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. . . . - Page Four COLLEGIAN — SUMMER SESSION June 11, 1962 Committee Heads Set Edward M. Spencer, dean of the Fresno State College summer session, has announced the mem¬ bers of 11 committees who wil steer this SS through Its varlouB activities and problems. The committees: Assemblies — Art Margosian, chairman, Howard Campbell, Herman Graham. Ralph Rea, Ber¬ nard Shepard and Spencer Campus Recreation - Myron Anderson, chairman, nnd Jack Adler. Collegian — Ed 1'lston chair¬ man, Margosian. Paul Sheen an. Spencer and a representative oi Student Council. E.yci-s'- I*r<>gn.n. Excess Programs — Deryle Allen, chairman. Wayne Dlehler, James Pikes and Ennls Womack- Faculty Breakfast — Winston Strong, chairman. Mary Alexan¬ der, O. M. Braun, Marjorle Brew¬ ster, Arthur Bryon, William Dun¬ ning, Roger Ervln. Peter Fast. William Gilbert. Grady Mullen- alx, Darwin Musselman and Cbar- lene Smith. Faculty Reception — Arnold Joyal and Alvin Plerson, co-chair¬ men. George Avery. Maxima Dan- doy, John Donaldson, Blrger Johnson, Leland Mach. Elisabeth Honta, Clair Nelson, Patricia Plckford, Thelma Rae, James Rockwell, Keith Standing and Shirley Thompson. Independent Study Independent Study — Daniel Ewy, chairman, Dale Burtner, Wayne Colver. David Halmbach and Seymour Hack. Publicity —- Margosian, chair¬ man, Sheeban and Spencer. ' Registration — Campbell, chairman, H. E. Jones. Eula Les¬ lie, Margosian, Spencer, Phyllis Watts and George Waybrlght. St ad en t Advisory — Margo¬ sian, chairman,, and Anderson. The student (acuity picnic commit- te© will be announced next week. Master Plan Sees 20,000 Enrollment A revised master plan for a facility to occommodato 20.000 full time equivalent students by the year 2000. an expenditure of another t* 5.000,000 by the State of California and a change In the size of future buildings are among Ihe crystal ball,- gazer's outlook Tor the next 50 years of construc¬ tion for Fresno Stale College. Dr. Orrfn Wardle. executive dean and the man In charge of the college'_ construction pro¬ gram. Is the crystal ball gazer and he Is slightly more than op¬ timistic about the collegers fu¬ ture in the area of physical facili¬ ties. The Slate of California hn* al¬ ready expended about $30,000.- 0O0. and If Ihe next five-year plan is completed, as sttpulaled in the Trustees oT the California State College system's guide for 1962-fi7, another $10,000,000 will be poured into buildings and other facilities by ihe end of the decade. "The Trustees in estaollshlng the 20.000 full time equivalent limit on FSC's enrollment, a fig¬ ure which actually represents some 25,000 students both full and part time, have given the college planners an excellent op¬ portunity — a planner's dream— to settle down and get the master plan In shape for that maximum," Dr. Wardle says. "We at Fresno State are most fortunate In that we will have more than one year to work out a revised master plan, because our current classrooms will be suffi¬ cient to accommodate the tide of students for the next few years without having to rush construc¬ tion of additional classroom build- The capacity of our present fa¬ cilities Is 6,700 full time equiva¬ lent students, .while the current FTE enrollment Is about 4.600. "The building plans for the next five to seven years will be aimed at filling specialized de¬ mands, such as enlarging; the li¬ brary, building a baseball park 'tapin.s CAL-STATE MUFFLER SERVICE MUFFLERS • TAIL PIPES • EXHAUSTS FOR All CARS 9nCC. AUTO AIR CONDITIONING mAaJo OFF ON WWTS WITH S J. AM S-9S44 1160 aVlcsdcston. est Oily. can Your Summer Clothes ATTHt NEW StU SUVKE NORGE COIN-OPERATED atANJNG & LAUNDROMAT FOR EXAMPLE dean 10 Summer Weight Dresses for only $2°° qnd get S & H stamp* too Opart From 8 o.m. to 10 p.m. t Sunday—41 a.m. to 6 p.m. Don't judflw coin-opirat*. chy cUowing until you have inoa srSPt^po. and a physical education facility adding to the Industrial arts struc ture. constructing an auditorium air conditioning of all facilities and more than doubling the ca¬ pacity of ihe college's residence halls. Specifically the next five year plan, chronologically, as submit¬ ted to the Trustees, and the es¬ timated cost ol* some of the items is as rollows Remodeling of five rooms in ihw science building into five specialized laboratories. $230.