Ļć½¶Šć began on its current campus with one building on a flat piece of land in what amounted to the suburbs early last century, and it has never stopped growing. New facilities have emerged and technology and fashions have changed, but some things never change: the need to take notes during class and choose new courses every semester, the unique opportunity to make friends on campus, and some of the peopleācoaches, professors, staffāthemselves. Take a gander down memory lane, and get to know one family that has attended Ļć½¶Šć for three generations.
Brian Harvey at age 16, having just signed as a youth player for Sheffield, England, and more recently while coaching. Until his retirement after last season, Harvey was the only head coach Ļć½¶Šć soccer had ever had since the menās program began in 1986 and womenās started in 1994. āThenā photo provided by Harvey family; ānowā photo by Josh Robinson. Jo Rowan teaches dance students in 2020 and the 1980s. āThenā photo courtesy of University Archives; ānowā photo by Josh Robinson.Bachelor of Arts diplomas from 1929 and 2019 with modern Greg Burns art print. Course catalogs from 1923 and spring 2020. Today, catalogs are accessed online. Professors once kept grades by hand, as in history professor Dr. Lloyd Musselmanās 1969ā70 notebook, but now keep track with the online D2L system, which also gives students access to class materials. āThenā photos courtesy of University Archives; ānowā photos by Josh Robinson and courtesy of University Communications and the Ļć½¶Šć Center for Excellence in Teaching and Learning.Fashions change, but walking to class remains the same. āThenā photo courtesy of University Archives; ānowā photo by Shane Bevel.