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Top Attractions in University of Arizona Museum of Art

McKale Center

McKale Memorial Center is an athletic arena located at 1756 E University Blvd on the campus of the University of Arizona in Tucson, Arizona. It is primarily used for basketball, but also features state-of-the-art physical training and therapy facilities. Its construction is marked with a large copper cap that has turned brown over time. McKale Center is home to the University of Arizona Wildcats basketball team. The arena opened in February 1973 and has an official capacity of 14,655 spectators. It hosted the 1988 Pacific-10 Conference mens basketball tournament. The McKale Center was named in honor of J.F. "Pop" McKale, athletic director and coach of all sports at the University of Arizona for a time, a figure at the university from 1914 to 1957. McKale was head basketball coach of Arizona from 1914 to 1921, where he recorded a 49-12 record. McKale was coach of the Arizona football team from 1914 to 1930, with a record of 80 wins, 32 losses and six ties. His winning percentage of .714 was one of the top in the universitys history. It was one of McKale’s tough football teams that brought the nickname of “Wildcats” to the university. In 1914, McKales football team, which had little or no standing in intercollegiate football, played Occidental College in Los Angeles, and even though they lost 14-0, a reporter for the Los Angeles Times was so inspired with the team’s desire to win that he wrote: “the Arizona men showed the fight of wildcats…". The name stuck and today the University of Arizona teams are known as the "Wildcats." The University of Arizona is in the Pacific-12 Conference of the National Collegiate Athletic Association. Following the Arizona State University game on February 26, 2000, the University of Arizona athletic department honored head coach Lute Olson with a ceremony to name the McKale Center floor, "Lute Olson Court". Then, during a memorial service in January 2001 for Olsons late wife, Bobbi, it was renamed, "Lute and Bobbi Olson Court" in recognition of the couples impact on the university and the city of Tucson. In 2002, the Eddie Lynch Athletics Pavilion, a state-of-the-art medical and strength/conditioning facility for Wildcat student athletes, was completed and opened. The pavilion was a 36,000-square-foot addition to the north end of McKale Center. The upper level has a 10,000-square-foot museum-like display area, open to the public, showcasing the history of Arizona Wildcat athletics. In terms of capacity, McKale Center is the second largest arena in the Pac-12 conference. Utahs Jon M. Huntsman Center is the largest basketball arena in the conference, but Arizona averages greater attendance.

Old Main, University of Arizona

Old Main, University of Arizona, originally known as the University of Arizona, School of Agriculture building, was the first building constructed on the University of Arizona campus in Tucson, Arizona, United States. Old Main is one of the oldest surviving educational structures in the western United States. It was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972. Designed by Phoenix architect James Miller Creighton, construction of Old Main began on October 27, 1887. The budget of $37,969 ran out before the roof was finished. When university officials discovered federal loans were available for agricultural schools, they renamed the building from the originally planned School of Mines to the School of Agriculture. Federal funding allowed completion of the building and it opened for the first class of the university on October 1, 1891. Old Main, then the only building on the campus, contained the classrooms, library, offices, and dorms. Six faculty taught 32 students in 1891. In 1919, the Alexander Berger Memorial Fountain was constructed in front of Old Main. Berger funded the project as a memorial for 13 University of Arizona students who were killed in World War I, including his nephew. Completed for $5500, the fountain was dedicated on January 31, 1920 by General John J. "Blackjack" Pershing. Due to neglect by the University, Old Main fell into disrepair and was condemned by the City of Tucson in 1938. Demolition was averted when the US Navy repaired the building in 1942, for use as a Naval Indoctrination Training School during World War II. The Navy then paid $20,000 in 1945 to turn it back into a functioning campus building. The first floor of Old Main was restored and renovated in 2008 at a cost of $4.6 million. It then housed the Universitys Office of Admissions, Center for Exploratory Students, and the Dean of Students Office. In January 2013, renovation of the entire building began — including a modernization of the interior spaces, replacing the roof, and framing the porch. It reopened before the 2014-15 academic year. In addition to extensive improvements, the Office of the President was relocated to Old Main.

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