- 00(1; an addition to the library, (1.625.000; a student personnel wing addition lo the administra¬ tion building. $900,000. a base¬ ball p.irk to accommodate 3.000 peoplf. $115,000; development of 35 acres of physical educailon facilities across Odar avenue, to be used for activity classes and including a practice field for foot¬ ball—the acreage will he planted In a type of grass to enable It to be used as a parking area when the physical education stadium Is completed —- $150,000. Air conditioning of the social science, the remainder of the speech arts and the new wing of the science building, $100,000: 300 additional parking spaces Houth of the residence halls; con¬ struction of a student union. $1,- 000,000; addition of an auditor¬ ium between the music and speech arts buildings, built to sent 2,000 people, $1,100,000. Residence halls for an addi¬ tional 600 students, $2,600,000: air conditioning of the industrial arts and the remainder of the science buildings. $100,000; an addition to the industrial arts building, $1,200,000; more air conditioning for the men's and women's gymnasium and the ag¬ riculture classroom building, $100,000. ■"" An additional 300 parking spaces, location undetermined at present; a president's residence; completion of air conditioning for all other buildings, $100,000; residence halls for 400 additional students, $1,676,000; a physical education stadium with a capa¬ city of between 20,000 and 30.- 000 persons. $1,876,000; and a student health center Infirmary, $198,000. "All of these Items will come under the scrutiny, or the depart¬ ment of finance, and some of them — especially those calling for physical education facilities will require policy decisions at higher -levels before any state ^oilege receives the go ahead on tbelr construction," Dr. Wardle said. "Including equipment, these buildings and other facilities will cost approximately $10,000,000." Dr. Wardic envisions the con¬ struction of a large humanities classroom building — noting that it is the only division on campus which does not have a "home" building as such; the future buildings will no longer be the "low" one-story or two-story type of building Been on the campus today. The veteran administrator be¬ lieves that the planned additions for resilience halls will no doubt shoot space. up skywards to cons* Dr. Wardle sees the necessity of moving east across Maple within tin- next two decolles for can.structlon of additional class¬ room buildings forcing the divi¬ sion of agriculture to shift cer¬ tain crops to other parts of Its some 1.200 acres. These build¬ ings will come arter all possible additions are made to those exist¬ ing on the present ISO-acre aca¬ demic site. He forsees additions to almost every classroom build¬ ing. He happily stales that addi¬ tional attempts will be made to "beauty the campus." Dr. Wardle notes here that the Trustees have gone on record in favor of mak¬ ing the state colleges aesthetic¬ ally acceptable and appealing to students and to the community which supports the college. Among present Ideas are those to better Identify and beautify a main entrance to campus (wheth¬ er it be at Maple or Barton); the addition of a carillon (bells); construction of water fountains at various places on the campus — with many of these items planned to reduce the Impact of the present water tower on the college's architectural scene. SS Services Announced (Continued from Page 1) brary hours will be 8 AM to 3 PM Monday through Friday with the building being closed on Sat¬ urday. Cafeteria hours will be from 7 to 10:16 AM for breakfast, 11 AM to 1:30 I'M for lunch, and 5 to fi PM for dinner Monday through