september 21, 1965 staff bulletin

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BULLE California State Polytechnic 'RICHAI'J>SON, l-llliTSON 11 0UTSTA!-1DINC TEACHERS" For' . 1964-65 A highlight during the annual Fall Staff Conference held last ueek on campus was pre- sentation of " outstanding teacher" auards to two long-time members of the faculty. Recipients of the college's second annual awards honoring outstanding performances by its teaching staff uere Dr. Milo E. Uhitson, head of the Hathematics Department, and Joy 0. Richardson, a member of the Hechanical Engineering Department faculty. Their awards, each in the amount of $100, were made possible by a grant to Cal Poly from the Sears ' Roebuck Foundation. The presentations, made by President Julian A. McPhee, who was assisted by Robert Holmquist, chairman of the selection committee, preceeded President McPhee's speech to the faculty, entitled, :. Ny Hope for Cal Poly's Future. " Commenting on the two-year-old program for honoring outstanding teaching among members of its faculty, the president complimented the committee which handled the selections on its work. This year's recipients were selected from a group of 19 instructors, nominated by their students, fellow teachers, and former students. R ichardson received his BS degree from the University of Nebraska in 1940 and his Master of Engineering degree from Yale University tuo years later. Since then, he ha& been an instructor at Yale; New Haven Junior College, New Haven, Conn.; and at Orland High School, Orland, Calif. He became a member of the Cal Poly faculty in 1948. He has considerable experience in business and industry and is a registered professional engineer in the State of California. Dr. l·lhitson received his Bachelor of Philosophy degree from Uashburn College in 1937, HA degree from George Peabody College for Teachers three years later, and his Doctor of Education degree from the University of Southern California in 1949. At Cal Poly since 1947, he was a public school teacher and administrator in the State of Kansas, an officer in the US Navy, and a lecturer in mathematics at USC prior to joining the college's faculty. ADDITIONAL EDITIONS OF 11 C S C REVIEH'' DISTRIBUTED Copies of the June and August editions of The California State Colleges Revie\'7 are being distributed as attachments to this issue of Staff Bulletin. The June edition was overlooked during preparation of last week's issue, that for August ar- . rived on campus late last week. A monthly publication prepared by the office of CSC Chancellor Glenn s. Dumke, the Review is designed to help keep members of faculties of the various California State Colleges informed of events and accomplishments of their colleagues at other campuses in the college system. -

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Page 1: September 21, 1965 Staff Bulletin

BULLE California State Polytechnic

RICHAIJgtSON l-llliTSON l~IED 110UTSTA-1DINC TEACHERS For 1964-65

A highlight during the annual Fall Staff Conference held last ueek on campus was preshysentation of outstanding teacher auards to two long-time members of the faculty Recipients of the colleges second annual awards honoring outstanding performances by its teaching staff uere Dr Milo E Uhitson head of the Hathematics Department and Joy 0 Richardson a member of the Hechanical Engineering Department faculty Their awards each in the amount of $100 were made possible by a grant to Cal Poly from the Sears Roebuck Foundation

The presentations made by President Julian A McPhee who was assisted by Robert Holmquist chairman of the selection committee preceeded President McPhees speech to the faculty entitled Ny Hope for Cal Polys Future Commenting on the college ~ two-year-old program for honoring outstanding teaching among members of its faculty the president complimented the committee which handled the selections on its work This years recipients were selected from a group of 19 instructors nominated by their students fellow teachers and former students

Richardson received his BS degree from the University of Nebraska in 1940 and his Master of Engineering degree from Yale University tuo years later Since then he haamp been an instructor at Yale New Haven Junior College New Haven Conn and at Orland High School Orland Calif He became a member of the Cal Poly faculty in 1948 He has considerable experience in business and industry and is a registered professional engineer in the State of California

Dr lmiddotlhitson received his Bachelor of Philosophy degree from Uashburn College in 1937 HA degree from George Peabody College for Teachers three years later and his Doctor of Education degree from the University of Southern California in 1949 At Cal Poly since 1947 he was a public school teacher and administrator in the State of Kansas an officer in the US Navy and a lecturer in mathematics at USC prior to joining the colleges faculty

ADDITIONAL EDITIONS OF 11C S C REVIEH DISTRIBUTED

Copies of the June and August editions of The California State Colleges Revie7 are being distributed as attachments to this issue of Staff Bulletin The June edition was overlooked during preparation of last weeks issue wh~le that for August ar- rived on campus late last week

A monthly publication prepared by the office of CSC Chancellor Glenn s Dumke the Review is designed to help keep members of faculties of the various California State Colleges informed of events and accomplishments of their colleagues at other campuses in the college system

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-2-

SALE OF PAJUING PERMITS FOR FALL QUARTER CONTINUES

Sale of parking permits for the Fall Quarter which began yesterday (Monday September 20) is continuing at the Cashiers Uindow located on the first floot of the Adminisshytration Building Price for the permit which allous members of the faculty and staff of the college to park in marked staff parking spaces on campus is $900 per quarter

The need for having permits from previous quarters removed from vehic1es continues Both campus parking regulations and the California Motor Vehicle Code bear on this matter Campus regulations call for removal of all permits not currently in effect while the MVC requires that all decals of this nature be confined to the sevenbullinchshysquare area in the lcn~er right-hand corner of the windshield surface

Enforcement of parking regulations for the quarter began with the start o~ classes yesterday (Monday September 20) morning and will continue through end of final examinations

STAFF CLUB SCHEDULES COFFEE HOUR FOR NEW OLD MEMBERS OCTOBER 3

the patio of the Motel Inn in San Luis Obispo will be site of the Staff Clubs annual coffee hour for new and old members Sunday October 3 from 300 to 500 pm Neu members of the colleges staff and faculty are especially invited to attend and old members are urged to be on middot hand to ivelcome them A table of snacks with coffee and tea will be available to help stave off hunger

REVIEV1 OF TELL ME JOSEPHINE PLANHED FOR SEPTEMBER 28

Pearl Turner curriculum librarian on the college Librarys staff will revielt7 Tell Me Josephine edited by Barbara Hall when the Books at High Noon luncheon series conshy

tinues next Tuesday (September 28) beginning at noon in the Staff Dining Room

Tell Me Josephine is a personal middotadvice column which appears in the Central Africa Mail a reekly newspaper published in Zambia (formerly Northern Rhodesia) The editor of this book has selected letters which give a picture of everyday life of the African and his difficulties Iiiss Turner 1 s review should give an interesting picture of the world in which the Dr Robert Motts the Philip Bromleys and the George Furimskys lived while they were on the faculty of Evelyn Hone College of Further Education in Lusaka

On today 1 s (Tuesday September 21) program Ena Marston chairman of the Books at High Noon series will review the second edition of Fowlers Dictionary of Modern English Usage Starting time and meeting place are same as those listed above for next weeks luncheon

TEA lULL OPEN SEASONS ACTIVITY FOR CAL POLY UOMEN 1 S CLUB MEl1BERS

The Cal Poly o1omen 1 s Club will open its activity season l-7ith its annual Fall Tea Saturday (September 25) Planned for Room 129 of the Library from 300 to 500pm the event will provide both new and old members of the club with an opportunity to sign up for any of the special interest section activities they may be interested in

All women employees and the wives of members of the college faculty and staff are invited to attend

-l- bull

COLLEGE EXHIBIT Al STATE FAIR ~1ETUPHS TO CAMPUS llifH THIRD-PlACE RIBBON

The San Luis Obispo County exhibit at the California State Fair and Exposition pre- ~ pared and exhibited by Cal Poly returned to campus last toJeek with a third-place W ribbon and $1200 in premiums ~tered in middot county Exhibits- Contributions to the Development of California the display competed with other county exhibits costing up to $20000 It included photographs a large mural painting and a four-by-seven-foot model middotmiddot middot middot gt

Learn by Doing at Cal Poly in Beautiful San Luis Obispo County was theme of the exhibit llhich also featured recreational opportunities in the county including Avila Beach Hearst Castle and Horro Bay It came about through a resolution passed by the countys Board of Supetvisors last February 23 which designated the college ~s San Luis Obispo Countys agent and exhibitor at the huge state exposition toJhich ran September 1-12 in Sacramento

Robert Reynolds an illustrator on the staff of Cal Polys Audio Visual Department designed the exhibit The premium money earned will be used to defray construction costs _ middot

The exhibit itself was 32 feet wide and 12 feet deep with the 11 by 5-foot color mural painting occupying its left corner The mural depicted a youth on his horse overlookshying the San Luis Obispo Campus from the Santa Lucia Hountain focgtthills The mural- sized photographs of Morro Bay middotHearst Castle and Avila B-each filled the exhibit 1 s right side with the scale model of Cal Poly and photographs representing the college Agriculture Engineering Applied Sciences and Applied Art~ Divisions i middotn the backshyground Printed information on both the college and San Luis Obispo County was available for interested vidtors

Del Shirley an instructor in the Agricultural Education Department setved as manager for the display Norman Manzer Harold Johnson Eileen Johnson Phyllis Armstrong Shalom Kelner and Curtis Holder all students assisted in attending and constructing the exhibit Jim Crissie photographer on the A-V Departments staff provided photoshygraphs

~iPUS CONCERT BY LOUIS AlUiSTRONG SlATED SEPTEMBER 29

Louis Satchmo Pops Armstrong known as one of the foremost of all jazz musicians and showmen will appear in concert in the ~wn 1 s Gym cgtn campus Wednesday September 29 at 800 pm Being sponsored by the student College Union Assemblies Committee the shobulls cast ill also include Armstrongs famed All-Stars middot=

According to the sponsoring committee general admission prices for students have been set at $200 and for the public $250 Reserved seats are available at $250 for students and $300 for the public Tickets at all prices may be purchased at the Associated Students Inc offices on campus or at Browns Music Store Wickenden 1 s Mens Wear Rileys Fashion Center - College Square and Premiere Music Company all in San Luis Obispobull middotmiddot

Armstrong is the founding father of a particular style and sound in trumpet playing from which numerous techniques have evolvedbull However that which makes its greatest impact on the public is ~he famed musicien 1middots almost 50 years in the business What people enjoy most about Satchmobull seems to be his highly-expressive rtinger-cQmeciianshi which will undoubtedly be obvious during his concert here

The College Union committee t-lhich expects a sell-out crowd to hear Armstrong September 29 indicated last week that the Hens Gym is being prepared to accommodate 3500 middot persons for the concert

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COLLEGE STUDENTS FACULTY INVITED TO JOIN IN INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION YEAR-

Students and faculty of Cal Poly have been encouraged to participate in the 11 Intershynational Cooperation Year 11 The invitation came fr01n Joseph ~ Amter chairman of the Committee for Research on the Development of International Institutions of the National Citizens Co~ssion on International Cooperation

The letter to Cal Poly President Julian A McPhee indicated that President of the us Lyndon B Johnson had proclaimed 1965 as International Cooperation Year and had set up a broad program within the Executive Branch of the federal government to revi~7 our present international policies in cooperation A Nation~l Citizens 1 Co~ssion on International Cooperation has been organized to present a report to the President at a l~ite House Conference to be held November 29-December 1 1965

The national committee is encouraging faculty and students to discuss in seminars or meetings on the subject of international cooperation as an agent of 11 peace The combull mittee intends to publish a volume l-7hich lrlll contain extensive middotsubstantiating material and would welcome contributions from faculty and students i f they wish to make SUch contributions by the deadline November 1 1965

One of the kinds of questions which the national cOmmittee hopes students and faculty uill attempt to ans-Jer is Should educational institutions conduct significant edushycational programs at various levels on the requirements for peace Please elaborate

Contributions should be sent to 11 Joseph A Amter Committee Chairman Committee for Research on the Development of International Institutions National Citizens Comshymission on International Cooperation Peace Research Organization Fund 2535 First National Bank Building Denver Colo 80202 middot

S E S L 0 C NOW IN NEW QUARTERS

Now in its new quarters in Room 206 of the Agricultural Education Building on campus is SESLOC Federal Credit Union The new location at the north end of the buildings main level is at the opposite end of the hall from the credit unions old location Open hours remain the same as those in the former location

INFORI-iTION ON TICKETS FOR FOOTBALL CORRECTED TICKET SALE CONTINUES

Advance sale of tickets for Cal Polys 1965 varsity football season is continuing according to Robert F Spink graduate manager for the Associated Students Inc who also issued information to correct that which appeare4 in last weeks issue of Staff Bulletin

Spink said that last weeks article which left the impression that the special $500 with ASI associate membership offer for five reserved seat tickets would allow the buyer to purchase five tickets to any one or all five home games was incorrect It should have indicated that the offer includes one ticket to each home contest and that the cost will be $500 regardless of whether the purchase is made in time for the ticket to be used for all f~ve games or for only two or three

In addition the graduate manager said that the several different types of tickets for use by members of the college faculty and staff discussed in last weeks article reshymain available Those interested in obtaining further information regarding purchase of tickets for use during the home football season which begins Saturday (September 25) night when the Mustangs host Linfield College may do so by calling the ASI Office 546-2411

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MUSTANG FOOTBALLERS OPEN HOME SLATE SATURDAY MIGHT

With a season-opening 21middot20 victory over San Francisco State College already under its belt bull Coach Sheldon Hardens grid varsity will begin its home schedule Saturday (September 25) night when tt hosts Linfield College of Oregon Game t~e

bull for that middotcontest planned for Mustang Stadium on campus will be 800 pm bull bull bull bull

Last week-ends action saw the Mustangs tally the games first points h the second 9uarter and then Come from behind to score two touchdowns in the final half to win

middot CAMPUS THEATER ANNOUNCES OPEN HOUSE TRY-OUTS

request from J Murray Smith of the English and Speech Departments faculty asks members of the faculty to announce to their classes that the Theater will hold an open house and try-outs for its planned p~qduction of Harvey middot T~esday and Wednesday nights from 700 to 1000 p~m I

The combined events will provide an opportunity for interested st~dents to see and learn more about lighting makeup the stage and the workshop At the same time trybullouts for the play -which is sched~led to run November 5 6 19 and 20 will take pla~e in Room 212 of the Theater Building Those interested in trying out do not need to have had prior th~atrical experience and may receive either class credit or activity credit

I

Smith conclJdes by adding coffee and cake will be served with great splendor on the radial saw table in the WQrkshop

STAFF CLUB SLATES TALK BY COACH HARDEN FOR THURSDAY LUNCHEON

With a successful opening game already history Cal Polys Head Football Coach Sheldon Harden will illuminate his crystal ball with statistics ~~d experience and really tell about what the 1965 grid season has in store for Mustang fans when he addresses Thursdaybull s Staff Club Luncheon meeting Special guests for the program which is planned for noon Thursday (September 23) in the Staff Dining Room will be several members of the Mustmiddotang Boosters Club

Staff Club members who have wondered how to support the colleges athletic program other than by game attendance and en~oUfaging athletes in their classes will want to bring $10 to the meeting and become a Mustang booster according to Col William Boyce~ middotpresident of the club By special arrangement all members of the Cal Poly faculty and staff are now eligible to join the Mustang Boosters Club at the special annual rate of $1000

Membership in the boosters club entitles the member to reserved parking at home middot football games free admission to all Cal Poly athletic events except football specialmiddot event and tournaments listing in football proirams and a car sticker and desk plaque Memberships in this organization which supports the colleges athleticmiddot program through a scholarshmiddotip program administered by the middotcollege bull may

middot be purchased from Athletic Coordinator Dick Anderson whose office ismiddot in Room 209 of theMen s Physical Educationmiddot Building

The Mustang Boosters Club annual banquet scheduled for tomorrow (Wednesday September 22) evening~beginning at 600 pm at the Madonna Inn in San LJiS Obispo A will present Ernie Nevers a former allbullAmerican and pioneer professional football W player as guest speaker~ Tickets for the banquet may be purchased at $300 each ~lub members may purchase two tickets for $500

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TAPE OF PANEL DISCUSSION ON PERSONNEL BENEFITS IS AVAILABLE

Because a number of members of the staff and faculty were unable to attend the panel discussion on Personnel Benefits held during the recent Fall Staff Conference a tape recording was made of the proceedings and is available to middot those who would like to hear it

The panel made up of experts on various subjects discussed recent changes in the areas of insurance retirement and California Physicians Service Health middot Insurance

The 90-minute tape of the discussion may be checked out at the Audio Visual Departmeots Service Office Room 9 Business Administration and Education Building

1 middot l

PLACEMENT CALENDAR bullbull INTERVIEWS ON CAMPUS SEPTEMBER 21 - OCTOBER 1 1965

UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS Capt M V Young Captain Donald A Hodgen and SSgt E J Paurazas US Marine Corps officer selection liaison officers will be available in the Snack Bar area of the Dining Hall to discuss with interested students the Marine Corps Officer Training Programs (921-923)

UNITED STATES NAVY Lt F J Skin~er USB Lt C L Clinton USN(W) and LtJg F M Fellrath USN the Officer Programs Information Jeam will b~ available in the Snack Bar area of the Dining Hall to provide studentamp with information on the opportunities available to college graduates as commissioned officers in the US Naval Reserve (927~929)

YORK CORPORATION Los Angeles A Dokter regional sales manager and L P Jacobsen regional manager will interview seniors in AC and R and ME who have an interest in air conditioning and refrigeration (930)

MARVIN LANDPLANE CO Woodland Calif R L Hormbostel sales manager will interview seniors in Ag Engineering and MA The company is a builder of scientific land levelers

DEADLINE FOR ARTICLES APPEARING IN NEXT WEEKS STAFF BULLETIN IS FRIDAY NOON

bull bull - 1

CAMPUSmiddot CALENDAR - middot 1oiEEK ()F SEPTEMBER 21middot28 1965

Tuesday September 21

12 00 Books at High Noon Luncheon Meeting

Wednesday September 22

200 Executive Council Meeting

Thursday September 23

815 am Applied Arts middotmiddot Division Committee Meeting

900 am Agriculture Division Commit~ee Meeting

Noon Staff Club Luncheon Meeting -

Saturday September 25

middotmiddot 300 pm Cal Poly Womens Club Fall Tea

800 pm Varsity Football vs Linfield College

Monday September 27

200 pm bull Executive Council Meeting

Tuesday Seetember 28

815 am Applied 3ciences Division Meet~

middot- middotmiddot 1000 Am middot Engineering Division Committee Meeting

Noon Books at High Noon

SDR

Admin 301

Admin 213-A

Ag 138

SDR

bull

Lib 129

Mustang Stadium

Admin 301

Admin 301 ~ tt~

GA 101

SDR

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES

EVIE~ JUNE 1965 VOl 2 No 12

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

Victor H Palmieri was appointed to the Board of Trustees by Governor Brown in July of 1964 A decade before almost to the month Trustee Palmshyieri had graduated from Stanford Law School where he was editor of the Law Review and had been namshyed to the Order of the Coif high-ranking honor soshyciety of the legal profession He also received his undergraduate education at Stanford with a major in history

Following his graduation he joined the law firm of 0Melshyveny amp Myers in Los Angeles where he served until duty with with the US Army Later he returned to OMelveny amp Myshyers where he specialized in orporate and business law

In 1958 Mr Palmieri left private practice to become exshyecutive vice-president of the Janss Investment Corp a leading real estate deshyvelopment firm and in 1963 he was named presishydent of the firm and its affiliated companies

Mr Palmieri has remained continuously acshytive in educational fields A lecturer in law at the Stanford Law School he is currently teaching a course there in legal aspects of real estate transacshytions He also lectu res from time to time at varishyous other graduate schools including the Universishyty of Southern California and UCLA In addition he is a founding member of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions in Santa Barbara

He was born in Chicago Ill but has lived in California since 1939 He has served as a member of a number of state commissions concerned with urban problems As a memb er of the Commission on Metropolitan Area Probl ems the Governors Advisory Commission on Housing and the Coordinashyting Council on Urban Policies he has been closeshyly involved with state-level efforts to meet growth

roblems throu ghout the state

On the occasion of his appointment to the CSC Board of Trustees Governor (Continued on Page 4)

REVISED CSC BUDGET ADOPTED

A pared-down but still substantial CSC support budget which emerged from two legislative sessions and a special hearing held by Governor Brown was finally approved as both the month and fiscal year ended

At the Governors hearing Jun 23 Chancellor Dumke accompanied by Trustees Louis Heilbron Albert J Ruffo and E Guy Warren and Dr John Livingston chairman of the Statewide Academic Senate continued to plead the case of the Colleges for no further cuts in the systems budgetary reshyquests stressing again a pressing need for faculty salary increases

As finally adopted budget figures revealed more gains than losses in key items including a faculty salary increase of approximately 10

Other faculty benefits which became available for the new fiscal year are $250 000 for sabbatishycal leaves $200 000 for leaves of absence to do research in science or creative work in the arts $100 000 for achievement awards to recognize exshycellence in classroom instruction and $96 000 for out-of-state travel related to instruction The apshypropriations likewise provided $100 000 to defray up to 50 of moving costs for relocating new faculty

One million dollars for library books to augshyment existing books -per - student ratios at five of the Colleges was also authorized

On-campus work-study programs employing student assistants were funded with $148 226 to be used with federal matching funds an additional $17 000 was allocated for lectures by visiting scholshyars and the educat ional TV station at San Diego SC as well as the nursery school at San Francisco SC were provided support funds

All of these improvements said Chancellor Dumke will greatly help to relieve the spartan bu dgetunderwhich we have been operating for years but we are still far behind In this regard I am pleased to note that the Legislatu re is planning an interim study on the whole problem of financing pubshylic higher education

SYSTEM HONORS MARK COMMENCEMENTS

Commencement Day at Hwnboldt SC Jun 4 was not only the first in a series of statewide cereshymonies it also marked the granting of the first honorary degree to a CSC alwnnus An honorary Doctor of Laws degree was conferred by the Colshyleges on Dr Monroe E Spaght onetime president of the student body at Humboldt and now managing director and chairman of the board of Europes largest industrial complex Royal Dutch Shell peshytrolewn companies Trustee James F Thacher and HSC President Cornelius H Siemens officiated

A week later on Jun 11 at San Francisco SC s Commencement Trustee Louis H Heilbron and Chancellor Dumke presided with SFSC Presishydent Paul A Dodd at the award of an honorary Docshytor of Hwnane Letters degree to Frank V de Belshylis patron of the arts and donor to the Colleges of the immense collection of books music and objets dart which bears his name in a special section of the library building at SFSC (See photo at right)

De Bellis who was honored for his contribushytions to the preservation of Italian culture and its interpretation to the students and people of Cali shyfornia 11 will be further honored this month at the University of Bari the fourth largest educational institution in Italy which will present him with its sigillum aureum (golden seal) in tribute to his lifeshylong interest in the dissemination of Italian culture

Dr Spaght gave the commencement address at Hwnboldt SC Dr Arthur Stanton Adams former president of the American Council on Education was the principal speaker at the San Francisco cershyemonies

On other campuses of the system _speakers were Chico Dr Harold Benjamin USC Visiting Lecturer Stanislaus Dr John F Olson presishydent of Oklahoma City University Fresno Dr Louis Benezet president of Claremont Graduate School and University Center Sacramento Dr Guy A West retiring president of SSG San Diego Dr Frank Baxter professor emeritus of USC San Fernando Valley Dr R A Billington of the Huntshyington Library San Jose Trustee Louis H Heil shybron Cal State Hayward Dr Mitchell P Briggs executive secretary of the Western Association of Schools and Colleges

Cal State Long Beach Dr E C Stakrnan of the University of Minnesota Rockefeller Foundashytion consultant Cal State Los Angeles Stanley Mosk Associate Justice Supreme Court of Calif Sonoma Rev Dr Samuel DeWitt Proctor of the National Council of the Churches of Christ Cal

2

State Fullerton Trustee Victor H Palmieri Poly San Luis Obispo Charles Luckman chai man CSC Board of Trustees Cal Poly Pomona Mr Bart Lytton president and chairman of Lytton Financial Corp

This year the California State Colleges gradushyated approximately 20000 students a recordnwnshyber Among them was Gunnar Herrstrom of Sonoshyma SC who received his bachelors degree in psyshychology and thus completed a program started at UC which was interrupted by the war World War I that is Mr Herrstrom is 72 years old He plans to return to sse for the summer session to continue studies in Spanish

Commencement at San Francisco SC included presshyentation of honorary L H D to Frank V de Bellis Photo shows 1 to r President Dodd Mr de Belshylis Trustee Louis Heilbron and Chancellor Dumke

FACULTY SALARY ISSUE ON TV

A television docwnentary 11 The Salary Issue Colleges in Crisis 11 was filmed last month at San Diego SC Participants in the program a segment of the Profile series were Trustee Victor H Palmieri Chancellor Dwnke Dr Ernest 0 Byrne Dr James N Tidwell and Dr Donald N Wood of SDSC and Jerry Harmon president of the Associshyated Students at the College They presented a panel discussion Showings were on KOGO San Diego KNBC Los Angeles and KRON San Franshycisco It is scheduled for KVIE Sacramento Jul 2 and subsequently will be made available to stations in Bakersfield Fresno Eureka and Santa Barbara Motion picture prints of the program are on loan to the Colleges from the Chancellors Office

Retirements of Dr H Thurston Hatch associshyate dean of students in charge of placement and DJa William B McCann director of the SchoolAdmini shytration Center and professor of education at Chico SC became effective this month

3

IVINGSTON HEADS STATEWIDE SENATE

Dr John C Livingston of Sacramento SC has been elected chairman of the Statewide Academic Senate for 1965-66 succeeding Dr Samuel E Wishyley of Cal State Long Beach

Meeting May 20-21 at the Long Beach campus the Senate also elected Dr Jesse B Allen of Cal State Los Angeles to a second term as vice-chairshyman named as secretary Dr James P Heath of San Jose SC and reconstituted its Executive Comshymittee by electing as members-at-l arge Mr Leo G McClatchy of San Francisco SC and Dr William R Rogers of San Jose who will serve on the comshymitteewith thenewofficersand Dr Wiley of CSLB past-president

Newly elected to the Senate were Dr Joseph A Wagner of CSLB Drs Lee R Kerschner and Paul J Pastor of Cal State Fullerton replacing Drs Ida Cappolino and Miles D McCarthy Mr Milton Dobkin of Humboldt SC for Dr Hyman Palshyais Mr R Dean Galloway of Stanislaus SC for Dr Max C Norton Dr PeterKoestenbaum of SanJose SC for Dr Dean R Cresap Dr Joseph McGowan of Sacramento SC for Dr James M Bradfield Dr Robert A Mott of Cal Poly SLO for Mr Warren R

nderson Mr Elmer H Rice of Cal Poly Pornoshya for Dr John Fulbeck Dr James N Tidwell of

San Diego SC for Dr Ivan N McCollom and Dr William W Young of Sonoma SC for Dr Cheryl Peterson

Facultymembers whose terms as senators conshytinue are Drs B Gordon Gibb and Lew D Oliver of Chico Drs R Deane Branstetter and James J Hunter of San Diego Drs Richard Axen and John L Clark of San Francisco Dr La Verne Bucy of Cal Poly SLO Dr Bernard A Shepard and Mr Phillip Walker of Fresno Dr Roscoe Peithman of Humboldt Mr William Eshelman and Dr Kenneth A Martyn of Cal State Los Angeles Dr Edward A Nelson of Cal Poly Pomona Dr Nicholas P Hardeman of Cal State Long Beach Drs H Duane Heath and William Sawrey of Cal State Hayward Dr John E Caswell of Stan islaus Dr Warren E Olson of Sonoma Dr Lyle E Gibson of Cal State Palos Verdes and Dr Gerald Scherba of Cal State San Bernardino

ANGELL TO CHANCELLORS OFFICE

Dr Melvin A Angell associate dean of stushydents for counseling at Fresn oSC has been appoinshy

d associate dean of student affairs in the Chancelshyr1 s Office He will be on leave of absence from

his FSC position during the 1965-66 academic year to ~ccept the post

SCULPTURE SYMPOSIUM SET FOR CSLB

The first international sculpture symposium in the US opened Jun 21 at Cal State Long Beach where 14 of the worlds great modern sculptors were scheduled to begin work on monumental sculptures Sculptors participating include Kosso Eloul of Isshyrael Andre Bloc of France Kenjiro Azuma of Mishylan Italy J J Beljon of Holland and Gabriel Kohn of the U S The event will be open to the public without charge through Aug 14

SONOMA SC OFFERS FAR WEST INSTITUTE

For the fourth summer Sonoma SC and the California Folklore Society will co-sponsor an Inshystitute of Far Western American Culture beginning Aug 2 This years themeis FolkMusic and Othshyer Folklore of Minority Groups in the Far West Previous themes were folklore and local history folklore and fiction and art architecture and folkshylore

Participating specialists include Dr Stith Thompson emeritus professor of English and folkshylore Indiana U Chingwah Lee curator of the Kuan Yin temple in San Franciscos Chinatown and Ralph J Gleason nationally known jazz music authority

Dr Hector Lee dean of in struction at SSC and executive vice-president of the California Folkshylore Society will direct the institute which is reshylated to several American Studies courses and degree programs comprising a part of the area studies offered by the Colleges

FIRST JOINT DOCTORATE OFFERED

The first doctoral program to be offered jointshyly by a California State College and the University of California will be initiated at San Diego SC this fall it was announced this month by Chancellor Dumshyke and University President Clark Kerr It will be offered in chemistry by UC s San Diego campus and SDSC Granting of joint doctorates was authorized in 1960 under the Master Plan and approval of the chemistry program was granted by a joint graduate board of final academic review composed of represhysentatives from the Colleges and the University

SUPREME COURTS ACCREDIT CHAPMAN

Attorney Mayer Chapman now associate counshysel of the esc legal staff has been admitted to the U S Supreme Court for p r actice before that body and also admitted to the Court of Military Appeals highest military court He earned his undergradushyate and law degree at UCLA where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and the Order of the Coif

4

STATEWIDE NEWS BRIEFS

San Jose SC-- Lowell C Pratt dean of CSC public information directors retires this month after 18 years at the College He will be succeedshyed by James E Noah his assistant for the past three years + + +A two-year study financed by the federal government through the States Division of Highways will be conducted by SJSC to determine whether a special course of driver training will improve driving habits of traffic violators

San Diego SC --Dr Malcolm A Love presishydent of SDSC has been triply honored by the American Association of University Professors at the annual banquet of its San Diego chapter by Colshyorado State College at Greeley where he delivered the commencement address and by the University of Nevada which this month awarded him an honorshyary LLD degree + + + Cap and Gown SDSC s honor society for women is now a chapter of Morshytar Board the only national honorary organization recognizing outstanding senior womens societies in American colleges and universities Cap and Gown thus becomes the first CSC chapter of Morshytar Board and the 117th in the nation

The Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany was awarded to Chancellor Dumke at a reshycent ceremony in Los Angeles Phoshytograph shows Hans RolfKiderlen Gershyman Consul-General congratulating Dr and Mrs Dumke following presentashytion of the Orders medal and citation which Dr Dumke holds The decorashytion was conferred in appreciation of the Chancellors part in establishing esc international programs overshyseas and for encouraging instruction in foreign lanshyguages including German throughout the college system

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

(Continued from Page 1) Brown commented I have verydeliberately sought to recognize the importance and the standing of the California State Colleges in my appointments to the Board and to push for their continued development as centers of academic exshycellence Mr Palmieris appointment contributes to both of those goals 1 Trustee Palmieri is marshy

ried His wife the former Martha Cooley of Pasashydena is also a Stanford graduate They have thr sons Victor Jr Matthew B and John W Th family home is in Malibu on Colony Drive

FALK TO HEAD INTERNATIONAL UNIT

Dr Karl L Falk professor of economics at Fresno SC and an authority on comparative economshyic systems and international housing has been namshyed director of international affairs for the Califorshynia State Colleges

In making the appointment Chancellor Dumke said Falk will head an expanded program of intershynational activities coordinating existing and new programs including foreign aid international study student and faculty exchanges with other countries and overseas projects sponsored by private foundashytions

One important phase of State College overseas operation consists of programs of study abroad for State College students in France Germany Japan Spain Sweden and Taiwan under the direction of Dr Thomas P Lantos of San Francisco SC who according to Dr Falk will continue in this aspect of international activities

Falk has been on the Fresno SC faculty sinshy1938 He received his undergraduate training at Stanford U and his doctoral degree at the Univershysity of Berlin Germany

