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This stretch of buildings provides a great route for staying warm in cold weather, and I always bump into at least one person I know here. I really like that so many student services are close together: I can pop into the bursar's office or check my course schedule just about anytime. And since it hooks up to the Campus Center, it's my route of choice when I'm heading from the computer lab to meet my friends for lunch.
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The stretch of buildings that spans (from west to east) Job, Friends, and Textor Halls, as well as the Muller Faculty Center, comprises the academic and administrative backbone of Ithaca's campus. Job Hall serves as home to the Offices of the President, the Bursar, the Registrar, the Provost, and two vice presidents. Also in Job is the Office of Admission, which coordinates campus tours, both actual and virtual.
Friends Hall contains a number of classrooms, two computer labs, a conference room, and a specially equipped classroom for intensive interactive learning. Constructed in 1961, Friends Hall was our first classroom building and was named in honor of the Friends of Ithaca College, a group of community leaders whose generous financial contributions helped make possible our move from downtown Ithaca to the South Hill campus.
Textor Hall has enhanced classrooms outfitted with audio, visual, and Internet technology that professors use to incorporate multimedia elements into their courses. This technology also serves well in the evenings, when the Student Activities Board presents recently released films at a fraction of movie theater prices.
Muller Faculty Center is home to the dean's office for the School of Humanities and Sciences and is a hub of activity for many of the school's faculty. The building also houses Information Technology Services (ITS), the honors program, and the department offices for politics, education, English, history, modern languages and literature, sociology, and speech communication.
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