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THE DAILY periodicals DE| colleGtan FRESNO STATE COLLEGE Special Registration Edition Monday, September 13, 1965 University Type System Adopted first, but Fresno State College tlonal change. During the summer, tho chan¬ cellor of the California State Col¬ leges approved reorganization of FSC along unlvorslty lines and tho appointment of deans of the schools and two vice presidents. Dr. Frederic W. Noss, presi¬ dent of FSC, regards the col¬ lege's reorganization plan as a •significant mllostono In tho his¬ tory of tho college.* Under the new plan, originally submitted by the Academic Re¬ organization Committee, the di¬ visional structure with six aca¬ demic schools and ono division will bo roplaced. Under the now plan, the largest school will bo tho School of Arts and Sciences, It will be composed of tho fol¬ lowing dopartments: Anthropology-sociology, art, biology, chemistry, economics, English, foreign language, ge¬ ography, geology, history, mathematics, music, philosophy, physical education-recreation, physics, political science, psy¬ chology and speech arts. Other schools and their dopart- Agriculruro--agrlculturo me- Ness Gives Freshman Camp Key Word Reservations Open In a special pro-somester ln- torvlew, Dr. Noss said both stu¬ dents and faculty must strlvo to further develop the reorganlza- He termed tho recently passed faculty constitution a "model of Its kind" and expressed tho hopo that tho faculty would approve a sound set of working oylaws for tho constitution this yoar. Dr. Ness said he hopes a stu¬ dent-faculty committee working on a revision of tho student con¬ stitution also can complete Its work this Ho s; i M-i- lng the faculty of an organizational under tho recent reorganization of FSC t Dr. Ness termed tho reorgan¬ ization a "milestone in the history of the college.* He said the new system will result In greator administrative efficiency and will allow for a more creative and dynamic pro¬ gram of dovolopment. Camp Sept. 18-19. Saturday at 8 AM, a bus will leave tho collego Religious Cen¬ ter for Camp Gaines, Lake Se- Tho group will bo composed of freshmen, upper classman, and faculty members. There will bo Parking Permits Now On Sale Parking decals for the Fall So- mostor aro now on sale in Admin¬ istration 125. Persons who wish to park on campus must have a decal displayed on tho lower right hand area of their windshield. Enforcement of paid parking regulations will go into effect Monday, the first day of instruc¬ tion, at 8 Ail. Copies of the Fresno State Col¬ lege Parking Regulations are available li upon roquof Frosh Class Officer Petitions Available Petitions now are available in the Student Activities Office, Ad¬ ministration 120, for freshman election is scheduled for Oct. 13, Offices to bo filled are presi¬ dent, vice-president, socretary- Deadllne tor submitting peti¬ tions Is Sept. 29. A meeting of all the candidates will be held Sept. 30. speeches, panels, year's camp theme, sensitivity and understanding. The guest speaker Dr. Harrison E. Madden, associate professor of psy¬ chology will talk on sensitivity. for swimming, volleyball, horso- shoes, and just plain lounging. A Saturday night campflra will bo climaxed by a moonlight hike around tho lake to Redwood Camp General chairmen for the out¬ ing are Cheryl Brown and Don Robert Knudson, associate ac¬ tivities adviser, and Tom Llnde- mann, of tho College Religious Center, will bo tho faculty ad- Staff members will Include: Mary Lund, Linn Green, Charles Thompson, Pamela Dugan, Alice Sasaki, Sally Freeman, Ernlo Kinney, Joan PCuoger, Pat Prewitt, Don Bruland, Syd Jacob- sen, Dora Mlsslrllan.Gary Yam- amoto, Linda Sodorstrom. Don Zody, Tom McLaughlin, Linda Schmidt, Carol Baily, Dud¬ ley Drake, Jean Thomas, Dick Ramage, Lenora Rudholm, and Joonno Portlock. Camp costs will be $9.50 and will cover transportation. Insur¬ ance, food, and a cabin. Students wishing further Infor¬ mation should contact the College Religious Center, 2311 E. Shaw Admissions Expected To Top 9,000 More than 9,000 studonts aro xpected to enroll at Fresno tato College for the upcoming Dr. Harry E. Jones, assoclato ean of studonts for admissions nd records, said ho expects ,455 students will enroll on tho SC campus and an additional 50 at the Bakorsflold Cantor. The predicted enrollment rep- Profosslonal Studies—aero¬ space studios, criminology, health education, home eco¬ nomics, industrial arts, Journal- Ism and nursing, Tho schools of business, edu¬ cation and engineering are study¬ ing departmentalization in their Tho reorganization commit¬ tee, according to Dr. Noss, was composed of both faculty and ad¬ it. Dr. president, as- roglstorod : o collego M964. The fall 1964 total Included 7,986 students at