He is chairman of the Fresno City Housing Aushythority vice-chairman of the Governors Advisory Committee on Housing Probl ems and past-president of the NationalAssociationof Housing and Redevelshyopment Officials He is an official of several finanshycial institutions and a former member of the board of the California Savings and Loan League

In his new post which he assumes Aug 1 Falk will be headquartered at the Chancellors Office Inglewood

SIEMENS JOINS CONSTITUTION COMMITTEE

Humboldt SC President Cornelius H Siemens has been elected to membership on the state 1 s Conshystitutional Revision Commission established by the 1963 Legislature for the purpose of recommending revisions to the Constitution for placement on the 1966 November ballot

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymo A Rydell Executive Vice-Chancellor John F Richardson Vice-Chancell Business Affairs C Mansel Keene Assistant Chancellor Faculty and Sta Affairs The California State Colleges Review is issued by the Public Affairs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES

EVIE~

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

Governor Edmund G Brown recently appointed Chester R Bartalini 62 president of the California State Council of Carpenters to succeed Thomas L Pitts secretary-treasurer of the California Labor Federation as a member of CSCs Board of Trustees

Trustee Pitts said he had asked the Governor to replace him on the board because the demands of his union post have made it impossible for me to give as much time to the State Colleges as I felt necessary

Pitts told Governor Brown that he was most pleased with Mr Barshytalinis appointment I know he will do a great job for the people of California on this board

The Governor said I regret ne loss of Tom Pitts from this imshy~rtant board very much He served

with great distinction and his good Chester R Bartalinijudgment will certainly be missed

Governor Brown said that he was however very happy to have the service of Chester Bartalini who has proved himshyself in many ways a truly dedicated Californian

In his long service in the Carpenters union Chester Bartalini has shown great administrative talent and executive ability As a union leader he has learned to appreciate the need to keep alive and strengthen Californias system of tuition-free education

Trustee Bartalini is a native of Michigan and has lived here since 1936 He served two terms as a member of the state Correctional Industry Commission and has been executive secretary of the Bay Counties District Council of Carpenters San Francisco since 1950

He is a member of the Commonwealth Club the Elks Eagles Associated Sportsmen of California and the Alameda Rod and Gun Club

He is a director of the Alameda Boys Oub and a member of the Joint Labor University of California committee

He has been president of the California State Council of orpenters since 1958

Trustee Bartalini lives at 1446 Eastshore Drive Alameda with his wife Florinda He has six children and seven grandshychildren

AUGUST 1965

VOL 3 N o 2

FISCAL TASK FORCES DEPLOYED

More efficient ways of staffing and funding systemwide college operations at every level of support are now being sought by eight task forces representing all of the Colleges

Members of the task-force groups were appointed by the CSC Committee on Fiscal Responsibility which was formed in May to implement the provisions of Senate Concurrent Resoshylution No 29 calling for a study of greater fiscal flexibility for the college system

Under the leadership of Harry W Brakebill vice-presishydent at San Francisco SC and permanent chairman of the committee together with Sol Buchalter chairman of the deshypartment of finance and law at San Fernando Valley SC who is serving as the committees executive officer on a fulltime basis during the summer months the task forces will engage in an all-out assault on the CSCs financial problems

Scope of the effort is shown by the assignments given to the groups ( 1) relationships and responsibilities of state agencies involved ( 2) budget formulation processes ( 3) deshytermination of level of support ( 4) budget administration ( 5) accounting and reporting ( 6-7-8) self-supporting funcshytions designated as noninstructional college foundation and summer-session and extension activities

Before hearings start on SCR 29 next Oct the specific tasks that these forces have set for themselves are in order of priority suggesting feasible and attainable methods for imshyproving budget administration defining means for determining adequate support levels and creating a model arrangement for fulfilling accountability requirements relating to expenditure of funds provided by the Legislature In the matter of accountshyability both internal management aspects and external public interest in quality education are being considered by the comshymittee and its forces

Some eighty representatives of the Colleges and the Chanshycellors Office including presidents deans business managers and students have already been named to the various task forces and most of the groups have started work

FIRST SCHOLARSHIP FOR CSSB

A $1000 check has established the first scholarship fund sponsored by a private organization for Cal State San Bernarshydino Donated by The Social Lites a Negro womens social and civic organization it provides an initial $300 for some deservshying student from the San Bernardino area Income from the remainder will go into a permanent fund to which the womens organization will continue to add until a complete scholarship program can be financed from the funds income alone

2

BOOKS MAGAZINES AND PAPERS At the end of last June Dr Monroe E Spaght the forshy

mer student body president at Humboldt SC who is now managing director of more than 500 companies operated by Royal Dutch Shell- a position of corporate eminence never before achieved by any American- became not only an honorary Doctor of Laws by virtue of his CSC degree but also an author of belles-lettres by virtue of his book The Bright Key

Dr Monroe E Spaght (right) receiving the LLD dregree from Trustee James F Thatcher at Humboldt State College June 4 1965

Just published by Appleton-Century-Crofts the book defends with truth urbanity and wit his strong belief that business has real responsibilities to our educational system Dr Spaght earned his PhD in chemistry at a time when much of the business world was convinced such training rendered a man unfit for a life of decision and action Today he is recognized as a leading spokesman for industry on the role of education in contemporary society A trustee of Stanford U he is chairshyman of the Committee for Corporate Support of American Universities and chairman of the New York State Science and Technology Foundation

Literary honors for two other Humboldt alumni were also in the news Mr James Yoakum and Mr Sherman Pearl won first prize in the full-color category of the 1965 Governmentshywide Publications Contest sponsored by the Federal Editors Association with Wildlife on the Public Lands produced for the US Dept of the Interior Bureau of Land Management Mr Yoakum presently a lecturer in natural resources at the College was chief color photographer for the publication Mr Pearl is with the Nevada office of the Bureau Their document is the No 1 seller of the Government Printing Office with the widest distribution of any federal book and is now being transshylated into several foreign languages

A textbook on wildlife management by Dr Raymond Dasmann chairman of HSCs division of natural resources was recently published by John Wiley amp Sons It is his second text The first Environmental Conservation came out in 1959

Dr Ralph Samuelson chairman of the division of lanshyguage arts at the College has been notified that Nineteenth Century American Authors a syllabus of American Literature of which he was an editor is now being published by the

Eurasia Press in New Delhi India for use by more than 30 Indian universities e

College Information Officer Vivienne L George received first place award from the California Press Women for producshytion of Challenge 1964 the first annual Presidents Report In other categories Mrs George received third place for a feature article The Grapes Run Dry Along the Mayacamas published in a national magazine and top honorable mention for a series of newspaper articles about faculty members pubshylished last fall

Dr Clay Hatfield of the biological sciences department at Cal Poly SLO and John Applegarth also a member of the biological sciences faculty have collaborated in the production of a new college biology textbook Applied Microbiology reflecting Dr Hatfields more than 20 years experience as a microbio~ogist National Press Palo Alto published

OVERSEAS DIRECTORS NAMED Resident directors of CSCs International Programs durshy

ing the 1965-66 academic year have been announced by Chancellor Dumke

Named were Dr Leonard Messier of San Diego SC who will supervise the program at the University of Aix-Marseille France Dr John E Merrill also of SDSC at Waseda Univershysity in Tokyo Japan Dr Joachim Stanzel of San Jose SC at the Free University of Berlin and the University of Heidelshyberg Germany Dr Joseph Reid Scott also of SJSC at t University of Madrid and the University of Granada Spai and Dr Donald M Castleberry of San Francisco SC who was appointed for the University of Stockholm and the University of U ppsala Sweden

SAN JOSE OFFERS NEW TUTORIALS The usual courses lectures and grades so familiar to colshy

lege students will be unknown in Sep 1965 to a segment of entering freshmen at San Jose SC

Their unfamiliarity will stem from an experimental proshygram which is officially known at Tutorials in Letters and Science

While tutorial programs are not new the abandonment of the course is a startling departure from the usual educational experiments and reforms according to Dr Mervyn L Cadshywallader initiator of the program and associate professor of sociology at SJSC

Instead of the familiar format the new program will make use of individual tutorials group discussions small seminars and laboratory sessions Successful participants will earn 48 semester units of credit

The chief obligation of the student said Dr John Galm assistant professor of English and one of the first six tutors will be to submit written work to his tutor approximately every two weeks and then to have a conference with him A

Dr Cadwallader said a central theme will be featur each of the four semesters As an example four semesters work could be organized around study of four pivotal epochs in

3

Western Civilization Students will be encouraged to particishyte in some of the planning and evaluation of the program

The faculty-student ratio with the tutorial program will be approximately 1-to-20 This will permit the kind of intimiddot mate association and per~nal exchange between college proshyfessors and students that has become notable by its absence on the campuses of our large colleges and universities said Dr Cadwallader

He continued by stating that this return to a personal education may be one answer to the student demonstrations across the country

Other tutors in addition to Drs Cadwallader and Galm are Dr Richard Tansey professor of art Dr David Newman associate professor of psychology Dr Harold DeBey professor of chemistry and Gary Albright assistant professor of philshyosophy

UC COMMISSIONS CSLB ART

The first catalog of the new lrvine campus 6pound UC pubshylished early this month was designed by Dr Joseph Krause professor of art at Cal State Long Beach

Dr Krauses striking designs for various publications at the College caught the eye of Dr Clayton Garrison a former associate professor of speech at CSLB and present dean of UC Irvines fine arts division He requested Krause to design the new UC catalog

Rose Mary Thompson 21-year-old electronics major at Cal Poly Pomona became the first four-year coed to receive an engineering degree from the College when she graduated this summer Women were not enrolled at that campus until 1961

A CAMPUS CONVERTED into an international showcase for monumental sculpture has made Cal State at Long Beach a cynosure of cultural controversy this summer Bold abstract works formed of concrete steel redwood aluminum pipes and paint challenge the viewer as nine world-famous sculptors complete their contributions to the first International Sculpture Symposium in this country Their creations will remain on permanent exhibition at the College Along an area 100 ft in length and about 28 ft wide at the Seventh Street corner of the campus 19 massive forms 8-to-1 0 ft high (model pictured center-left above) constitute the sculpture of J J Beljon director of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in The Hague Holland Sculptor Beljon (upper left) contemplating the extent of his work under construction said wryly Gallery art and art dealers are doomed they have no future Other photos proceeding clockwise show- Gabriel Kohn of the US Andre Bloc of France

osso Eloul of Israel and directly under the center portrait of Piotr Kowalski a Polish sculptor residing in France an interior view of the ulptors workshop with student helper in foreground and with plaster on hand Kenneth Glenn director of the symposium who is also proshyssor of art at CSLB Left corner picture was taken at Bethlehem Steels Terminal Island plant where donated fabrication of plate contributed

by Triangle Steel Co and Ge~teral Pipe amp Supply Co vitalized the designs of Canadian sculptor Robert Murray Also participating in the symshyposium but not shown here are sculptors Kenjiro Azuma and Claire Falkenstein as well as muralist Rita Letendre who is sculptor Elouls wife

4

The ACADEMIC SENATE REGISTER

Headlines in the Los Angeles Times of last Jul 2 anshynounced Educators Hail Budget as Victory Yet I suspect for a large portion of the faculties the salary increase and the state college quality package of funds for research travel sabshybaticals and distinguished teaching represented a hollow vicshytory Not primarily because the salary increase was too little too late (though it was) and certainly not because the other benefits are insignificant Many of us are rather in the position ~f the teenager whose desire to be understood and respected Is not compensated by an increase in his allowance For those who react this way (I include myself) the most hopeful aspects of the past year are to be found in those activities of ad hoc faculty groups professional organizations the Chancellors Office Trustees and Academic Senate which have sought to create and enlarge public respect and support for the goals of the State Colleges

If we have sometimes acted inexpediently or undiploshymatically we need not apologize This is not a job for imageshymakers our problems will not always respond to the tech shyniques of politics as the art of the possible Our task has been to prepare the seedbed for a dialogue with the community and with the Legislature through which the purposes and aspirations of the state college experiment may be clarified We need now to consider as we gain the attention of the public and the Legislature what we are to say

Our problem is put into sharp focus by an observation of the young John Adams in 1765 Reflecting on the advanshytages bequeathed by the early settlers to their progeny Adams noted the unique civil and religious principles on the basis of which they laid very early the foundation of colleges and invested them with ample privileges and emoluments It is remarkable he added that they have left among their posshyterity so universal an affection and veneration for those seminshyaries and for liberal education that the meanest of the people contribute cheerfully to the support and maintenance of them every year and that nothing is more generally popular than projections for the honor reputation and advantage of those seats of learning

Is not our task to rekindle and revitalize the universal affection and veneration which alone in the long run can provide the basis for public support of our seminaries The civil and religious principles which supported it in times past Adams went on to note valued knowledge as the means to liberty Perhaps the purpose of the State Colleges reflects the universalization of that insight If so it is time to get about clarifying our own ideas on the matter and finding the means to communicate them to others If we are to survive we must become the peoples colleges not in an ad-mans empty phrase and not in the peoples present understanding but in a sense we have yet to define clearly for ourselves and then to communicate to the public As the Academic Senate

begins its third year of existence in the shadow of continuitA fiscal crises we will I hope turn part of our energies to ponde ing how to recover and how to deserve that universal affection and veneration -John C Livingston Chairman

STRONG POLICY ON COLLEGE SUPPORT ADOPTED With four new California State Colleges established by

the Legislature-in Contra Costa Kern San Mateo Santa Clara and Ventura counties-the Board of Trustees has adopted a policy to protect the support base of the existing Colleges

In a resolution of Jul 29 the Trustees expressed their concern for the financing of the California State Colleges at a level to maintain and strengthen educational excellence and declared that the financing of existing State Colleges should be maintained at the proper level and not be adversely affected by the financial impact of the addition of new State Colleges

Chancellor Dumke pointed out that the great strides made in the recent legislative session in faculty salary increases library and sabbatical leave augmentations research and travel allowances were the result of hard work in presenting the case for the State Colleges to the Legislature We must make it just as clear he said that our support budget for existing Colleges is still at an inadequate level and must not be diluted further by draining off funds to establish new Colleges

FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS

Three humanities professors from San Francisco SC ha been awarded Guggenheim Fellowships Ruby Cohn associa professor of English and world literarure Mark Harris associshyate professor of English and director of creative writing and Rudolph Weingartner associate professor of philosophy and chairman of the philosophy department

It is believed that no Cal State campus has ever before received three Guggenheims at one time

Dr George Huppert assistant professor of history at Cal State Hayward has been awarded a fellowship by the American Council of Learned Societies to complete research on The New History of the French Renaissance + + + Fellowships for srudy and travel in India have been awarded to Dr Joseph Pugliese CSH associate professor of art and to Glenn Glasow assistant professor of music by the Instirute of International Education Only 2i fellowships were awarded nationwide

Faculty fellowships provided by the National Science Foundation will enable Dr Seymour Mack associate professor of geology at Fresno SC to take his sabbatical leave at Stanford U for study and research in geo-chemistry and hydrology Earl L Pye of the physical sciences faculty at Cal Poly Pomona to complete his chemistry research project on detergent mishycelles at Louisiana State U and Dr Donald E Bianchi associshyate professor of biology at San Fernando Valley SC to spend a year at the University of Geneva Switzerland

==================~middotshyTHE CALIFORNIA_STA~ COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymond A ~ydell Ex~uhve Voce-Chancellor Harry E Brakebill Vice-Chancellor Busness Affaors C Mansel Keene Assost~nt Chancellor Faculty and Staff Affaors The Callforma State Colleges Rev1ew is issued by the Public Affa irs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

Page 2: September 21, 1965 Staff Bulletin

-2-

SALE OF PAJUING PERMITS FOR FALL QUARTER CONTINUES

Sale of parking permits for the Fall Quarter which began yesterday (Monday September 20) is continuing at the Cashiers Uindow located on the first floot of the Adminisshytration Building Price for the permit which allous members of the faculty and staff of the college to park in marked staff parking spaces on campus is $900 per quarter

The need for having permits from previous quarters removed from vehic1es continues Both campus parking regulations and the California Motor Vehicle Code bear on this matter Campus regulations call for removal of all permits not currently in effect while the MVC requires that all decals of this nature be confined to the sevenbullinchshysquare area in the lcn~er right-hand corner of the windshield surface

Enforcement of parking regulations for the quarter began with the start o~ classes yesterday (Monday September 20) morning and will continue through end of final examinations

STAFF CLUB SCHEDULES COFFEE HOUR FOR NEW OLD MEMBERS OCTOBER 3

the patio of the Motel Inn in San Luis Obispo will be site of the Staff Clubs annual coffee hour for new and old members Sunday October 3 from 300 to 500 pm Neu members of the colleges staff and faculty are especially invited to attend and old members are urged to be on middot hand to ivelcome them A table of snacks with coffee and tea will be available to help stave off hunger

REVIEV1 OF TELL ME JOSEPHINE PLANHED FOR SEPTEMBER 28

Pearl Turner curriculum librarian on the college Librarys staff will revielt7 Tell Me Josephine edited by Barbara Hall when the Books at High Noon luncheon series conshy

tinues next Tuesday (September 28) beginning at noon in the Staff Dining Room

Tell Me Josephine is a personal middotadvice column which appears in the Central Africa Mail a reekly newspaper published in Zambia (formerly Northern Rhodesia) The editor of this book has selected letters which give a picture of everyday life of the African and his difficulties Iiiss Turner 1 s review should give an interesting picture of the world in which the Dr Robert Motts the Philip Bromleys and the George Furimskys lived while they were on the faculty of Evelyn Hone College of Further Education in Lusaka

On today 1 s (Tuesday September 21) program Ena Marston chairman of the Books at High Noon series will review the second edition of Fowlers Dictionary of Modern English Usage Starting time and meeting place are same as those listed above for next weeks luncheon

TEA lULL OPEN SEASONS ACTIVITY FOR CAL POLY UOMEN 1 S CLUB MEl1BERS

The Cal Poly o1omen 1 s Club will open its activity season l-7ith its annual Fall Tea Saturday (September 25) Planned for Room 129 of the Library from 300 to 500pm the event will provide both new and old members of the club with an opportunity to sign up for any of the special interest section activities they may be interested in

All women employees and the wives of members of the college faculty and staff are invited to attend

-l- bull

COLLEGE EXHIBIT Al STATE FAIR ~1ETUPHS TO CAMPUS llifH THIRD-PlACE RIBBON

The San Luis Obispo County exhibit at the California State Fair and Exposition pre- ~ pared and exhibited by Cal Poly returned to campus last toJeek with a third-place W ribbon and $1200 in premiums ~tered in middot county Exhibits- Contributions to the Development of California the display competed with other county exhibits costing up to $20000 It included photographs a large mural painting and a four-by-seven-foot model middotmiddot middot middot gt

Learn by Doing at Cal Poly in Beautiful San Luis Obispo County was theme of the exhibit llhich also featured recreational opportunities in the county including Avila Beach Hearst Castle and Horro Bay It came about through a resolution passed by the countys Board of Supetvisors last February 23 which designated the college ~s San Luis Obispo Countys agent and exhibitor at the huge state exposition toJhich ran September 1-12 in Sacramento

Robert Reynolds an illustrator on the staff of Cal Polys Audio Visual Department designed the exhibit The premium money earned will be used to defray construction costs _ middot

The exhibit itself was 32 feet wide and 12 feet deep with the 11 by 5-foot color mural painting occupying its left corner The mural depicted a youth on his horse overlookshying the San Luis Obispo Campus from the Santa Lucia Hountain focgtthills The mural- sized photographs of Morro Bay middotHearst Castle and Avila B-each filled the exhibit 1 s right side with the scale model of Cal Poly and photographs representing the college Agriculture Engineering Applied Sciences and Applied Art~ Divisions i middotn the backshyground Printed information on both the college and San Luis Obispo County was available for interested vidtors

Del Shirley an instructor in the Agricultural Education Department setved as manager for the display Norman Manzer Harold Johnson Eileen Johnson Phyllis Armstrong Shalom Kelner and Curtis Holder all students assisted in attending and constructing the exhibit Jim Crissie photographer on the A-V Departments staff provided photoshygraphs

~iPUS CONCERT BY LOUIS AlUiSTRONG SlATED SEPTEMBER 29

Louis Satchmo Pops Armstrong known as one of the foremost of all jazz musicians and showmen will appear in concert in the ~wn 1 s Gym cgtn campus Wednesday September 29 at 800 pm Being sponsored by the student College Union Assemblies Committee the shobulls cast ill also include Armstrongs famed All-Stars middot=

According to the sponsoring committee general admission prices for students have been set at $200 and for the public $250 Reserved seats are available at $250 for students and $300 for the public Tickets at all prices may be purchased at the Associated Students Inc offices on campus or at Browns Music Store Wickenden 1 s Mens Wear Rileys Fashion Center - College Square and Premiere Music Company all in San Luis Obispobull middotmiddot

Armstrong is the founding father of a particular style and sound in trumpet playing from which numerous techniques have evolvedbull However that which makes its greatest impact on the public is ~he famed musicien 1middots almost 50 years in the business What people enjoy most about Satchmobull seems to be his highly-expressive rtinger-cQmeciianshi which will undoubtedly be obvious during his concert here

The College Union committee t-lhich expects a sell-out crowd to hear Armstrong September 29 indicated last week that the Hens Gym is being prepared to accommodate 3500 middot persons for the concert

-4-

COLLEGE STUDENTS FACULTY INVITED TO JOIN IN INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION YEAR-

Students and faculty of Cal Poly have been encouraged to participate in the 11 Intershynational Cooperation Year 11 The invitation came fr01n Joseph ~ Amter chairman of the Committee for Research on the Development of International Institutions of the National Citizens Co~ssion on International Cooperation

The letter to Cal Poly President Julian A McPhee indicated that President of the us Lyndon B Johnson had proclaimed 1965 as International Cooperation Year and had set up a broad program within the Executive Branch of the federal government to revi~7 our present international policies in cooperation A Nation~l Citizens 1 Co~ssion on International Cooperation has been organized to present a report to the President at a l~ite House Conference to be held November 29-December 1 1965

The national committee is encouraging faculty and students to discuss in seminars or meetings on the subject of international cooperation as an agent of 11 peace The combull mittee intends to publish a volume l-7hich lrlll contain extensive middotsubstantiating material and would welcome contributions from faculty and students i f they wish to make SUch contributions by the deadline November 1 1965

One of the kinds of questions which the national cOmmittee hopes students and faculty uill attempt to ans-Jer is Should educational institutions conduct significant edushycational programs at various levels on the requirements for peace Please elaborate

Contributions should be sent to 11 Joseph A Amter Committee Chairman Committee for Research on the Development of International Institutions National Citizens Comshymission on International Cooperation Peace Research Organization Fund 2535 First National Bank Building Denver Colo 80202 middot

S E S L 0 C NOW IN NEW QUARTERS

Now in its new quarters in Room 206 of the Agricultural Education Building on campus is SESLOC Federal Credit Union The new location at the north end of the buildings main level is at the opposite end of the hall from the credit unions old location Open hours remain the same as those in the former location

INFORI-iTION ON TICKETS FOR FOOTBALL CORRECTED TICKET SALE CONTINUES

Advance sale of tickets for Cal Polys 1965 varsity football season is continuing according to Robert F Spink graduate manager for the Associated Students Inc who also issued information to correct that which appeare4 in last weeks issue of Staff Bulletin

Spink said that last weeks article which left the impression that the special $500 with ASI associate membership offer for five reserved seat tickets would allow the buyer to purchase five tickets to any one or all five home games was incorrect It should have indicated that the offer includes one ticket to each home contest and that the cost will be $500 regardless of whether the purchase is made in time for the ticket to be used for all f~ve games or for only two or three

In addition the graduate manager said that the several different types of tickets for use by members of the college faculty and staff discussed in last weeks article reshymain available Those interested in obtaining further information regarding purchase of tickets for use during the home football season which begins Saturday (September 25) night when the Mustangs host Linfield College may do so by calling the ASI Office 546-2411

- 5 -

MUSTANG FOOTBALLERS OPEN HOME SLATE SATURDAY MIGHT

With a season-opening 21middot20 victory over San Francisco State College already under its belt bull Coach Sheldon Hardens grid varsity will begin its home schedule Saturday (September 25) night when tt hosts Linfield College of Oregon Game t~e

bull for that middotcontest planned for Mustang Stadium on campus will be 800 pm bull bull bull bull

Last week-ends action saw the Mustangs tally the games first points h the second 9uarter and then Come from behind to score two touchdowns in the final half to win

middot CAMPUS THEATER ANNOUNCES OPEN HOUSE TRY-OUTS

request from J Murray Smith of the English and Speech Departments faculty asks members of the faculty to announce to their classes that the Theater will hold an open house and try-outs for its planned p~qduction of Harvey middot T~esday and Wednesday nights from 700 to 1000 p~m I

The combined events will provide an opportunity for interested st~dents to see and learn more about lighting makeup the stage and the workshop At the same time trybullouts for the play -which is sched~led to run November 5 6 19 and 20 will take pla~e in Room 212 of the Theater Building Those interested in trying out do not need to have had prior th~atrical experience and may receive either class credit or activity credit

I

Smith conclJdes by adding coffee and cake will be served with great splendor on the radial saw table in the WQrkshop

STAFF CLUB SLATES TALK BY COACH HARDEN FOR THURSDAY LUNCHEON

With a successful opening game already history Cal Polys Head Football Coach Sheldon Harden will illuminate his crystal ball with statistics ~~d experience and really tell about what the 1965 grid season has in store for Mustang fans when he addresses Thursdaybull s Staff Club Luncheon meeting Special guests for the program which is planned for noon Thursday (September 23) in the Staff Dining Room will be several members of the Mustmiddotang Boosters Club

Staff Club members who have wondered how to support the colleges athletic program other than by game attendance and en~oUfaging athletes in their classes will want to bring $10 to the meeting and become a Mustang booster according to Col William Boyce~ middotpresident of the club By special arrangement all members of the Cal Poly faculty and staff are now eligible to join the Mustang Boosters Club at the special annual rate of $1000

Membership in the boosters club entitles the member to reserved parking at home middot football games free admission to all Cal Poly athletic events except football specialmiddot event and tournaments listing in football proirams and a car sticker and desk plaque Memberships in this organization which supports the colleges athleticmiddot program through a scholarshmiddotip program administered by the middotcollege bull may

middot be purchased from Athletic Coordinator Dick Anderson whose office ismiddot in Room 209 of theMen s Physical Educationmiddot Building

The Mustang Boosters Club annual banquet scheduled for tomorrow (Wednesday September 22) evening~beginning at 600 pm at the Madonna Inn in San LJiS Obispo A will present Ernie Nevers a former allbullAmerican and pioneer professional football W player as guest speaker~ Tickets for the banquet may be purchased at $300 each ~lub members may purchase two tickets for $500

6--

TAPE OF PANEL DISCUSSION ON PERSONNEL BENEFITS IS AVAILABLE

Because a number of members of the staff and faculty were unable to attend the panel discussion on Personnel Benefits held during the recent Fall Staff Conference a tape recording was made of the proceedings and is available to middot those who would like to hear it

The panel made up of experts on various subjects discussed recent changes in the areas of insurance retirement and California Physicians Service Health middot Insurance

The 90-minute tape of the discussion may be checked out at the Audio Visual Departmeots Service Office Room 9 Business Administration and Education Building

1 middot l

PLACEMENT CALENDAR bullbull INTERVIEWS ON CAMPUS SEPTEMBER 21 - OCTOBER 1 1965

UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS Capt M V Young Captain Donald A Hodgen and SSgt E J Paurazas US Marine Corps officer selection liaison officers will be available in the Snack Bar area of the Dining Hall to discuss with interested students the Marine Corps Officer Training Programs (921-923)

UNITED STATES NAVY Lt F J Skin~er USB Lt C L Clinton USN(W) and LtJg F M Fellrath USN the Officer Programs Information Jeam will b~ available in the Snack Bar area of the Dining Hall to provide studentamp with information on the opportunities available to college graduates as commissioned officers in the US Naval Reserve (927~929)

YORK CORPORATION Los Angeles A Dokter regional sales manager and L P Jacobsen regional manager will interview seniors in AC and R and ME who have an interest in air conditioning and refrigeration (930)

MARVIN LANDPLANE CO Woodland Calif R L Hormbostel sales manager will interview seniors in Ag Engineering and MA The company is a builder of scientific land levelers

DEADLINE FOR ARTICLES APPEARING IN NEXT WEEKS STAFF BULLETIN IS FRIDAY NOON

bull bull - 1

CAMPUSmiddot CALENDAR - middot 1oiEEK ()F SEPTEMBER 21middot28 1965

Tuesday September 21

12 00 Books at High Noon Luncheon Meeting

Wednesday September 22

200 Executive Council Meeting

Thursday September 23

815 am Applied Arts middotmiddot Division Committee Meeting

900 am Agriculture Division Commit~ee Meeting

Noon Staff Club Luncheon Meeting -

Saturday September 25

middotmiddot 300 pm Cal Poly Womens Club Fall Tea

800 pm Varsity Football vs Linfield College

Monday September 27

200 pm bull Executive Council Meeting

Tuesday Seetember 28

815 am Applied 3ciences Division Meet~

middot- middotmiddot 1000 Am middot Engineering Division Committee Meeting

Noon Books at High Noon

SDR

Admin 301

Admin 213-A

Ag 138

SDR

bull

Lib 129

Mustang Stadium

Admin 301

Admin 301 ~ tt~

GA 101

SDR

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES

EVIE~ JUNE 1965 VOl 2 No 12

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

Victor H Palmieri was appointed to the Board of Trustees by Governor Brown in July of 1964 A decade before almost to the month Trustee Palmshyieri had graduated from Stanford Law School where he was editor of the Law Review and had been namshyed to the Order of the Coif high-ranking honor soshyciety of the legal profession He also received his undergraduate education at Stanford with a major in history

Following his graduation he joined the law firm of 0Melshyveny amp Myers in Los Angeles where he served until duty with with the US Army Later he returned to OMelveny amp Myshyers where he specialized in orporate and business law

In 1958 Mr Palmieri left private practice to become exshyecutive vice-president of the Janss Investment Corp a leading real estate deshyvelopment firm and in 1963 he was named presishydent of the firm and its affiliated companies

Mr Palmieri has remained continuously acshytive in educational fields A lecturer in law at the Stanford Law School he is currently teaching a course there in legal aspects of real estate transacshytions He also lectu res from time to time at varishyous other graduate schools including the Universishyty of Southern California and UCLA In addition he is a founding member of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions in Santa Barbara

He was born in Chicago Ill but has lived in California since 1939 He has served as a member of a number of state commissions concerned with urban problems As a memb er of the Commission on Metropolitan Area Probl ems the Governors Advisory Commission on Housing and the Coordinashyting Council on Urban Policies he has been closeshyly involved with state-level efforts to meet growth

roblems throu ghout the state

On the occasion of his appointment to the CSC Board of Trustees Governor (Continued on Page 4)

REVISED CSC BUDGET ADOPTED

A pared-down but still substantial CSC support budget which emerged from two legislative sessions and a special hearing held by Governor Brown was finally approved as both the month and fiscal year ended

At the Governors hearing Jun 23 Chancellor Dumke accompanied by Trustees Louis Heilbron Albert J Ruffo and E Guy Warren and Dr John Livingston chairman of the Statewide Academic Senate continued to plead the case of the Colleges for no further cuts in the systems budgetary reshyquests stressing again a pressing need for faculty salary increases

As finally adopted budget figures revealed more gains than losses in key items including a faculty salary increase of approximately 10

Other faculty benefits which became available for the new fiscal year are $250 000 for sabbatishycal leaves $200 000 for leaves of absence to do research in science or creative work in the arts $100 000 for achievement awards to recognize exshycellence in classroom instruction and $96 000 for out-of-state travel related to instruction The apshypropriations likewise provided $100 000 to defray up to 50 of moving costs for relocating new faculty

One million dollars for library books to augshyment existing books -per - student ratios at five of the Colleges was also authorized

On-campus work-study programs employing student assistants were funded with $148 226 to be used with federal matching funds an additional $17 000 was allocated for lectures by visiting scholshyars and the educat ional TV station at San Diego SC as well as the nursery school at San Francisco SC were provided support funds

All of these improvements said Chancellor Dumke will greatly help to relieve the spartan bu dgetunderwhich we have been operating for years but we are still far behind In this regard I am pleased to note that the Legislatu re is planning an interim study on the whole problem of financing pubshylic higher education

