17,958,318
5,047,659
12,096,087
{10C'.'JS4,847
20,489,527
10,403,705
12,349,755
{160,937,343
19,450,410
14,191,713
16,693,362
78,841,690
30,762.934
70,583,649
69,256,835
97,972,871
59,634,921
136,952,501
80,534,403
144,237,174
104,179,480
211,716,128
135,015,044
{109,604,624 {139,840,484 {157,607,792 {217,486,904 {248,416,654 {346,731,172
{2,274,957
2,227,355
{9,803,398
8,086,819
{6,367,559
4,753,052
{5,757,098
4,677,400
{7,352,110
7,321,967
{8,140,109
8,264,044
{4,502.312 {17,890,217 {11,120,611 {10,434,498 {14,674,077 {16,404,153
{4,340,803
2,784,153
{4,139,433
1,607,519
{1,863,277
7,054,676
{7,710,681
5,310,877
{13,849,248
6,922,165
{48,714,905
6,997,782
{7,124,956 {5,746,952 {8,917,953 {13,021,558 {20,771,413 - {55,712,687
{71,043,181
22,921,592
{47,914,637
49,096,264
{73,997,971
42,971,936-
{117,135,870
64,050,359
{112,230,599
79,197,138
{137,650,121
108,753,024
{93,964,773 {97,010,901 {116,969,907 {181,186,229 {191,427,737 {246,403,145
{1,169,101
2.838,892
{8,766,333
10,490,099
{15,771,620
4,982,621
{7,182,656
6,734,422
{11,084,832
10,805,194
{17,428,326
11,219,980
{4,007,993 .. {19,256,432 > {20,754,241 {13,917,078 {21,890,026 {28,648,306
{109,600,034 {139,904,502 {157,762,712 {218,559,363 {248,763,253 {347,168,291
' Additions, Rerruxielings, and Renovations
References
1. Five-year free lease donated by United
Centenary Methodist Church.
2. Community raised additional $300,000 toward
opening day book collection.
3. Ninety-nine year lease at $1 f«r year.
4. The library had been housed in two rooms in
the town hall for 92 years.
5. Change from building with no
. running water.
6. See article on modular building boom in
Florida, p. 74-76.
7. Project only two-thirds completed; one-third
remains to be finished sometime in the future.
8. See article on this project, p. 79-80.
9. Library situated to take advantage of view of
nine acres of wcx)ded wetlands.
10. New State of Michigan Library.
11. Three-story atrium separates conference wing
from library; includes gift shop and art gallery.,
12. First librap' in town.
13. Doubles size of original 1890 building;
designed to blend with other 1890 structures
and new construction.
14. Library constructed privately, then donated
to the city.
15. Constructed on site of former prison;
the warden's house and intake center now
house the James A. Michener Arts Center.
16. Completes a two-block complex of four
buildings dedicated to genealogical research.
17. Successfully incorporates library into^area of
two-story, tum-of-the-century buildings.
18. Branch relocated at no cost to library.
19. The town paid for the complete overhaul and
relocation of the library in the town hall.
20. Garaventa stairlift for use by handicapped;
population rises as seasons change.
21. Original building listed in National Register of
Historic Places.
22. Only remaining membership library in the
state, and one of very few in the nation;
established in 1890 and now
celebrating 100 years of service to members.
23. Successful renovation and expansion of 1908
Carnegie building.
24. Original building is Depression-era ^blic
Works Administration project built in 1935.
25. Renovated limestone-clad building modeled
after Pazzi Chapel in Florence by Brunelleschi
and completed in 1927.
26. Original building is 100 years old and served
as warehouse/storeroom for a mill that is
located across the street from the library.
27. Restoration of a 150-year-old former church.
28. Part of 100-year-old railroad depot. Historical
society grant stipulated original door,
hardware, weight, and scale must remain.