FSC and 549 at tho Bakersfleld Center. FSC's enrollment last fall In¬ cluded 0,747 undergraduates and 239 graduate students. Tho Bakersfleld Center had 298 un¬ dergraduates and 251 graduate students last fall. Registration will begin Thurs¬ day at 8 AM tor seniors and graduates with priority cards and will continue through Friday In tho Men's Gymnasium. A complete schedule of regis¬ tration times Is printed on tho front cover of the Courses for the fall Howdy Dance, Picnic Slated Two social functlo ns especial- ly for freshmen and A new student picnic and hootenanny will be h aid In O-Neil Park, at the corner of Barstow and Maple avenues Wednesday The traditional Howdy Dance for both freshmen and transfers will be held Friday from 8:30 to 11:30 PM In the Quad area be¬ tween the Library and Education- Psychology Building. tho position Harold Walke: ed as an FSC sumos tho post of president. Tho now schools and tho deans--who aro appointed School of agricultural, Lloyd Dowler, head of the division of agriculture; School of Arts and Sciences, Herbert H. Wheaton, the acting dean of the college; School of Business, Dr.McKec lneos; School of Education, Dr. Richard Sparks, head of the di¬ vision of education. School of Engineering, Thomas H. Evans, head of tho division of engineering; School of Pro¬ fessional Studies, Dr. Horace Schorllng, head of the division of applied arts; and School of Grad¬ uate Studies, Dr. Phyllis Welch Watts, dean of graduate studies. Thomas Brigham, now the chairman of the department of so¬ cial work, becomes tho head of tho division of social work. •The principle task of these officers (the deans), initially, wlU be to wort out with their facultlos the organizational structure of their respective schools,* Dr. Ness said. •One of the oarly concerns, of course, will be to evolve an ef¬ fective consultative procedure within the school for the selec¬ tion of a permanent dean to take office at tho conclusion of the transition yoar,* according to Already existing positions of Doan of Educational Services and Summer Sessions, Dean of Stu¬ dents and Executive Dean will not be affected by the reorganlxaUnc. Under the college's tormar organ I rational plan, the acade role, structure was composed ofJQ divisions. ofll
Object Description
Title | 1965_09 The Daily Collegian September 1965 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1965 |
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 | Sept 13, 1965 Pg. 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1965 |
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 | THE DAILY periodicals DE| colleGtan FRESNO STATE COLLEGE Special Registration Edition Monday, September 13, 1965 University Type System Adopted first, but Fresno State College tlonal change. During the summer, tho chan¬ cellor of the California State Col¬ leges approved reorganization of FSC along unlvorslty lines and tho appointment of deans of the schools and two vice presidents. Dr. Frederic W. Noss, presi¬ dent of FSC, regards the col¬ lege's reorganization plan as a •significant mllostono In tho his¬ tory of tho college.* Under the new plan, originally submitted by the Academic Re¬ organization Committee, the di¬ visional structure with six aca¬ demic schools and ono division will bo roplaced. Under the now plan, the largest school will bo tho School of Arts and Sciences, It will be composed of tho fol¬ lowing dopartments: Anthropology-sociology, art, biology, chemistry, economics, English, foreign language, ge¬ ography, geology, history, mathematics, music, philosophy, physical education-recreation, physics, political science, psy¬ chology and speech arts. Other schools and their dopart- Agriculruro--agrlculturo me- Ness Gives Freshman Camp Key Word Reservations Open In a special pro-somester ln- torvlew, Dr. Noss said both stu¬ dents and faculty must strlvo to further develop the reorganlza- He termed tho recently passed faculty constitution a "model of Its kind" and expressed tho hopo that tho faculty would approve a sound set of working oylaws for tho constitution this yoar. Dr. Ness said he hopes a stu¬ dent-faculty committee working on a revision of tho student con¬ stitution also can complete Its work this Ho s; i M-i- lng the faculty of an organizational under tho recent reorganization of FSC t Dr. Ness termed tho reorgan¬ ization a "milestone in the history of the college.