SYSTEM HONORS MARK COMMENCEMENTS

Commencement Day at Hwnboldt SC Jun 4 was not only the first in a series of statewide cereshymonies it also marked the granting of the first honorary degree to a CSC alwnnus An honorary Doctor of Laws degree was conferred by the Colshyleges on Dr Monroe E Spaght onetime president of the student body at Humboldt and now managing director and chairman of the board of Europes largest industrial complex Royal Dutch Shell peshytrolewn companies Trustee James F Thacher and HSC President Cornelius H Siemens officiated

A week later on Jun 11 at San Francisco SC s Commencement Trustee Louis H Heilbron and Chancellor Dumke presided with SFSC Presishydent Paul A Dodd at the award of an honorary Docshytor of Hwnane Letters degree to Frank V de Belshylis patron of the arts and donor to the Colleges of the immense collection of books music and objets dart which bears his name in a special section of the library building at SFSC (See photo at right)

De Bellis who was honored for his contribushytions to the preservation of Italian culture and its interpretation to the students and people of Cali shyfornia 11 will be further honored this month at the University of Bari the fourth largest educational institution in Italy which will present him with its sigillum aureum (golden seal) in tribute to his lifeshylong interest in the dissemination of Italian culture

Dr Spaght gave the commencement address at Hwnboldt SC Dr Arthur Stanton Adams former president of the American Council on Education was the principal speaker at the San Francisco cershyemonies

On other campuses of the system _speakers were Chico Dr Harold Benjamin USC Visiting Lecturer Stanislaus Dr John F Olson presishydent of Oklahoma City University Fresno Dr Louis Benezet president of Claremont Graduate School and University Center Sacramento Dr Guy A West retiring president of SSG San Diego Dr Frank Baxter professor emeritus of USC San Fernando Valley Dr R A Billington of the Huntshyington Library San Jose Trustee Louis H Heil shybron Cal State Hayward Dr Mitchell P Briggs executive secretary of the Western Association of Schools and Colleges

Cal State Long Beach Dr E C Stakrnan of the University of Minnesota Rockefeller Foundashytion consultant Cal State Los Angeles Stanley Mosk Associate Justice Supreme Court of Calif Sonoma Rev Dr Samuel DeWitt Proctor of the National Council of the Churches of Christ Cal

2

State Fullerton Trustee Victor H Palmieri Poly San Luis Obispo Charles Luckman chai man CSC Board of Trustees Cal Poly Pomona Mr Bart Lytton president and chairman of Lytton Financial Corp

This year the California State Colleges gradushyated approximately 20000 students a recordnwnshyber Among them was Gunnar Herrstrom of Sonoshyma SC who received his bachelors degree in psyshychology and thus completed a program started at UC which was interrupted by the war World War I that is Mr Herrstrom is 72 years old He plans to return to sse for the summer session to continue studies in Spanish

Commencement at San Francisco SC included presshyentation of honorary L H D to Frank V de Bellis Photo shows 1 to r President Dodd Mr de Belshylis Trustee Louis Heilbron and Chancellor Dumke

FACULTY SALARY ISSUE ON TV

A television docwnentary 11 The Salary Issue Colleges in Crisis 11 was filmed last month at San Diego SC Participants in the program a segment of the Profile series were Trustee Victor H Palmieri Chancellor Dwnke Dr Ernest 0 Byrne Dr James N Tidwell and Dr Donald N Wood of SDSC and Jerry Harmon president of the Associshyated Students at the College They presented a panel discussion Showings were on KOGO San Diego KNBC Los Angeles and KRON San Franshycisco It is scheduled for KVIE Sacramento Jul 2 and subsequently will be made available to stations in Bakersfield Fresno Eureka and Santa Barbara Motion picture prints of the program are on loan to the Colleges from the Chancellors Office

Retirements of Dr H Thurston Hatch associshyate dean of students in charge of placement and DJa William B McCann director of the SchoolAdmini shytration Center and professor of education at Chico SC became effective this month

3

IVINGSTON HEADS STATEWIDE SENATE

Dr John C Livingston of Sacramento SC has been elected chairman of the Statewide Academic Senate for 1965-66 succeeding Dr Samuel E Wishyley of Cal State Long Beach

Meeting May 20-21 at the Long Beach campus the Senate also elected Dr Jesse B Allen of Cal State Los Angeles to a second term as vice-chairshyman named as secretary Dr James P Heath of San Jose SC and reconstituted its Executive Comshymittee by electing as members-at-l arge Mr Leo G McClatchy of San Francisco SC and Dr William R Rogers of San Jose who will serve on the comshymitteewith thenewofficersand Dr Wiley of CSLB past-president

Newly elected to the Senate were Dr Joseph A Wagner of CSLB Drs Lee R Kerschner and Paul J Pastor of Cal State Fullerton replacing Drs Ida Cappolino and Miles D McCarthy Mr Milton Dobkin of Humboldt SC for Dr Hyman Palshyais Mr R Dean Galloway of Stanislaus SC for Dr Max C Norton Dr PeterKoestenbaum of SanJose SC for Dr Dean R Cresap Dr Joseph McGowan of Sacramento SC for Dr James M Bradfield Dr Robert A Mott of Cal Poly SLO for Mr Warren R

nderson Mr Elmer H Rice of Cal Poly Pornoshya for Dr John Fulbeck Dr James N Tidwell of

San Diego SC for Dr Ivan N McCollom and Dr William W Young of Sonoma SC for Dr Cheryl Peterson

Facultymembers whose terms as senators conshytinue are Drs B Gordon Gibb and Lew D Oliver of Chico Drs R Deane Branstetter and James J Hunter of San Diego Drs Richard Axen and John L Clark of San Francisco Dr La Verne Bucy of Cal Poly SLO Dr Bernard A Shepard and Mr Phillip Walker of Fresno Dr Roscoe Peithman of Humboldt Mr William Eshelman and Dr Kenneth A Martyn of Cal State Los Angeles Dr Edward A Nelson of Cal Poly Pomona Dr Nicholas P Hardeman of Cal State Long Beach Drs H Duane Heath and William Sawrey of Cal State Hayward Dr John E Caswell of Stan islaus Dr Warren E Olson of Sonoma Dr Lyle E Gibson of Cal State Palos Verdes and Dr Gerald Scherba of Cal State San Bernardino

ANGELL TO CHANCELLORS OFFICE

Dr Melvin A Angell associate dean of stushydents for counseling at Fresn oSC has been appoinshy

d associate dean of student affairs in the Chancelshyr1 s Office He will be on leave of absence from

his FSC position during the 1965-66 academic year to ~ccept the post

SCULPTURE SYMPOSIUM SET FOR CSLB

The first international sculpture symposium in the US opened Jun 21 at Cal State Long Beach where 14 of the worlds great modern sculptors were scheduled to begin work on monumental sculptures Sculptors participating include Kosso Eloul of Isshyrael Andre Bloc of France Kenjiro Azuma of Mishylan Italy J J Beljon of Holland and Gabriel Kohn of the U S The event will be open to the public without charge through Aug 14

SONOMA SC OFFERS FAR WEST INSTITUTE

For the fourth summer Sonoma SC and the California Folklore Society will co-sponsor an Inshystitute of Far Western American Culture beginning Aug 2 This years themeis FolkMusic and Othshyer Folklore of Minority Groups in the Far West Previous themes were folklore and local history folklore and fiction and art architecture and folkshylore

Participating specialists include Dr Stith Thompson emeritus professor of English and folkshylore Indiana U Chingwah Lee curator of the Kuan Yin temple in San Franciscos Chinatown and Ralph J Gleason nationally known jazz music authority

Dr Hector Lee dean of in struction at SSC and executive vice-president of the California Folkshylore Society will direct the institute which is reshylated to several American Studies courses and degree programs comprising a part of the area studies offered by the Colleges

FIRST JOINT DOCTORATE OFFERED

The first doctoral program to be offered jointshyly by a California State College and the University of California will be initiated at San Diego SC this fall it was announced this month by Chancellor Dumshyke and University President Clark Kerr It will be offered in chemistry by UC s San Diego campus and SDSC Granting of joint doctorates was authorized in 1960 under the Master Plan and approval of the chemistry program was granted by a joint graduate board of final academic review composed of represhysentatives from the Colleges and the University

SUPREME COURTS ACCREDIT CHAPMAN

Attorney Mayer Chapman now associate counshysel of the esc legal staff has been admitted to the U S Supreme Court for p r actice before that body and also admitted to the Court of Military Appeals highest military court He earned his undergradushyate and law degree at UCLA where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and the Order of the Coif

4

STATEWIDE NEWS BRIEFS

San Jose SC-- Lowell C Pratt dean of CSC public information directors retires this month after 18 years at the College He will be succeedshyed by James E Noah his assistant for the past three years + + +A two-year study financed by the federal government through the States Division of Highways will be conducted by SJSC to determine whether a special course of driver training will improve driving habits of traffic violators

San Diego SC --Dr Malcolm A Love presishydent of SDSC has been triply honored by the American Association of University Professors at the annual banquet of its San Diego chapter by Colshyorado State College at Greeley where he delivered the commencement address and by the University of Nevada which this month awarded him an honorshyary LLD degree + + + Cap and Gown SDSC s honor society for women is now a chapter of Morshytar Board the only national honorary organization recognizing outstanding senior womens societies in American colleges and universities Cap and Gown thus becomes the first CSC chapter of Morshytar Board and the 117th in the nation

The Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany was awarded to Chancellor Dumke at a reshycent ceremony in Los Angeles Phoshytograph shows Hans RolfKiderlen Gershyman Consul-General congratulating Dr and Mrs Dumke following presentashytion of the Orders medal and citation which Dr Dumke holds The decorashytion was conferred in appreciation of the Chancellors part in establishing esc international programs overshyseas and for encouraging instruction in foreign lanshyguages including German throughout the college system

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

(Continued from Page 1) Brown commented I have verydeliberately sought to recognize the importance and the standing of the California State Colleges in my appointments to the Board and to push for their continued development as centers of academic exshycellence Mr Palmieris appointment contributes to both of those goals 1 Trustee Palmieri is marshy

ried His wife the former Martha Cooley of Pasashydena is also a Stanford graduate They have thr sons Victor Jr Matthew B and John W Th family home is in Malibu on Colony Drive

FALK TO HEAD INTERNATIONAL UNIT

Dr Karl L Falk professor of economics at Fresno SC and an authority on comparative economshyic systems and international housing has been namshyed director of international affairs for the Califorshynia State Colleges

In making the appointment Chancellor Dumke said Falk will head an expanded program of intershynational activities coordinating existing and new programs including foreign aid international study student and faculty exchanges with other countries and overseas projects sponsored by private foundashytions

One important phase of State College overseas operation consists of programs of study abroad for State College students in France Germany Japan Spain Sweden and Taiwan under the direction of Dr Thomas P Lantos of San Francisco SC who according to Dr Falk will continue in this aspect of international activities

Falk has been on the Fresno SC faculty sinshy1938 He received his undergraduate training at Stanford U and his doctoral degree at the Univershysity of Berlin Germany

He is chairman of the Fresno City Housing Aushythority vice-chairman of the Governors Advisory Committee on Housing Probl ems and past-president of the NationalAssociationof Housing and Redevelshyopment Officials He is an official of several finanshycial institutions and a former member of the board of the California Savings and Loan League

In his new post which he assumes Aug 1 Falk will be headquartered at the Chancellors Office Inglewood

SIEMENS JOINS CONSTITUTION COMMITTEE

Humboldt SC President Cornelius H Siemens has been elected to membership on the state 1 s Conshystitutional Revision Commission established by the 1963 Legislature for the purpose of recommending revisions to the Constitution for placement on the 1966 November ballot

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymo A Rydell Executive Vice-Chancellor John F Richardson Vice-Chancell Business Affairs C Mansel Keene Assistant Chancellor Faculty and Sta Affairs The California State Colleges Review is issued by the Public Affairs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES

EVIE~

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

Governor Edmund G Brown recently appointed Chester R Bartalini 62 president of the California State Council of Carpenters to succeed Thomas L Pitts secretary-treasurer of the California Labor Federation as a member of CSCs Board of Trustees

Trustee Pitts said he had asked the Governor to replace him on the board because the demands of his union post have made it impossible for me to give as much time to the State Colleges as I felt necessary

Pitts told Governor Brown that he was most pleased with Mr Barshytalinis appointment I know he will do a great job for the people of California on this board

The Governor said I regret ne loss of Tom Pitts from this imshy~rtant board very much He served

with great distinction and his good Chester R Bartalinijudgment will certainly be missed

Governor Brown said that he was however very happy to have the service of Chester Bartalini who has proved himshyself in many ways a truly dedicated Californian

In his long service in the Carpenters union Chester Bartalini has shown great administrative talent and executive ability As a union leader he has learned to appreciate the need to keep alive and strengthen Californias system of tuition-free education

Trustee Bartalini is a native of Michigan and has lived here since 1936 He served two terms as a member of the state Correctional Industry Commission and has been executive secretary of the Bay Counties District Council of Carpenters San Francisco since 1950

He is a member of the Commonwealth Club the Elks Eagles Associated Sportsmen of California and the Alameda Rod and Gun Club

He is a director of the Alameda Boys Oub and a member of the Joint Labor University of California committee

He has been president of the California State Council of orpenters since 1958

Trustee Bartalini lives at 1446 Eastshore Drive Alameda with his wife Florinda He has six children and seven grandshychildren

AUGUST 1965

VOL 3 N o 2

FISCAL TASK FORCES DEPLOYED

More efficient ways of staffing and funding systemwide college operations at every level of support are now being sought by eight task forces representing all of the Colleges

Members of the task-force groups were appointed by the CSC Committee on Fiscal Responsibility which was formed in May to implement the provisions of Senate Concurrent Resoshylution No 29 calling for a study of greater fiscal flexibility for the college system

Under the leadership of Harry W Brakebill vice-presishydent at San Francisco SC and permanent chairman of the committee together with Sol Buchalter chairman of the deshypartment of finance and law at San Fernando Valley SC who is serving as the committees executive officer on a fulltime basis during the summer months the task forces will engage in an all-out assault on the CSCs financial problems

Scope of the effort is shown by the assignments given to the groups ( 1) relationships and responsibilities of state agencies involved ( 2) budget formulation processes ( 3) deshytermination of level of support ( 4) budget administration ( 5) accounting and reporting ( 6-7-8) self-supporting funcshytions designated as noninstructional college foundation and summer-session and extension activities

Before hearings start on SCR 29 next Oct the specific tasks that these forces have set for themselves are in order of priority suggesting feasible and attainable methods for imshyproving budget administration defining means for determining adequate support levels and creating a model arrangement for fulfilling accountability requirements relating to expenditure of funds provided by the Legislature In the matter of accountshyability both internal management aspects and external public interest in quality education are being considered by the comshymittee and its forces

Some eighty representatives of the Colleges and the Chanshycellors Office including presidents deans business managers and students have already been named to the various task forces and most of the groups have started work

FIRST SCHOLARSHIP FOR CSSB

A $1000 check has established the first scholarship fund sponsored by a private organization for Cal State San Bernarshydino Donated by The Social Lites a Negro womens social and civic organization it provides an initial $300 for some deservshying student from the San Bernardino area Income from the remainder will go into a permanent fund to which the womens organization will continue to add until a complete scholarship program can be financed from the funds income alone

2

BOOKS MAGAZINES AND PAPERS At the end of last June Dr Monroe E Spaght the forshy

mer student body president at Humboldt SC who is now managing director of more than 500 companies operated by Royal Dutch Shell- a position of corporate eminence never before achieved by any American- became not only an honorary Doctor of Laws by virtue of his CSC degree but also an author of belles-lettres by virtue of his book The Bright Key

Dr Monroe E Spaght (right) receiving the LLD dregree from Trustee James F Thatcher at Humboldt State College June 4 1965

Just published by Appleton-Century-Crofts the book defends with truth urbanity and wit his strong belief that business has real responsibilities to our educational system Dr Spaght earned his PhD in chemistry at a time when much of the business world was convinced such training rendered a man unfit for a life of decision and action Today he is recognized as a leading spokesman for industry on the role of education in contemporary society A trustee of Stanford U he is chairshyman of the Committee for Corporate Support of American Universities and chairman of the New York State Science and Technology Foundation

Literary honors for two other Humboldt alumni were also in the news Mr James Yoakum and Mr Sherman Pearl won first prize in the full-color category of the 1965 Governmentshywide Publications Contest sponsored by the Federal Editors Association with Wildlife on the Public Lands produced for the US Dept of the Interior Bureau of Land Management Mr Yoakum presently a lecturer in natural resources at the College was chief color photographer for the publication Mr Pearl is with the Nevada office of the Bureau Their document is the No 1 seller of the Government Printing Office with the widest distribution of any federal book and is now being transshylated into several foreign languages

A textbook on wildlife management by Dr Raymond Dasmann chairman of HSCs division of natural resources was recently published by John Wiley amp Sons It is his second text The first Environmental Conservation came out in 1959

Dr Ralph Samuelson chairman of the division of lanshyguage arts at the College has been notified that Nineteenth Century American Authors a syllabus of American Literature of which he was an editor is now being published by the

Eurasia Press in New Delhi India for use by more than 30 Indian universities e

College Information Officer Vivienne L George received first place award from the California Press Women for producshytion of Challenge 1964 the first annual Presidents Report In other categories Mrs George received third place for a feature article The Grapes Run Dry Along the Mayacamas published in a national magazine and top honorable mention for a series of newspaper articles about faculty members pubshylished last fall

Dr Clay Hatfield of the biological sciences department at Cal Poly SLO and John Applegarth also a member of the biological sciences faculty have collaborated in the production of a new college biology textbook Applied Microbiology reflecting Dr Hatfields more than 20 years experience as a microbio~ogist National Press Palo Alto published

OVERSEAS DIRECTORS NAMED Resident directors of CSCs International Programs durshy

ing the 1965-66 academic year have been announced by Chancellor Dumke

Named were Dr Leonard Messier of San Diego SC who will supervise the program at the University of Aix-Marseille France Dr John E Merrill also of SDSC at Waseda Univershysity in Tokyo Japan Dr Joachim Stanzel of San Jose SC at the Free University of Berlin and the University of Heidelshyberg Germany Dr Joseph Reid Scott also of SJSC at t University of Madrid and the University of Granada Spai and Dr Donald M Castleberry of San Francisco SC who was appointed for the University of Stockholm and the University of U ppsala Sweden

SAN JOSE OFFERS NEW TUTORIALS The usual courses lectures and grades so familiar to colshy

lege students will be unknown in Sep 1965 to a segment of entering freshmen at San Jose SC

Their unfamiliarity will stem from an experimental proshygram which is officially known at Tutorials in Letters and Science

While tutorial programs are not new the abandonment of the course is a startling departure from the usual educational experiments and reforms according to Dr Mervyn L Cadshywallader initiator of the program and associate professor of sociology at SJSC

Instead of the familiar format the new program will make use of individual tutorials group discussions small seminars and laboratory sessions Successful participants will earn 48 semester units of credit

The chief obligation of the student said Dr John Galm assistant professor of English and one of the first six tutors will be to submit written work to his tutor approximately every two weeks and then to have a conference with him A

Dr Cadwallader said a central theme will be featur each of the four semesters As an example four semesters work could be organized around study of four pivotal epochs in

3

Western Civilization Students will be encouraged to particishyte in some of the planning and evaluation of the program

The faculty-student ratio with the tutorial program will be approximately 1-to-20 This will permit the kind of intimiddot mate association and per~nal exchange between college proshyfessors and students that has become notable by its absence on the campuses of our large colleges and universities said Dr Cadwallader

He continued by stating that this return to a personal education may be one answer to the student demonstrations across the country

Other tutors in addition to Drs Cadwallader and Galm are Dr Richard Tansey professor of art Dr David Newman associate professor of psychology Dr Harold DeBey professor of chemistry and Gary Albright assistant professor of philshyosophy

UC COMMISSIONS CSLB ART

The first catalog of the new lrvine campus 6pound UC pubshylished early this month was designed by Dr Joseph Krause professor of art at Cal State Long Beach

Dr Krauses striking designs for various publications at the College caught the eye of Dr Clayton Garrison a former associate professor of speech at CSLB and present dean of UC Irvines fine arts division He requested Krause to design the new UC catalog

Rose Mary Thompson 21-year-old electronics major at Cal Poly Pomona became the first four-year coed to receive an engineering degree from the College when she graduated this summer Women were not enrolled at that campus until 1961

A CAMPUS CONVERTED into an international showcase for monumental sculpture has made Cal State at Long Beach a cynosure of cultural controversy this summer Bold abstract works formed of concrete steel redwood aluminum pipes and paint challenge the viewer as nine world-famous sculptors complete their contributions to the first International Sculpture Symposium in this country Their creations will remain on permanent exhibition at the College Along an area 100 ft in length and about 28 ft wide at the Seventh Street corner of the campus 19 massive forms 8-to-1 0 ft high (model pictured center-left above) constitute the sculpture of J J Beljon director of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in The Hague Holland Sculptor Beljon (upper left) contemplating the extent of his work under construction said wryly Gallery art and art dealers are doomed they have no future Other photos proceeding clockwise show- Gabriel Kohn of the US Andre Bloc of France

osso Eloul of Israel and directly under the center portrait of Piotr Kowalski a Polish sculptor residing in France an interior view of the ulptors workshop with student helper in foreground and with plaster on hand Kenneth Glenn director of the symposium who is also proshyssor of art at CSLB Left corner picture was taken at Bethlehem Steels Terminal Island plant where donated fabrication of plate contributed

by Triangle Steel Co and Ge~teral Pipe amp Supply Co vitalized the designs of Canadian sculptor Robert Murray Also participating in the symshyposium but not shown here are sculptors Kenjiro Azuma and Claire Falkenstein as well as muralist Rita Letendre who is sculptor Elouls wife

4

The ACADEMIC SENATE REGISTER

Headlines in the Los Angeles Times of last Jul 2 anshynounced Educators Hail Budget as Victory Yet I suspect for a large portion of the faculties the salary increase and the state college quality package of funds for research travel sabshybaticals and distinguished teaching represented a hollow vicshytory Not primarily because the salary increase was too little too late (though it was) and certainly not because the other benefits are insignificant Many of us are rather in the position ~f the teenager whose desire to be understood and respected Is not compensated by an increase in his allowance For those who react this way (I include myself) the most hopeful aspects of the past year are to be found in those activities of ad hoc faculty groups professional organizations the Chancellors Office Trustees and Academic Senate which have sought to create and enlarge public respect and support for the goals of the State Colleges

If we have sometimes acted inexpediently or undiploshymatically we need not apologize This is not a job for imageshymakers our problems will not always respond to the tech shyniques of politics as the art of the possible Our task has been to prepare the seedbed for a dialogue with the community and with the Legislature through which the purposes and aspirations of the state college experiment may be clarified We need now to consider as we gain the attention of the public and the Legislature what we are to say

Our problem is put into sharp focus by an observation of the young John Adams in 1765 Reflecting on the advanshytages bequeathed by the early settlers to their progeny Adams noted the unique civil and religious principles on the basis of which they laid very early the foundation of colleges and invested them with ample privileges and emoluments It is remarkable he added that they have left among their posshyterity so universal an affection and veneration for those seminshyaries and for liberal education that the meanest of the people contribute cheerfully to the support and maintenance of them every year and that nothing is more generally popular than projections for the honor reputation and advantage of those seats of learning

Is not our task to rekindle and revitalize the universal affection and veneration which alone in the long run can provide the basis for public support of our seminaries The civil and religious principles which supported it in times past Adams went on to note valued knowledge as the means to liberty Perhaps the purpose of the State Colleges reflects the universalization of that insight If so it is time to get about clarifying our own ideas on the matter and finding the means to communicate them to others If we are to survive we must become the peoples colleges not in an ad-mans empty phrase and not in the peoples present understanding but in a sense we have yet to define clearly for ourselves and then to communicate to the public As the Academic Senate

begins its third year of existence in the shadow of continuitA fiscal crises we will I hope turn part of our energies to ponde ing how to recover and how to deserve that universal affection and veneration -John C Livingston Chairman

STRONG POLICY ON COLLEGE SUPPORT ADOPTED With four new California State Colleges established by

the Legislature-in Contra Costa Kern San Mateo Santa Clara and Ventura counties-the Board of Trustees has adopted a policy to protect the support base of the existing Colleges

In a resolution of Jul 29 the Trustees expressed their concern for the financing of the California State Colleges at a level to maintain and strengthen educational excellence and declared that the financing of existing State Colleges should be maintained at the proper level and not be adversely affected by the financial impact of the addition of new State Colleges

Chancellor Dumke pointed out that the great strides made in the recent legislative session in faculty salary increases library and sabbatical leave augmentations research and travel allowances were the result of hard work in presenting the case for the State Colleges to the Legislature We must make it just as clear he said that our support budget for existing Colleges is still at an inadequate level and must not be diluted further by draining off funds to establish new Colleges

FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS

Three humanities professors from San Francisco SC ha been awarded Guggenheim Fellowships Ruby Cohn associa professor of English and world literarure Mark Harris associshyate professor of English and director of creative writing and Rudolph Weingartner associate professor of philosophy and chairman of the philosophy department

It is believed that no Cal State campus has ever before received three Guggenheims at one time

Dr George Huppert assistant professor of history at Cal State Hayward has been awarded a fellowship by the American Council of Learned Societies to complete research on The New History of the French Renaissance + + + Fellowships for srudy and travel in India have been awarded to Dr Joseph Pugliese CSH associate professor of art and to Glenn Glasow assistant professor of music by the Instirute of International Education Only 2i fellowships were awarded nationwide

Faculty fellowships provided by the National Science Foundation will enable Dr Seymour Mack associate professor of geology at Fresno SC to take his sabbatical leave at Stanford U for study and research in geo-chemistry and hydrology Earl L Pye of the physical sciences faculty at Cal Poly Pomona to complete his chemistry research project on detergent mishycelles at Louisiana State U and Dr Donald E Bianchi associshyate professor of biology at San Fernando Valley SC to spend a year at the University of Geneva Switzerland

==================~middotshyTHE CALIFORNIA_STA~ COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymond A ~ydell Ex~uhve Voce-Chancellor Harry E Brakebill Vice-Chancellor Busness Affaors C Mansel Keene Assost~nt Chancellor Faculty and Staff Affaors The Callforma State Colleges Rev1ew is issued by the Public Affa irs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

Page 3: September 21, 1965 Staff Bulletin

-l- bull

COLLEGE EXHIBIT Al STATE FAIR ~1ETUPHS TO CAMPUS llifH THIRD-PlACE RIBBON

The San Luis Obispo County exhibit at the California State Fair and Exposition pre- ~ pared and exhibited by Cal Poly returned to campus last toJeek with a third-place W ribbon and $1200 in premiums ~tered in middot county Exhibits- Contributions to the Development of California the display competed with other county exhibits costing up to $20000 It included photographs a large mural painting and a four-by-seven-foot model middotmiddot middot middot gt

Learn by Doing at Cal Poly in Beautiful San Luis Obispo County was theme of the exhibit llhich also featured recreational opportunities in the county including Avila Beach Hearst Castle and Horro Bay It came about through a resolution passed by the countys Board of Supetvisors last February 23 which designated the college ~s San Luis Obispo Countys agent and exhibitor at the huge state exposition toJhich ran September 1-12 in Sacramento

Robert Reynolds an illustrator on the staff of Cal Polys Audio Visual Department designed the exhibit The premium money earned will be used to defray construction costs _ middot

The exhibit itself was 32 feet wide and 12 feet deep with the 11 by 5-foot color mural painting occupying its left corner The mural depicted a youth on his horse overlookshying the San Luis Obispo Campus from the Santa Lucia Hountain focgtthills The mural- sized photographs of Morro Bay middotHearst Castle and Avila B-each filled the exhibit 1 s right side with the scale model of Cal Poly and photographs representing the college Agriculture Engineering Applied Sciences and Applied Art~ Divisions i middotn the backshyground Printed information on both the college and San Luis Obispo County was available for interested vidtors

Del Shirley an instructor in the Agricultural Education Department setved as manager for the display Norman Manzer Harold Johnson Eileen Johnson Phyllis Armstrong Shalom Kelner and Curtis Holder all students assisted in attending and constructing the exhibit Jim Crissie photographer on the A-V Departments staff provided photoshygraphs

~iPUS CONCERT BY LOUIS AlUiSTRONG SlATED SEPTEMBER 29

Louis Satchmo Pops Armstrong known as one of the foremost of all jazz musicians and showmen will appear in concert in the ~wn 1 s Gym cgtn campus Wednesday September 29 at 800 pm Being sponsored by the student College Union Assemblies Committee the shobulls cast ill also include Armstrongs famed All-Stars middot=

According to the sponsoring committee general admission prices for students have been set at $200 and for the public $250 Reserved seats are available at $250 for students and $300 for the public Tickets at all prices may be purchased at the Associated Students Inc offices on campus or at Browns Music Store Wickenden 1 s Mens Wear Rileys Fashion Center - College Square and Premiere Music Company all in San Luis Obispobull middotmiddot

Armstrong is the founding father of a particular style and sound in trumpet playing from which numerous techniques have evolvedbull However that which makes its greatest impact on the public is ~he famed musicien 1middots almost 50 years in the business What people enjoy most about Satchmobull seems to be his highly-expressive rtinger-cQmeciianshi which will undoubtedly be obvious during his concert here

The College Union committee t-lhich expects a sell-out crowd to hear Armstrong September 29 indicated last week that the Hens Gym is being prepared to accommodate 3500 middot persons for the concert

-4-

COLLEGE STUDENTS FACULTY INVITED TO JOIN IN INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION YEAR-

Students and faculty of Cal Poly have been encouraged to participate in the 11 Intershynational Cooperation Year 11 The invitation came fr01n Joseph ~ Amter chairman of the Committee for Research on the Development of International Institutions of the National Citizens Co~ssion on International Cooperation

The letter to Cal Poly President Julian A McPhee indicated that President of the us Lyndon B Johnson had proclaimed 1965 as International Cooperation Year and had set up a broad program within the Executive Branch of the federal government to revi~7 our present international policies in cooperation A Nation~l Citizens 1 Co~ssion on International Cooperation has been organized to present a report to the President at a l~ite House Conference to be held November 29-December 1 1965

The national committee is encouraging faculty and students to discuss in seminars or meetings on the subject of international cooperation as an agent of 11 peace The combull mittee intends to publish a volume l-7hich lrlll contain extensive middotsubstantiating material and would welcome contributions from faculty and students i f they wish to make SUch contributions by the deadline November 1 1965

One of the kinds of questions which the national cOmmittee hopes students and faculty uill attempt to ans-Jer is Should educational institutions conduct significant edushycational programs at various levels on the requirements for peace Please elaborate

Contributions should be sent to 11 Joseph A Amter Committee Chairman Committee for Research on the Development of International Institutions National Citizens Comshymission on International Cooperation Peace Research Organization Fund 2535 First National Bank Building Denver Colo 80202 middot

S E S L 0 C NOW IN NEW QUARTERS

Now in its new quarters in Room 206 of the Agricultural Education Building on campus is SESLOC Federal Credit Union The new location at the north end of the buildings main level is at the opposite end of the hall from the credit unions old location Open hours remain the same as those in the former location

INFORI-iTION ON TICKETS FOR FOOTBALL CORRECTED TICKET SALE CONTINUES

Advance sale of tickets for Cal Polys 1965 varsity football season is continuing according to Robert F Spink graduate manager for the Associated Students Inc who also issued information to correct that which appeare4 in last weeks issue of Staff Bulletin

Spink said that last weeks article which left the impression that the special $500 with ASI associate membership offer for five reserved seat tickets would allow the buyer to purchase five tickets to any one or all five home games was incorrect It should have indicated that the offer includes one ticket to each home contest and that the cost will be $500 regardless of whether the purchase is made in time for the ticket to be used for all f~ve games or for only two or three

In addition the graduate manager said that the several different types of tickets for use by members of the college faculty and staff discussed in last weeks article reshymain available Those interested in obtaining further information regarding purchase of tickets for use during the home football season which begins Saturday (September 25) night when the Mustangs host Linfield College may do so by calling the ASI Office 546-2411

