If 18 THE CALIFORNIA BULLETIN BUILDINGS fom·-year curriculum for the preparation of teachers for publi� ::iecondary schools. In 1929 the school became officially a Teach­ ers College, fourteen students receiving degrees at the Com­ mencement in )Iay. THE CAMPUS, BUILDINGS, AND EQUIPMENT PRESENT BUILDINGS Eighteen buildings, of which 12 are brick. are arranged in a quadrangle on a campus of 28 acres. The entire campus has been laid out by a landscape architect, ,Yith hedges, shade trers. flower plots, and shrubbery. Many uncommon plants and trees are included in the collection, which. besides adding beauty to the campus, offers a valuable laboratory for students in the biological sciences. In the fall of 1930 an industrial arts curriculn111 was added. Sjnce that time the services in the elementary fielcl have been extended to include courses for the preparation of teachers in­ terested in speech correction and in mentally retarded classes. Today the College, with three four-year curriculums and several specialized services, rank& among the outstanding insti­ tuitions of its kincl in the state as well as in the Eastern IJnited States. During- ] 948-] �J-W. jt serwd 1,000 fnJl-time students and more than 150 teachers-in-service. It has a faculty and administrative staff of 68 persons. The sen-ice area of the College includes, for the prepara­ tion of elementary and secondary school teachers, ·\Yashington, Fayette, Greene, and Somerset Counties, and for the prepara­ tion of teachers of industrial arts, all of "\Vestern Pennsylvania. LOCATION The State Teachers College at California, located in what is known as the Tenth Teachers College District, is 35 miles south of Pittsburgh; 16 miles from Uniontown; 25 miles from \r ashington, Pennsylvania; 25 miles from "\Vaynesburg; and (i6 miles from Somerset. The 'College is most easily reached over U. S. Route 40, which comes within four miles of California at )lalclen, a short distance from "\Yest Brownsville, and over Pennsylrnnia Route 88. Bus and railroad services add to its accessibility. One bus route, between California and Roscoe, makes half-hourly con­ nections with the interurban trolley from Pittsburgh; others furnish service to Brownsville, Charleroi, )fonessen, and Pitts­ burgh. i 19 Main Hall, the oldest building on the campus. was first used in 1870. The administrative offices, the library. the auditorium. and a number of classroom� are located in this building. I North Hall, South Hall, and Dixon Hall, all of which facr College Avenue, are student dormitories. )forth Hall was built in 1874; South, in 1876; and Dixon, which in addition to serving­ as a dormitory includes the Georgian Dining Room, in 1907. Fayette, Greene, Sonie1·set, and Washington Halls, temporary dormitories for men, are located on the north side of the back campus between Science Hall and tbe Heating Plant. They were completed in January, 1947. Science Hall, which stands near the center of the northern boundary of the campus, was built in 1892 and remodeled in 1938. rrhe laboratories, equipped to acrommodate 30 students at a time, are modern in eYery respect. Short-waYe Radio Station W8S"CS is located on the third floor. . Science A1111c.r. a temporar.,· structure located on the north s1de of the campus, has been constructed recentl.v to accommo­ date classes in biological science. mathematics. ancl speech. The Noss Laboratory School, built in Hl30 on the southeast �orner of the campus, is a ceuter for student teaching-. inclucl­ mg observation and demonstration · work. The l11clusfrial Arts Builcl1:ng, opened for use in 1939, is on the east campus. This building is one of the best planned arnl mo�t complete of its kind in the country. It proYicles labora­ tories, classrooms, offices, storage rooms, a reference library, and shop facilities for printing, woodwork, painting, machine shop, �heet metal, forging, welding, auto mechanics, electricity, ceramics, and the graphic arts.