This is just continuing the series taken last weekend. Many more to go... this is just an area in and around the Science Quadrangle. TTU has a HUGE campus.
The last two pics bring waves of nostalgia for me, because the area used to be part of Agricultural Engineering and I worked there once, as a part-timer, under Dr. Ulich. Whatever happened to Dr. Ulich? Nice guy. He would be retired, surely. I enjoyed the work. Now, I think these buildings just seem to be used for storage.
Grampus exists, but different things are called that. For instance, Orca whales have been called Grampus. Not likely to find an Orca hanging out at TTU though. Various naval vessels have been named Grampus but that won't get us anywhere. So how do we complete the picture? See below:
This is the Texas Tech Biology building. If we take one of the accepted "Grampus" defintions, that of bottfly larva, this is the place where we are most likely to find the Campus Grampus. And you thought I was being funny. By the way, a very strange thing and sad thing happened at the Biology Building when it was under construction, in the days when I still lived in a dorm on campus. I walked right by the scene that night but didn't find out until later what had happened. It was after dark. I was returning to my dorm from the library and I passed a knot of students outside the fence that surrounded the construction zone. They were talking in low voices and waving flashlights. They were gathered around something on the ground. That something was a dead body, a student from a nearby dorm who had leaped to his death from the top floor of the not quite completed Biology Building. Witnesses reported that the student was speaking to them in the hallway of his dorm, seemingly normal, before he turned and ran. He was followed. He was seen to enter the construction site through a breach in the fence. He ran up concrete steps in a stairway that had, as yet, no enclosing walls-- the entire building was still a skeleton, with no external walls. When he reached the top he didn't hesitate. He hurled himself into the air and fell to his death outside the fence, onto a grassy area outside his dorm. Those dorms were demolished several years ago. I think it was the Carpenter-Wells complex if memory serves. Strange incident! Hard to forget something like that. I think at that time I was in Thompson Hall...
Now it is time to post our harvest of conventional color photos, taken on the TTU campus at the very start of the Fall Semester, 2014. The dorms were opening and students were moving in, according to schedule... these pics will go up over a period of several days.
There is the campus, but where is the Grampus? Every campus should have Grampus, in some form, I think. More on this later...
My wife and I made a photo expedition to the TTU campus this past weekend and I'll post all the pics here eventually, but first I want to put up an impressionistic harvest of black and white images. Not all of these were from TTU. If I can't get them all in one post I'll do the rest in another. The kids were moving into the dorm rooms when we were there. Kind of an exciting time here in Lubbock, as another semester begins, and the schools prepare for a new school year. TTU sports promise to be bigger than usual this year, and of course, high school football rivalries go on and on... it's those Friday night lights.
Well, I'm amazed! They all went up! Next time I'll do the plain color pics...
I'm trying to complete the batch taken several weekends ago. My wife and I want to get more. We like to take photos in the parts of town most residents don't see, since they spend all of their time in the more prosperous parts of town. But those prosperous areas seem to us to be overcrowded and sterile.
This is where Lubbock has stashed its homeless, out of sight and out of mind. There is a tent city behind the fence. Looks like they've got a crematorium handy, doesn't it? I suspect that will be the FINAL SOLUTION...
Sometimes in Lubbock you see something that appears natural but on close inspection it turns out to be a pile of broken, bulldozed, concrete scrap, overgrown with weeds and scraggly, drought-ravaged trees. And you think, well, that's sort of natural. It doesn't look TOO bad.