Friday with the excep¬ tion that the cafeteria will not be open on Friday nights. The snack bar will be open from 10:15 AM to 3 PM Monday through Friday. The Roundup will be open from 10 AM to 5:15 PM Monday through Friday during .he regu¬ lar session. Only the staff dining room will remain open during the post-session; snack bar service will be offered there from 8 AM to 1 PM Mopday through Friday. Tho bookstore will be open from 7:30 AM to 2 PM from Monday through Friday through¬ out the regular session. The only exception will be Friday, June 29, when the bookstore will close at 9 AM for Inventory. During post-session, the book¬ store will remain open during the first week (July 23-27) from 8 AM to 2:30 PM. For the rest of the session, the bookstore will be open only on Mondays — from 9:30 to 11:30 AM July 30 and August 13, and from 10 AM to 2 PM on August 6. Bobs to stenographer: "Con¬ gratulations. MlSS Hlpkins. Thil¬ ls the earliest you've been late." You can't fool al) of the people all of the time—some ara fooling you. PIZZA SPECIAL Doily 'til 4 a.m. — wllh my.ry rim al regular pile*, w# istrro) cottaa, saJod or soup ot no tt-tra charge.. (Oom not apply es orden "lo go") SPAGHETTI SPECIAL Sundoy Ihra Thursdays only. SPAGHETTI Cm\ —AIL YOU CAN EAT (nmmWtu Iwo moal- njm fa-lli, br*od & butter, salad OT soup and I coHoe.) ■ PARADISE PIZZA Op.ii Bollyat 11:30 AM. — Sundays 4:00 P.M. 469S. N. SLACKSTONE BA 9-0798 CEDAR & SHIELDS SHOPPING CENTER FSC's CLOSEST COMPLETE SHOPPING AREA (2 milts away) MANOR DRUGS For your complete Drug mi Cosmetic needs 9 SERVICE BA 9-6575 9S.r»nOHk»mntn — ffau7 jurtuamk
Object Description
Title | 1962_06 The Daily Collegian June 1962 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1962 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Description
Title | June 11, 1962, Page 4 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1962 |
Description | Daily (except weedends) during the school year. Microfilm. Palo Alto, Calif.: BMI Library Microfilms, 1986- microfilm reels; 35 mm. Vol.1, no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- |
Subject | California State University, Fresno -- Periodicals. |
Contributors | Associated Students of Fresno State. |
Coverage | Vol.1 no.1 (Feb 8, 1922)- to present |
Format | Microfilm reels, 35 mm. |
Technical Information | Scanned at 600 dpi; TIFF; Microfilm ScanPro 2000 "E-image data" |
Language | eng |
Full-Text-Search | . . . . - Page Four COLLEGIAN — SUMMER SESSION June 11, 1962 Committee Heads Set Edward M. Spencer, dean of the Fresno State College summer session, has announced the mem¬ bers of 11 committees who wil steer this SS through Its varlouB activities and problems. The committees: Assemblies — Art Margosian, chairman, Howard Campbell, Herman Graham. Ralph Rea, Ber¬ nard Shepard and Spencer Campus Recreation - Myron Anderson, chairman, nnd Jack Adler. Collegian — Ed 1'lston chair¬ man, Margosian. Paul Sheen an. Spencer and a representative oi Student Council. E.yci-s'- I*r<>gn.n. Excess Programs — Deryle Allen, chairman. Wayne Dlehler, James Pikes and Ennls Womack- Faculty Breakfast — Winston Strong, chairman. Mary Alexan¬ der, O. M. Braun, Marjorle Brew¬ ster, Arthur Bryon, William Dun¬ ning, Roger Ervln. Peter Fast. William Gilbert. Grady Mullen- alx, Darwin Musselman and Cbar- lene Smith. Faculty Reception — Arnold Joyal and Alvin Plerson, co-chair¬ men. George Avery. Maxima Dan- doy, John Donaldson, Blrger Johnson, Leland Mach. Elisabeth Honta, Clair Nelson, Patricia Plckford, Thelma Rae, James Rockwell, Keith Standing and Shirley Thompson. Independent Study Independent Study — Daniel Ewy, chairman, Dale Burtner, Wayne Colver. David Halmbach and Seymour Hack. Publicity —- Margosian, chair¬ man, Sheeban and Spencer. ' Registration — Campbell, chairman, H. E. Jones. Eula Les¬ lie, Margosian, Spencer, Phyllis Watts and George Waybrlght. St ad en t Advisory — Margo¬ sian, chairman,, and Anderson. The student (acuity picnic commit- te© will be announced next