- 5 -

MUSTANG FOOTBALLERS OPEN HOME SLATE SATURDAY MIGHT

With a season-opening 21middot20 victory over San Francisco State College already under its belt bull Coach Sheldon Hardens grid varsity will begin its home schedule Saturday (September 25) night when tt hosts Linfield College of Oregon Game t~e

bull for that middotcontest planned for Mustang Stadium on campus will be 800 pm bull bull bull bull

Last week-ends action saw the Mustangs tally the games first points h the second 9uarter and then Come from behind to score two touchdowns in the final half to win

middot CAMPUS THEATER ANNOUNCES OPEN HOUSE TRY-OUTS

request from J Murray Smith of the English and Speech Departments faculty asks members of the faculty to announce to their classes that the Theater will hold an open house and try-outs for its planned p~qduction of Harvey middot T~esday and Wednesday nights from 700 to 1000 p~m I

The combined events will provide an opportunity for interested st~dents to see and learn more about lighting makeup the stage and the workshop At the same time trybullouts for the play -which is sched~led to run November 5 6 19 and 20 will take pla~e in Room 212 of the Theater Building Those interested in trying out do not need to have had prior th~atrical experience and may receive either class credit or activity credit

I

Smith conclJdes by adding coffee and cake will be served with great splendor on the radial saw table in the WQrkshop

STAFF CLUB SLATES TALK BY COACH HARDEN FOR THURSDAY LUNCHEON

With a successful opening game already history Cal Polys Head Football Coach Sheldon Harden will illuminate his crystal ball with statistics ~~d experience and really tell about what the 1965 grid season has in store for Mustang fans when he addresses Thursdaybull s Staff Club Luncheon meeting Special guests for the program which is planned for noon Thursday (September 23) in the Staff Dining Room will be several members of the Mustmiddotang Boosters Club

Staff Club members who have wondered how to support the colleges athletic program other than by game attendance and en~oUfaging athletes in their classes will want to bring $10 to the meeting and become a Mustang booster according to Col William Boyce~ middotpresident of the club By special arrangement all members of the Cal Poly faculty and staff are now eligible to join the Mustang Boosters Club at the special annual rate of $1000

Membership in the boosters club entitles the member to reserved parking at home middot football games free admission to all Cal Poly athletic events except football specialmiddot event and tournaments listing in football proirams and a car sticker and desk plaque Memberships in this organization which supports the colleges athleticmiddot program through a scholarshmiddotip program administered by the middotcollege bull may

middot be purchased from Athletic Coordinator Dick Anderson whose office ismiddot in Room 209 of theMen s Physical Educationmiddot Building

The Mustang Boosters Club annual banquet scheduled for tomorrow (Wednesday September 22) evening~beginning at 600 pm at the Madonna Inn in San LJiS Obispo A will present Ernie Nevers a former allbullAmerican and pioneer professional football W player as guest speaker~ Tickets for the banquet may be purchased at $300 each ~lub members may purchase two tickets for $500

6--

TAPE OF PANEL DISCUSSION ON PERSONNEL BENEFITS IS AVAILABLE

Because a number of members of the staff and faculty were unable to attend the panel discussion on Personnel Benefits held during the recent Fall Staff Conference a tape recording was made of the proceedings and is available to middot those who would like to hear it

The panel made up of experts on various subjects discussed recent changes in the areas of insurance retirement and California Physicians Service Health middot Insurance

The 90-minute tape of the discussion may be checked out at the Audio Visual Departmeots Service Office Room 9 Business Administration and Education Building

1 middot l

PLACEMENT CALENDAR bullbull INTERVIEWS ON CAMPUS SEPTEMBER 21 - OCTOBER 1 1965

UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS Capt M V Young Captain Donald A Hodgen and SSgt E J Paurazas US Marine Corps officer selection liaison officers will be available in the Snack Bar area of the Dining Hall to discuss with interested students the Marine Corps Officer Training Programs (921-923)

UNITED STATES NAVY Lt F J Skin~er USB Lt C L Clinton USN(W) and LtJg F M Fellrath USN the Officer Programs Information Jeam will b~ available in the Snack Bar area of the Dining Hall to provide studentamp with information on the opportunities available to college graduates as commissioned officers in the US Naval Reserve (927~929)

YORK CORPORATION Los Angeles A Dokter regional sales manager and L P Jacobsen regional manager will interview seniors in AC and R and ME who have an interest in air conditioning and refrigeration (930)

MARVIN LANDPLANE CO Woodland Calif R L Hormbostel sales manager will interview seniors in Ag Engineering and MA The company is a builder of scientific land levelers

DEADLINE FOR ARTICLES APPEARING IN NEXT WEEKS STAFF BULLETIN IS FRIDAY NOON

bull bull - 1

CAMPUSmiddot CALENDAR - middot 1oiEEK ()F SEPTEMBER 21middot28 1965

Tuesday September 21

12 00 Books at High Noon Luncheon Meeting

Wednesday September 22

200 Executive Council Meeting

Thursday September 23

815 am Applied Arts middotmiddot Division Committee Meeting

900 am Agriculture Division Commit~ee Meeting

Noon Staff Club Luncheon Meeting -

Saturday September 25

middotmiddot 300 pm Cal Poly Womens Club Fall Tea

800 pm Varsity Football vs Linfield College

Monday September 27

200 pm bull Executive Council Meeting

Tuesday Seetember 28

815 am Applied 3ciences Division Meet~

middot- middotmiddot 1000 Am middot Engineering Division Committee Meeting

Noon Books at High Noon

SDR

Admin 301

Admin 213-A

Ag 138

SDR

bull

Lib 129

Mustang Stadium

Admin 301

Admin 301 ~ tt~

GA 101

SDR

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES

EVIE~ JUNE 1965 VOl 2 No 12

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

Victor H Palmieri was appointed to the Board of Trustees by Governor Brown in July of 1964 A decade before almost to the month Trustee Palmshyieri had graduated from Stanford Law School where he was editor of the Law Review and had been namshyed to the Order of the Coif high-ranking honor soshyciety of the legal profession He also received his undergraduate education at Stanford with a major in history

Following his graduation he joined the law firm of 0Melshyveny amp Myers in Los Angeles where he served until duty with with the US Army Later he returned to OMelveny amp Myshyers where he specialized in orporate and business law

In 1958 Mr Palmieri left private practice to become exshyecutive vice-president of the Janss Investment Corp a leading real estate deshyvelopment firm and in 1963 he was named presishydent of the firm and its affiliated companies

Mr Palmieri has remained continuously acshytive in educational fields A lecturer in law at the Stanford Law School he is currently teaching a course there in legal aspects of real estate transacshytions He also lectu res from time to time at varishyous other graduate schools including the Universishyty of Southern California and UCLA In addition he is a founding member of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions in Santa Barbara

He was born in Chicago Ill but has lived in California since 1939 He has served as a member of a number of state commissions concerned with urban problems As a memb er of the Commission on Metropolitan Area Probl ems the Governors Advisory Commission on Housing and the Coordinashyting Council on Urban Policies he has been closeshyly involved with state-level efforts to meet growth

roblems throu ghout the state

On the occasion of his appointment to the CSC Board of Trustees Governor (Continued on Page 4)

REVISED CSC BUDGET ADOPTED

A pared-down but still substantial CSC support budget which emerged from two legislative sessions and a special hearing held by Governor Brown was finally approved as both the month and fiscal year ended

At the Governors hearing Jun 23 Chancellor Dumke accompanied by Trustees Louis Heilbron Albert J Ruffo and E Guy Warren and Dr John Livingston chairman of the Statewide Academic Senate continued to plead the case of the Colleges for no further cuts in the systems budgetary reshyquests stressing again a pressing need for faculty salary increases

As finally adopted budget figures revealed more gains than losses in key items including a faculty salary increase of approximately 10

Other faculty benefits which became available for the new fiscal year are $250 000 for sabbatishycal leaves $200 000 for leaves of absence to do research in science or creative work in the arts $100 000 for achievement awards to recognize exshycellence in classroom instruction and $96 000 for out-of-state travel related to instruction The apshypropriations likewise provided $100 000 to defray up to 50 of moving costs for relocating new faculty

One million dollars for library books to augshyment existing books -per - student ratios at five of the Colleges was also authorized

On-campus work-study programs employing student assistants were funded with $148 226 to be used with federal matching funds an additional $17 000 was allocated for lectures by visiting scholshyars and the educat ional TV station at San Diego SC as well as the nursery school at San Francisco SC were provided support funds

All of these improvements said Chancellor Dumke will greatly help to relieve the spartan bu dgetunderwhich we have been operating for years but we are still far behind In this regard I am pleased to note that the Legislatu re is planning an interim study on the whole problem of financing pubshylic higher education

SYSTEM HONORS MARK COMMENCEMENTS

Commencement Day at Hwnboldt SC Jun 4 was not only the first in a series of statewide cereshymonies it also marked the granting of the first honorary degree to a CSC alwnnus An honorary Doctor of Laws degree was conferred by the Colshyleges on Dr Monroe E Spaght onetime president of the student body at Humboldt and now managing director and chairman of the board of Europes largest industrial complex Royal Dutch Shell peshytrolewn companies Trustee James F Thacher and HSC President Cornelius H Siemens officiated

A week later on Jun 11 at San Francisco SC s Commencement Trustee Louis H Heilbron and Chancellor Dumke presided with SFSC Presishydent Paul A Dodd at the award of an honorary Docshytor of Hwnane Letters degree to Frank V de Belshylis patron of the arts and donor to the Colleges of the immense collection of books music and objets dart which bears his name in a special section of the library building at SFSC (See photo at right)

De Bellis who was honored for his contribushytions to the preservation of Italian culture and its interpretation to the students and people of Cali shyfornia 11 will be further honored this month at the University of Bari the fourth largest educational institution in Italy which will present him with its sigillum aureum (golden seal) in tribute to his lifeshylong interest in the dissemination of Italian culture

Dr Spaght gave the commencement address at Hwnboldt SC Dr Arthur Stanton Adams former president of the American Council on Education was the principal speaker at the San Francisco cershyemonies

On other campuses of the system _speakers were Chico Dr Harold Benjamin USC Visiting Lecturer Stanislaus Dr John F Olson presishydent of Oklahoma City University Fresno Dr Louis Benezet president of Claremont Graduate School and University Center Sacramento Dr Guy A West retiring president of SSG San Diego Dr Frank Baxter professor emeritus of USC San Fernando Valley Dr R A Billington of the Huntshyington Library San Jose Trustee Louis H Heil shybron Cal State Hayward Dr Mitchell P Briggs executive secretary of the Western Association of Schools and Colleges

Cal State Long Beach Dr E C Stakrnan of the University of Minnesota Rockefeller Foundashytion consultant Cal State Los Angeles Stanley Mosk Associate Justice Supreme Court of Calif Sonoma Rev Dr Samuel DeWitt Proctor of the National Council of the Churches of Christ Cal

2

State Fullerton Trustee Victor H Palmieri Poly San Luis Obispo Charles Luckman chai man CSC Board of Trustees Cal Poly Pomona Mr Bart Lytton president and chairman of Lytton Financial Corp

This year the California State Colleges gradushyated approximately 20000 students a recordnwnshyber Among them was Gunnar Herrstrom of Sonoshyma SC who received his bachelors degree in psyshychology and thus completed a program started at UC which was interrupted by the war World War I that is Mr Herrstrom is 72 years old He plans to return to sse for the summer session to continue studies in Spanish

Commencement at San Francisco SC included presshyentation of honorary L H D to Frank V de Bellis Photo shows 1 to r President Dodd Mr de Belshylis Trustee Louis Heilbron and Chancellor Dumke

FACULTY SALARY ISSUE ON TV

A television docwnentary 11 The Salary Issue Colleges in Crisis 11 was filmed last month at San Diego SC Participants in the program a segment of the Profile series were Trustee Victor H Palmieri Chancellor Dwnke Dr Ernest 0 Byrne Dr James N Tidwell and Dr Donald N Wood of SDSC and Jerry Harmon president of the Associshyated Students at the College They presented a panel discussion Showings were on KOGO San Diego KNBC Los Angeles and KRON San Franshycisco It is scheduled for KVIE Sacramento Jul 2 and subsequently will be made available to stations in Bakersfield Fresno Eureka and Santa Barbara Motion picture prints of the program are on loan to the Colleges from the Chancellors Office

Retirements of Dr H Thurston Hatch associshyate dean of students in charge of placement and DJa William B McCann director of the SchoolAdmini shytration Center and professor of education at Chico SC became effective this month

3

IVINGSTON HEADS STATEWIDE SENATE

Dr John C Livingston of Sacramento SC has been elected chairman of the Statewide Academic Senate for 1965-66 succeeding Dr Samuel E Wishyley of Cal State Long Beach

Meeting May 20-21 at the Long Beach campus the Senate also elected Dr Jesse B Allen of Cal State Los Angeles to a second term as vice-chairshyman named as secretary Dr James P Heath of San Jose SC and reconstituted its Executive Comshymittee by electing as members-at-l arge Mr Leo G McClatchy of San Francisco SC and Dr William R Rogers of San Jose who will serve on the comshymitteewith thenewofficersand Dr Wiley of CSLB past-president

Newly elected to the Senate were Dr Joseph A Wagner of CSLB Drs Lee R Kerschner and Paul J Pastor of Cal State Fullerton replacing Drs Ida Cappolino and Miles D McCarthy Mr Milton Dobkin of Humboldt SC for Dr Hyman Palshyais Mr R Dean Galloway of Stanislaus SC for Dr Max C Norton Dr PeterKoestenbaum of SanJose SC for Dr Dean R Cresap Dr Joseph McGowan of Sacramento SC for Dr James M Bradfield Dr Robert A Mott of Cal Poly SLO for Mr Warren R

nderson Mr Elmer H Rice of Cal Poly Pornoshya for Dr John Fulbeck Dr James N Tidwell of

San Diego SC for Dr Ivan N McCollom and Dr William W Young of Sonoma SC for Dr Cheryl Peterson

Facultymembers whose terms as senators conshytinue are Drs B Gordon Gibb and Lew D Oliver of Chico Drs R Deane Branstetter and James J Hunter of San Diego Drs Richard Axen and John L Clark of San Francisco Dr La Verne Bucy of Cal Poly SLO Dr Bernard A Shepard and Mr Phillip Walker of Fresno Dr Roscoe Peithman of Humboldt Mr William Eshelman and Dr Kenneth A Martyn of Cal State Los Angeles Dr Edward A Nelson of Cal Poly Pomona Dr Nicholas P Hardeman of Cal State Long Beach Drs H Duane Heath and William Sawrey of Cal State Hayward Dr John E Caswell of Stan islaus Dr Warren E Olson of Sonoma Dr Lyle E Gibson of Cal State Palos Verdes and Dr Gerald Scherba of Cal State San Bernardino

ANGELL TO CHANCELLORS OFFICE

Dr Melvin A Angell associate dean of stushydents for counseling at Fresn oSC has been appoinshy

d associate dean of student affairs in the Chancelshyr1 s Office He will be on leave of absence from

his FSC position during the 1965-66 academic year to ~ccept the post

SCULPTURE SYMPOSIUM SET FOR CSLB

The first international sculpture symposium in the US opened Jun 21 at Cal State Long Beach where 14 of the worlds great modern sculptors were scheduled to begin work on monumental sculptures Sculptors participating include Kosso Eloul of Isshyrael Andre Bloc of France Kenjiro Azuma of Mishylan Italy J J Beljon of Holland and Gabriel Kohn of the U S The event will be open to the public without charge through Aug 14

SONOMA SC OFFERS FAR WEST INSTITUTE

For the fourth summer Sonoma SC and the California Folklore Society will co-sponsor an Inshystitute of Far Western American Culture beginning Aug 2 This years themeis FolkMusic and Othshyer Folklore of Minority Groups in the Far West Previous themes were folklore and local history folklore and fiction and art architecture and folkshylore

Participating specialists include Dr Stith Thompson emeritus professor of English and folkshylore Indiana U Chingwah Lee curator of the Kuan Yin temple in San Franciscos Chinatown and Ralph J Gleason nationally known jazz music authority

Dr Hector Lee dean of in struction at SSC and executive vice-president of the California Folkshylore Society will direct the institute which is reshylated to several American Studies courses and degree programs comprising a part of the area studies offered by the Colleges

FIRST JOINT DOCTORATE OFFERED

The first doctoral program to be offered jointshyly by a California State College and the University of California will be initiated at San Diego SC this fall it was announced this month by Chancellor Dumshyke and University President Clark Kerr It will be offered in chemistry by UC s San Diego campus and SDSC Granting of joint doctorates was authorized in 1960 under the Master Plan and approval of the chemistry program was granted by a joint graduate board of final academic review composed of represhysentatives from the Colleges and the University

SUPREME COURTS ACCREDIT CHAPMAN

Attorney Mayer Chapman now associate counshysel of the esc legal staff has been admitted to the U S Supreme Court for p r actice before that body and also admitted to the Court of Military Appeals highest military court He earned his undergradushyate and law degree at UCLA where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and the Order of the Coif

4

STATEWIDE NEWS BRIEFS

San Jose SC-- Lowell C Pratt dean of CSC public information directors retires this month after 18 years at the College He will be succeedshyed by James E Noah his assistant for the past three years + + +A two-year study financed by the federal government through the States Division of Highways will be conducted by SJSC to determine whether a special course of driver training will improve driving habits of traffic violators

San Diego SC --Dr Malcolm A Love presishydent of SDSC has been triply honored by the American Association of University Professors at the annual banquet of its San Diego chapter by Colshyorado State College at Greeley where he delivered the commencement address and by the University of Nevada which this month awarded him an honorshyary LLD degree + + + Cap and Gown SDSC s honor society for women is now a chapter of Morshytar Board the only national honorary organization recognizing outstanding senior womens societies in American colleges and universities Cap and Gown thus becomes the first CSC chapter of Morshytar Board and the 117th in the nation

The Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany was awarded to Chancellor Dumke at a reshycent ceremony in Los Angeles Phoshytograph shows Hans RolfKiderlen Gershyman Consul-General congratulating Dr and Mrs Dumke following presentashytion of the Orders medal and citation which Dr Dumke holds The decorashytion was conferred in appreciation of the Chancellors part in establishing esc international programs overshyseas and for encouraging instruction in foreign lanshyguages including German throughout the college system

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

(Continued from Page 1) Brown commented I have verydeliberately sought to recognize the importance and the standing of the California State Colleges in my appointments to the Board and to push for their continued development as centers of academic exshycellence Mr Palmieris appointment contributes to both of those goals 1 Trustee Palmieri is marshy

ried His wife the former Martha Cooley of Pasashydena is also a Stanford graduate They have thr sons Victor Jr Matthew B and John W Th family home is in Malibu on Colony Drive

FALK TO HEAD INTERNATIONAL UNIT

Dr Karl L Falk professor of economics at Fresno SC and an authority on comparative economshyic systems and international housing has been namshyed director of international affairs for the Califorshynia State Colleges

In making the appointment Chancellor Dumke said Falk will head an expanded program of intershynational activities coordinating existing and new programs including foreign aid international study student and faculty exchanges with other countries and overseas projects sponsored by private foundashytions

One important phase of State College overseas operation consists of programs of study abroad for State College students in France Germany Japan Spain Sweden and Taiwan under the direction of Dr Thomas P Lantos of San Francisco SC who according to Dr Falk will continue in this aspect of international activities

Falk has been on the Fresno SC faculty sinshy1938 He received his undergraduate training at Stanford U and his doctoral degree at the Univershysity of Berlin Germany

He is chairman of the Fresno City Housing Aushythority vice-chairman of the Governors Advisory Committee on Housing Probl ems and past-president of the NationalAssociationof Housing and Redevelshyopment Officials He is an official of several finanshycial institutions and a former member of the board of the California Savings and Loan League

In his new post which he assumes Aug 1 Falk will be headquartered at the Chancellors Office Inglewood

SIEMENS JOINS CONSTITUTION COMMITTEE

Humboldt SC President Cornelius H Siemens has been elected to membership on the state 1 s Conshystitutional Revision Commission established by the 1963 Legislature for the purpose of recommending revisions to the Constitution for placement on the 1966 November ballot

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymo A Rydell Executive Vice-Chancellor John F Richardson Vice-Chancell Business Affairs C Mansel Keene Assistant Chancellor Faculty and Sta Affairs The California State Colleges Review is issued by the Public Affairs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES

EVIE~

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

Governor Edmund G Brown recently appointed Chester R Bartalini 62 president of the California State Council of Carpenters to succeed Thomas L Pitts secretary-treasurer of the California Labor Federation as a member of CSCs Board of Trustees

Trustee Pitts said he had asked the Governor to replace him on the board because the demands of his union post have made it impossible for me to give as much time to the State Colleges as I felt necessary

Pitts told Governor Brown that he was most pleased with Mr Barshytalinis appointment I know he will do a great job for the people of California on this board

The Governor said I regret ne loss of Tom Pitts from this imshy~rtant board very much He served

with great distinction and his good Chester R Bartalinijudgment will certainly be missed

Governor Brown said that he was however very happy to have the service of Chester Bartalini who has proved himshyself in many ways a truly dedicated Californian

In his long service in the Carpenters union Chester Bartalini has shown great administrative talent and executive ability As a union leader he has learned to appreciate the need to keep alive and strengthen Californias system of tuition-free education

Trustee Bartalini is a native of Michigan and has lived here since 1936 He served two terms as a member of the state Correctional Industry Commission and has been executive secretary of the Bay Counties District Council of Carpenters San Francisco since 1950

He is a member of the Commonwealth Club the Elks Eagles Associated Sportsmen of California and the Alameda Rod and Gun Club

He is a director of the Alameda Boys Oub and a member of the Joint Labor University of California committee

He has been president of the California State Council of orpenters since 1958

Trustee Bartalini lives at 1446 Eastshore Drive Alameda with his wife Florinda He has six children and seven grandshychildren

AUGUST 1965

VOL 3 N o 2

FISCAL TASK FORCES DEPLOYED

More efficient ways of staffing and funding systemwide college operations at every level of support are now being sought by eight task forces representing all of the Colleges

Members of the task-force groups were appointed by the CSC Committee on Fiscal Responsibility which was formed in May to implement the provisions of Senate Concurrent Resoshylution No 29 calling for a study of greater fiscal flexibility for the college system

Under the leadership of Harry W Brakebill vice-presishydent at San Francisco SC and permanent chairman of the committee together with Sol Buchalter chairman of the deshypartment of finance and law at San Fernando Valley SC who is serving as the committees executive officer on a fulltime basis during the summer months the task forces will engage in an all-out assault on the CSCs financial problems

Scope of the effort is shown by the assignments given to the groups ( 1) relationships and responsibilities of state agencies involved ( 2) budget formulation processes ( 3) deshytermination of level of support ( 4) budget administration ( 5) accounting and reporting ( 6-7-8) self-supporting funcshytions designated as noninstructional college foundation and summer-session and extension activities

Before hearings start on SCR 29 next Oct the specific tasks that these forces have set for themselves are in order of priority suggesting feasible and attainable methods for imshyproving budget administration defining means for determining adequate support levels and creating a model arrangement for fulfilling accountability requirements relating to expenditure of funds provided by the Legislature In the matter of accountshyability both internal management aspects and external public interest in quality education are being considered by the comshymittee and its forces

Some eighty representatives of the Colleges and the Chanshycellors Office including presidents deans business managers and students have already been named to the various task forces and most of the groups have started work

FIRST SCHOLARSHIP FOR CSSB

A $1000 check has established the first scholarship fund sponsored by a private organization for Cal State San Bernarshydino Donated by The Social Lites a Negro womens social and civic organization it provides an initial $300 for some deservshying student from the San Bernardino area Income from the remainder will go into a permanent fund to which the womens organization will continue to add until a complete scholarship program can be financed from the funds income alone

2

BOOKS MAGAZINES AND PAPERS At the end of last June Dr Monroe E Spaght the forshy

mer student body president at Humboldt SC who is now managing director of more than 500 companies operated by Royal Dutch Shell- a position of corporate eminence never before achieved by any American- became not only an honorary Doctor of Laws by virtue of his CSC degree but also an author of belles-lettres by virtue of his book The Bright Key

Dr Monroe E Spaght (right) receiving the LLD dregree from Trustee James F Thatcher at Humboldt State College June 4 1965

Just published by Appleton-Century-Crofts the book defends with truth urbanity and wit his strong belief that business has real responsibilities to our educational system Dr Spaght earned his PhD in chemistry at a time when much of the business world was convinced such training rendered a man unfit for a life of decision and action Today he is recognized as a leading spokesman for industry on the role of education in contemporary society A trustee of Stanford U he is chairshyman of the Committee for Corporate Support of American Universities and chairman of the New York State Science and Technology Foundation

Literary honors for two other Humboldt alumni were also in the news Mr James Yoakum and Mr Sherman Pearl won first prize in the full-color category of the 1965 Governmentshywide Publications Contest sponsored by the Federal Editors Association with Wildlife on the Public Lands produced for the US Dept of the Interior Bureau of Land Management Mr Yoakum presently a lecturer in natural resources at the College was chief color photographer for the publication Mr Pearl is with the Nevada office of the Bureau Their document is the No 1 seller of the Government Printing Office with the widest distribution of any federal book and is now being transshylated into several foreign languages

A textbook on wildlife management by Dr Raymond Dasmann chairman of HSCs division of natural resources was recently published by John Wiley amp Sons It is his second text The first Environmental Conservation came out in 1959

Dr Ralph Samuelson chairman of the division of lanshyguage arts at the College has been notified that Nineteenth Century American Authors a syllabus of American Literature of which he was an editor is now being published by the

Eurasia Press in New Delhi India for use by more than 30 Indian universities e

College Information Officer Vivienne L George received first place award from the California Press Women for producshytion of Challenge 1964 the first annual Presidents Report In other categories Mrs George received third place for a feature article The Grapes Run Dry Along the Mayacamas published in a national magazine and top honorable mention for a series of newspaper articles about faculty members pubshylished last fall

Dr Clay Hatfield of the biological sciences department at Cal Poly SLO and John Applegarth also a member of the biological sciences faculty have collaborated in the production of a new college biology textbook Applied Microbiology reflecting Dr Hatfields more than 20 years experience as a microbio~ogist National Press Palo Alto published

OVERSEAS DIRECTORS NAMED Resident directors of CSCs International Programs durshy

ing the 1965-66 academic year have been announced by Chancellor Dumke

Named were Dr Leonard Messier of San Diego SC who will supervise the program at the University of Aix-Marseille France Dr John E Merrill also of SDSC at Waseda Univershysity in Tokyo Japan Dr Joachim Stanzel of San Jose SC at the Free University of Berlin and the University of Heidelshyberg Germany Dr Joseph Reid Scott also of SJSC at t University of Madrid and the University of Granada Spai and Dr Donald M Castleberry of San Francisco SC who was appointed for the University of Stockholm and the University of U ppsala Sweden

SAN JOSE OFFERS NEW TUTORIALS The usual courses lectures and grades so familiar to colshy

lege students will be unknown in Sep 1965 to a segment of entering freshmen at San Jose SC

Their unfamiliarity will stem from an experimental proshygram which is officially known at Tutorials in Letters and Science

While tutorial programs are not new the abandonment of the course is a startling departure from the usual educational experiments and reforms according to Dr Mervyn L Cadshywallader initiator of the program and associate professor of sociology at SJSC

Instead of the familiar format the new program will make use of individual tutorials group discussions small seminars and laboratory sessions Successful participants will earn 48 semester units of credit

The chief obligation of the student said Dr John Galm assistant professor of English and one of the first six tutors will be to submit written work to his tutor approximately every two weeks and then to have a conference with him A

Dr Cadwallader said a central theme will be featur each of the four semesters As an example four semesters work could be organized around study of four pivotal epochs in

3

Western Civilization Students will be encouraged to particishyte in some of the planning and evaluation of the program

The faculty-student ratio with the tutorial program will be approximately 1-to-20 This will permit the kind of intimiddot mate association and per~nal exchange between college proshyfessors and students that has become notable by its absence on the campuses of our large colleges and universities said Dr Cadwallader

He continued by stating that this return to a personal education may be one answer to the student demonstrations across the country

Other tutors in addition to Drs Cadwallader and Galm are Dr Richard Tansey professor of art Dr David Newman associate professor of psychology Dr Harold DeBey professor of chemistry and Gary Albright assistant professor of philshyosophy

UC COMMISSIONS CSLB ART

The first catalog of the new lrvine campus 6pound UC pubshylished early this month was designed by Dr Joseph Krause professor of art at Cal State Long Beach

Dr Krauses striking designs for various publications at the College caught the eye of Dr Clayton Garrison a former associate professor of speech at CSLB and present dean of UC Irvines fine arts division He requested Krause to design the new UC catalog

Rose Mary Thompson 21-year-old electronics major at Cal Poly Pomona became the first four-year coed to receive an engineering degree from the College when she graduated this summer Women were not enrolled at that campus until 1961

A CAMPUS CONVERTED into an international showcase for monumental sculpture has made Cal State at Long Beach a cynosure of cultural controversy this summer Bold abstract works formed of concrete steel redwood aluminum pipes and paint challenge the viewer as nine world-famous sculptors complete their contributions to the first International Sculpture Symposium in this country Their creations will remain on permanent exhibition at the College Along an area 100 ft in length and about 28 ft wide at the Seventh Street corner of the campus 19 massive forms 8-to-1 0 ft high (model pictured center-left above) constitute the sculpture of J J Beljon director of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in The Hague Holland Sculptor Beljon (upper left) contemplating the extent of his work under construction said wryly Gallery art and art dealers are doomed they have no future Other photos proceeding clockwise show- Gabriel Kohn of the US Andre Bloc of France

osso Eloul of Israel and directly under the center portrait of Piotr Kowalski a Polish sculptor residing in France an interior view of the ulptors workshop with student helper in foreground and with plaster on hand Kenneth Glenn director of the symposium who is also proshyssor of art at CSLB Left corner picture was taken at Bethlehem Steels Terminal Island plant where donated fabrication of plate contributed

by Triangle Steel Co and Ge~teral Pipe amp Supply Co vitalized the designs of Canadian sculptor Robert Murray Also participating in the symshyposium but not shown here are sculptors Kenjiro Azuma and Claire Falkenstein as well as muralist Rita Letendre who is sculptor Elouls wife

4

The ACADEMIC SENATE REGISTER

Headlines in the Los Angeles Times of last Jul 2 anshynounced Educators Hail Budget as Victory Yet I suspect for a large portion of the faculties the salary increase and the state college quality package of funds for research travel sabshybaticals and distinguished teaching represented a hollow vicshytory Not primarily because the salary increase was too little too late (though it was) and certainly not because the other benefits are insignificant Many of us are rather in the position ~f the teenager whose desire to be understood and respected Is not compensated by an increase in his allowance For those who react this way (I include myself) the most hopeful aspects of the past year are to be found in those activities of ad hoc faculty groups professional organizations the Chancellors Office Trustees and Academic Senate which have sought to create and enlarge public respect and support for the goals of the State Colleges

If we have sometimes acted inexpediently or undiploshymatically we need not apologize This is not a job for imageshymakers our problems will not always respond to the tech shyniques of politics as the art of the possible Our task has been to prepare the seedbed for a dialogue with the community and with the Legislature through which the purposes and aspirations of the state college experiment may be clarified We need now to consider as we gain the attention of the public and the Legislature what we are to say

Our problem is put into sharp focus by an observation of the young John Adams in 1765 Reflecting on the advanshytages bequeathed by the early settlers to their progeny Adams noted the unique civil and religious principles on the basis of which they laid very early the foundation of colleges and invested them with ample privileges and emoluments It is remarkable he added that they have left among their posshyterity so universal an affection and veneration for those seminshyaries and for liberal education that the meanest of the people contribute cheerfully to the support and maintenance of them every year and that nothing is more generally popular than projections for the honor reputation and advantage of those seats of learning

Is not our task to rekindle and revitalize the universal affection and veneration which alone in the long run can provide the basis for public support of our seminaries The civil and religious principles which supported it in times past Adams went on to note valued knowledge as the means to liberty Perhaps the purpose of the State Colleges reflects the universalization of that insight If so it is time to get about clarifying our own ideas on the matter and finding the means to communicate them to others If we are to survive we must become the peoples colleges not in an ad-mans empty phrase and not in the peoples present understanding but in a sense we have yet to define clearly for ourselves and then to communicate to the public As the Academic Senate

begins its third year of existence in the shadow of continuitA fiscal crises we will I hope turn part of our energies to ponde ing how to recover and how to deserve that universal affection and veneration -John C Livingston Chairman