Architects
Alexander-Scckel Architects, 106
Sturgis Ave., Mansfield, OH 44903
Alf, Keith, Cannon Design, Whitehaven
Rd., Grand Island, NY
14672
Alley & Associates, Las Cruces, NM
8S001
Alliance Inc., 1324 Heame, Suite
390, Shreveport, LA 71107
Anderzohn Architects, Shenandoah,
lA
Anthony i Langford, 16152 Beach
Blvd., Suite 20, Huntington
Beach, CA 92647
Architects Design Group II, 593
Washington St., Wellesley, MA
02181
The Architecture, 2625 N, Silverbell
Rd,, Tucson, AZ 85745
Arnold & Stacks, 527 W, Washington,
PC Box 69, Jonesboro, AR
72403
Ashworth, Steve, VP of Walden,
Ashworth & Associates, 1640
Powers Ferry Rd,, Bldg. 30, Suite
100, Marietta, GA 30067
Associated Architectural Services,
Suhe 215, Village Office Bldg,,
Cleveland, TN 3731 1
Austin & Associates, 4901 Towne
Centre Rd,, Suite 225, Saginaw,
MI 48604
Bailey & Gardner, Architects, 278
Caroline St., Orange, VA 22960
Ballou, Alan, AIA, Architects, 190
Haverstraw Rd,, Suffern, NY
10901
Barker, Riner, Sea cat & Partners,
2546 15th St., Denver, CO 80211
Barnes, Edward Larrabee of John
M,Y, Lee 4 Partners, 320 W, 13th
St., New York, NY 10014
Barren, Tom, Frank L, Meier, Architects,
3400 Cariisle, #300, Dallas,
TX 75204
Barry Architects, 29 Wendell Ave.,
Pinsfield, MA 01201
Beck Associates, 2200 Classen
Blvd., Suite 1450, Citizen's Tower,
Oklahoma City, OK 73106
Bender Associates, 1 Bender Terrace,
Delmar, NY 12054
Bentley Engineers & Architects,
Inc., no address reported,
Berte, John N, & Sons, Box 48, Livermore,
LA
B.G.R, Architects, 2118 34th St.,
• Lubbock, TX 79411
Biagi, J, Quintin, Shelbyvflle, KY
Bi^erts, Gunnar &. Associates, 292
Harmon St., Birmingham, Ml
48009
Boannan i Associates, 222 N. 2d
St., Minneapolis, MN 55401
Bohlin PoweD Larkin Cywinski, 12
S, I2th St., Philadelphia, PA 19107
"-w. I«S S, Casino Center
Blvd., Las Vegas, NV 89101
Bouwman, Herman E„ 61 Harvard
St., Worcester, MX 01609
Bracken Associates, 28 East Church
St., Cartersville, GA 30120
117 S, Trade
St„Tryon, NC 28782
Architects, Inc.,
2M3 S, Memorial Pl„ PQ Box 955,
Sheboygan, WI53082
Brown Healey Bock, Cedar Rapids,
Brummen, James, 290 7th St., San
Francisco, CA 94103
C^isch, Uonhard, B., 201 N, Penn,
Suite M3, Professional Bldg., Independence,
KS 67301
Caroe Architects Planners, 114 W.
Illinois, Chicago. IL
Cherry, Roberts & Associates, no
address reported.
Childers Anderson, Inc., 423 Roger
Ave., Ft. Smith, AR 72901
Choy, Eugene Kinn/Barton Choy
Associates. 2410 Beverly Blvd.,
. Los Angeles, CA 93357
City of Chicago—Bureau of Architecture,
320 N. Clark St., Rm. 600,
Chicago, IL 60610
Clcavc-Lundgren & Associates,
Inc., 131 E. 5th, Benson, AZ
Coblin Porter & Associates, Frankfort.
KY
Conlcy & Co. Architects, 8307 Collins
Rd., Nashville, TN 37221
CraAon, Tull, Span & Voc, Inc., Box
1750, Grove. OK 74344
Craig, Gauldin, & Davis, Inc., PC
Box 2527, Greenville, SC 2S>602
Crouch, William, 806 Railroad Ave.,
Santa Paula, CA 93060
Crowe Architects, AIA, PC Box 569,
Frisco. CO 80443
Sherman St., Cambridge, MA
Dcvinc Architecls, 23UW. 47th St.,
Kansas City, MO 64112
Diseroad & Wolff. Inc.. 8 Broad St.,
Hatfield, PA 19440
Dunwody, Beeland. & Henderson,
484 Mulberry St., Macon, GA
31201
Educated Design. 5001 W. Cypress
St., Suite 100, Tampa, FL 33607
Eichcnbcrgcr, Kurt, 413 Glcnwood
Ave., Raleigh, NC 27603
Ellon, Dan W., Box 23, Pelican Rapids,
MN 56572
Engineering Facilities Staff. Queens
Borough Public Library, 89-11
Merrick Blvd., Jamaica, NY 11432
Esherick, Homsey, Dodge & Davis,
2789 25th St., San Francisco. CA
94110
F & S Partners, Inc., 3535 Travis,
#201, Dallas, TX 75204
Faridy, Jamil E., Faridy, Thome,
Maddish, PA, I5I5 Lower Ferry
Rd.. Trenton, NJ 08628
Orion Toumship Public Library, Lake Orion, Mich.
Crump Firm, Inc., 81 Monroe Bldg.,
Memphis, TN 38103
Dardman. Jones Ltd., 1500 Gateway,
Grenada, MS 38901
Davies & Bibbins, II Hurley St.,
Cambridge, MA 02141
Davis, Stokes Collaborative, PC, 530
26th Ave. S., NashvUle, TN 37209
Dehnert/Richardson/Associates, PC,
350 Garfield, Lander, WY 82520
Denis, Donald A., AIA, PC, Rte.
