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The main building of the Academy, Dean Hall, was completed in 1868. During the summer of 1872, it was destroyed by a fire, but reconstruction began and finished on June 7, 1874. The school's name changed twice more, Dean Junior College in May 1941 and then Dean College in May 1994. [4] The school's academic mascot is a bulldog named Boomer.
Houses the office of the College of Engineering's dean and the departments of industrial engineering and civil engineering [3] Catlett Music Center 1986 Contains School of Music offices and practice rooms, a 1,000 seat concert hall, and an indoor rehearsal area for the Pride of Oklahoma [4] Chemistry Building 1915
Ian Christie was a reader of History from 1960 to 1966, Professor of History from 1966 to 1979, Chairman of the History Department from 1975 to 1979 and Astor Professor of British History from 1979 to 1984. [11] Between 1962 and 1972 Peter Ucko was lecturer in anthropology at UCL. [12]
The College of Arts and Sciences occupies multiple buildings on campus, such as Dodd Hall, the Bellamy Building, the Psychology Building, and the Williams Building. The dean's office is located in the Longmire Building. In July 2011, Sam Huckaba, who served as the associate dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, stepped in as the interim dean.
The first phase of construction on the Merrill Engineering Building was completed in 1960 [14] and it served as the main building for the College of Engineering until the John and Marva Warnock Engineering building was completed. The building still houses most of the student and research labs used by the college of engineering.
The College of Engineering added the Department of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering in 1981. Michael Kovac became the College of Engineering’s third dean [6] in 1986, serving until 1999. In 1987, Engineering II (ENB) building opened. The building was formally named Glenn A. Burdick Hall after the college’s second dean.
Prior to 2016, the college was known as the Dwight Look College of Engineering. [1] The college was named after the civil engineering graduate, Harold Dwight Look, an army veteran of World War II who later founded a construction company on the U.S. Territory of Guam , where he lived for 40 years until his death on September 5, 2002, at the age ...
The college is distinguished for its mandatory co-operative education program, which was first conceived at the University of Cincinnati College of Engineering in 1906. [10] [11] [12] Students alternate between working as paid employees in design firms and attending classes, giving them experience that enables them to easily enter the workplace after graduation.