STRONG POLICY ON COLLEGE SUPPORT ADOPTED With four new California State Colleges established by

the Legislature-in Contra Costa Kern San Mateo Santa Clara and Ventura counties-the Board of Trustees has adopted a policy to protect the support base of the existing Colleges

In a resolution of Jul 29 the Trustees expressed their concern for the financing of the California State Colleges at a level to maintain and strengthen educational excellence and declared that the financing of existing State Colleges should be maintained at the proper level and not be adversely affected by the financial impact of the addition of new State Colleges

Chancellor Dumke pointed out that the great strides made in the recent legislative session in faculty salary increases library and sabbatical leave augmentations research and travel allowances were the result of hard work in presenting the case for the State Colleges to the Legislature We must make it just as clear he said that our support budget for existing Colleges is still at an inadequate level and must not be diluted further by draining off funds to establish new Colleges

FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS

Three humanities professors from San Francisco SC ha been awarded Guggenheim Fellowships Ruby Cohn associa professor of English and world literarure Mark Harris associshyate professor of English and director of creative writing and Rudolph Weingartner associate professor of philosophy and chairman of the philosophy department

It is believed that no Cal State campus has ever before received three Guggenheims at one time

Dr George Huppert assistant professor of history at Cal State Hayward has been awarded a fellowship by the American Council of Learned Societies to complete research on The New History of the French Renaissance + + + Fellowships for srudy and travel in India have been awarded to Dr Joseph Pugliese CSH associate professor of art and to Glenn Glasow assistant professor of music by the Instirute of International Education Only 2i fellowships were awarded nationwide

Faculty fellowships provided by the National Science Foundation will enable Dr Seymour Mack associate professor of geology at Fresno SC to take his sabbatical leave at Stanford U for study and research in geo-chemistry and hydrology Earl L Pye of the physical sciences faculty at Cal Poly Pomona to complete his chemistry research project on detergent mishycelles at Louisiana State U and Dr Donald E Bianchi associshyate professor of biology at San Fernando Valley SC to spend a year at the University of Geneva Switzerland

==================~middotshyTHE CALIFORNIA_STA~ COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymond A ~ydell Ex~uhve Voce-Chancellor Harry E Brakebill Vice-Chancellor Busness Affaors C Mansel Keene Assost~nt Chancellor Faculty and Staff Affaors The Callforma State Colleges Rev1ew is issued by the Public Affa irs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

Page 4: September 21, 1965 Staff Bulletin

-4-

COLLEGE STUDENTS FACULTY INVITED TO JOIN IN INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION YEAR-

Students and faculty of Cal Poly have been encouraged to participate in the 11 Intershynational Cooperation Year 11 The invitation came fr01n Joseph ~ Amter chairman of the Committee for Research on the Development of International Institutions of the National Citizens Co~ssion on International Cooperation

The letter to Cal Poly President Julian A McPhee indicated that President of the us Lyndon B Johnson had proclaimed 1965 as International Cooperation Year and had set up a broad program within the Executive Branch of the federal government to revi~7 our present international policies in cooperation A Nation~l Citizens 1 Co~ssion on International Cooperation has been organized to present a report to the President at a l~ite House Conference to be held November 29-December 1 1965

The national committee is encouraging faculty and students to discuss in seminars or meetings on the subject of international cooperation as an agent of 11 peace The combull mittee intends to publish a volume l-7hich lrlll contain extensive middotsubstantiating material and would welcome contributions from faculty and students i f they wish to make SUch contributions by the deadline November 1 1965

One of the kinds of questions which the national cOmmittee hopes students and faculty uill attempt to ans-Jer is Should educational institutions conduct significant edushycational programs at various levels on the requirements for peace Please elaborate

Contributions should be sent to 11 Joseph A Amter Committee Chairman Committee for Research on the Development of International Institutions National Citizens Comshymission on International Cooperation Peace Research Organization Fund 2535 First National Bank Building Denver Colo 80202 middot

S E S L 0 C NOW IN NEW QUARTERS

Now in its new quarters in Room 206 of the Agricultural Education Building on campus is SESLOC Federal Credit Union The new location at the north end of the buildings main level is at the opposite end of the hall from the credit unions old location Open hours remain the same as those in the former location

INFORI-iTION ON TICKETS FOR FOOTBALL CORRECTED TICKET SALE CONTINUES

Advance sale of tickets for Cal Polys 1965 varsity football season is continuing according to Robert F Spink graduate manager for the Associated Students Inc who also issued information to correct that which appeare4 in last weeks issue of Staff Bulletin

Spink said that last weeks article which left the impression that the special $500 with ASI associate membership offer for five reserved seat tickets would allow the buyer to purchase five tickets to any one or all five home games was incorrect It should have indicated that the offer includes one ticket to each home contest and that the cost will be $500 regardless of whether the purchase is made in time for the ticket to be used for all f~ve games or for only two or three

In addition the graduate manager said that the several different types of tickets for use by members of the college faculty and staff discussed in last weeks article reshymain available Those interested in obtaining further information regarding purchase of tickets for use during the home football season which begins Saturday (September 25) night when the Mustangs host Linfield College may do so by calling the ASI Office 546-2411

- 5 -

MUSTANG FOOTBALLERS OPEN HOME SLATE SATURDAY MIGHT

With a season-opening 21middot20 victory over San Francisco State College already under its belt bull Coach Sheldon Hardens grid varsity will begin its home schedule Saturday (September 25) night when tt hosts Linfield College of Oregon Game t~e

bull for that middotcontest planned for Mustang Stadium on campus will be 800 pm bull bull bull bull

Last week-ends action saw the Mustangs tally the games first points h the second 9uarter and then Come from behind to score two touchdowns in the final half to win

middot CAMPUS THEATER ANNOUNCES OPEN HOUSE TRY-OUTS

request from J Murray Smith of the English and Speech Departments faculty asks members of the faculty to announce to their classes that the Theater will hold an open house and try-outs for its planned p~qduction of Harvey middot T~esday and Wednesday nights from 700 to 1000 p~m I

The combined events will provide an opportunity for interested st~dents to see and learn more about lighting makeup the stage and the workshop At the same time trybullouts for the play -which is sched~led to run November 5 6 19 and 20 will take pla~e in Room 212 of the Theater Building Those interested in trying out do not need to have had prior th~atrical experience and may receive either class credit or activity credit

I

Smith conclJdes by adding coffee and cake will be served with great splendor on the radial saw table in the WQrkshop

STAFF CLUB SLATES TALK BY COACH HARDEN FOR THURSDAY LUNCHEON

With a successful opening game already history Cal Polys Head Football Coach Sheldon Harden will illuminate his crystal ball with statistics ~~d experience and really tell about what the 1965 grid season has in store for Mustang fans when he addresses Thursdaybull s Staff Club Luncheon meeting Special guests for the program which is planned for noon Thursday (September 23) in the Staff Dining Room will be several members of the Mustmiddotang Boosters Club

Staff Club members who have wondered how to support the colleges athletic program other than by game attendance and en~oUfaging athletes in their classes will want to bring $10 to the meeting and become a Mustang booster according to Col William Boyce~ middotpresident of the club By special arrangement all members of the Cal Poly faculty and staff are now eligible to join the Mustang Boosters Club at the special annual rate of $1000

Membership in the boosters club entitles the member to reserved parking at home middot football games free admission to all Cal Poly athletic events except football specialmiddot event and tournaments listing in football proirams and a car sticker and desk plaque Memberships in this organization which supports the colleges athleticmiddot program through a scholarshmiddotip program administered by the middotcollege bull may

middot be purchased from Athletic Coordinator Dick Anderson whose office ismiddot in Room 209 of theMen s Physical Educationmiddot Building

The Mustang Boosters Club annual banquet scheduled for tomorrow (Wednesday September 22) evening~beginning at 600 pm at the Madonna Inn in San LJiS Obispo A will present Ernie Nevers a former allbullAmerican and pioneer professional football W player as guest speaker~ Tickets for the banquet may be purchased at $300 each ~lub members may purchase two tickets for $500

6--

TAPE OF PANEL DISCUSSION ON PERSONNEL BENEFITS IS AVAILABLE

Because a number of members of the staff and faculty were unable to attend the panel discussion on Personnel Benefits held during the recent Fall Staff Conference a tape recording was made of the proceedings and is available to middot those who would like to hear it

The panel made up of experts on various subjects discussed recent changes in the areas of insurance retirement and California Physicians Service Health middot Insurance

The 90-minute tape of the discussion may be checked out at the Audio Visual Departmeots Service Office Room 9 Business Administration and Education Building

1 middot l

PLACEMENT CALENDAR bullbull INTERVIEWS ON CAMPUS SEPTEMBER 21 - OCTOBER 1 1965

UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS Capt M V Young Captain Donald A Hodgen and SSgt E J Paurazas US Marine Corps officer selection liaison officers will be available in the Snack Bar area of the Dining Hall to discuss with interested students the Marine Corps Officer Training Programs (921-923)

UNITED STATES NAVY Lt F J Skin~er USB Lt C L Clinton USN(W) and LtJg F M Fellrath USN the Officer Programs Information Jeam will b~ available in the Snack Bar area of the Dining Hall to provide studentamp with information on the opportunities available to college graduates as commissioned officers in the US Naval Reserve (927~929)

YORK CORPORATION Los Angeles A Dokter regional sales manager and L P Jacobsen regional manager will interview seniors in AC and R and ME who have an interest in air conditioning and refrigeration (930)

MARVIN LANDPLANE CO Woodland Calif R L Hormbostel sales manager will interview seniors in Ag Engineering and MA The company is a builder of scientific land levelers

DEADLINE FOR ARTICLES APPEARING IN NEXT WEEKS STAFF BULLETIN IS FRIDAY NOON

bull bull - 1

CAMPUSmiddot CALENDAR - middot 1oiEEK ()F SEPTEMBER 21middot28 1965

Tuesday September 21

12 00 Books at High Noon Luncheon Meeting

Wednesday September 22

200 Executive Council Meeting

Thursday September 23

815 am Applied Arts middotmiddot Division Committee Meeting

900 am Agriculture Division Commit~ee Meeting

Noon Staff Club Luncheon Meeting -

Saturday September 25

middotmiddot 300 pm Cal Poly Womens Club Fall Tea

800 pm Varsity Football vs Linfield College

Monday September 27

200 pm bull Executive Council Meeting

Tuesday Seetember 28

815 am Applied 3ciences Division Meet~

middot- middotmiddot 1000 Am middot Engineering Division Committee Meeting

Noon Books at High Noon

SDR

Admin 301

Admin 213-A

Ag 138

SDR

bull

Lib 129

Mustang Stadium

Admin 301

Admin 301 ~ tt~

GA 101

SDR

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES

EVIE~ JUNE 1965 VOl 2 No 12

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

Victor H Palmieri was appointed to the Board of Trustees by Governor Brown in July of 1964 A decade before almost to the month Trustee Palmshyieri had graduated from Stanford Law School where he was editor of the Law Review and had been namshyed to the Order of the Coif high-ranking honor soshyciety of the legal profession He also received his undergraduate education at Stanford with a major in history

Following his graduation he joined the law firm of 0Melshyveny amp Myers in Los Angeles where he served until duty with with the US Army Later he returned to OMelveny amp Myshyers where he specialized in orporate and business law

In 1958 Mr Palmieri left private practice to become exshyecutive vice-president of the Janss Investment Corp a leading real estate deshyvelopment firm and in 1963 he was named presishydent of the firm and its affiliated companies

Mr Palmieri has remained continuously acshytive in educational fields A lecturer in law at the Stanford Law School he is currently teaching a course there in legal aspects of real estate transacshytions He also lectu res from time to time at varishyous other graduate schools including the Universishyty of Southern California and UCLA In addition he is a founding member of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions in Santa Barbara

He was born in Chicago Ill but has lived in California since 1939 He has served as a member of a number of state commissions concerned with urban problems As a memb er of the Commission on Metropolitan Area Probl ems the Governors Advisory Commission on Housing and the Coordinashyting Council on Urban Policies he has been closeshyly involved with state-level efforts to meet growth

roblems throu ghout the state

On the occasion of his appointment to the CSC Board of Trustees Governor (Continued on Page 4)

REVISED CSC BUDGET ADOPTED

A pared-down but still substantial CSC support budget which emerged from two legislative sessions and a special hearing held by Governor Brown was finally approved as both the month and fiscal year ended

At the Governors hearing Jun 23 Chancellor Dumke accompanied by Trustees Louis Heilbron Albert J Ruffo and E Guy Warren and Dr John Livingston chairman of the Statewide Academic Senate continued to plead the case of the Colleges for no further cuts in the systems budgetary reshyquests stressing again a pressing need for faculty salary increases

As finally adopted budget figures revealed more gains than losses in key items including a faculty salary increase of approximately 10

Other faculty benefits which became available for the new fiscal year are $250 000 for sabbatishycal leaves $200 000 for leaves of absence to do research in science or creative work in the arts $100 000 for achievement awards to recognize exshycellence in classroom instruction and $96 000 for out-of-state travel related to instruction The apshypropriations likewise provided $100 000 to defray up to 50 of moving costs for relocating new faculty

One million dollars for library books to augshyment existing books -per - student ratios at five of the Colleges was also authorized

On-campus work-study programs employing student assistants were funded with $148 226 to be used with federal matching funds an additional $17 000 was allocated for lectures by visiting scholshyars and the educat ional TV station at San Diego SC as well as the nursery school at San Francisco SC were provided support funds

All of these improvements said Chancellor Dumke will greatly help to relieve the spartan bu dgetunderwhich we have been operating for years but we are still far behind In this regard I am pleased to note that the Legislatu re is planning an interim study on the whole problem of financing pubshylic higher education

SYSTEM HONORS MARK COMMENCEMENTS

Commencement Day at Hwnboldt SC Jun 4 was not only the first in a series of statewide cereshymonies it also marked the granting of the first honorary degree to a CSC alwnnus An honorary Doctor of Laws degree was conferred by the Colshyleges on Dr Monroe E Spaght onetime president of the student body at Humboldt and now managing director and chairman of the board of Europes largest industrial complex Royal Dutch Shell peshytrolewn companies Trustee James F Thacher and HSC President Cornelius H Siemens officiated

A week later on Jun 11 at San Francisco SC s Commencement Trustee Louis H Heilbron and Chancellor Dumke presided with SFSC Presishydent Paul A Dodd at the award of an honorary Docshytor of Hwnane Letters degree to Frank V de Belshylis patron of the arts and donor to the Colleges of the immense collection of books music and objets dart which bears his name in a special section of the library building at SFSC (See photo at right)

De Bellis who was honored for his contribushytions to the preservation of Italian culture and its interpretation to the students and people of Cali shyfornia 11 will be further honored this month at the University of Bari the fourth largest educational institution in Italy which will present him with its sigillum aureum (golden seal) in tribute to his lifeshylong interest in the dissemination of Italian culture

Dr Spaght gave the commencement address at Hwnboldt SC Dr Arthur Stanton Adams former president of the American Council on Education was the principal speaker at the San Francisco cershyemonies

On other campuses of the system _speakers were Chico Dr Harold Benjamin USC Visiting Lecturer Stanislaus Dr John F Olson presishydent of Oklahoma City University Fresno Dr Louis Benezet president of Claremont Graduate School and University Center Sacramento Dr Guy A West retiring president of SSG San Diego Dr Frank Baxter professor emeritus of USC San Fernando Valley Dr R A Billington of the Huntshyington Library San Jose Trustee Louis H Heil shybron Cal State Hayward Dr Mitchell P Briggs executive secretary of the Western Association of Schools and Colleges

Cal State Long Beach Dr E C Stakrnan of the University of Minnesota Rockefeller Foundashytion consultant Cal State Los Angeles Stanley Mosk Associate Justice Supreme Court of Calif Sonoma Rev Dr Samuel DeWitt Proctor of the National Council of the Churches of Christ Cal

2

State Fullerton Trustee Victor H Palmieri Poly San Luis Obispo Charles Luckman chai man CSC Board of Trustees Cal Poly Pomona Mr Bart Lytton president and chairman of Lytton Financial Corp

This year the California State Colleges gradushyated approximately 20000 students a recordnwnshyber Among them was Gunnar Herrstrom of Sonoshyma SC who received his bachelors degree in psyshychology and thus completed a program started at UC which was interrupted by the war World War I that is Mr Herrstrom is 72 years old He plans to return to sse for the summer session to continue studies in Spanish

Commencement at San Francisco SC included presshyentation of honorary L H D to Frank V de Bellis Photo shows 1 to r President Dodd Mr de Belshylis Trustee Louis Heilbron and Chancellor Dumke

FACULTY SALARY ISSUE ON TV

A television docwnentary 11 The Salary Issue Colleges in Crisis 11 was filmed last month at San Diego SC Participants in the program a segment of the Profile series were Trustee Victor H Palmieri Chancellor Dwnke Dr Ernest 0 Byrne Dr James N Tidwell and Dr Donald N Wood of SDSC and Jerry Harmon president of the Associshyated Students at the College They presented a panel discussion Showings were on KOGO San Diego KNBC Los Angeles and KRON San Franshycisco It is scheduled for KVIE Sacramento Jul 2 and subsequently will be made available to stations in Bakersfield Fresno Eureka and Santa Barbara Motion picture prints of the program are on loan to the Colleges from the Chancellors Office

Retirements of Dr H Thurston Hatch associshyate dean of students in charge of placement and DJa William B McCann director of the SchoolAdmini shytration Center and professor of education at Chico SC became effective this month

3

IVINGSTON HEADS STATEWIDE SENATE

Dr John C Livingston of Sacramento SC has been elected chairman of the Statewide Academic Senate for 1965-66 succeeding Dr Samuel E Wishyley of Cal State Long Beach

Meeting May 20-21 at the Long Beach campus the Senate also elected Dr Jesse B Allen of Cal State Los Angeles to a second term as vice-chairshyman named as secretary Dr James P Heath of San Jose SC and reconstituted its Executive Comshymittee by electing as members-at-l arge Mr Leo G McClatchy of San Francisco SC and Dr William R Rogers of San Jose who will serve on the comshymitteewith thenewofficersand Dr Wiley of CSLB past-president

Newly elected to the Senate were Dr Joseph A Wagner of CSLB Drs Lee R Kerschner and Paul J Pastor of Cal State Fullerton replacing Drs Ida Cappolino and Miles D McCarthy Mr Milton Dobkin of Humboldt SC for Dr Hyman Palshyais Mr R Dean Galloway of Stanislaus SC for Dr Max C Norton Dr PeterKoestenbaum of SanJose SC for Dr Dean R Cresap Dr Joseph McGowan of Sacramento SC for Dr James M Bradfield Dr Robert A Mott of Cal Poly SLO for Mr Warren R

nderson Mr Elmer H Rice of Cal Poly Pornoshya for Dr John Fulbeck Dr James N Tidwell of

San Diego SC for Dr Ivan N McCollom and Dr William W Young of Sonoma SC for Dr Cheryl Peterson

Facultymembers whose terms as senators conshytinue are Drs B Gordon Gibb and Lew D Oliver of Chico Drs R Deane Branstetter and James J Hunter of San Diego Drs Richard Axen and John L Clark of San Francisco Dr La Verne Bucy of Cal Poly SLO Dr Bernard A Shepard and Mr Phillip Walker of Fresno Dr Roscoe Peithman of Humboldt Mr William Eshelman and Dr Kenneth A Martyn of Cal State Los Angeles Dr Edward A Nelson of Cal Poly Pomona Dr Nicholas P Hardeman of Cal State Long Beach Drs H Duane Heath and William Sawrey of Cal State Hayward Dr John E Caswell of Stan islaus Dr Warren E Olson of Sonoma Dr Lyle E Gibson of Cal State Palos Verdes and Dr Gerald Scherba of Cal State San Bernardino

ANGELL TO CHANCELLORS OFFICE

Dr Melvin A Angell associate dean of stushydents for counseling at Fresn oSC has been appoinshy

d associate dean of student affairs in the Chancelshyr1 s Office He will be on leave of absence from

his FSC position during the 1965-66 academic year to ~ccept the post

SCULPTURE SYMPOSIUM SET FOR CSLB

The first international sculpture symposium in the US opened Jun 21 at Cal State Long Beach where 14 of the worlds great modern sculptors were scheduled to begin work on monumental sculptures Sculptors participating include Kosso Eloul of Isshyrael Andre Bloc of France Kenjiro Azuma of Mishylan Italy J J Beljon of Holland and Gabriel Kohn of the U S The event will be open to the public without charge through Aug 14

SONOMA SC OFFERS FAR WEST INSTITUTE

For the fourth summer Sonoma SC and the California Folklore Society will co-sponsor an Inshystitute of Far Western American Culture beginning Aug 2 This years themeis FolkMusic and Othshyer Folklore of Minority Groups in the Far West Previous themes were folklore and local history folklore and fiction and art architecture and folkshylore

Participating specialists include Dr Stith Thompson emeritus professor of English and folkshylore Indiana U Chingwah Lee curator of the Kuan Yin temple in San Franciscos Chinatown and Ralph J Gleason nationally known jazz music authority

Dr Hector Lee dean of in struction at SSC and executive vice-president of the California Folkshylore Society will direct the institute which is reshylated to several American Studies courses and degree programs comprising a part of the area studies offered by the Colleges

FIRST JOINT DOCTORATE OFFERED

The first doctoral program to be offered jointshyly by a California State College and the University of California will be initiated at San Diego SC this fall it was announced this month by Chancellor Dumshyke and University President Clark Kerr It will be offered in chemistry by UC s San Diego campus and SDSC Granting of joint doctorates was authorized in 1960 under the Master Plan and approval of the chemistry program was granted by a joint graduate board of final academic review composed of represhysentatives from the Colleges and the University

SUPREME COURTS ACCREDIT CHAPMAN

Attorney Mayer Chapman now associate counshysel of the esc legal staff has been admitted to the U S Supreme Court for p r actice before that body and also admitted to the Court of Military Appeals highest military court He earned his undergradushyate and law degree at UCLA where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and the Order of the Coif

4

STATEWIDE NEWS BRIEFS

San Jose SC-- Lowell C Pratt dean of CSC public information directors retires this month after 18 years at the College He will be succeedshyed by James E Noah his assistant for the past three years + + +A two-year study financed by the federal government through the States Division of Highways will be conducted by SJSC to determine whether a special course of driver training will improve driving habits of traffic violators

San Diego SC --Dr Malcolm A Love presishydent of SDSC has been triply honored by the American Association of University Professors at the annual banquet of its San Diego chapter by Colshyorado State College at Greeley where he delivered the commencement address and by the University of Nevada which this month awarded him an honorshyary LLD degree + + + Cap and Gown SDSC s honor society for women is now a chapter of Morshytar Board the only national honorary organization recognizing outstanding senior womens societies in American colleges and universities Cap and Gown thus becomes the first CSC chapter of Morshytar Board and the 117th in the nation

The Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany was awarded to Chancellor Dumke at a reshycent ceremony in Los Angeles Phoshytograph shows Hans RolfKiderlen Gershyman Consul-General congratulating Dr and Mrs Dumke following presentashytion of the Orders medal and citation which Dr Dumke holds The decorashytion was conferred in appreciation of the Chancellors part in establishing esc international programs overshyseas and for encouraging instruction in foreign lanshyguages including German throughout the college system

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

(Continued from Page 1) Brown commented I have verydeliberately sought to recognize the importance and the standing of the California State Colleges in my appointments to the Board and to push for their continued development as centers of academic exshycellence Mr Palmieris appointment contributes to both of those goals 1 Trustee Palmieri is marshy

ried His wife the former Martha Cooley of Pasashydena is also a Stanford graduate They have thr sons Victor Jr Matthew B and John W Th family home is in Malibu on Colony Drive

FALK TO HEAD INTERNATIONAL UNIT

Dr Karl L Falk professor of economics at Fresno SC and an authority on comparative economshyic systems and international housing has been namshyed director of international affairs for the Califorshynia State Colleges

In making the appointment Chancellor Dumke said Falk will head an expanded program of intershynational activities coordinating existing and new programs including foreign aid international study student and faculty exchanges with other countries and overseas projects sponsored by private foundashytions

One important phase of State College overseas operation consists of programs of study abroad for State College students in France Germany Japan Spain Sweden and Taiwan under the direction of Dr Thomas P Lantos of San Francisco SC who according to Dr Falk will continue in this aspect of international activities

Falk has been on the Fresno SC faculty sinshy1938 He received his undergraduate training at Stanford U and his doctoral degree at the Univershysity of Berlin Germany

He is chairman of the Fresno City Housing Aushythority vice-chairman of the Governors Advisory Committee on Housing Probl ems and past-president of the NationalAssociationof Housing and Redevelshyopment Officials He is an official of several finanshycial institutions and a former member of the board of the California Savings and Loan League

In his new post which he assumes Aug 1 Falk will be headquartered at the Chancellors Office Inglewood

SIEMENS JOINS CONSTITUTION COMMITTEE

Humboldt SC President Cornelius H Siemens has been elected to membership on the state 1 s Conshystitutional Revision Commission established by the 1963 Legislature for the purpose of recommending revisions to the Constitution for placement on the 1966 November ballot

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymo A Rydell Executive Vice-Chancellor John F Richardson Vice-Chancell Business Affairs C Mansel Keene Assistant Chancellor Faculty and Sta Affairs The California State Colleges Review is issued by the Public Affairs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES

EVIE~

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

Governor Edmund G Brown recently appointed Chester R Bartalini 62 president of the California State Council of Carpenters to succeed Thomas L Pitts secretary-treasurer of the California Labor Federation as a member of CSCs Board of Trustees

Trustee Pitts said he had asked the Governor to replace him on the board because the demands of his union post have made it impossible for me to give as much time to the State Colleges as I felt necessary

Pitts told Governor Brown that he was most pleased with Mr Barshytalinis appointment I know he will do a great job for the people of California on this board

The Governor said I regret ne loss of Tom Pitts from this imshy~rtant board very much He served

with great distinction and his good Chester R Bartalinijudgment will certainly be missed

Governor Brown said that he was however very happy to have the service of Chester Bartalini who has proved himshyself in many ways a truly dedicated Californian

In his long service in the Carpenters union Chester Bartalini has shown great administrative talent and executive ability As a union leader he has learned to appreciate the need to keep alive and strengthen Californias system of tuition-free education

Trustee Bartalini is a native of Michigan and has lived here since 1936 He served two terms as a member of the state Correctional Industry Commission and has been executive secretary of the Bay Counties District Council of Carpenters San Francisco since 1950

He is a member of the Commonwealth Club the Elks Eagles Associated Sportsmen of California and the Alameda Rod and Gun Club

He is a director of the Alameda Boys Oub and a member of the Joint Labor University of California committee

He has been president of the California State Council of orpenters since 1958

Trustee Bartalini lives at 1446 Eastshore Drive Alameda with his wife Florinda He has six children and seven grandshychildren

AUGUST 1965

VOL 3 N o 2

FISCAL TASK FORCES DEPLOYED

More efficient ways of staffing and funding systemwide college operations at every level of support are now being sought by eight task forces representing all of the Colleges

Members of the task-force groups were appointed by the CSC Committee on Fiscal Responsibility which was formed in May to implement the provisions of Senate Concurrent Resoshylution No 29 calling for a study of greater fiscal flexibility for the college system

Under the leadership of Harry W Brakebill vice-presishydent at San Francisco SC and permanent chairman of the committee together with Sol Buchalter chairman of the deshypartment of finance and law at San Fernando Valley SC who is serving as the committees executive officer on a fulltime basis during the summer months the task forces will engage in an all-out assault on the CSCs financial problems

Scope of the effort is shown by the assignments given to the groups ( 1) relationships and responsibilities of state agencies involved ( 2) budget formulation processes ( 3) deshytermination of level of support ( 4) budget administration ( 5) accounting and reporting ( 6-7-8) self-supporting funcshytions designated as noninstructional college foundation and summer-session and extension activities

Before hearings start on SCR 29 next Oct the specific tasks that these forces have set for themselves are in order of priority suggesting feasible and attainable methods for imshyproving budget administration defining means for determining adequate support levels and creating a model arrangement for fulfilling accountability requirements relating to expenditure of funds provided by the Legislature In the matter of accountshyability both internal management aspects and external public interest in quality education are being considered by the comshymittee and its forces

Some eighty representatives of the Colleges and the Chanshycellors Office including presidents deans business managers and students have already been named to the various task forces and most of the groups have started work

FIRST SCHOLARSHIP FOR CSSB

A $1000 check has established the first scholarship fund sponsored by a private organization for Cal State San Bernarshydino Donated by The Social Lites a Negro womens social and civic organization it provides an initial $300 for some deservshying student from the San Bernardino area Income from the remainder will go into a permanent fund to which the womens organization will continue to add until a complete scholarship program can be financed from the funds income alone

2

BOOKS MAGAZINES AND PAPERS At the end of last June Dr Monroe E Spaght the forshy

mer student body president at Humboldt SC who is now managing director of more than 500 companies operated by Royal Dutch Shell- a position of corporate eminence never before achieved by any American- became not only an honorary Doctor of Laws by virtue of his CSC degree but also an author of belles-lettres by virtue of his book The Bright Key

Dr Monroe E Spaght (right) receiving the LLD dregree from Trustee James F Thatcher at Humboldt State College June 4 1965

Just published by Appleton-Century-Crofts the book defends with truth urbanity and wit his strong belief that business has real responsibilities to our educational system Dr Spaght earned his PhD in chemistry at a time when much of the business world was convinced such training rendered a man unfit for a life of decision and action Today he is recognized as a leading spokesman for industry on the role of education in contemporary society A trustee of Stanford U he is chairshyman of the Committee for Corporate Support of American Universities and chairman of the New York State Science and Technology Foundation

Literary honors for two other Humboldt alumni were also in the news Mr James Yoakum and Mr Sherman Pearl won first prize in the full-color category of the 1965 Governmentshywide Publications Contest sponsored by the Federal Editors Association with Wildlife on the Public Lands produced for the US Dept of the Interior Bureau of Land Management Mr Yoakum presently a lecturer in natural resources at the College was chief color photographer for the publication Mr Pearl is with the Nevada office of the Bureau Their document is the No 1 seller of the Government Printing Office with the widest distribution of any federal book and is now being transshylated into several foreign languages

A textbook on wildlife management by Dr Raymond Dasmann chairman of HSCs division of natural resources was recently published by John Wiley amp Sons It is his second text The first Environmental Conservation came out in 1959

Dr Ralph Samuelson chairman of the division of lanshyguage arts at the College has been notified that Nineteenth Century American Authors a syllabus of American Literature of which he was an editor is now being published by the

Eurasia Press in New Delhi India for use by more than 30 Indian universities e

College Information Officer Vivienne L George received first place award from the California Press Women for producshytion of Challenge 1964 the first annual Presidents Report In other categories Mrs George received third place for a feature article The Grapes Run Dry Along the Mayacamas published in a national magazine and top honorable mention for a series of newspaper articles about faculty members pubshylished last fall

Dr Clay Hatfield of the biological sciences department at Cal Poly SLO and John Applegarth also a member of the biological sciences faculty have collaborated in the production of a new college biology textbook Applied Microbiology reflecting Dr Hatfields more than 20 years experience as a microbio~ogist National Press Palo Alto published

OVERSEAS DIRECTORS NAMED Resident directors of CSCs International Programs durshy

ing the 1965-66 academic year have been announced by Chancellor Dumke

Named were Dr Leonard Messier of San Diego SC who will supervise the program at the University of Aix-Marseille France Dr John E Merrill also of SDSC at Waseda Univershysity in Tokyo Japan Dr Joachim Stanzel of San Jose SC at the Free University of Berlin and the University of Heidelshyberg Germany Dr Joseph Reid Scott also of SJSC at t University of Madrid and the University of Granada Spai and Dr Donald M Castleberry of San Francisco SC who was appointed for the University of Stockholm and the University of U ppsala Sweden

SAN JOSE OFFERS NEW TUTORIALS The usual courses lectures and grades so familiar to colshy

lege students will be unknown in Sep 1965 to a segment of entering freshmen at San Jose SC

