Petition for a new library
The rapid increase in student enrollment in the 1950s and 1960s meant that Dexter Library could not meeting the needs of the campus. Enrollment grew to nearly 15,000 full-time-equivalent students and the library became badly overloaded, with students crowding into reading rooms and thousands of books placed in remote storage.[2] By the 1960s, students were calling for new library spaces.
In the 1968 Master Plan, the university proposed a new library adjacent to Dexter. Working drawings for the 205,000-square-foot library building were completed by Marquis Associates of San Francisco in 1971.
However, the campus had to wait on an allocation from the state. By 1977, students joined the call for funds--a petition for state funding was signed by over 7,000 students in 1977.[3] The signatures were bound into a book and presented to the governor by ASI President Ole Meland. The library still has the oversized book in the archives. Meland presented the book to the governor on the steps of the Capitol Building in Sacramento.
Finally, in July 1977, the state legislature budgeted the allocation of construction funds, approved by Governor Edmund Brown Jr.[4] The 1977 bid for construction was 9 million.
See photos of ASI President Ole Meland with the petition for the governor