The Radio-Television Building. Mostly the same.
Baker Center (behind it) has closed and been replaced with a new
$64-million student center (with escalators! --  the very first ones in SE Ohio.  New Yorkers may be amused.)  The old Baker Center building will be converted (or razed and rebuilt) into a new home for the
College of Communication.
Court Street. Looking towards campus.
We've removed the overhead utility wires so it looks nice and clean now.
The university now owns the Athena Theater which shows mostly art films.
It burned in the late 80s and has recently been remodeled inside. Art-Deco.
It's a triple cinema. The balcony was enclosed and made into one small theater; the downstairs was split down the middle into two long theaters.  (No more $1 midnight movies.)
Cutler Hall. The president's office.
Probably just as you remember it.
Downtown Athens as seen from the old mental hospital (The Ridges.)  The tall building to the left of the Court House cupola is the College Inn dorm (now owned by the University.)
Just across from Baron Men's Shop,
Looking through the campus gate to the downtown area.
Baron Men's Shop  (sadly, closing this month.)

On the left is Copeland Hall (The College of Business).
To the right is still the Little Professor book and magazine shop.
N & S Court St and E & W Washington St.  (The exact center of town at the court house intersection.) Notice the nice new "old" turn of the century street lights (with matching green parking meters.) We "re-did" Court Street a few years ago.
This sight wasn't here when you were here.
It used to be an old drainage ditch on south campus.
Now it's a beautiful park, looking towards Ping Center, the fairly new recreation building which replaced Grover Center (which has been remodeled).
To the far left is the edge of Clippinger Hall (The science building. They used to have the computer center there in the 70s.)
Memorial Auditorium (Mem Aud).
It's been redone inside and is really beautiful.
 Athens
Still lots of outdoor events on Court Street in spring and summer.
Here's a mini-farmers market.The real farmers market is much larger and located out on E State St.
The Convo. I think you drew a larger crowd than Hillary that day.
We're looking across a little piece of a park designed by Maya Lin who grew up in Athens when you were here (her father, Henry Lin, was Dean of Fine Arts.) She designed the Vietnam Memorial.