Their unfamiliarity will stem from an experimental proshygram which is officially known at Tutorials in Letters and Science

While tutorial programs are not new the abandonment of the course is a startling departure from the usual educational experiments and reforms according to Dr Mervyn L Cadshywallader initiator of the program and associate professor of sociology at SJSC

Instead of the familiar format the new program will make use of individual tutorials group discussions small seminars and laboratory sessions Successful participants will earn 48 semester units of credit

The chief obligation of the student said Dr John Galm assistant professor of English and one of the first six tutors will be to submit written work to his tutor approximately every two weeks and then to have a conference with him A

Dr Cadwallader said a central theme will be featur each of the four semesters As an example four semesters work could be organized around study of four pivotal epochs in

3

Western Civilization Students will be encouraged to particishyte in some of the planning and evaluation of the program

The faculty-student ratio with the tutorial program will be approximately 1-to-20 This will permit the kind of intimiddot mate association and per~nal exchange between college proshyfessors and students that has become notable by its absence on the campuses of our large colleges and universities said Dr Cadwallader

He continued by stating that this return to a personal education may be one answer to the student demonstrations across the country

Other tutors in addition to Drs Cadwallader and Galm are Dr Richard Tansey professor of art Dr David Newman associate professor of psychology Dr Harold DeBey professor of chemistry and Gary Albright assistant professor of philshyosophy

UC COMMISSIONS CSLB ART

The first catalog of the new lrvine campus 6pound UC pubshylished early this month was designed by Dr Joseph Krause professor of art at Cal State Long Beach

Dr Krauses striking designs for various publications at the College caught the eye of Dr Clayton Garrison a former associate professor of speech at CSLB and present dean of UC Irvines fine arts division He requested Krause to design the new UC catalog

Rose Mary Thompson 21-year-old electronics major at Cal Poly Pomona became the first four-year coed to receive an engineering degree from the College when she graduated this summer Women were not enrolled at that campus until 1961

A CAMPUS CONVERTED into an international showcase for monumental sculpture has made Cal State at Long Beach a cynosure of cultural controversy this summer Bold abstract works formed of concrete steel redwood aluminum pipes and paint challenge the viewer as nine world-famous sculptors complete their contributions to the first International Sculpture Symposium in this country Their creations will remain on permanent exhibition at the College Along an area 100 ft in length and about 28 ft wide at the Seventh Street corner of the campus 19 massive forms 8-to-1 0 ft high (model pictured center-left above) constitute the sculpture of J J Beljon director of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in The Hague Holland Sculptor Beljon (upper left) contemplating the extent of his work under construction said wryly Gallery art and art dealers are doomed they have no future Other photos proceeding clockwise show- Gabriel Kohn of the US Andre Bloc of France

osso Eloul of Israel and directly under the center portrait of Piotr Kowalski a Polish sculptor residing in France an interior view of the ulptors workshop with student helper in foreground and with plaster on hand Kenneth Glenn director of the symposium who is also proshyssor of art at CSLB Left corner picture was taken at Bethlehem Steels Terminal Island plant where donated fabrication of plate contributed

by Triangle Steel Co and Ge~teral Pipe amp Supply Co vitalized the designs of Canadian sculptor Robert Murray Also participating in the symshyposium but not shown here are sculptors Kenjiro Azuma and Claire Falkenstein as well as muralist Rita Letendre who is sculptor Elouls wife

4

The ACADEMIC SENATE REGISTER

Headlines in the Los Angeles Times of last Jul 2 anshynounced Educators Hail Budget as Victory Yet I suspect for a large portion of the faculties the salary increase and the state college quality package of funds for research travel sabshybaticals and distinguished teaching represented a hollow vicshytory Not primarily because the salary increase was too little too late (though it was) and certainly not because the other benefits are insignificant Many of us are rather in the position ~f the teenager whose desire to be understood and respected Is not compensated by an increase in his allowance For those who react this way (I include myself) the most hopeful aspects of the past year are to be found in those activities of ad hoc faculty groups professional organizations the Chancellors Office Trustees and Academic Senate which have sought to create and enlarge public respect and support for the goals of the State Colleges

If we have sometimes acted inexpediently or undiploshymatically we need not apologize This is not a job for imageshymakers our problems will not always respond to the tech shyniques of politics as the art of the possible Our task has been to prepare the seedbed for a dialogue with the community and with the Legislature through which the purposes and aspirations of the state college experiment may be clarified We need now to consider as we gain the attention of the public and the Legislature what we are to say

Our problem is put into sharp focus by an observation of the young John Adams in 1765 Reflecting on the advanshytages bequeathed by the early settlers to their progeny Adams noted the unique civil and religious principles on the basis of which they laid very early the foundation of colleges and invested them with ample privileges and emoluments It is remarkable he added that they have left among their posshyterity so universal an affection and veneration for those seminshyaries and for liberal education that the meanest of the people contribute cheerfully to the support and maintenance of them every year and that nothing is more generally popular than projections for the honor reputation and advantage of those seats of learning

Is not our task to rekindle and revitalize the universal affection and veneration which alone in the long run can provide the basis for public support of our seminaries The civil and religious principles which supported it in times past Adams went on to note valued knowledge as the means to liberty Perhaps the purpose of the State Colleges reflects the universalization of that insight If so it is time to get about clarifying our own ideas on the matter and finding the means to communicate them to others If we are to survive we must become the peoples colleges not in an ad-mans empty phrase and not in the peoples present understanding but in a sense we have yet to define clearly for ourselves and then to communicate to the public As the Academic Senate

begins its third year of existence in the shadow of continuitA fiscal crises we will I hope turn part of our energies to ponde ing how to recover and how to deserve that universal affection and veneration -John C Livingston Chairman

STRONG POLICY ON COLLEGE SUPPORT ADOPTED With four new California State Colleges established by

the Legislature-in Contra Costa Kern San Mateo Santa Clara and Ventura counties-the Board of Trustees has adopted a policy to protect the support base of the existing Colleges

In a resolution of Jul 29 the Trustees expressed their concern for the financing of the California State Colleges at a level to maintain and strengthen educational excellence and declared that the financing of existing State Colleges should be maintained at the proper level and not be adversely affected by the financial impact of the addition of new State Colleges

Chancellor Dumke pointed out that the great strides made in the recent legislative session in faculty salary increases library and sabbatical leave augmentations research and travel allowances were the result of hard work in presenting the case for the State Colleges to the Legislature We must make it just as clear he said that our support budget for existing Colleges is still at an inadequate level and must not be diluted further by draining off funds to establish new Colleges

FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS

Three humanities professors from San Francisco SC ha been awarded Guggenheim Fellowships Ruby Cohn associa professor of English and world literarure Mark Harris associshyate professor of English and director of creative writing and Rudolph Weingartner associate professor of philosophy and chairman of the philosophy department

It is believed that no Cal State campus has ever before received three Guggenheims at one time

Dr George Huppert assistant professor of history at Cal State Hayward has been awarded a fellowship by the American Council of Learned Societies to complete research on The New History of the French Renaissance + + + Fellowships for srudy and travel in India have been awarded to Dr Joseph Pugliese CSH associate professor of art and to Glenn Glasow assistant professor of music by the Instirute of International Education Only 2i fellowships were awarded nationwide

Faculty fellowships provided by the National Science Foundation will enable Dr Seymour Mack associate professor of geology at Fresno SC to take his sabbatical leave at Stanford U for study and research in geo-chemistry and hydrology Earl L Pye of the physical sciences faculty at Cal Poly Pomona to complete his chemistry research project on detergent mishycelles at Louisiana State U and Dr Donald E Bianchi associshyate professor of biology at San Fernando Valley SC to spend a year at the University of Geneva Switzerland

==================~middotshyTHE CALIFORNIA_STA~ COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymond A ~ydell Ex~uhve Voce-Chancellor Harry E Brakebill Vice-Chancellor Busness Affaors C Mansel Keene Assost~nt Chancellor Faculty and Staff Affaors The Callforma State Colleges Rev1ew is issued by the Public Affa irs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

Page 5: September 21, 1965 Staff Bulletin

- 5 -

MUSTANG FOOTBALLERS OPEN HOME SLATE SATURDAY MIGHT

With a season-opening 21middot20 victory over San Francisco State College already under its belt bull Coach Sheldon Hardens grid varsity will begin its home schedule Saturday (September 25) night when tt hosts Linfield College of Oregon Game t~e

bull for that middotcontest planned for Mustang Stadium on campus will be 800 pm bull bull bull bull

Last week-ends action saw the Mustangs tally the games first points h the second 9uarter and then Come from behind to score two touchdowns in the final half to win

middot CAMPUS THEATER ANNOUNCES OPEN HOUSE TRY-OUTS

request from J Murray Smith of the English and Speech Departments faculty asks members of the faculty to announce to their classes that the Theater will hold an open house and try-outs for its planned p~qduction of Harvey middot T~esday and Wednesday nights from 700 to 1000 p~m I

The combined events will provide an opportunity for interested st~dents to see and learn more about lighting makeup the stage and the workshop At the same time trybullouts for the play -which is sched~led to run November 5 6 19 and 20 will take pla~e in Room 212 of the Theater Building Those interested in trying out do not need to have had prior th~atrical experience and may receive either class credit or activity credit

I

Smith conclJdes by adding coffee and cake will be served with great splendor on the radial saw table in the WQrkshop

STAFF CLUB SLATES TALK BY COACH HARDEN FOR THURSDAY LUNCHEON

With a successful opening game already history Cal Polys Head Football Coach Sheldon Harden will illuminate his crystal ball with statistics ~~d experience and really tell about what the 1965 grid season has in store for Mustang fans when he addresses Thursdaybull s Staff Club Luncheon meeting Special guests for the program which is planned for noon Thursday (September 23) in the Staff Dining Room will be several members of the Mustmiddotang Boosters Club

Staff Club members who have wondered how to support the colleges athletic program other than by game attendance and en~oUfaging athletes in their classes will want to bring $10 to the meeting and become a Mustang booster according to Col William Boyce~ middotpresident of the club By special arrangement all members of the Cal Poly faculty and staff are now eligible to join the Mustang Boosters Club at the special annual rate of $1000

Membership in the boosters club entitles the member to reserved parking at home middot football games free admission to all Cal Poly athletic events except football specialmiddot event and tournaments listing in football proirams and a car sticker and desk plaque Memberships in this organization which supports the colleges athleticmiddot program through a scholarshmiddotip program administered by the middotcollege bull may

middot be purchased from Athletic Coordinator Dick Anderson whose office ismiddot in Room 209 of theMen s Physical Educationmiddot Building

The Mustang Boosters Club annual banquet scheduled for tomorrow (Wednesday September 22) evening~beginning at 600 pm at the Madonna Inn in San LJiS Obispo A will present Ernie Nevers a former allbullAmerican and pioneer professional football W player as guest speaker~ Tickets for the banquet may be purchased at $300 each ~lub members may purchase two tickets for $500

6--

TAPE OF PANEL DISCUSSION ON PERSONNEL BENEFITS IS AVAILABLE

Because a number of members of the staff and faculty were unable to attend the panel discussion on Personnel Benefits held during the recent Fall Staff Conference a tape recording was made of the proceedings and is available to middot those who would like to hear it

The panel made up of experts on various subjects discussed recent changes in the areas of insurance retirement and California Physicians Service Health middot Insurance

The 90-minute tape of the discussion may be checked out at the Audio Visual Departmeots Service Office Room 9 Business Administration and Education Building

1 middot l

PLACEMENT CALENDAR bullbull INTERVIEWS ON CAMPUS SEPTEMBER 21 - OCTOBER 1 1965

UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS Capt M V Young Captain Donald A Hodgen and SSgt E J Paurazas US Marine Corps officer selection liaison officers will be available in the Snack Bar area of the Dining Hall to discuss with interested students the Marine Corps Officer Training Programs (921-923)

UNITED STATES NAVY Lt F J Skin~er USB Lt C L Clinton USN(W) and LtJg F M Fellrath USN the Officer Programs Information Jeam will b~ available in the Snack Bar area of the Dining Hall to provide studentamp with information on the opportunities available to college graduates as commissioned officers in the US Naval Reserve (927~929)

YORK CORPORATION Los Angeles A Dokter regional sales manager and L P Jacobsen regional manager will interview seniors in AC and R and ME who have an interest in air conditioning and refrigeration (930)

MARVIN LANDPLANE CO Woodland Calif R L Hormbostel sales manager will interview seniors in Ag Engineering and MA The company is a builder of scientific land levelers

DEADLINE FOR ARTICLES APPEARING IN NEXT WEEKS STAFF BULLETIN IS FRIDAY NOON

bull bull - 1

CAMPUSmiddot CALENDAR - middot 1oiEEK ()F SEPTEMBER 21middot28 1965

Tuesday September 21

12 00 Books at High Noon Luncheon Meeting

Wednesday September 22

200 Executive Council Meeting

Thursday September 23

815 am Applied Arts middotmiddot Division Committee Meeting

900 am Agriculture Division Commit~ee Meeting

Noon Staff Club Luncheon Meeting -

Saturday September 25

middotmiddot 300 pm Cal Poly Womens Club Fall Tea

800 pm Varsity Football vs Linfield College

Monday September 27

200 pm bull Executive Council Meeting

Tuesday Seetember 28

815 am Applied 3ciences Division Meet~

middot- middotmiddot 1000 Am middot Engineering Division Committee Meeting

Noon Books at High Noon

SDR

Admin 301

Admin 213-A

Ag 138

SDR

bull

Lib 129

Mustang Stadium

Admin 301

Admin 301 ~ tt~

GA 101

SDR

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES

EVIE~ JUNE 1965 VOl 2 No 12

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

Victor H Palmieri was appointed to the Board of Trustees by Governor Brown in July of 1964 A decade before almost to the month Trustee Palmshyieri had graduated from Stanford Law School where he was editor of the Law Review and had been namshyed to the Order of the Coif high-ranking honor soshyciety of the legal profession He also received his undergraduate education at Stanford with a major in history

Following his graduation he joined the law firm of 0Melshyveny amp Myers in Los Angeles where he served until duty with with the US Army Later he returned to OMelveny amp Myshyers where he specialized in orporate and business law

In 1958 Mr Palmieri left private practice to become exshyecutive vice-president of the Janss Investment Corp a leading real estate deshyvelopment firm and in 1963 he was named presishydent of the firm and its affiliated companies

Mr Palmieri has remained continuously acshytive in educational fields A lecturer in law at the Stanford Law School he is currently teaching a course there in legal aspects of real estate transacshytions He also lectu res from time to time at varishyous other graduate schools including the Universishyty of Southern California and UCLA In addition he is a founding member of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions in Santa Barbara

He was born in Chicago Ill but has lived in California since 1939 He has served as a member of a number of state commissions concerned with urban problems As a memb er of the Commission on Metropolitan Area Probl ems the Governors Advisory Commission on Housing and the Coordinashyting Council on Urban Policies he has been closeshyly involved with state-level efforts to meet growth

roblems throu ghout the state

On the occasion of his appointment to the CSC Board of Trustees Governor (Continued on Page 4)

REVISED CSC BUDGET ADOPTED

A pared-down but still substantial CSC support budget which emerged from two legislative sessions and a special hearing held by Governor Brown was finally approved as both the month and fiscal year ended

At the Governors hearing Jun 23 Chancellor Dumke accompanied by Trustees Louis Heilbron Albert J Ruffo and E Guy Warren and Dr John Livingston chairman of the Statewide Academic Senate continued to plead the case of the Colleges for no further cuts in the systems budgetary reshyquests stressing again a pressing need for faculty salary increases

As finally adopted budget figures revealed more gains than losses in key items including a faculty salary increase of approximately 10

Other faculty benefits which became available for the new fiscal year are $250 000 for sabbatishycal leaves $200 000 for leaves of absence to do research in science or creative work in the arts $100 000 for achievement awards to recognize exshycellence in classroom instruction and $96 000 for out-of-state travel related to instruction The apshypropriations likewise provided $100 000 to defray up to 50 of moving costs for relocating new faculty

One million dollars for library books to augshyment existing books -per - student ratios at five of the Colleges was also authorized

On-campus work-study programs employing student assistants were funded with $148 226 to be used with federal matching funds an additional $17 000 was allocated for lectures by visiting scholshyars and the educat ional TV station at San Diego SC as well as the nursery school at San Francisco SC were provided support funds

All of these improvements said Chancellor Dumke will greatly help to relieve the spartan bu dgetunderwhich we have been operating for years but we are still far behind In this regard I am pleased to note that the Legislatu re is planning an interim study on the whole problem of financing pubshylic higher education

SYSTEM HONORS MARK COMMENCEMENTS

Commencement Day at Hwnboldt SC Jun 4 was not only the first in a series of statewide cereshymonies it also marked the granting of the first honorary degree to a CSC alwnnus An honorary Doctor of Laws degree was conferred by the Colshyleges on Dr Monroe E Spaght onetime president of the student body at Humboldt and now managing director and chairman of the board of Europes largest industrial complex Royal Dutch Shell peshytrolewn companies Trustee James F Thacher and HSC President Cornelius H Siemens officiated

A week later on Jun 11 at San Francisco SC s Commencement Trustee Louis H Heilbron and Chancellor Dumke presided with SFSC Presishydent Paul A Dodd at the award of an honorary Docshytor of Hwnane Letters degree to Frank V de Belshylis patron of the arts and donor to the Colleges of the immense collection of books music and objets dart which bears his name in a special section of the library building at SFSC (See photo at right)

De Bellis who was honored for his contribushytions to the preservation of Italian culture and its interpretation to the students and people of Cali shyfornia 11 will be further honored this month at the University of Bari the fourth largest educational institution in Italy which will present him with its sigillum aureum (golden seal) in tribute to his lifeshylong interest in the dissemination of Italian culture

Dr Spaght gave the commencement address at Hwnboldt SC Dr Arthur Stanton Adams former president of the American Council on Education was the principal speaker at the San Francisco cershyemonies

On other campuses of the system _speakers were Chico Dr Harold Benjamin USC Visiting Lecturer Stanislaus Dr John F Olson presishydent of Oklahoma City University Fresno Dr Louis Benezet president of Claremont Graduate School and University Center Sacramento Dr Guy A West retiring president of SSG San Diego Dr Frank Baxter professor emeritus of USC San Fernando Valley Dr R A Billington of the Huntshyington Library San Jose Trustee Louis H Heil shybron Cal State Hayward Dr Mitchell P Briggs executive secretary of the Western Association of Schools and Colleges

Cal State Long Beach Dr E C Stakrnan of the University of Minnesota Rockefeller Foundashytion consultant Cal State Los Angeles Stanley Mosk Associate Justice Supreme Court of Calif Sonoma Rev Dr Samuel DeWitt Proctor of the National Council of the Churches of Christ Cal

2

State Fullerton Trustee Victor H Palmieri Poly San Luis Obispo Charles Luckman chai man CSC Board of Trustees Cal Poly Pomona Mr Bart Lytton president and chairman of Lytton Financial Corp

This year the California State Colleges gradushyated approximately 20000 students a recordnwnshyber Among them was Gunnar Herrstrom of Sonoshyma SC who received his bachelors degree in psyshychology and thus completed a program started at UC which was interrupted by the war World War I that is Mr Herrstrom is 72 years old He plans to return to sse for the summer session to continue studies in Spanish

Commencement at San Francisco SC included presshyentation of honorary L H D to Frank V de Bellis Photo shows 1 to r President Dodd Mr de Belshylis Trustee Louis Heilbron and Chancellor Dumke

FACULTY SALARY ISSUE ON TV

A television docwnentary 11 The Salary Issue Colleges in Crisis 11 was filmed last month at San Diego SC Participants in the program a segment of the Profile series were Trustee Victor H Palmieri Chancellor Dwnke Dr Ernest 0 Byrne Dr James N Tidwell and Dr Donald N Wood of SDSC and Jerry Harmon president of the Associshyated Students at the College They presented a panel discussion Showings were on KOGO San Diego KNBC Los Angeles and KRON San Franshycisco It is scheduled for KVIE Sacramento Jul 2 and subsequently will be made available to stations in Bakersfield Fresno Eureka and Santa Barbara Motion picture prints of the program are on loan to the Colleges from the Chancellors Office

Retirements of Dr H Thurston Hatch associshyate dean of students in charge of placement and DJa William B McCann director of the SchoolAdmini shytration Center and professor of education at Chico SC became effective this month

3

IVINGSTON HEADS STATEWIDE SENATE

Dr John C Livingston of Sacramento SC has been elected chairman of the Statewide Academic Senate for 1965-66 succeeding Dr Samuel E Wishyley of Cal State Long Beach

Meeting May 20-21 at the Long Beach campus the Senate also elected Dr Jesse B Allen of Cal State Los Angeles to a second term as vice-chairshyman named as secretary Dr James P Heath of San Jose SC and reconstituted its Executive Comshymittee by electing as members-at-l arge Mr Leo G McClatchy of San Francisco SC and Dr William R Rogers of San Jose who will serve on the comshymitteewith thenewofficersand Dr Wiley of CSLB past-president

Newly elected to the Senate were Dr Joseph A Wagner of CSLB Drs Lee R Kerschner and Paul J Pastor of Cal State Fullerton replacing Drs Ida Cappolino and Miles D McCarthy Mr Milton Dobkin of Humboldt SC for Dr Hyman Palshyais Mr R Dean Galloway of Stanislaus SC for Dr Max C Norton Dr PeterKoestenbaum of SanJose SC for Dr Dean R Cresap Dr Joseph McGowan of Sacramento SC for Dr James M Bradfield Dr Robert A Mott of Cal Poly SLO for Mr Warren R

nderson Mr Elmer H Rice of Cal Poly Pornoshya for Dr John Fulbeck Dr James N Tidwell of

San Diego SC for Dr Ivan N McCollom and Dr William W Young of Sonoma SC for Dr Cheryl Peterson

Facultymembers whose terms as senators conshytinue are Drs B Gordon Gibb and Lew D Oliver of Chico Drs R Deane Branstetter and James J Hunter of San Diego Drs Richard Axen and John L Clark of San Francisco Dr La Verne Bucy of Cal Poly SLO Dr Bernard A Shepard and Mr Phillip Walker of Fresno Dr Roscoe Peithman of Humboldt Mr William Eshelman and Dr Kenneth A Martyn of Cal State Los Angeles Dr Edward A Nelson of Cal Poly Pomona Dr Nicholas P Hardeman of Cal State Long Beach Drs H Duane Heath and William Sawrey of Cal State Hayward Dr John E Caswell of Stan islaus Dr Warren E Olson of Sonoma Dr Lyle E Gibson of Cal State Palos Verdes and Dr Gerald Scherba of Cal State San Bernardino

ANGELL TO CHANCELLORS OFFICE

Dr Melvin A Angell associate dean of stushydents for counseling at Fresn oSC has been appoinshy

d associate dean of student affairs in the Chancelshyr1 s Office He will be on leave of absence from

his FSC position during the 1965-66 academic year to ~ccept the post

SCULPTURE SYMPOSIUM SET FOR CSLB

The first international sculpture symposium in the US opened Jun 21 at Cal State Long Beach where 14 of the worlds great modern sculptors were scheduled to begin work on monumental sculptures Sculptors participating include Kosso Eloul of Isshyrael Andre Bloc of France Kenjiro Azuma of Mishylan Italy J J Beljon of Holland and Gabriel Kohn of the U S The event will be open to the public without charge through Aug 14

SONOMA SC OFFERS FAR WEST INSTITUTE

For the fourth summer Sonoma SC and the California Folklore Society will co-sponsor an Inshystitute of Far Western American Culture beginning Aug 2 This years themeis FolkMusic and Othshyer Folklore of Minority Groups in the Far West Previous themes were folklore and local history folklore and fiction and art architecture and folkshylore

Participating specialists include Dr Stith Thompson emeritus professor of English and folkshylore Indiana U Chingwah Lee curator of the Kuan Yin temple in San Franciscos Chinatown and Ralph J Gleason nationally known jazz music authority

Dr Hector Lee dean of in struction at SSC and executive vice-president of the California Folkshylore Society will direct the institute which is reshylated to several American Studies courses and degree programs comprising a part of the area studies offered by the Colleges

FIRST JOINT DOCTORATE OFFERED

The first doctoral program to be offered jointshyly by a California State College and the University of California will be initiated at San Diego SC this fall it was announced this month by Chancellor Dumshyke and University President Clark Kerr It will be offered in chemistry by UC s San Diego campus and SDSC Granting of joint doctorates was authorized in 1960 under the Master Plan and approval of the chemistry program was granted by a joint graduate board of final academic review composed of represhysentatives from the Colleges and the University

SUPREME COURTS ACCREDIT CHAPMAN

Attorney Mayer Chapman now associate counshysel of the esc legal staff has been admitted to the U S Supreme Court for p r actice before that body and also admitted to the Court of Military Appeals highest military court He earned his undergradushyate and law degree at UCLA where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and the Order of the Coif

4

STATEWIDE NEWS BRIEFS

San Jose SC-- Lowell C Pratt dean of CSC public information directors retires this month after 18 years at the College He will be succeedshyed by James E Noah his assistant for the past three years + + +A two-year study financed by the federal government through the States Division of Highways will be conducted by SJSC to determine whether a special course of driver training will improve driving habits of traffic violators

San Diego SC --Dr Malcolm A Love presishydent of SDSC has been triply honored by the American Association of University Professors at the annual banquet of its San Diego chapter by Colshyorado State College at Greeley where he delivered the commencement address and by the University of Nevada which this month awarded him an honorshyary LLD degree + + + Cap and Gown SDSC s honor society for women is now a chapter of Morshytar Board the only national honorary organization recognizing outstanding senior womens societies in American colleges and universities Cap and Gown thus becomes the first CSC chapter of Morshytar Board and the 117th in the nation

The Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany was awarded to Chancellor Dumke at a reshycent ceremony in Los Angeles Phoshytograph shows Hans RolfKiderlen Gershyman Consul-General congratulating Dr and Mrs Dumke following presentashytion of the Orders medal and citation which Dr Dumke holds The decorashytion was conferred in appreciation of the Chancellors part in establishing esc international programs overshyseas and for encouraging instruction in foreign lanshyguages including German throughout the college system

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

(Continued from Page 1) Brown commented I have verydeliberately sought to recognize the importance and the standing of the California State Colleges in my appointments to the Board and to push for their continued development as centers of academic exshycellence Mr Palmieris appointment contributes to both of those goals 1 Trustee Palmieri is marshy

ried His wife the former Martha Cooley of Pasashydena is also a Stanford graduate They have thr sons Victor Jr Matthew B and John W Th family home is in Malibu on Colony Drive

FALK TO HEAD INTERNATIONAL UNIT

Dr Karl L Falk professor of economics at Fresno SC and an authority on comparative economshyic systems and international housing has been namshyed director of international affairs for the Califorshynia State Colleges

In making the appointment Chancellor Dumke said Falk will head an expanded program of intershynational activities coordinating existing and new programs including foreign aid international study student and faculty exchanges with other countries and overseas projects sponsored by private foundashytions

One important phase of State College overseas operation consists of programs of study abroad for State College students in France Germany Japan Spain Sweden and Taiwan under the direction of Dr Thomas P Lantos of San Francisco SC who according to Dr Falk will continue in this aspect of international activities

Falk has been on the Fresno SC faculty sinshy1938 He received his undergraduate training at Stanford U and his doctoral degree at the Univershysity of Berlin Germany

He is chairman of the Fresno City Housing Aushythority vice-chairman of the Governors Advisory Committee on Housing Probl ems and past-president of the NationalAssociationof Housing and Redevelshyopment Officials He is an official of several finanshycial institutions and a former member of the board of the California Savings and Loan League

In his new post which he assumes Aug 1 Falk will be headquartered at the Chancellors Office Inglewood

SIEMENS JOINS CONSTITUTION COMMITTEE

Humboldt SC President Cornelius H Siemens has been elected to membership on the state 1 s Conshystitutional Revision Commission established by the 1963 Legislature for the purpose of recommending revisions to the Constitution for placement on the 1966 November ballot

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymo A Rydell Executive Vice-Chancellor John F Richardson Vice-Chancell Business Affairs C Mansel Keene Assistant Chancellor Faculty and Sta Affairs The California State Colleges Review is issued by the Public Affairs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES

EVIE~

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

Governor Edmund G Brown recently appointed Chester R Bartalini 62 president of the California State Council of Carpenters to succeed Thomas L Pitts secretary-treasurer of the California Labor Federation as a member of CSCs Board of Trustees

Trustee Pitts said he had asked the Governor to replace him on the board because the demands of his union post have made it impossible for me to give as much time to the State Colleges as I felt necessary

Pitts told Governor Brown that he was most pleased with Mr Barshytalinis appointment I know he will do a great job for the people of California on this board

The Governor said I regret ne loss of Tom Pitts from this imshy~rtant board very much He served

with great distinction and his good Chester R Bartalinijudgment will certainly be missed

Governor Brown said that he was however very happy to have the service of Chester Bartalini who has proved himshyself in many ways a truly dedicated Californian

In his long service in the Carpenters union Chester Bartalini has shown great administrative talent and executive ability As a union leader he has learned to appreciate the need to keep alive and strengthen Californias system of tuition-free education

Trustee Bartalini is a native of Michigan and has lived here since 1936 He served two terms as a member of the state Correctional Industry Commission and has been executive secretary of the Bay Counties District Council of Carpenters San Francisco since 1950

He is a member of the Commonwealth Club the Elks Eagles Associated Sportsmen of California and the Alameda Rod and Gun Club

He is a director of the Alameda Boys Oub and a member of the Joint Labor University of California committee

He has been president of the California State Council of orpenters since 1958

Trustee Bartalini lives at 1446 Eastshore Drive Alameda with his wife Florinda He has six children and seven grandshychildren

AUGUST 1965

VOL 3 N o 2

FISCAL TASK FORCES DEPLOYED

More efficient ways of staffing and funding systemwide college operations at every level of support are now being sought by eight task forces representing all of the Colleges

Members of the task-force groups were appointed by the CSC Committee on Fiscal Responsibility which was formed in May to implement the provisions of Senate Concurrent Resoshylution No 29 calling for a study of greater fiscal flexibility for the college system

Under the leadership of Harry W Brakebill vice-presishydent at San Francisco SC and permanent chairman of the committee together with Sol Buchalter chairman of the deshypartment of finance and law at San Fernando Valley SC who is serving as the committees executive officer on a fulltime basis during the summer months the task forces will engage in an all-out assault on the CSCs financial problems

Scope of the effort is shown by the assignments given to the groups ( 1) relationships and responsibilities of state agencies involved ( 2) budget formulation processes ( 3) deshytermination of level of support ( 4) budget administration ( 5) accounting and reporting ( 6-7-8) self-supporting funcshytions designated as noninstructional college foundation and summer-session and extension activities

Before hearings start on SCR 29 next Oct the specific tasks that these forces have set for themselves are in order of priority suggesting feasible and attainable methods for imshyproving budget administration defining means for determining adequate support levels and creating a model arrangement for fulfilling accountability requirements relating to expenditure of funds provided by the Legislature In the matter of accountshyability both internal management aspects and external public interest in quality education are being considered by the comshymittee and its forces

Some eighty representatives of the Colleges and the Chanshycellors Office including presidents deans business managers and students have already been named to the various task forces and most of the groups have started work

FIRST SCHOLARSHIP FOR CSSB

A $1000 check has established the first scholarship fund sponsored by a private organization for Cal State San Bernarshydino Donated by The Social Lites a Negro womens social and civic organization it provides an initial $300 for some deservshying student from the San Bernardino area Income from the remainder will go into a permanent fund to which the womens organization will continue to add until a complete scholarship program can be financed from the funds income alone

2

BOOKS MAGAZINES AND PAPERS At the end of last June Dr Monroe E Spaght the forshy

mer student body president at Humboldt SC who is now managing director of more than 500 companies operated by Royal Dutch Shell- a position of corporate eminence never before achieved by any American- became not only an honorary Doctor of Laws by virtue of his CSC degree but also an author of belles-lettres by virtue of his book The Bright Key

Dr Monroe E Spaght (right) receiving the LLD dregree from Trustee James F Thatcher at Humboldt State College June 4 1965