25A, PO Box 565, Aquebogue, NY
11931
Denney, Roy, Southern Engineering,
807 S. Psirk St., CarroUton, GA
30117
Dept. of Engineering i Public
Works, Schenectady County, 80
Keller Ave., Schenectady, NY
12306
Design Collaborative, 2940 N. Lynnhaven
Rd., Virginia Beach, VA
23452
Design Partnership of Cambridge, 86
Farrell 4 Associates Architects,
Inc., 4710 Bellaire Bldg., Suite
370, Houston, TX 77401
Fauntleroy, Sam, 316 N. Lee 1-ane,
SUdeU, LA 70458
Fitzgerald, Dennis of Architectural
Alliance, 117 Balsom, Boise, ID
83706
Flesher 4 Foster Architects, 663
Lighthouse Ave., Suite F, Pacific
Grove, CA,93950
Fletcher, Valenti 4 Chillura, Tampa,
FL
Foster, John M,,'927 NE Jensen
Beach Blvd., Jensen Beach, FL
34457
Fox, Ballas, Barrow Associates, PO
Box 7547, Missoula, MT 59807
Fox, C.W., Associates, 8430 Ardleigh
St., Philadelphia, PA 19118
Eraser, Bruce, ALA, 890 Osos St.,
San Luis Obispo, CA
Freytag 4 Associates, Inc., Suite
502, Ohio Bldg., Sidney, OH 45365
Gabriel, Joseph, 3055 McCulloch
Blvd., Lake Havasu City, AZ
86403
Gallagher, Charles W., Inc., 234 S.
Third St., Coshocton, OH
Geddes Brecher Quails Cunningham,
103 University Sq., Princeton, NJ
08540
Gee 4 Jenson, 315 E. Robinson St.,
Orlando, FL 32801
General Building Contractors, Inc.,
2457 C.R. 68, Auburn, IN 46706
Gibbons, Heidtmann 4 Salvador,
707 Westchester Ave., Suite 110,
White Plains, NY 10604
Gingles 4 Hurms, Architects 4 Engineers,
2111 20th Ave. S., Nashville,
TN
Glaser Associates Inc., 2753 Erie
Ave., Cincinnati, OH 45208
Goodman, Douglas, Reinhart Associates,
Agawam, MA
Graham Associates Architects Planners,
Box 5560 Ketchikan, AK
99901
Graham Gund Architects, 47 Thorndike
St., Cambridge, MA
Greene, W. Lane, Atlanta, GA 30305
Grulke, Roger, 515 New Jersey,
Suite A, Redlands, CA 92373
Hager, Smith 4 Huffman, PO Box
1308, Raleigh, NC 27602
Hanson, Arnold L,, PO Box 2755,
Bismarck, ND 58502
Harley, Gerald, C.G. Hartman 4 Associates,
514A Ohio Pike, Cincinnati,
OH 45255
Harris 4 Partners, 1580 Connally'
Dr., Suite C, East Point, GA 30344
Harrison, Joel, L-ebanon, VA 24266
Haskins, Savage, Rice, Pearce, 2515
Fairview Rd., Raleigh, NC 27606
Hayes, Robert 4 Associates, Ft.
MitcheU, KY
Helpern, David P., AIA, 23 E. 4th
St., New York, NY 10003
Hempen, Jeff, Clarksville, lA
Henley, Carroll, Chattanooga, TN
Hickerson Fowlkes Architects, 2300
West End Ave., Nashville, TN
37203
Hickey, George, Frank P. Marinace
Architect, Box 429, New Hampton,
NH 03256
Hidden, William H., Hidell Architects,
2811 McKinney Ave., Suite
207, Dallas, TX 75204
Hillsborough County, PO Box 1110,
Tam[», FL 33601
Holzheimer, David, Associates, Architects,
8223 E. Washington St.,
Chagrin Falls, OH 44022
Horton-Ptaszynski Architects, Tracy
House, Shelbume, VT
Howard 4 Porch, Inc., First National
Center, Suite 1300 E., Oklahoma
City, OK 73102
HSR Associates, Inc., Madison, Wl
Button 4 Hutton, 6832 Calumet
Ave., Hammond, IN 46324
Irby, Dean, 2003 W. 6th St., Stillwater,
OK 74074
Jinright, Robert of Jinright 4 Ryan,
PO Box 533, Thomasville, GA
31799
Johnson, Richard L„ Associates,
Inc., 4703 Charles St., Rockford,
IL61108
Jones, Gerald W. 4 Co., 11701 Winner
Rd., Independence, MO 64052
JSA Inc. Architects Planners, 361
Hanover St., Portsmouth, NH
03801
Kahler Slater Torphy Architects,
Inc., 733 N. Van Buren, Milwaukee,
WI 53202
Kahri. Albert, Associates, Inc., New
Center BIdg., Detroit, MI 48202
Kaiser, John, 97 Downing Place, Somerdale,
NJ
Kamp-DiComo Associates, 15875
Middlebelt Rd., Livonia, Ml 48154
Kant Charuhas Chapman & Twohey,
1150 I7th St. NW, Suite 103,
Washington, DC 20036
Kessler, William & Associates, 733
St. Antoine St., Detroit, Ml 48226
King <t Tuthill, PO Box 736, Avon
Park, North Avon, CT 06001
King, George, Box 663, Durango,
CO 81301
King, WiUiam, 1602 W. Beltline
Hwy., Madison, Wl
Kinsella, J. Michael, Erlanger, KY
41018
Kirkman, Lowell Associates, PO
Box 1033, Dalton, OA 30720
Lack, Robert A., 29 S. 2d St., Lewisburg,
PA 17837
LaTourelle, Elaine Day & Associates,
Terminal Sales Bldg., First
SL Virginia, Seattle, WA 98101
Lee, James C., 4744 1-55 N, Jackson,
MS 39311
Lewis, J. Trevor, AIA, PO Box 337,
Emporia, KS 66801
Lindsey, Buck & Associates, no address
reported.