week. Master Plan Sees 20,000 Enrollment A revised master plan for a facility to occommodato 20.000 full time equivalent students by the year 2000. an expenditure of another t* 5.000,000 by the State of California and a change In the size of future buildings are among Ihe crystal ball,- gazer's outlook Tor the next 50 years of construc¬ tion for Fresno Stale College. Dr. Orrfn Wardle. executive dean and the man In charge of the college'_ construction pro¬ gram. Is the crystal ball gazer and he Is slightly more than op¬ timistic about the collegers fu¬ ture in the area of physical facili¬ ties. The Slate of California hn* al¬ ready expended about $30,000.- 0O0. and If Ihe next five-year plan is completed, as sttpulaled in the Trustees oT the California State College system's guide for 1962-fi7, another $10,000,000 will be poured into buildings and other facilities by ihe end of the decade. "The Trustees in estaollshlng the 20.000 full time equivalent limit on FSC's enrollment, a fig¬ ure which actually represents some 25,000 students both full and part time, have given the college planners an excellent op¬ portunity — a planner's dream— to settle down and get the master plan In shape for that maximum," Dr. Wardle says. "We at Fresno State are most fortunate In that we will have more than one year to work out a revised master plan, because our current classrooms will be suffi¬ cient to accommodate the tide of students for the next few years without having to rush construc¬ tion of additional classroom build- The capacity of our present fa¬ cilities Is 6,700 full time equiva¬ lent students, .while the current FTE enrollment Is about 4.600. "The building plans for the next five to seven years will be aimed at filling specialized de¬ mands, such as enlarging; the li¬ brary, building a baseball park 'tapin.s CAL-STATE MUFFLER SERVICE MUFFLERS • TAIL PIPES • EXHAUSTS FOR All CARS 9nCC. AUTO AIR CONDITIONING mAaJo OFF ON WWTS WITH S J. AM S-9S44 1160 aVlcsdcston. est Oily. can Your Summer Clothes ATTHt NEW StU SUVKE NORGE COIN-OPERATED atANJNG & LAUNDROMAT FOR EXAMPLE dean 10 Summer Weight Dresses for only $2°° qnd get S & H stamp* too Opart From 8 o.m. to 10 p.m. t Sunday—41 a.m. to 6 p.m. Don't judflw coin-opirat*. chy cUowing until you have inoa srSPt^po. and a physical education facility adding to the Industrial arts struc ture. constructing an auditorium air conditioning of all facilities and more than doubling the ca¬ pacity of ihe college's residence halls. Specifically the next five year plan, chronologically, as submit¬ ted to the Trustees, and the es¬ timated cost ol* some of the items is as rollows Remodeling of five rooms in ihw science building into five specialized laboratories. $230.- 00(1; an addition to the library, (1.625.000; a student personnel wing addition lo the administra¬ tion building. $900,000. a base¬ ball p.irk to accommodate 3.000 peoplf. $115,000; development of 35 acres of physical educailon facilities across Odar avenue, to be used for activity classes and including a practice field for foot¬ ball—the acreage will he planted In a type of grass to enable It to be used as a parking area when the physical education stadium Is completed —- $150,000. Air conditioning of the social science, the remainder of the speech arts and the new wing of the science building, $100,000: 300 additional parking spaces Houth of the residence halls; con¬ struction of a student union. $1,- 000,000; addition of an auditor¬ ium between the music and speech arts buildings, built to sent 2,000 people, $1,100,000. Residence halls for an addi¬ tional 600 students, $2,600,000: air conditioning of the industrial arts and the remainder of the science buildings. $100,000; an addition to the industrial arts building, $1,200,000; more air conditioning for the men's and women's gymnasium and the ag¬ riculture classroom building, $100,000. ■"" An additional 300 parking spaces, location undetermined at present; a president's residence; completion of air conditioning for all other buildings, $100,000; residence halls for 400 additional students, $1,676,000; a physical education stadium with a capa¬ city of between 20,000 and 30.