Just published by Appleton-Century-Crofts the book defends with truth urbanity and wit his strong belief that business has real responsibilities to our educational system Dr Spaght earned his PhD in chemistry at a time when much of the business world was convinced such training rendered a man unfit for a life of decision and action Today he is recognized as a leading spokesman for industry on the role of education in contemporary society A trustee of Stanford U he is chairshyman of the Committee for Corporate Support of American Universities and chairman of the New York State Science and Technology Foundation

Literary honors for two other Humboldt alumni were also in the news Mr James Yoakum and Mr Sherman Pearl won first prize in the full-color category of the 1965 Governmentshywide Publications Contest sponsored by the Federal Editors Association with Wildlife on the Public Lands produced for the US Dept of the Interior Bureau of Land Management Mr Yoakum presently a lecturer in natural resources at the College was chief color photographer for the publication Mr Pearl is with the Nevada office of the Bureau Their document is the No 1 seller of the Government Printing Office with the widest distribution of any federal book and is now being transshylated into several foreign languages

A textbook on wildlife management by Dr Raymond Dasmann chairman of HSCs division of natural resources was recently published by John Wiley amp Sons It is his second text The first Environmental Conservation came out in 1959

Dr Ralph Samuelson chairman of the division of lanshyguage arts at the College has been notified that Nineteenth Century American Authors a syllabus of American Literature of which he was an editor is now being published by the

Eurasia Press in New Delhi India for use by more than 30 Indian universities e

College Information Officer Vivienne L George received first place award from the California Press Women for producshytion of Challenge 1964 the first annual Presidents Report In other categories Mrs George received third place for a feature article The Grapes Run Dry Along the Mayacamas published in a national magazine and top honorable mention for a series of newspaper articles about faculty members pubshylished last fall

Dr Clay Hatfield of the biological sciences department at Cal Poly SLO and John Applegarth also a member of the biological sciences faculty have collaborated in the production of a new college biology textbook Applied Microbiology reflecting Dr Hatfields more than 20 years experience as a microbio~ogist National Press Palo Alto published

OVERSEAS DIRECTORS NAMED Resident directors of CSCs International Programs durshy

ing the 1965-66 academic year have been announced by Chancellor Dumke

Named were Dr Leonard Messier of San Diego SC who will supervise the program at the University of Aix-Marseille France Dr John E Merrill also of SDSC at Waseda Univershysity in Tokyo Japan Dr Joachim Stanzel of San Jose SC at the Free University of Berlin and the University of Heidelshyberg Germany Dr Joseph Reid Scott also of SJSC at t University of Madrid and the University of Granada Spai and Dr Donald M Castleberry of San Francisco SC who was appointed for the University of Stockholm and the University of U ppsala Sweden

SAN JOSE OFFERS NEW TUTORIALS The usual courses lectures and grades so familiar to colshy

lege students will be unknown in Sep 1965 to a segment of entering freshmen at San Jose SC

Their unfamiliarity will stem from an experimental proshygram which is officially known at Tutorials in Letters and Science

While tutorial programs are not new the abandonment of the course is a startling departure from the usual educational experiments and reforms according to Dr Mervyn L Cadshywallader initiator of the program and associate professor of sociology at SJSC

Instead of the familiar format the new program will make use of individual tutorials group discussions small seminars and laboratory sessions Successful participants will earn 48 semester units of credit

The chief obligation of the student said Dr John Galm assistant professor of English and one of the first six tutors will be to submit written work to his tutor approximately every two weeks and then to have a conference with him A

Dr Cadwallader said a central theme will be featur each of the four semesters As an example four semesters work could be organized around study of four pivotal epochs in

3

Western Civilization Students will be encouraged to particishyte in some of the planning and evaluation of the program

The faculty-student ratio with the tutorial program will be approximately 1-to-20 This will permit the kind of intimiddot mate association and per~nal exchange between college proshyfessors and students that has become notable by its absence on the campuses of our large colleges and universities said Dr Cadwallader

He continued by stating that this return to a personal education may be one answer to the student demonstrations across the country

Other tutors in addition to Drs Cadwallader and Galm are Dr Richard Tansey professor of art Dr David Newman associate professor of psychology Dr Harold DeBey professor of chemistry and Gary Albright assistant professor of philshyosophy

UC COMMISSIONS CSLB ART

The first catalog of the new lrvine campus 6pound UC pubshylished early this month was designed by Dr Joseph Krause professor of art at Cal State Long Beach

Dr Krauses striking designs for various publications at the College caught the eye of Dr Clayton Garrison a former associate professor of speech at CSLB and present dean of UC Irvines fine arts division He requested Krause to design the new UC catalog

Rose Mary Thompson 21-year-old electronics major at Cal Poly Pomona became the first four-year coed to receive an engineering degree from the College when she graduated this summer Women were not enrolled at that campus until 1961

A CAMPUS CONVERTED into an international showcase for monumental sculpture has made Cal State at Long Beach a cynosure of cultural controversy this summer Bold abstract works formed of concrete steel redwood aluminum pipes and paint challenge the viewer as nine world-famous sculptors complete their contributions to the first International Sculpture Symposium in this country Their creations will remain on permanent exhibition at the College Along an area 100 ft in length and about 28 ft wide at the Seventh Street corner of the campus 19 massive forms 8-to-1 0 ft high (model pictured center-left above) constitute the sculpture of J J Beljon director of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in The Hague Holland Sculptor Beljon (upper left) contemplating the extent of his work under construction said wryly Gallery art and art dealers are doomed they have no future Other photos proceeding clockwise show- Gabriel Kohn of the US Andre Bloc of France

osso Eloul of Israel and directly under the center portrait of Piotr Kowalski a Polish sculptor residing in France an interior view of the ulptors workshop with student helper in foreground and with plaster on hand Kenneth Glenn director of the symposium who is also proshyssor of art at CSLB Left corner picture was taken at Bethlehem Steels Terminal Island plant where donated fabrication of plate contributed

by Triangle Steel Co and Ge~teral Pipe amp Supply Co vitalized the designs of Canadian sculptor Robert Murray Also participating in the symshyposium but not shown here are sculptors Kenjiro Azuma and Claire Falkenstein as well as muralist Rita Letendre who is sculptor Elouls wife

4

The ACADEMIC SENATE REGISTER

Headlines in the Los Angeles Times of last Jul 2 anshynounced Educators Hail Budget as Victory Yet I suspect for a large portion of the faculties the salary increase and the state college quality package of funds for research travel sabshybaticals and distinguished teaching represented a hollow vicshytory Not primarily because the salary increase was too little too late (though it was) and certainly not because the other benefits are insignificant Many of us are rather in the position ~f the teenager whose desire to be understood and respected Is not compensated by an increase in his allowance For those who react this way (I include myself) the most hopeful aspects of the past year are to be found in those activities of ad hoc faculty groups professional organizations the Chancellors Office Trustees and Academic Senate which have sought to create and enlarge public respect and support for the goals of the State Colleges

If we have sometimes acted inexpediently or undiploshymatically we need not apologize This is not a job for imageshymakers our problems will not always respond to the tech shyniques of politics as the art of the possible Our task has been to prepare the seedbed for a dialogue with the community and with the Legislature through which the purposes and aspirations of the state college experiment may be clarified We need now to consider as we gain the attention of the public and the Legislature what we are to say

Our problem is put into sharp focus by an observation of the young John Adams in 1765 Reflecting on the advanshytages bequeathed by the early settlers to their progeny Adams noted the unique civil and religious principles on the basis of which they laid very early the foundation of colleges and invested them with ample privileges and emoluments It is remarkable he added that they have left among their posshyterity so universal an affection and veneration for those seminshyaries and for liberal education that the meanest of the people contribute cheerfully to the support and maintenance of them every year and that nothing is more generally popular than projections for the honor reputation and advantage of those seats of learning

Is not our task to rekindle and revitalize the universal affection and veneration which alone in the long run can provide the basis for public support of our seminaries The civil and religious principles which supported it in times past Adams went on to note valued knowledge as the means to liberty Perhaps the purpose of the State Colleges reflects the universalization of that insight If so it is time to get about clarifying our own ideas on the matter and finding the means to communicate them to others If we are to survive we must become the peoples colleges not in an ad-mans empty phrase and not in the peoples present understanding but in a sense we have yet to define clearly for ourselves and then to communicate to the public As the Academic Senate

begins its third year of existence in the shadow of continuitA fiscal crises we will I hope turn part of our energies to ponde ing how to recover and how to deserve that universal affection and veneration -John C Livingston Chairman

STRONG POLICY ON COLLEGE SUPPORT ADOPTED With four new California State Colleges established by

the Legislature-in Contra Costa Kern San Mateo Santa Clara and Ventura counties-the Board of Trustees has adopted a policy to protect the support base of the existing Colleges

In a resolution of Jul 29 the Trustees expressed their concern for the financing of the California State Colleges at a level to maintain and strengthen educational excellence and declared that the financing of existing State Colleges should be maintained at the proper level and not be adversely affected by the financial impact of the addition of new State Colleges

Chancellor Dumke pointed out that the great strides made in the recent legislative session in faculty salary increases library and sabbatical leave augmentations research and travel allowances were the result of hard work in presenting the case for the State Colleges to the Legislature We must make it just as clear he said that our support budget for existing Colleges is still at an inadequate level and must not be diluted further by draining off funds to establish new Colleges

FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS

Three humanities professors from San Francisco SC ha been awarded Guggenheim Fellowships Ruby Cohn associa professor of English and world literarure Mark Harris associshyate professor of English and director of creative writing and Rudolph Weingartner associate professor of philosophy and chairman of the philosophy department

It is believed that no Cal State campus has ever before received three Guggenheims at one time

Dr George Huppert assistant professor of history at Cal State Hayward has been awarded a fellowship by the American Council of Learned Societies to complete research on The New History of the French Renaissance + + + Fellowships for srudy and travel in India have been awarded to Dr Joseph Pugliese CSH associate professor of art and to Glenn Glasow assistant professor of music by the Instirute of International Education Only 2i fellowships were awarded nationwide

Faculty fellowships provided by the National Science Foundation will enable Dr Seymour Mack associate professor of geology at Fresno SC to take his sabbatical leave at Stanford U for study and research in geo-chemistry and hydrology Earl L Pye of the physical sciences faculty at Cal Poly Pomona to complete his chemistry research project on detergent mishycelles at Louisiana State U and Dr Donald E Bianchi associshyate professor of biology at San Fernando Valley SC to spend a year at the University of Geneva Switzerland

==================~middotshyTHE CALIFORNIA_STA~ COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymond A ~ydell Ex~uhve Voce-Chancellor Harry E Brakebill Vice-Chancellor Busness Affaors C Mansel Keene Assost~nt Chancellor Faculty and Staff Affaors The Callforma State Colleges Rev1ew is issued by the Public Affa irs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

Page 6: September 21, 1965 Staff Bulletin

6--

TAPE OF PANEL DISCUSSION ON PERSONNEL BENEFITS IS AVAILABLE

Because a number of members of the staff and faculty were unable to attend the panel discussion on Personnel Benefits held during the recent Fall Staff Conference a tape recording was made of the proceedings and is available to middot those who would like to hear it

The panel made up of experts on various subjects discussed recent changes in the areas of insurance retirement and California Physicians Service Health middot Insurance

The 90-minute tape of the discussion may be checked out at the Audio Visual Departmeots Service Office Room 9 Business Administration and Education Building

1 middot l

PLACEMENT CALENDAR bullbull INTERVIEWS ON CAMPUS SEPTEMBER 21 - OCTOBER 1 1965

UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS Capt M V Young Captain Donald A Hodgen and SSgt E J Paurazas US Marine Corps officer selection liaison officers will be available in the Snack Bar area of the Dining Hall to discuss with interested students the Marine Corps Officer Training Programs (921-923)

UNITED STATES NAVY Lt F J Skin~er USB Lt C L Clinton USN(W) and LtJg F M Fellrath USN the Officer Programs Information Jeam will b~ available in the Snack Bar area of the Dining Hall to provide studentamp with information on the opportunities available to college graduates as commissioned officers in the US Naval Reserve (927~929)

YORK CORPORATION Los Angeles A Dokter regional sales manager and L P Jacobsen regional manager will interview seniors in AC and R and ME who have an interest in air conditioning and refrigeration (930)

MARVIN LANDPLANE CO Woodland Calif R L Hormbostel sales manager will interview seniors in Ag Engineering and MA The company is a builder of scientific land levelers

DEADLINE FOR ARTICLES APPEARING IN NEXT WEEKS STAFF BULLETIN IS FRIDAY NOON

bull bull - 1

CAMPUSmiddot CALENDAR - middot 1oiEEK ()F SEPTEMBER 21middot28 1965

Tuesday September 21

12 00 Books at High Noon Luncheon Meeting

Wednesday September 22

200 Executive Council Meeting

Thursday September 23

815 am Applied Arts middotmiddot Division Committee Meeting

900 am Agriculture Division Commit~ee Meeting

Noon Staff Club Luncheon Meeting -

Saturday September 25

middotmiddot 300 pm Cal Poly Womens Club Fall Tea

800 pm Varsity Football vs Linfield College

Monday September 27

200 pm bull Executive Council Meeting

Tuesday Seetember 28

815 am Applied 3ciences Division Meet~

middot- middotmiddot 1000 Am middot Engineering Division Committee Meeting

Noon Books at High Noon

SDR

Admin 301

Admin 213-A

Ag 138

SDR

bull

Lib 129

Mustang Stadium

Admin 301

Admin 301 ~ tt~

GA 101

SDR

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES

EVIE~ JUNE 1965 VOl 2 No 12

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

Victor H Palmieri was appointed to the Board of Trustees by Governor Brown in July of 1964 A decade before almost to the month Trustee Palmshyieri had graduated from Stanford Law School where he was editor of the Law Review and had been namshyed to the Order of the Coif high-ranking honor soshyciety of the legal profession He also received his undergraduate education at Stanford with a major in history

Following his graduation he joined the law firm of 0Melshyveny amp Myers in Los Angeles where he served until duty with with the US Army Later he returned to OMelveny amp Myshyers where he specialized in orporate and business law

In 1958 Mr Palmieri left private practice to become exshyecutive vice-president of the Janss Investment Corp a leading real estate deshyvelopment firm and in 1963 he was named presishydent of the firm and its affiliated companies

Mr Palmieri has remained continuously acshytive in educational fields A lecturer in law at the Stanford Law School he is currently teaching a course there in legal aspects of real estate transacshytions He also lectu res from time to time at varishyous other graduate schools including the Universishyty of Southern California and UCLA In addition he is a founding member of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions in Santa Barbara

He was born in Chicago Ill but has lived in California since 1939 He has served as a member of a number of state commissions concerned with urban problems As a memb er of the Commission on Metropolitan Area Probl ems the Governors Advisory Commission on Housing and the Coordinashyting Council on Urban Policies he has been closeshyly involved with state-level efforts to meet growth

roblems throu ghout the state

On the occasion of his appointment to the CSC Board of Trustees Governor (Continued on Page 4)

REVISED CSC BUDGET ADOPTED

A pared-down but still substantial CSC support budget which emerged from two legislative sessions and a special hearing held by Governor Brown was finally approved as both the month and fiscal year ended

At the Governors hearing Jun 23 Chancellor Dumke accompanied by Trustees Louis Heilbron Albert J Ruffo and E Guy Warren and Dr John Livingston chairman of the Statewide Academic Senate continued to plead the case of the Colleges for no further cuts in the systems budgetary reshyquests stressing again a pressing need for faculty salary increases

As finally adopted budget figures revealed more gains than losses in key items including a faculty salary increase of approximately 10

Other faculty benefits which became available for the new fiscal year are $250 000 for sabbatishycal leaves $200 000 for leaves of absence to do research in science or creative work in the arts $100 000 for achievement awards to recognize exshycellence in classroom instruction and $96 000 for out-of-state travel related to instruction The apshypropriations likewise provided $100 000 to defray up to 50 of moving costs for relocating new faculty

One million dollars for library books to augshyment existing books -per - student ratios at five of the Colleges was also authorized

On-campus work-study programs employing student assistants were funded with $148 226 to be used with federal matching funds an additional $17 000 was allocated for lectures by visiting scholshyars and the educat ional TV station at San Diego SC as well as the nursery school at San Francisco SC were provided support funds

All of these improvements said Chancellor Dumke will greatly help to relieve the spartan bu dgetunderwhich we have been operating for years but we are still far behind In this regard I am pleased to note that the Legislatu re is planning an interim study on the whole problem of financing pubshylic higher education

SYSTEM HONORS MARK COMMENCEMENTS

Commencement Day at Hwnboldt SC Jun 4 was not only the first in a series of statewide cereshymonies it also marked the granting of the first honorary degree to a CSC alwnnus An honorary Doctor of Laws degree was conferred by the Colshyleges on Dr Monroe E Spaght onetime president of the student body at Humboldt and now managing director and chairman of the board of Europes largest industrial complex Royal Dutch Shell peshytrolewn companies Trustee James F Thacher and HSC President Cornelius H Siemens officiated

A week later on Jun 11 at San Francisco SC s Commencement Trustee Louis H Heilbron and Chancellor Dumke presided with SFSC Presishydent Paul A Dodd at the award of an honorary Docshytor of Hwnane Letters degree to Frank V de Belshylis patron of the arts and donor to the Colleges of the immense collection of books music and objets dart which bears his name in a special section of the library building at SFSC (See photo at right)

De Bellis who was honored for his contribushytions to the preservation of Italian culture and its interpretation to the students and people of Cali shyfornia 11 will be further honored this month at the University of Bari the fourth largest educational institution in Italy which will present him with its sigillum aureum (golden seal) in tribute to his lifeshylong interest in the dissemination of Italian culture

Dr Spaght gave the commencement address at Hwnboldt SC Dr Arthur Stanton Adams former president of the American Council on Education was the principal speaker at the San Francisco cershyemonies

On other campuses of the system _speakers were Chico Dr Harold Benjamin USC Visiting Lecturer Stanislaus Dr John F Olson presishydent of Oklahoma City University Fresno Dr Louis Benezet president of Claremont Graduate School and University Center Sacramento Dr Guy A West retiring president of SSG San Diego Dr Frank Baxter professor emeritus of USC San Fernando Valley Dr R A Billington of the Huntshyington Library San Jose Trustee Louis H Heil shybron Cal State Hayward Dr Mitchell P Briggs executive secretary of the Western Association of Schools and Colleges

Cal State Long Beach Dr E C Stakrnan of the University of Minnesota Rockefeller Foundashytion consultant Cal State Los Angeles Stanley Mosk Associate Justice Supreme Court of Calif Sonoma Rev Dr Samuel DeWitt Proctor of the National Council of the Churches of Christ Cal

2

State Fullerton Trustee Victor H Palmieri Poly San Luis Obispo Charles Luckman chai man CSC Board of Trustees Cal Poly Pomona Mr Bart Lytton president and chairman of Lytton Financial Corp

This year the California State Colleges gradushyated approximately 20000 students a recordnwnshyber Among them was Gunnar Herrstrom of Sonoshyma SC who received his bachelors degree in psyshychology and thus completed a program started at UC which was interrupted by the war World War I that is Mr Herrstrom is 72 years old He plans to return to sse for the summer session to continue studies in Spanish

Commencement at San Francisco SC included presshyentation of honorary L H D to Frank V de Bellis Photo shows 1 to r President Dodd Mr de Belshylis Trustee Louis Heilbron and Chancellor Dumke

FACULTY SALARY ISSUE ON TV

A television docwnentary 11 The Salary Issue Colleges in Crisis 11 was filmed last month at San Diego SC Participants in the program a segment of the Profile series were Trustee Victor H Palmieri Chancellor Dwnke Dr Ernest 0 Byrne Dr James N Tidwell and Dr Donald N Wood of SDSC and Jerry Harmon president of the Associshyated Students at the College They presented a panel discussion Showings were on KOGO San Diego KNBC Los Angeles and KRON San Franshycisco It is scheduled for KVIE Sacramento Jul 2 and subsequently will be made available to stations in Bakersfield Fresno Eureka and Santa Barbara Motion picture prints of the program are on loan to the Colleges from the Chancellors Office

Retirements of Dr H Thurston Hatch associshyate dean of students in charge of placement and DJa William B McCann director of the SchoolAdmini shytration Center and professor of education at Chico SC became effective this month

3

IVINGSTON HEADS STATEWIDE SENATE

Dr John C Livingston of Sacramento SC has been elected chairman of the Statewide Academic Senate for 1965-66 succeeding Dr Samuel E Wishyley of Cal State Long Beach

Meeting May 20-21 at the Long Beach campus the Senate also elected Dr Jesse B Allen of Cal State Los Angeles to a second term as vice-chairshyman named as secretary Dr James P Heath of San Jose SC and reconstituted its Executive Comshymittee by electing as members-at-l arge Mr Leo G McClatchy of San Francisco SC and Dr William R Rogers of San Jose who will serve on the comshymitteewith thenewofficersand Dr Wiley of CSLB past-president

Newly elected to the Senate were Dr Joseph A Wagner of CSLB Drs Lee R Kerschner and Paul J Pastor of Cal State Fullerton replacing Drs Ida Cappolino and Miles D McCarthy Mr Milton Dobkin of Humboldt SC for Dr Hyman Palshyais Mr R Dean Galloway of Stanislaus SC for Dr Max C Norton Dr PeterKoestenbaum of SanJose SC for Dr Dean R Cresap Dr Joseph McGowan of Sacramento SC for Dr James M Bradfield Dr Robert A Mott of Cal Poly SLO for Mr Warren R

nderson Mr Elmer H Rice of Cal Poly Pornoshya for Dr John Fulbeck Dr James N Tidwell of

San Diego SC for Dr Ivan N McCollom and Dr William W Young of Sonoma SC for Dr Cheryl Peterson

Facultymembers whose terms as senators conshytinue are Drs B Gordon Gibb and Lew D Oliver of Chico Drs R Deane Branstetter and James J Hunter of San Diego Drs Richard Axen and John L Clark of San Francisco Dr La Verne Bucy of Cal Poly SLO Dr Bernard A Shepard and Mr Phillip Walker of Fresno Dr Roscoe Peithman of Humboldt Mr William Eshelman and Dr Kenneth A Martyn of Cal State Los Angeles Dr Edward A Nelson of Cal Poly Pomona Dr Nicholas P Hardeman of Cal State Long Beach Drs H Duane Heath and William Sawrey of Cal State Hayward Dr John E Caswell of Stan islaus Dr Warren E Olson of Sonoma Dr Lyle E Gibson of Cal State Palos Verdes and Dr Gerald Scherba of Cal State San Bernardino

ANGELL TO CHANCELLORS OFFICE

Dr Melvin A Angell associate dean of stushydents for counseling at Fresn oSC has been appoinshy

d associate dean of student affairs in the Chancelshyr1 s Office He will be on leave of absence from

his FSC position during the 1965-66 academic year to ~ccept the post

SCULPTURE SYMPOSIUM SET FOR CSLB

The first international sculpture symposium in the US opened Jun 21 at Cal State Long Beach where 14 of the worlds great modern sculptors were scheduled to begin work on monumental sculptures Sculptors participating include Kosso Eloul of Isshyrael Andre Bloc of France Kenjiro Azuma of Mishylan Italy J J Beljon of Holland and Gabriel Kohn of the U S The event will be open to the public without charge through Aug 14

SONOMA SC OFFERS FAR WEST INSTITUTE

For the fourth summer Sonoma SC and the California Folklore Society will co-sponsor an Inshystitute of Far Western American Culture beginning Aug 2 This years themeis FolkMusic and Othshyer Folklore of Minority Groups in the Far West Previous themes were folklore and local history folklore and fiction and art architecture and folkshylore

Participating specialists include Dr Stith Thompson emeritus professor of English and folkshylore Indiana U Chingwah Lee curator of the Kuan Yin temple in San Franciscos Chinatown and Ralph J Gleason nationally known jazz music authority

Dr Hector Lee dean of in struction at SSC and executive vice-president of the California Folkshylore Society will direct the institute which is reshylated to several American Studies courses and degree programs comprising a part of the area studies offered by the Colleges

FIRST JOINT DOCTORATE OFFERED

The first doctoral program to be offered jointshyly by a California State College and the University of California will be initiated at San Diego SC this fall it was announced this month by Chancellor Dumshyke and University President Clark Kerr It will be offered in chemistry by UC s San Diego campus and SDSC Granting of joint doctorates was authorized in 1960 under the Master Plan and approval of the chemistry program was granted by a joint graduate board of final academic review composed of represhysentatives from the Colleges and the University

SUPREME COURTS ACCREDIT CHAPMAN

Attorney Mayer Chapman now associate counshysel of the esc legal staff has been admitted to the U S Supreme Court for p r actice before that body and also admitted to the Court of Military Appeals highest military court He earned his undergradushyate and law degree at UCLA where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and the Order of the Coif

4

STATEWIDE NEWS BRIEFS

San Jose SC-- Lowell C Pratt dean of CSC public information directors retires this month after 18 years at the College He will be succeedshyed by James E Noah his assistant for the past three years + + +A two-year study financed by the federal government through the States Division of Highways will be conducted by SJSC to determine whether a special course of driver training will improve driving habits of traffic violators

San Diego SC --Dr Malcolm A Love presishydent of SDSC has been triply honored by the American Association of University Professors at the annual banquet of its San Diego chapter by Colshyorado State College at Greeley where he delivered the commencement address and by the University of Nevada which this month awarded him an honorshyary LLD degree + + + Cap and Gown SDSC s honor society for women is now a chapter of Morshytar Board the only national honorary organization recognizing outstanding senior womens societies in American colleges and universities Cap and Gown thus becomes the first CSC chapter of Morshytar Board and the 117th in the nation

The Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany was awarded to Chancellor Dumke at a reshycent ceremony in Los Angeles Phoshytograph shows Hans RolfKiderlen Gershyman Consul-General congratulating Dr and Mrs Dumke following presentashytion of the Orders medal and citation which Dr Dumke holds The decorashytion was conferred in appreciation of the Chancellors part in establishing esc international programs overshyseas and for encouraging instruction in foreign lanshyguages including German throughout the college system

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

(Continued from Page 1) Brown commented I have verydeliberately sought to recognize the importance and the standing of the California State Colleges in my appointments to the Board and to push for their continued development as centers of academic exshycellence Mr Palmieris appointment contributes to both of those goals 1 Trustee Palmieri is marshy

ried His wife the former Martha Cooley of Pasashydena is also a Stanford graduate They have thr sons Victor Jr Matthew B and John W Th family home is in Malibu on Colony Drive

FALK TO HEAD INTERNATIONAL UNIT

Dr Karl L Falk professor of economics at Fresno SC and an authority on comparative economshyic systems and international housing has been namshyed director of international affairs for the Califorshynia State Colleges

In making the appointment Chancellor Dumke said Falk will head an expanded program of intershynational activities coordinating existing and new programs including foreign aid international study student and faculty exchanges with other countries and overseas projects sponsored by private foundashytions

One important phase of State College overseas operation consists of programs of study abroad for State College students in France Germany Japan Spain Sweden and Taiwan under the direction of Dr Thomas P Lantos of San Francisco SC who according to Dr Falk will continue in this aspect of international activities

Falk has been on the Fresno SC faculty sinshy1938 He received his undergraduate training at Stanford U and his doctoral degree at the Univershysity of Berlin Germany

He is chairman of the Fresno City Housing Aushythority vice-chairman of the Governors Advisory Committee on Housing Probl ems and past-president of the NationalAssociationof Housing and Redevelshyopment Officials He is an official of several finanshycial institutions and a former member of the board of the California Savings and Loan League

In his new post which he assumes Aug 1 Falk will be headquartered at the Chancellors Office Inglewood

SIEMENS JOINS CONSTITUTION COMMITTEE

Humboldt SC President Cornelius H Siemens has been elected to membership on the state 1 s Conshystitutional Revision Commission established by the 1963 Legislature for the purpose of recommending revisions to the Constitution for placement on the 1966 November ballot

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymo A Rydell Executive Vice-Chancellor John F Richardson Vice-Chancell Business Affairs C Mansel Keene Assistant Chancellor Faculty and Sta Affairs The California State Colleges Review is issued by the Public Affairs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES

EVIE~

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

Governor Edmund G Brown recently appointed Chester R Bartalini 62 president of the California State Council of Carpenters to succeed Thomas L Pitts secretary-treasurer of the California Labor Federation as a member of CSCs Board of Trustees

Trustee Pitts said he had asked the Governor to replace him on the board because the demands of his union post have made it impossible for me to give as much time to the State Colleges as I felt necessary

Pitts told Governor Brown that he was most pleased with Mr Barshytalinis appointment I know he will do a great job for the people of California on this board

The Governor said I regret ne loss of Tom Pitts from this imshy~rtant board very much He served

with great distinction and his good Chester R Bartalinijudgment will certainly be missed

Governor Brown said that he was however very happy to have the service of Chester Bartalini who has proved himshyself in many ways a truly dedicated Californian

In his long service in the Carpenters union Chester Bartalini has shown great administrative talent and executive ability As a union leader he has learned to appreciate the need to keep alive and strengthen Californias system of tuition-free education

Trustee Bartalini is a native of Michigan and has lived here since 1936 He served two terms as a member of the state Correctional Industry Commission and has been executive secretary of the Bay Counties District Council of Carpenters San Francisco since 1950

He is a member of the Commonwealth Club the Elks Eagles Associated Sportsmen of California and the Alameda Rod and Gun Club

He is a director of the Alameda Boys Oub and a member of the Joint Labor University of California committee

He has been president of the California State Council of orpenters since 1958

Trustee Bartalini lives at 1446 Eastshore Drive Alameda with his wife Florinda He has six children and seven grandshychildren

AUGUST 1965

VOL 3 N o 2

FISCAL TASK FORCES DEPLOYED

More efficient ways of staffing and funding systemwide college operations at every level of support are now being sought by eight task forces representing all of the Colleges

Members of the task-force groups were appointed by the CSC Committee on Fiscal Responsibility which was formed in May to implement the provisions of Senate Concurrent Resoshylution No 29 calling for a study of greater fiscal flexibility for the college system

Under the leadership of Harry W Brakebill vice-presishydent at San Francisco SC and permanent chairman of the committee together with Sol Buchalter chairman of the deshypartment of finance and law at San Fernando Valley SC who is serving as the committees executive officer on a fulltime basis during the summer months the task forces will engage in an all-out assault on the CSCs financial problems

Scope of the effort is shown by the assignments given to the groups ( 1) relationships and responsibilities of state agencies involved ( 2) budget formulation processes ( 3) deshytermination of level of support ( 4) budget administration ( 5) accounting and reporting ( 6-7-8) self-supporting funcshytions designated as noninstructional college foundation and summer-session and extension activities

Before hearings start on SCR 29 next Oct the specific tasks that these forces have set for themselves are in order of priority suggesting feasible and attainable methods for imshyproving budget administration defining means for determining adequate support levels and creating a model arrangement for fulfilling accountability requirements relating to expenditure of funds provided by the Legislature In the matter of accountshyability both internal management aspects and external public interest in quality education are being considered by the comshymittee and its forces

Some eighty representatives of the Colleges and the Chanshycellors Office including presidents deans business managers and students have already been named to the various task forces and most of the groups have started work

FIRST SCHOLARSHIP FOR CSSB

A $1000 check has established the first scholarship fund sponsored by a private organization for Cal State San Bernarshydino Donated by The Social Lites a Negro womens social and civic organization it provides an initial $300 for some deservshying student from the San Bernardino area Income from the remainder will go into a permanent fund to which the womens organization will continue to add until a complete scholarship program can be financed from the funds income alone

2

BOOKS MAGAZINES AND PAPERS At the end of last June Dr Monroe E Spaght the forshy

mer student body president at Humboldt SC who is now managing director of more than 500 companies operated by Royal Dutch Shell- a position of corporate eminence never before achieved by any American- became not only an honorary Doctor of Laws by virtue of his CSC degree but also an author of belles-lettres by virtue of his book The Bright Key

Dr Monroe E Spaght (right) receiving the LLD dregree from Trustee James F Thatcher at Humboldt State College June 4 1965

Just published by Appleton-Century-Crofts the book defends with truth urbanity and wit his strong belief that business has real responsibilities to our educational system Dr Spaght earned his PhD in chemistry at a time when much of the business world was convinced such training rendered a man unfit for a life of decision and action Today he is recognized as a leading spokesman for industry on the role of education in contemporary society A trustee of Stanford U he is chairshyman of the Committee for Corporate Support of American Universities and chairman of the New York State Science and Technology Foundation