Lorenz & Williams, Inc., 120 W.
Third St., Dayton, OH 45402
Love, Frederick, Project Consultant,
Robinson Green Beretta Corp., 2
John St., Providence, RI 02903
McCall, William Frank, Jr., 110 3d
Ave. SE, Moultrie, OA 31768 -
McCurry, Carieton G., PO Box 351,
Gulf Shores, AL 36542
McGee, Keimeth, PA, AIA, 23 Lazy
Eight Dr., Daytona Beach, FL
32114
McGin, Smith, Panshon, 2734 Chancellor
Dr., Suite 105, Crestview
HUls, KY 41017
McGranahan Messenger & Associates,
950 Fawcett, Suite 300, Tacoma,
WA 98402
McNair, Johnson & Associates, PO
Box 84, Columbia, SC 29202
Macon & Chaintreuil Associates, 266
Alexander St., Rochester. NY
14607
Maddox, Ed of Maddox & Associates,
414 E. 39th St., Savatmah,
GA 31412
Marcellus Wri^t Cox & Smith, 100
Shockoe Slip, Richmond, VA
23219
Maschke, David & Associates, PO
Box %3, Albany, GA 31701
Metz, Don, Lyme, NH 03768
Meyers, John, 323 15th St., Ashland,
KY 41101
MHF, Jefferson, lA
Middleton, McMillan, Architects,
Inc., 6230 Fairview Rd., Charlotte,
NC 28210
Miller, Gary, Architect & Associates,
350 W. 5th St., Suite 210B,
San Bernardino, CA 92401
Miller, Howard, PO Box 143, Center
Conway, NH 03813
Miller, Monte J., 2d & Sherman
Ave., Coeur d'Alene, ID 83814
Moles, Clifford, Associates, 405 Sansome
St., San Francisco, CA
94111
Monson, Neuman, Iowa City, lA
Montgomery, K.R. & Associates,
Inc., 33 W. 10th St., Andersen, IN
46016
Moody/Nolan, Ltd., 1780 E. Broad
St., Columbus, OH 43203
Moore, William, 805 BBT Bldg.,
Asheville, NC 28801
Morey, Richard, Imageering, Lake
Placid, FL 33852
Morris-Aubry Architects, 3355 W.
Alabama, Houston, TX 77098
Mosher Drew Watson Fugerson Architects,
4206 W. Point Loma
Blvd., San Diego, CA
MRB Group Inc., 2480 Browncroft
Blvd., Rochester, NY 14625
Munger, Monger 4 Associates, 225
N. Michigan, Toledo, OH 43624
Myers, George, 405 Banning Creek
Rd., Prescott, AZ 86301
Myers, Ron, City Engineer, Washington,
lA
N-Y Associates, 2700 Lake Villa
Dr., Metairie, LA 70002
Nagal, Ken, Vidor, TX 77662
Nagao & Oroyan Associates, 1680
Pearl St., Eugene, OR 97401
NatoU, Thomas, Norwich, NY
Newman, Herbert S., Associates,
300 York St., New Haven, CT
06511
Nix Mann Viehman, 1328 Peachtree
St. NE, Atlanta, GA 30303
O'LearyTerasawa Partners, 1313 W.
8th St., Suite 200, Los Angeles,
CA 90012
Oshima, Alan, 1731 J St., Suite 200,
Sacramento, CA
O'Steen & Suttles, AIA, PO Box
Soui/i Branch Library,
Kansas City, Mo.