* He said the new system will result In greator administrative efficiency and will allow for a more creative and dynamic pro¬ gram of dovolopment. Camp Sept. 18-19. Saturday at 8 AM, a bus will leave tho collego Religious Cen¬ ter for Camp Gaines, Lake Se- Tho group will bo composed of freshmen, upper classman, and faculty members. There will bo Parking Permits Now On Sale Parking decals for the Fall So- mostor aro now on sale in Admin¬ istration 125. Persons who wish to park on campus must have a decal displayed on tho lower right hand area of their windshield. Enforcement of paid parking regulations will go into effect Monday, the first day of instruc¬ tion, at 8 Ail. Copies of the Fresno State Col¬ lege Parking Regulations are available li upon roquof Frosh Class Officer Petitions Available Petitions now are available in the Student Activities Office, Ad¬ ministration 120, for freshman election is scheduled for Oct. 13, Offices to bo filled are presi¬ dent, vice-president, socretary- Deadllne tor submitting peti¬ tions Is Sept. 29. A meeting of all the candidates will be held Sept. 30. speeches, panels, year's camp theme, sensitivity and understanding. The guest speaker Dr. Harrison E. Madden, associate professor of psy¬ chology will talk on sensitivity. for swimming, volleyball, horso- shoes, and just plain lounging. A Saturday night campflra will bo climaxed by a moonlight hike around tho lake to Redwood Camp General chairmen for the out¬ ing are Cheryl Brown and Don Robert Knudson, associate ac¬ tivities adviser, and Tom Llnde- mann, of tho College Religious Center, will bo tho faculty ad- Staff members will Include: Mary Lund, Linn Green, Charles Thompson, Pamela Dugan, Alice Sasaki, Sally Freeman, Ernlo Kinney, Joan PCuoger, Pat Prewitt, Don Bruland, Syd Jacob- sen, Dora Mlsslrllan.Gary Yam- amoto, Linda Sodorstrom. Don Zody, Tom McLaughlin, Linda Schmidt, Carol Baily, Dud¬ ley Drake, Jean Thomas, Dick Ramage, Lenora Rudholm, and Joonno Portlock. Camp costs will be $9.50 and will cover transportation. Insur¬ ance, food, and a cabin. Students wishing further Infor¬ mation should contact the College Religious Center, 2311 E. Shaw Admissions Expected To Top 9,000 More than 9,000 studonts aro xpected to enroll at Fresno tato College for the upcoming Dr. Harry E. Jones, assoclato ean of studonts for admissions nd records, said ho expects ,455 students will enroll on tho SC campus and an additional 50 at the Bakorsflold Cantor. The predicted enrollment rep- Profosslonal Studies—aero¬ space studios, criminology, health education, home eco¬ nomics, industrial arts, Journal- Ism and nursing, Tho schools of business, edu¬ cation and engineering are study¬ ing departmentalization in their Tho reorganization commit¬ tee, according to Dr. Noss, was composed of both faculty and ad¬ it. Dr. president, as- roglstorod : o collego M964. The fall 1964 total Included 7,986 students at FSC and 549 at tho Bakersfleld Center. FSC's enrollment last fall In¬ cluded 0,747 undergraduates and 239 graduate students. Tho Bakersfleld Center had 298 un¬ dergraduates and 251 graduate students last fall. Registration will begin Thurs¬ day at 8 AM tor seniors and graduates with priority cards and will continue through Friday In tho Men's Gymnasium. A complete schedule of regis¬ tration times Is printed on tho front cover of the Courses for the fall Howdy Dance, Picnic Slated Two social functlo ns especial- ly for freshmen and A new student picnic and hootenanny will be h aid In O-Neil Park, at the corner of Barstow and Maple avenues Wednesday The traditional Howdy Dance for both freshmen and transfers will be held Friday from 8:30 to 11:30 PM In the Quad area be¬ tween the Library and Education- Psychology Building. tho position Harold Walke: ed as an FSC sumos tho post of president. Tho now schools and tho deans--who aro appointed School of agricultural, Lloyd Dowler, head of the division of agriculture; School of Arts and Sciences, Herbert H. Wheaton, the acting dean of the college; School of Business, Dr.McKec lneos; School of Education, Dr. Richard Sparks, head of the di¬ vision of education. School of Engineering, Thomas H. Evans, head of tho division of engineering; School of Pro¬ fessional Studies, Dr. Horace Schorllng, head of the division of applied arts; and School of Grad¬ uate Studies, Dr. Phyllis Welch Watts, dean of graduate studies. Thomas Brigham, now the chairman of the department of so¬ cial work, becomes tho head of tho division of social work. •The principle task of these officers (the deans), initially, wlU be to wort out with their facultlos the organizational structure of their respective schools,* Dr. Ness said. •One of the oarly concerns, of course, will be to evolve an ef¬ fective consultative procedure within the school for the selec¬ tion of a permanent dean to take office at tho conclusion of the transition yoar,* according to Already existing positions of Doan of Educational Services and Summer Sessions, Dean of Stu¬ dents and Executive Dean will not be affected by the reorganlxaUnc. Under the college's tormar organ I rational plan, the acade role, structure was composed ofJQ divisions. ofll |