- 000 persons. $1,876,000; and a student health center Infirmary, $198,000. "All of these Items will come under the scrutiny, or the depart¬ ment of finance, and some of them — especially those calling for physical education facilities will require policy decisions at higher -levels before any state ^oilege receives the go ahead on tbelr construction," Dr. Wardle said. "Including equipment, these buildings and other facilities will cost approximately $10,000,000." Dr. Wardic envisions the con¬ struction of a large humanities classroom building — noting that it is the only division on campus which does not have a "home" building as such; the future buildings will no longer be the "low" one-story or two-story type of building Been on the campus today. The veteran administrator be¬ lieves that the planned additions for resilience halls will no doubt shoot space. up skywards to cons* Dr. Wardle sees the necessity of moving east across Maple within tin- next two decolles for can.structlon of additional class¬ room buildings forcing the divi¬ sion of agriculture to shift cer¬ tain crops to other parts of Its some 1.200 acres. These build¬ ings will come arter all possible additions are made to those exist¬ ing on the present ISO-acre aca¬ demic site. He forsees additions to almost every classroom build¬ ing. He happily stales that addi¬ tional attempts will be made to "beauty the campus." Dr. Wardle notes here that the Trustees have gone on record in favor of mak¬ ing the state colleges aesthetic¬ ally acceptable and appealing to students and to the community which supports the college. Among present Ideas are those to better Identify and beautify a main entrance to campus (wheth¬ er it be at Maple or Barton); the addition of a carillon (bells); construction of water fountains at various places on the campus — with many of these items planned to reduce the Impact of the present water tower on the college's architectural scene. SS Services Announced (Continued from Page 1) brary hours will be 8 AM to 3 PM Monday through Friday with the building being closed on Sat¬ urday. Cafeteria hours will be from 7 to 10:16 AM for breakfast, 11 AM to 1:30 I'M for lunch, and 5 to fi PM for dinner Monday through Friday with the excep¬ tion that the cafeteria will not be open on Friday nights. The snack bar will be open from 10:15 AM to 3 PM Monday through Friday. The Roundup will be open from 10 AM to 5:15 PM Monday through Friday during .he regu¬ lar session. Only the staff dining room will remain open during the post-session; snack bar service will be offered there from 8 AM to 1 PM Mopday through Friday. Tho bookstore will be open from 7:30 AM to 2 PM from Monday through Friday through¬ out the regular session. The only exception will be Friday, June 29, when the bookstore will close at 9 AM for Inventory. During post-session, the book¬ store will remain open during the first week (July 23-27) from 8 AM to 2:30 PM. For the rest of the session, the bookstore will be open only on Mondays — from 9:30 to 11:30 AM July 30 and August 13, and from 10 AM to 2 PM on August 6. Bobs to stenographer: "Con¬ gratulations. MlSS Hlpkins. Thil¬ ls the earliest you've been late." You can't fool al) of the people all of the time—some ara fooling you. PIZZA SPECIAL Doily 'til 4 a.m. — wllh my.ry rim al regular pile*, w# istrro) cottaa, saJod or soup ot no tt-tra charge.. (Oom not apply es orden "lo go") SPAGHETTI SPECIAL Sundoy Ihra Thursdays only. SPAGHETTI Cm\ —AIL YOU CAN EAT (nmmWtu Iwo moal- njm fa-lli, br*od & butter, salad OT soup and I coHoe.) ■ PARADISE PIZZA Op.ii Bollyat 11:30 AM. — Sundays 4:00 P.M. 469S. N. SLACKSTONE BA 9-0798 CEDAR & SHIELDS SHOPPING CENTER FSC's CLOSEST COMPLETE SHOPPING AREA (2 milts away) MANOR DRUGS For your complete Drug mi Cosmetic needs 9 SERVICE BA 9-6575 9S.r»nOHk»mntn — ffau7 jurtuamk |