328, Douglas, GA 31533
Pacific Urban Design, San Jose, CA
Page-Werner, PO Box 3005, Great
Falls, MT 59403
Parsons, Wible, Brummal, Alkire,
500 1st Alabama Bank Bldg.,
Montgomery, AL 36104
Pearson + Bender -t- Jolly, 201 Kentucky
Ave., Lexington, KY 40502
Peck, Cal 4 Steve Clark, AIA, Vickery/
Ovresat/Awsumb Associates,
Inc., 400 E. South St., Suite 300,
Orlando, FL 32801-2892
Pecsox, Jelliffe, Randall 4 Nice/
Schuette Mohler, 1015 Main St.,
Lafayette, IN
Phillips Associates, 275 Broadhollow
Rd., Melville, NY 11747
PHJ Architects, Inc., PO Box 215,
Montgomery, AL 36101
Piper, J. Scott, 203 W. Holly, Bellingham,
WA
Plumas County Engineering Dept.,
Box 10179, ^incy, CA 95971
Potter, Ross, 735 Jenifer St., Madison,
WI 53703
Prendergast, David W., 5 Beekman
St., New York, NY 10038
Price Group Architects, 301 Broadway
Bldg., Shawnee, OK 74801
QuinUvan, Pierk 4 Krause, 101 E.
Water St., Syracuse, NY 13201
Ramsay Associates, 625 W. Innes
St., Salisbury, NC 28144
Randall, Richard, Naples, NY 14512
Rea Design Associates, 86 Main St.,
Auburn, ME 04210
Remick Architect 4 Planners. 2 Executive
Dr., New Windsor, NY
12550
Ritchie Organization, 80 Bridge St.,
Newton, MA 02158
Rose, Noble E., 4610 University
Ave., Suite 430, PO Box 53705,
Madison, WI 53511
Sargent, Webster, Crenshaw 4 Folley,
2112 Erie Blvd. E., Syracuse,
NY 13224
Saxton Smith Associates, 814 W. B,
V Russellville, AR 72801
Scaffidi 4 Moore Architects, 4535
Bailey Ave., Buffalo, NY 14226
Scalf, J. 4 Associates, Nashville,
TN
Schaefer, Johnson, Cox 4 Frey, 220
S. Hillside, Wichita, KS 67211
Schrader, Mark, 1105 Terminal Way,
Suite 209, Reno, NV 89502
Sear-Brown Associates, 83 Metra
Park, Rochester, NY 14623
Seckel, Alexander, Architects, 106
Sturges Ave., Mansfield, OH
44903
Seifert 4 Forbes, 925 Tacoma Ave.
S., Tacoma, WA 98402
Sharp, Keith, 116 E. 4th St., HopkinsviUe,
KY 42240
Shepley Bulfinch Richardson 4 Abbot,
40 Broad St., Boston, MA
02109
Shere, Ralph, Architecture Unlimited,
PO Box 1555, Tryon, NC 28782
Sherman Carter Bamhart, 140 E.
Main St., Lexington, KY 40507
Shulman, Alan, 8 Elm St,, Goffstown,
NH 03045
Simmons, Harry, Jr., 127 Sixth
Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11217
Simon, Martin of Vegue, Winkelstein,
Moris, San Francisco, CA
Sizemore Floyd Architects, 1 Georgia
Center, Suite 10000,600 Peachtree
St., Atlanta, GA 30308
Smith, Robert J., Rte. 3, Box 100,
Ontario, OR 97914
Spencer, John W., of Spencer 4
Spencer, Carew Tower, Cincinnati,
OH 45202
Stecklein 4 Brungardt, 1st National
Bank Tower, Hays, KS
Stewart, Mark A., Brooks Association,
220 W. Loop S., #895, Houston,
TX 77027
Stokes, Steven, 47 Court St., Laconia,
NH 03246
Swenson, Earl 4 Associates, Nashville,
TN
Taylor, William H., AIA, 776 E.
Green St., Suite 204, Pasadena,
CA9I101
Thompson 4 Associates, 304 N. Lincoln,
Liberal, KS 67901
Thomson 4 Associates, 2906-B N.
Patterson St., Valdosta, GA 31602
Tomberlin Associates Architects,
Inc., 2241 Perimeter Park Dr., Atlanta,
GA 30341
Vkkery, Moje, Drinkard 4 Oakland
(VMDO), 116 2d St. NE, Charlottesville,
VA 22901
Voelckers, Paul of Minch Ritter Forrest
Architects, 800 Glacier Ave.,
Juneau, AK 99801
von Achen, Kurt, Eudora, KS
Voohris, Slone, Welsh, Crossland—
Architects, Inc., 414 Reading Rd.,
Mason, OH 45040
Walden 3 Associates, Hubbardston,
MA 01452-0187
Ward Associates, Bohemia, NY
11716
Ward 4 Wetherington, PO Box 1005,
LaGrange, GA 30241
Warner, Garett of Warner, Nease,
Bost Architects, Inc., 2701 Rockcreek
Pkwy., Suite 108, North
Kansas City, MO 64116
We Group Architects 4 Planners,
122 SW Third Ave., Portland, OR
97204
Weber Pollard 4 Associates, Marshalllown,
lA
Weese, Ben, Weese Langley Weese,
9 W. Hubbard St., Chicago, IL
60610
Wendt Cedarholm Tippens, Inc., 560
Green Bay Rd., Winnetka, IL
60093
Wheat, Raymond 4 Associates, 2034
Xlubview Ave., Montgomery, AL
36106
W.H.G.K., Inc., 3201 W. Main
Belleville, IL 62223
Williams, Christopher, Meredith
NH 03253
Wilson 4 Goff, Associated Architects,
81 Main St., St. Albans, WV
25177
Wilson Rains/Design Partnership, 71
High St., Newton Upper Falls,
MA
Wofford, Theodore J., AIA, of Murphy,
Downey, Wofford 4 Richman,
8135 Forsyth, Suite 222, St.
Louis, MO 63105
Wold Association, Architects, 386
N. Webasha, St. Paul, MN 55102
Wolf, Lang, Christopher Architects,
Inc., 10470 Foothill Blvd, Rancho
Cucamonga, CA 92730
Wurster, Bemardi, Emmons, San
Francisco, CA
Yamasaki, Minoru, Associates, 350
W. Big Beaver, Troy, MI 480O7-
4100
Young, Paul 4 Richard Nice, Young
Architects, 211 Prospect, Box
1484, Bloomington, IL 61702
NAME OF UBRARY
STAGES
NAME OF UBRARY
STAGES
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 B
1 2 3 4 s 8 7 8
Pittsylvania County PL, Chatham [1989]
Chesapeake PL [1991]
Greenbrier Library, Chesapeake [1991]
Russell Memorial Lib., Chesapeake [1991]
Cumberland County PL [?]
Municipal Library, Fairfax [1992]
Great Falls Library [1991]
Herrxion Community Library [1992]
Eastern Loudoun PL. Leesburg [1991]
Leesburg PL [1991]
Lorton Community Library [1989]
Lovettsville PL [1990]
Blue Ridge Regional Lib., Martir^vilie [1990]
Middleburg PL [1990]
r4or1olk PL [1989]
Orange County Library [1994]
Purcellville PL [1991]
Innsbrook Library, Richmond [1990]
Satem PL [1990]
Middlesex County PL, Urt>anna [?]
Patrick Henry Community Lib., Vienna [1992]
Spririgfield Metro Library, Vienna [1992]
Vienna Metro Utxary [1992]
Great Neck Area Lib., Virginia Beach [1989]
Kempsville Area Lib., Virginia Beach [1989]
Pungo-Blackwater Lib., Virginia Beach [1990]
Rappahannock County Lib., Washington [1991]
y^ y^ y y WASHINGTON
y^
y^ y^
Everett PL [1991)
Port Townsend PL [1990]
y y
>>
>> y^ Pullman (Neill) PL [1991]
Sedro-Wodley PL [1989]
North Spokane Ulxary, Spokane [1989]
Fern Hill Branch Lib., Tacoma [1989]
Mottet Branch Utxary, Tacoma [1989]
y
y^
y^
>>
y^
y^
y^
y y
y
y
y
y
Swasey Branch Ulxary, Tacoma [1989]
Tacoma PL [1990]
WEST VIRGINIA
Hannan PL, Ashton [1989]
Branchland PL [1989]
West Huntington PL, Huntington [1990]
Grant County PL, Peterstxirg [1990]
WISCONSIN
y^ y^ Brillion PL [1990]
BrookfieW PL[1990]
Cambridge Community Ubrary [1989]
Aram PL, Delavan [1990]
lola Village Library [1990]
y y y y
y^ y^ v'
y y y y y y y y
y y y
y'
y y y
Woman's Club Free Ubrary, Lodi [1989]
- Mkjdleton PL [1990]
New Berlin PL [1989]
Onalaska PL [1989]
Prescott PL [1990]
Shawano City-County Ubrary [1989]
y^ p' y y y
Mead PL, Shetxiygan [1995] y y y
Academic Projects
NAME OF UBRARY
STAGES
NAME OF UBRARY
STAGES
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
ALABAMA Caiitomia State Univ., Northridge [1991]
Mills College. Oakland [1989]
California State Polytechnic, Pomona [1989]
California State Univ., Sacramento [1990]
Bethel Seminary W., San Diego [1989]
San Frarxasco State University [?]
Univ. of California, San Frandsco [1990]
Science Lib., UC-Santa Cruz [1990]
Cat. State-Stanislaus, Turiock [1989]
>>
Troy State University, Dothan [1989]
Science/Engineering, UA-Tuscaloosa [1990]
ALASKA
>>
Univ. of Alaska-Southeast Juneau [1989]
ARIZONA
Northern Arizona University, FlagstafI [1990]
ARKANSAS
Univ. of Central Arkansas, Conway [1990]
Harding University, Searcy [1990]
CALIFORNIA
Calilomia State Univ., Bakersfiekj [1992]
Main Lib., UC-Berkeley [1993]
Biosciences Ub., UC-Berkeley [1989]
Biosciences Ub., UC-Berkeley [1994]
Haas Business Sch., UC-Berkeley [1992]
Ctiemistry Ub., UC-Berkeley [1990]
Doe Ub., UC-Berketey [1993]
East Asiatic Ub., UC-Berkeley [1997]
Environmental Design, Wurster Hall,
University ot California, Berkeley [1989]
Calilomia State-Hayward, Concord [1992]
Univ. of Caflfomia, Davis [1992]
Science Ub., UC-lrvine [1992]
Univ. of Calilomia-San Diego, l.a Jolta [1992]
International Relabons/Padfic Studies,
Univ. of Caiifomia-San Diego, LB Jolla [1989]
Teaching Ub., USC, Los Angeles [1992]
Info Sciences Inst., USC, Marina del Rey [1989]
Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey [1991]
y y K' CONNECTICUT
y y
DELAWARE
y
>>
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
American University l.aw Lib. [1992]
y
y
y National Defense University [1991]
FLORIDA
Valencia Community Coll., Orlando [1992]
GEORGIA
HAWAII
Chamir«de University of Honolulu [1990]
Hawaii Pacific College, Honolulu [1989]
>>
IDAHO
North kJaho College, Coeur d'Alene [1991]
Lewis Oark State Coll., Lewiston [1990]
lUUNOIS
y y University of Illinois, Chicago [1990]
I iRpiPv iniipsjii mprpMBFR IBS')
J
I ,
NAUP np LIBRARY
STAGES NAME OF UBRARY
STAGES
Knox College, Galesburg [1990] '
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 2
NEW YORK
3 4 5 6 7 8
Bradley University, Peoria [1990]
Augustana Coll.. Rock IstarxJ [1990]
INDIANA
yy
SUNY College at Fredonia ^1994]
Touro Law Center, Huntington [1990] t-*
^ yy yy y
y
y
Wabash College, Crawlordsvilte [1990] Parsons School of Design, New York [1990]
SL Joseph's College, Patchogue [1989]
-y y y
^ y y y 0
IOWA Ftochester Institute of Technology [1991] v' ^ y y y y 0
SI. Ambfose University, Davenport [1995] Union College, Schenectady [1994] 0
Grand View College, Des Moines (1991) y^ College of Staten Island [1991] v-" y y y y
KANSAS Health Science Ctr., SUNY at Syracuse [1993]
University of Kansas, l-awrence [1989] NORTH CAROUNA
KENTUCKY Univ. of North Carolina, Astieville [1990] y y y y y y
Berea College [1991]
Belknap Campus, Univ. of Louisville [1989]
y^ y^ North Carolina State Univ., Raleigh [1989] y y y y 0
yy OHIO
MAINE Geology/Physics Lib., Univ. of Cincinnati [1989] y y y y y
LRC, Univ. of Maine, Augusta [1990]
Sdetvce Ub., Bowdoin Coll., Brunswick [1991]
Scfx>ol of Law, Univ. of Maine, Portland [1991]
yy University of Rk) Grande [1991] k' y y y y
y^ y^ Youngstown State University [1989] y
MARYUND OKLAHOMA
Univ. of Maryland, College Park [1990]
Hood College, Frederick [1991]
Western Maryland Coll., Westminster [1991]
y^ y^ y^ yy y' yy Oklahoma State Univ., Stillwater [7]
y^ y^ y^ K f OREGON
yy Oregon State University, Corvallis [1992] y y
MASSACHUSETTS University of Oregon, Eugene [1992] y' y^ y y y
Resource Ctr., Northeastern Univ., Boston [1990]
Ftotch Lib., MIT, Cambridge [1990]
Boston College, Chestnut HiH [1989]
Morse Institute, Natick [1992]
Smith College, Northampton [1990]
Mount Holyoke College, So. Hadley [1992]
Williams College, Williamstown [1992]
yy
yy Hatfield Marine Scienc» Ctr., Newport [1990] y
y y y
' y
' y
y
y^ ^ Portarrd State University [1990] y
y^ y^ V* yy y" yy
>> y^ yy 'y yy PENNSYLVANIA
y^ yy y 0
MICHIGAN
Universrty of Michigan, Ann Artxx [1989]
Engineering Lib., Univ. of Michigan [?]
Social Work Ub., Univ. of Michigan [1992]
Ferris State. University, Big Rapid [1995]
Aquinas College, Grand Rapids [1992]
Western Michigan Univ., Kalamazoo [1990]
Olivet College [7]
Oakland University, Rochester [1989]
Walsh College, Troy [1990]
yy Franklin & Marshall Coll., Lancaster [1990] f y
y^ y^ y0 Philadelphia Coll. of Textiles i Saence [1992] y y^ y y y^ y^ y 0 Pennsylvania State, Schuylkill Haven [1991] y^ y
y^ University of Scranton [1992]
Susquetianna Univers'rty, Selinsgrove [1989] y
y
J-' y^ y^ y^ y y yy y y yy RHODE ISLAND -
y^ >> y^ y y yy Fioger Williams College, Bristol [1990] ^ y^
y^ y^ y^ y y yy y y yy Salve Regina College, Newport [1989] y ^ 0
>> SOUTH DAKOTA
MINNESOTA Sisseton-Wahpeton Community College [1990] y y V 0
Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis [1998]
Science & Engineering, UM-Minneapdis (1996)
St. Olaf College, Northfiekf [1992]
College of SL Thomas, St. Paul [1991]
TEXAS
y^
y^
y^
y^ y^ y > Sam Houston State Univ., Huntsville [1990] y y V 0
y^ y^ y
yy y y yy
S.F. Austin State Univ., Nacogdoches [1991]
SW Texas State Univ., San Marcos [1990] c* y^
y y y V ^ y
MISSISSIPPI VIRGINIA
Millsaps College, Jackson [1990] >> yy y > Marymount University, Arlington [1989] y* y^ y y y V ^ y y
MISSOURI University of Virginia, Charlottesville [7] y^ y' y y
Univ. of Missouri-Kansas City [1991]
Northeast Missouri State, Kirksville [1990]
Mo. Western State Ck)ll., SL Joseph [1990]
Missouri Baptist College, SL (.ouis [1992]
University of Missouri, SL Louis [1989]
Sch. of Medidne/Biomedical Comm. Ctr.,
Washington University, St. Louis [1989]
Music Ub., Univ. of Virginia, Charlottesville [1989]
Newport Coll., Newport News [1991] y' y^
>0
y^ y^
Roanoke College, Salem [1990] y"
Shenandoah CollJConservatory, Winchester [7] y'
WASHINGTON
y y y \
y y
^ y y
yy
Washington State Univ., Pullman [1993-95] y^ y^ y y y
University of Washington, Seattle [1990] y y y
NEW JERSEY Gonzaga University, Spokane [1992] y
Caldwell College [1991]
Rutgers University, New Brunswick [1992]
Art Lib., Rutgers Univ., New Brunswick [1991]
y^ y^ y^ y^ Ctr. lor Info & Technology, Gonzaga Univ [1991] y
y^ y^ y^ Whitworth College, Spokane [1992] y^ y^ y y
y^ y^ y^ y^ WEST VIRGINIA
NEW MEXICO Davis & Elkins College, Elkins [1991]
WISCONSIN
y y y
Altxjquerque Academy [1991]
University of New Mexico, Albuquerque [?)
New Mexico State Univ., Las Cruces [1991]
SL John's College, Sante Fe [1990]
NM Inst, of Mining & Technology, Socorro [1991
y^ Gateway Techntca! College. Elkborn [1990J y y^ y^ y^ y^ Univ. of Wiscoosln-LaCrosse (1992) y^
y^ >> y* ty yy Edgewood College, Madison [1990] y
] y^ yy Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison [1990] y ^
7?
Coiisolidlaied StmileintEs
UNIVERSITY OF NEVADA, LAS VEGAS
4505 MARYLAND PARKWAY 89109
TEL. 739-3477
....just a short reminder that the Legislative Feasibility
Hearing on starting a law school in Nevada has been rescheduled
for Friday, March l6 at 2:30 p.m. in the West Lounge of the
Student Union Building. Your attendance and support is
welcome (if not vital).
BOX #3
Law School Proposal 1980-
Law School Proposal 1972-
Proposed New Degrees Programs 1982 -
New Programs
Proposed New Degrees Programs October - December 1981
Proposed New Degrees Programs January - September 1981
Proposed New Degrees, Programs 1979-80
Proposed New Degrees, Programs 1977-78
University College Study November 1980
Administrative Study at University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Admissions Study
' Archeological Survey #1
School of Architecture
Al-Azhar University Proposal (Mohamed Yousef) #2
Al-Azhar University Proposal (Mohamed Yousef) #1
. Archeological Survey #jL.
Architecture Program Proposal #2
BOX #4
Dean of Student Services Search Committee/Information
Student Service 1985
Interviewing and Recruiting 1985-86, 87 6-2-330-4000-755
Campus Police 1984-86
Counseling and Evaluation Center
Financial Aid 1983-86
Athletics 1985 .
Showband of the Stars
Athletic Development 1984-85
Womens Athletics - Miscellaneous
NCCA - National Collegiate Athletic Association
Intercollegiate Athletic Council 1985
PCAA - Pacific Coast Athletic Association
Assistant General Counsel 1985
Assistant General Counsel 1985
Las Vegas Valley Water District - Reservoir
Affirmative Action 1985
V
•
Law School Proposal 1969-72
Clippings re; Law School proposal
Law School Paper - Dr. Goodall
Cresap, McCormick & Paget, Inc. Law School Consultants
Law School Feasibility Study
Space for Proposed Law School
Dr. Zorn's folder
Board of Regents University of Nevada System Law School
Feasibility Study
BOX #4 CONTINUED
Law School Study for the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (5)
Leisure Studies Center
Survey Research Center Proposal 1976
Veterinary Programs - General Information
Zoological Society 1976-1977
Zoological Society 1972-1975
Personnel 1985