Literary honors for two other Humboldt alumni were also in the news Mr James Yoakum and Mr Sherman Pearl won first prize in the full-color category of the 1965 Governmentshywide Publications Contest sponsored by the Federal Editors Association with Wildlife on the Public Lands produced for the US Dept of the Interior Bureau of Land Management Mr Yoakum presently a lecturer in natural resources at the College was chief color photographer for the publication Mr Pearl is with the Nevada office of the Bureau Their document is the No 1 seller of the Government Printing Office with the widest distribution of any federal book and is now being transshylated into several foreign languages

A textbook on wildlife management by Dr Raymond Dasmann chairman of HSCs division of natural resources was recently published by John Wiley amp Sons It is his second text The first Environmental Conservation came out in 1959

Dr Ralph Samuelson chairman of the division of lanshyguage arts at the College has been notified that Nineteenth Century American Authors a syllabus of American Literature of which he was an editor is now being published by the

Eurasia Press in New Delhi India for use by more than 30 Indian universities e

College Information Officer Vivienne L George received first place award from the California Press Women for producshytion of Challenge 1964 the first annual Presidents Report In other categories Mrs George received third place for a feature article The Grapes Run Dry Along the Mayacamas published in a national magazine and top honorable mention for a series of newspaper articles about faculty members pubshylished last fall

Dr Clay Hatfield of the biological sciences department at Cal Poly SLO and John Applegarth also a member of the biological sciences faculty have collaborated in the production of a new college biology textbook Applied Microbiology reflecting Dr Hatfields more than 20 years experience as a microbio~ogist National Press Palo Alto published

OVERSEAS DIRECTORS NAMED Resident directors of CSCs International Programs durshy

ing the 1965-66 academic year have been announced by Chancellor Dumke

Named were Dr Leonard Messier of San Diego SC who will supervise the program at the University of Aix-Marseille France Dr John E Merrill also of SDSC at Waseda Univershysity in Tokyo Japan Dr Joachim Stanzel of San Jose SC at the Free University of Berlin and the University of Heidelshyberg Germany Dr Joseph Reid Scott also of SJSC at t University of Madrid and the University of Granada Spai and Dr Donald M Castleberry of San Francisco SC who was appointed for the University of Stockholm and the University of U ppsala Sweden

SAN JOSE OFFERS NEW TUTORIALS The usual courses lectures and grades so familiar to colshy

lege students will be unknown in Sep 1965 to a segment of entering freshmen at San Jose SC

Their unfamiliarity will stem from an experimental proshygram which is officially known at Tutorials in Letters and Science

While tutorial programs are not new the abandonment of the course is a startling departure from the usual educational experiments and reforms according to Dr Mervyn L Cadshywallader initiator of the program and associate professor of sociology at SJSC

Instead of the familiar format the new program will make use of individual tutorials group discussions small seminars and laboratory sessions Successful participants will earn 48 semester units of credit

The chief obligation of the student said Dr John Galm assistant professor of English and one of the first six tutors will be to submit written work to his tutor approximately every two weeks and then to have a conference with him A

Dr Cadwallader said a central theme will be featur each of the four semesters As an example four semesters work could be organized around study of four pivotal epochs in

3

Western Civilization Students will be encouraged to particishyte in some of the planning and evaluation of the program

The faculty-student ratio with the tutorial program will be approximately 1-to-20 This will permit the kind of intimiddot mate association and per~nal exchange between college proshyfessors and students that has become notable by its absence on the campuses of our large colleges and universities said Dr Cadwallader

He continued by stating that this return to a personal education may be one answer to the student demonstrations across the country

Other tutors in addition to Drs Cadwallader and Galm are Dr Richard Tansey professor of art Dr David Newman associate professor of psychology Dr Harold DeBey professor of chemistry and Gary Albright assistant professor of philshyosophy

UC COMMISSIONS CSLB ART

The first catalog of the new lrvine campus 6pound UC pubshylished early this month was designed by Dr Joseph Krause professor of art at Cal State Long Beach

Dr Krauses striking designs for various publications at the College caught the eye of Dr Clayton Garrison a former associate professor of speech at CSLB and present dean of UC Irvines fine arts division He requested Krause to design the new UC catalog

Rose Mary Thompson 21-year-old electronics major at Cal Poly Pomona became the first four-year coed to receive an engineering degree from the College when she graduated this summer Women were not enrolled at that campus until 1961

A CAMPUS CONVERTED into an international showcase for monumental sculpture has made Cal State at Long Beach a cynosure of cultural controversy this summer Bold abstract works formed of concrete steel redwood aluminum pipes and paint challenge the viewer as nine world-famous sculptors complete their contributions to the first International Sculpture Symposium in this country Their creations will remain on permanent exhibition at the College Along an area 100 ft in length and about 28 ft wide at the Seventh Street corner of the campus 19 massive forms 8-to-1 0 ft high (model pictured center-left above) constitute the sculpture of J J Beljon director of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in The Hague Holland Sculptor Beljon (upper left) contemplating the extent of his work under construction said wryly Gallery art and art dealers are doomed they have no future Other photos proceeding clockwise show- Gabriel Kohn of the US Andre Bloc of France

osso Eloul of Israel and directly under the center portrait of Piotr Kowalski a Polish sculptor residing in France an interior view of the ulptors workshop with student helper in foreground and with plaster on hand Kenneth Glenn director of the symposium who is also proshyssor of art at CSLB Left corner picture was taken at Bethlehem Steels Terminal Island plant where donated fabrication of plate contributed

by Triangle Steel Co and Ge~teral Pipe amp Supply Co vitalized the designs of Canadian sculptor Robert Murray Also participating in the symshyposium but not shown here are sculptors Kenjiro Azuma and Claire Falkenstein as well as muralist Rita Letendre who is sculptor Elouls wife

4

The ACADEMIC SENATE REGISTER

Headlines in the Los Angeles Times of last Jul 2 anshynounced Educators Hail Budget as Victory Yet I suspect for a large portion of the faculties the salary increase and the state college quality package of funds for research travel sabshybaticals and distinguished teaching represented a hollow vicshytory Not primarily because the salary increase was too little too late (though it was) and certainly not because the other benefits are insignificant Many of us are rather in the position ~f the teenager whose desire to be understood and respected Is not compensated by an increase in his allowance For those who react this way (I include myself) the most hopeful aspects of the past year are to be found in those activities of ad hoc faculty groups professional organizations the Chancellors Office Trustees and Academic Senate which have sought to create and enlarge public respect and support for the goals of the State Colleges

If we have sometimes acted inexpediently or undiploshymatically we need not apologize This is not a job for imageshymakers our problems will not always respond to the tech shyniques of politics as the art of the possible Our task has been to prepare the seedbed for a dialogue with the community and with the Legislature through which the purposes and aspirations of the state college experiment may be clarified We need now to consider as we gain the attention of the public and the Legislature what we are to say

Our problem is put into sharp focus by an observation of the young John Adams in 1765 Reflecting on the advanshytages bequeathed by the early settlers to their progeny Adams noted the unique civil and religious principles on the basis of which they laid very early the foundation of colleges and invested them with ample privileges and emoluments It is remarkable he added that they have left among their posshyterity so universal an affection and veneration for those seminshyaries and for liberal education that the meanest of the people contribute cheerfully to the support and maintenance of them every year and that nothing is more generally popular than projections for the honor reputation and advantage of those seats of learning

Is not our task to rekindle and revitalize the universal affection and veneration which alone in the long run can provide the basis for public support of our seminaries The civil and religious principles which supported it in times past Adams went on to note valued knowledge as the means to liberty Perhaps the purpose of the State Colleges reflects the universalization of that insight If so it is time to get about clarifying our own ideas on the matter and finding the means to communicate them to others If we are to survive we must become the peoples colleges not in an ad-mans empty phrase and not in the peoples present understanding but in a sense we have yet to define clearly for ourselves and then to communicate to the public As the Academic Senate

begins its third year of existence in the shadow of continuitA fiscal crises we will I hope turn part of our energies to ponde ing how to recover and how to deserve that universal affection and veneration -John C Livingston Chairman

STRONG POLICY ON COLLEGE SUPPORT ADOPTED With four new California State Colleges established by

the Legislature-in Contra Costa Kern San Mateo Santa Clara and Ventura counties-the Board of Trustees has adopted a policy to protect the support base of the existing Colleges

In a resolution of Jul 29 the Trustees expressed their concern for the financing of the California State Colleges at a level to maintain and strengthen educational excellence and declared that the financing of existing State Colleges should be maintained at the proper level and not be adversely affected by the financial impact of the addition of new State Colleges

Chancellor Dumke pointed out that the great strides made in the recent legislative session in faculty salary increases library and sabbatical leave augmentations research and travel allowances were the result of hard work in presenting the case for the State Colleges to the Legislature We must make it just as clear he said that our support budget for existing Colleges is still at an inadequate level and must not be diluted further by draining off funds to establish new Colleges

FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS

Three humanities professors from San Francisco SC ha been awarded Guggenheim Fellowships Ruby Cohn associa professor of English and world literarure Mark Harris associshyate professor of English and director of creative writing and Rudolph Weingartner associate professor of philosophy and chairman of the philosophy department

It is believed that no Cal State campus has ever before received three Guggenheims at one time

Dr George Huppert assistant professor of history at Cal State Hayward has been awarded a fellowship by the American Council of Learned Societies to complete research on The New History of the French Renaissance + + + Fellowships for srudy and travel in India have been awarded to Dr Joseph Pugliese CSH associate professor of art and to Glenn Glasow assistant professor of music by the Instirute of International Education Only 2i fellowships were awarded nationwide

Faculty fellowships provided by the National Science Foundation will enable Dr Seymour Mack associate professor of geology at Fresno SC to take his sabbatical leave at Stanford U for study and research in geo-chemistry and hydrology Earl L Pye of the physical sciences faculty at Cal Poly Pomona to complete his chemistry research project on detergent mishycelles at Louisiana State U and Dr Donald E Bianchi associshyate professor of biology at San Fernando Valley SC to spend a year at the University of Geneva Switzerland

==================~middotshyTHE CALIFORNIA_STA~ COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymond A ~ydell Ex~uhve Voce-Chancellor Harry E Brakebill Vice-Chancellor Busness Affaors C Mansel Keene Assost~nt Chancellor Faculty and Staff Affaors The Callforma State Colleges Rev1ew is issued by the Public Affa irs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

Page 7: September 21, 1965 Staff Bulletin

bull bull - 1

CAMPUSmiddot CALENDAR - middot 1oiEEK ()F SEPTEMBER 21middot28 1965

Tuesday September 21

12 00 Books at High Noon Luncheon Meeting

Wednesday September 22

200 Executive Council Meeting

Thursday September 23

815 am Applied Arts middotmiddot Division Committee Meeting

900 am Agriculture Division Commit~ee Meeting

Noon Staff Club Luncheon Meeting -

Saturday September 25

middotmiddot 300 pm Cal Poly Womens Club Fall Tea

800 pm Varsity Football vs Linfield College

Monday September 27

200 pm bull Executive Council Meeting

Tuesday Seetember 28

815 am Applied 3ciences Division Meet~

middot- middotmiddot 1000 Am middot Engineering Division Committee Meeting

Noon Books at High Noon

SDR

Admin 301

Admin 213-A

Ag 138

SDR

bull

Lib 129

Mustang Stadium

Admin 301

Admin 301 ~ tt~

GA 101

SDR

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES

EVIE~ JUNE 1965 VOl 2 No 12

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

Victor H Palmieri was appointed to the Board of Trustees by Governor Brown in July of 1964 A decade before almost to the month Trustee Palmshyieri had graduated from Stanford Law School where he was editor of the Law Review and had been namshyed to the Order of the Coif high-ranking honor soshyciety of the legal profession He also received his undergraduate education at Stanford with a major in history

Following his graduation he joined the law firm of 0Melshyveny amp Myers in Los Angeles where he served until duty with with the US Army Later he returned to OMelveny amp Myshyers where he specialized in orporate and business law

In 1958 Mr Palmieri left private practice to become exshyecutive vice-president of the Janss Investment Corp a leading real estate deshyvelopment firm and in 1963 he was named presishydent of the firm and its affiliated companies

Mr Palmieri has remained continuously acshytive in educational fields A lecturer in law at the Stanford Law School he is currently teaching a course there in legal aspects of real estate transacshytions He also lectu res from time to time at varishyous other graduate schools including the Universishyty of Southern California and UCLA In addition he is a founding member of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions in Santa Barbara

He was born in Chicago Ill but has lived in California since 1939 He has served as a member of a number of state commissions concerned with urban problems As a memb er of the Commission on Metropolitan Area Probl ems the Governors Advisory Commission on Housing and the Coordinashyting Council on Urban Policies he has been closeshyly involved with state-level efforts to meet growth

roblems throu ghout the state

On the occasion of his appointment to the CSC Board of Trustees Governor (Continued on Page 4)

REVISED CSC BUDGET ADOPTED

A pared-down but still substantial CSC support budget which emerged from two legislative sessions and a special hearing held by Governor Brown was finally approved as both the month and fiscal year ended

At the Governors hearing Jun 23 Chancellor Dumke accompanied by Trustees Louis Heilbron Albert J Ruffo and E Guy Warren and Dr John Livingston chairman of the Statewide Academic Senate continued to plead the case of the Colleges for no further cuts in the systems budgetary reshyquests stressing again a pressing need for faculty salary increases

As finally adopted budget figures revealed more gains than losses in key items including a faculty salary increase of approximately 10

Other faculty benefits which became available for the new fiscal year are $250 000 for sabbatishycal leaves $200 000 for leaves of absence to do research in science or creative work in the arts $100 000 for achievement awards to recognize exshycellence in classroom instruction and $96 000 for out-of-state travel related to instruction The apshypropriations likewise provided $100 000 to defray up to 50 of moving costs for relocating new faculty

One million dollars for library books to augshyment existing books -per - student ratios at five of the Colleges was also authorized

On-campus work-study programs employing student assistants were funded with $148 226 to be used with federal matching funds an additional $17 000 was allocated for lectures by visiting scholshyars and the educat ional TV station at San Diego SC as well as the nursery school at San Francisco SC were provided support funds

All of these improvements said Chancellor Dumke will greatly help to relieve the spartan bu dgetunderwhich we have been operating for years but we are still far behind In this regard I am pleased to note that the Legislatu re is planning an interim study on the whole problem of financing pubshylic higher education

SYSTEM HONORS MARK COMMENCEMENTS

Commencement Day at Hwnboldt SC Jun 4 was not only the first in a series of statewide cereshymonies it also marked the granting of the first honorary degree to a CSC alwnnus An honorary Doctor of Laws degree was conferred by the Colshyleges on Dr Monroe E Spaght onetime president of the student body at Humboldt and now managing director and chairman of the board of Europes largest industrial complex Royal Dutch Shell peshytrolewn companies Trustee James F Thacher and HSC President Cornelius H Siemens officiated

A week later on Jun 11 at San Francisco SC s Commencement Trustee Louis H Heilbron and Chancellor Dumke presided with SFSC Presishydent Paul A Dodd at the award of an honorary Docshytor of Hwnane Letters degree to Frank V de Belshylis patron of the arts and donor to the Colleges of the immense collection of books music and objets dart which bears his name in a special section of the library building at SFSC (See photo at right)

De Bellis who was honored for his contribushytions to the preservation of Italian culture and its interpretation to the students and people of Cali shyfornia 11 will be further honored this month at the University of Bari the fourth largest educational institution in Italy which will present him with its sigillum aureum (golden seal) in tribute to his lifeshylong interest in the dissemination of Italian culture

Dr Spaght gave the commencement address at Hwnboldt SC Dr Arthur Stanton Adams former president of the American Council on Education was the principal speaker at the San Francisco cershyemonies

On other campuses of the system _speakers were Chico Dr Harold Benjamin USC Visiting Lecturer Stanislaus Dr John F Olson presishydent of Oklahoma City University Fresno Dr Louis Benezet president of Claremont Graduate School and University Center Sacramento Dr Guy A West retiring president of SSG San Diego Dr Frank Baxter professor emeritus of USC San Fernando Valley Dr R A Billington of the Huntshyington Library San Jose Trustee Louis H Heil shybron Cal State Hayward Dr Mitchell P Briggs executive secretary of the Western Association of Schools and Colleges

Cal State Long Beach Dr E C Stakrnan of the University of Minnesota Rockefeller Foundashytion consultant Cal State Los Angeles Stanley Mosk Associate Justice Supreme Court of Calif Sonoma Rev Dr Samuel DeWitt Proctor of the National Council of the Churches of Christ Cal

2

State Fullerton Trustee Victor H Palmieri Poly San Luis Obispo Charles Luckman chai man CSC Board of Trustees Cal Poly Pomona Mr Bart Lytton president and chairman of Lytton Financial Corp

This year the California State Colleges gradushyated approximately 20000 students a recordnwnshyber Among them was Gunnar Herrstrom of Sonoshyma SC who received his bachelors degree in psyshychology and thus completed a program started at UC which was interrupted by the war World War I that is Mr Herrstrom is 72 years old He plans to return to sse for the summer session to continue studies in Spanish

Commencement at San Francisco SC included presshyentation of honorary L H D to Frank V de Bellis Photo shows 1 to r President Dodd Mr de Belshylis Trustee Louis Heilbron and Chancellor Dumke

FACULTY SALARY ISSUE ON TV

A television docwnentary 11 The Salary Issue Colleges in Crisis 11 was filmed last month at San Diego SC Participants in the program a segment of the Profile series were Trustee Victor H Palmieri Chancellor Dwnke Dr Ernest 0 Byrne Dr James N Tidwell and Dr Donald N Wood of SDSC and Jerry Harmon president of the Associshyated Students at the College They presented a panel discussion Showings were on KOGO San Diego KNBC Los Angeles and KRON San Franshycisco It is scheduled for KVIE Sacramento Jul 2 and subsequently will be made available to stations in Bakersfield Fresno Eureka and Santa Barbara Motion picture prints of the program are on loan to the Colleges from the Chancellors Office

Retirements of Dr H Thurston Hatch associshyate dean of students in charge of placement and DJa William B McCann director of the SchoolAdmini shytration Center and professor of education at Chico SC became effective this month

3

IVINGSTON HEADS STATEWIDE SENATE

Dr John C Livingston of Sacramento SC has been elected chairman of the Statewide Academic Senate for 1965-66 succeeding Dr Samuel E Wishyley of Cal State Long Beach

Meeting May 20-21 at the Long Beach campus the Senate also elected Dr Jesse B Allen of Cal State Los Angeles to a second term as vice-chairshyman named as secretary Dr James P Heath of San Jose SC and reconstituted its Executive Comshymittee by electing as members-at-l arge Mr Leo G McClatchy of San Francisco SC and Dr William R Rogers of San Jose who will serve on the comshymitteewith thenewofficersand Dr Wiley of CSLB past-president

Newly elected to the Senate were Dr Joseph A Wagner of CSLB Drs Lee R Kerschner and Paul J Pastor of Cal State Fullerton replacing Drs Ida Cappolino and Miles D McCarthy Mr Milton Dobkin of Humboldt SC for Dr Hyman Palshyais Mr R Dean Galloway of Stanislaus SC for Dr Max C Norton Dr PeterKoestenbaum of SanJose SC for Dr Dean R Cresap Dr Joseph McGowan of Sacramento SC for Dr James M Bradfield Dr Robert A Mott of Cal Poly SLO for Mr Warren R

nderson Mr Elmer H Rice of Cal Poly Pornoshya for Dr John Fulbeck Dr James N Tidwell of

San Diego SC for Dr Ivan N McCollom and Dr William W Young of Sonoma SC for Dr Cheryl Peterson

Facultymembers whose terms as senators conshytinue are Drs B Gordon Gibb and Lew D Oliver of Chico Drs R Deane Branstetter and James J Hunter of San Diego Drs Richard Axen and John L Clark of San Francisco Dr La Verne Bucy of Cal Poly SLO Dr Bernard A Shepard and Mr Phillip Walker of Fresno Dr Roscoe Peithman of Humboldt Mr William Eshelman and Dr Kenneth A Martyn of Cal State Los Angeles Dr Edward A Nelson of Cal Poly Pomona Dr Nicholas P Hardeman of Cal State Long Beach Drs H Duane Heath and William Sawrey of Cal State Hayward Dr John E Caswell of Stan islaus Dr Warren E Olson of Sonoma Dr Lyle E Gibson of Cal State Palos Verdes and Dr Gerald Scherba of Cal State San Bernardino

ANGELL TO CHANCELLORS OFFICE

Dr Melvin A Angell associate dean of stushydents for counseling at Fresn oSC has been appoinshy

d associate dean of student affairs in the Chancelshyr1 s Office He will be on leave of absence from

his FSC position during the 1965-66 academic year to ~ccept the post

SCULPTURE SYMPOSIUM SET FOR CSLB

The first international sculpture symposium in the US opened Jun 21 at Cal State Long Beach where 14 of the worlds great modern sculptors were scheduled to begin work on monumental sculptures Sculptors participating include Kosso Eloul of Isshyrael Andre Bloc of France Kenjiro Azuma of Mishylan Italy J J Beljon of Holland and Gabriel Kohn of the U S The event will be open to the public without charge through Aug 14

SONOMA SC OFFERS FAR WEST INSTITUTE

For the fourth summer Sonoma SC and the California Folklore Society will co-sponsor an Inshystitute of Far Western American Culture beginning Aug 2 This years themeis FolkMusic and Othshyer Folklore of Minority Groups in the Far West Previous themes were folklore and local history folklore and fiction and art architecture and folkshylore

Participating specialists include Dr Stith Thompson emeritus professor of English and folkshylore Indiana U Chingwah Lee curator of the Kuan Yin temple in San Franciscos Chinatown and Ralph J Gleason nationally known jazz music authority

Dr Hector Lee dean of in struction at SSC and executive vice-president of the California Folkshylore Society will direct the institute which is reshylated to several American Studies courses and degree programs comprising a part of the area studies offered by the Colleges

FIRST JOINT DOCTORATE OFFERED

The first doctoral program to be offered jointshyly by a California State College and the University of California will be initiated at San Diego SC this fall it was announced this month by Chancellor Dumshyke and University President Clark Kerr It will be offered in chemistry by UC s San Diego campus and SDSC Granting of joint doctorates was authorized in 1960 under the Master Plan and approval of the chemistry program was granted by a joint graduate board of final academic review composed of represhysentatives from the Colleges and the University

SUPREME COURTS ACCREDIT CHAPMAN

Attorney Mayer Chapman now associate counshysel of the esc legal staff has been admitted to the U S Supreme Court for p r actice before that body and also admitted to the Court of Military Appeals highest military court He earned his undergradushyate and law degree at UCLA where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and the Order of the Coif

4

STATEWIDE NEWS BRIEFS

San Jose SC-- Lowell C Pratt dean of CSC public information directors retires this month after 18 years at the College He will be succeedshyed by James E Noah his assistant for the past three years + + +A two-year study financed by the federal government through the States Division of Highways will be conducted by SJSC to determine whether a special course of driver training will improve driving habits of traffic violators

San Diego SC --Dr Malcolm A Love presishydent of SDSC has been triply honored by the American Association of University Professors at the annual banquet of its San Diego chapter by Colshyorado State College at Greeley where he delivered the commencement address and by the University of Nevada which this month awarded him an honorshyary LLD degree + + + Cap and Gown SDSC s honor society for women is now a chapter of Morshytar Board the only national honorary organization recognizing outstanding senior womens societies in American colleges and universities Cap and Gown thus becomes the first CSC chapter of Morshytar Board and the 117th in the nation

The Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany was awarded to Chancellor Dumke at a reshycent ceremony in Los Angeles Phoshytograph shows Hans RolfKiderlen Gershyman Consul-General congratulating Dr and Mrs Dumke following presentashytion of the Orders medal and citation which Dr Dumke holds The decorashytion was conferred in appreciation of the Chancellors part in establishing esc international programs overshyseas and for encouraging instruction in foreign lanshyguages including German throughout the college system

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

(Continued from Page 1) Brown commented I have verydeliberately sought to recognize the importance and the standing of the California State Colleges in my appointments to the Board and to push for their continued development as centers of academic exshycellence Mr Palmieris appointment contributes to both of those goals 1 Trustee Palmieri is marshy

ried His wife the former Martha Cooley of Pasashydena is also a Stanford graduate They have thr sons Victor Jr Matthew B and John W Th family home is in Malibu on Colony Drive

FALK TO HEAD INTERNATIONAL UNIT

Dr Karl L Falk professor of economics at Fresno SC and an authority on comparative economshyic systems and international housing has been namshyed director of international affairs for the Califorshynia State Colleges

In making the appointment Chancellor Dumke said Falk will head an expanded program of intershynational activities coordinating existing and new programs including foreign aid international study student and faculty exchanges with other countries and overseas projects sponsored by private foundashytions

One important phase of State College overseas operation consists of programs of study abroad for State College students in France Germany Japan Spain Sweden and Taiwan under the direction of Dr Thomas P Lantos of San Francisco SC who according to Dr Falk will continue in this aspect of international activities

Falk has been on the Fresno SC faculty sinshy1938 He received his undergraduate training at Stanford U and his doctoral degree at the Univershysity of Berlin Germany

He is chairman of the Fresno City Housing Aushythority vice-chairman of the Governors Advisory Committee on Housing Probl ems and past-president of the NationalAssociationof Housing and Redevelshyopment Officials He is an official of several finanshycial institutions and a former member of the board of the California Savings and Loan League

In his new post which he assumes Aug 1 Falk will be headquartered at the Chancellors Office Inglewood

SIEMENS JOINS CONSTITUTION COMMITTEE

Humboldt SC President Cornelius H Siemens has been elected to membership on the state 1 s Conshystitutional Revision Commission established by the 1963 Legislature for the purpose of recommending revisions to the Constitution for placement on the 1966 November ballot

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymo A Rydell Executive Vice-Chancellor John F Richardson Vice-Chancell Business Affairs C Mansel Keene Assistant Chancellor Faculty and Sta Affairs The California State Colleges Review is issued by the Public Affairs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES

EVIE~

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

Governor Edmund G Brown recently appointed Chester R Bartalini 62 president of the California State Council of Carpenters to succeed Thomas L Pitts secretary-treasurer of the California Labor Federation as a member of CSCs Board of Trustees

Trustee Pitts said he had asked the Governor to replace him on the board because the demands of his union post have made it impossible for me to give as much time to the State Colleges as I felt necessary

Pitts told Governor Brown that he was most pleased with Mr Barshytalinis appointment I know he will do a great job for the people of California on this board

The Governor said I regret ne loss of Tom Pitts from this imshy~rtant board very much He served

with great distinction and his good Chester R Bartalinijudgment will certainly be missed

Governor Brown said that he was however very happy to have the service of Chester Bartalini who has proved himshyself in many ways a truly dedicated Californian

In his long service in the Carpenters union Chester Bartalini has shown great administrative talent and executive ability As a union leader he has learned to appreciate the need to keep alive and strengthen Californias system of tuition-free education

Trustee Bartalini is a native of Michigan and has lived here since 1936 He served two terms as a member of the state Correctional Industry Commission and has been executive secretary of the Bay Counties District Council of Carpenters San Francisco since 1950

He is a member of the Commonwealth Club the Elks Eagles Associated Sportsmen of California and the Alameda Rod and Gun Club

He is a director of the Alameda Boys Oub and a member of the Joint Labor University of California committee

He has been president of the California State Council of orpenters since 1958

Trustee Bartalini lives at 1446 Eastshore Drive Alameda with his wife Florinda He has six children and seven grandshychildren

AUGUST 1965

VOL 3 N o 2

FISCAL TASK FORCES DEPLOYED

More efficient ways of staffing and funding systemwide college operations at every level of support are now being sought by eight task forces representing all of the Colleges

Members of the task-force groups were appointed by the CSC Committee on Fiscal Responsibility which was formed in May to implement the provisions of Senate Concurrent Resoshylution No 29 calling for a study of greater fiscal flexibility for the college system

Under the leadership of Harry W Brakebill vice-presishydent at San Francisco SC and permanent chairman of the committee together with Sol Buchalter chairman of the deshypartment of finance and law at San Fernando Valley SC who is serving as the committees executive officer on a fulltime basis during the summer months the task forces will engage in an all-out assault on the CSCs financial problems

Scope of the effort is shown by the assignments given to the groups ( 1) relationships and responsibilities of state agencies involved ( 2) budget formulation processes ( 3) deshytermination of level of support ( 4) budget administration ( 5) accounting and reporting ( 6-7-8) self-supporting funcshytions designated as noninstructional college foundation and summer-session and extension activities

Before hearings start on SCR 29 next Oct the specific tasks that these forces have set for themselves are in order of priority suggesting feasible and attainable methods for imshyproving budget administration defining means for determining adequate support levels and creating a model arrangement for fulfilling accountability requirements relating to expenditure of funds provided by the Legislature In the matter of accountshyability both internal management aspects and external public interest in quality education are being considered by the comshymittee and its forces

Some eighty representatives of the Colleges and the Chanshycellors Office including presidents deans business managers and students have already been named to the various task forces and most of the groups have started work

FIRST SCHOLARSHIP FOR CSSB

A $1000 check has established the first scholarship fund sponsored by a private organization for Cal State San Bernarshydino Donated by The Social Lites a Negro womens social and civic organization it provides an initial $300 for some deservshying student from the San Bernardino area Income from the remainder will go into a permanent fund to which the womens organization will continue to add until a complete scholarship program can be financed from the funds income alone

2

BOOKS MAGAZINES AND PAPERS At the end of last June Dr Monroe E Spaght the forshy

mer student body president at Humboldt SC who is now managing director of more than 500 companies operated by Royal Dutch Shell- a position of corporate eminence never before achieved by any American- became not only an honorary Doctor of Laws by virtue of his CSC degree but also an author of belles-lettres by virtue of his book The Bright Key

Dr Monroe E Spaght (right) receiving the LLD dregree from Trustee James F Thatcher at Humboldt State College June 4 1965

Just published by Appleton-Century-Crofts the book defends with truth urbanity and wit his strong belief that business has real responsibilities to our educational system Dr Spaght earned his PhD in chemistry at a time when much of the business world was convinced such training rendered a man unfit for a life of decision and action Today he is recognized as a leading spokesman for industry on the role of education in contemporary society A trustee of Stanford U he is chairshyman of the Committee for Corporate Support of American Universities and chairman of the New York State Science and Technology Foundation

Literary honors for two other Humboldt alumni were also in the news Mr James Yoakum and Mr Sherman Pearl won first prize in the full-color category of the 1965 Governmentshywide Publications Contest sponsored by the Federal Editors Association with Wildlife on the Public Lands produced for the US Dept of the Interior Bureau of Land Management Mr Yoakum presently a lecturer in natural resources at the College was chief color photographer for the publication Mr Pearl is with the Nevada office of the Bureau Their document is the No 1 seller of the Government Printing Office with the widest distribution of any federal book and is now being transshylated into several foreign languages

A textbook on wildlife management by Dr Raymond Dasmann chairman of HSCs division of natural resources was recently published by John Wiley amp Sons It is his second text The first Environmental Conservation came out in 1959

Dr Ralph Samuelson chairman of the division of lanshyguage arts at the College has been notified that Nineteenth Century American Authors a syllabus of American Literature of which he was an editor is now being published by the

Eurasia Press in New Delhi India for use by more than 30 Indian universities e

College Information Officer Vivienne L George received first place award from the California Press Women for producshytion of Challenge 1964 the first annual Presidents Report In other categories Mrs George received third place for a feature article The Grapes Run Dry Along the Mayacamas published in a national magazine and top honorable mention for a series of newspaper articles about faculty members pubshylished last fall

Dr Clay Hatfield of the biological sciences department at Cal Poly SLO and John Applegarth also a member of the biological sciences faculty have collaborated in the production of a new college biology textbook Applied Microbiology reflecting Dr Hatfields more than 20 years experience as a microbio~ogist National Press Palo Alto published

OVERSEAS DIRECTORS NAMED Resident directors of CSCs International Programs durshy

ing the 1965-66 academic year have been announced by Chancellor Dumke

Named were Dr Leonard Messier of San Diego SC who will supervise the program at the University of Aix-Marseille France Dr John E Merrill also of SDSC at Waseda Univershysity in Tokyo Japan Dr Joachim Stanzel of San Jose SC at the Free University of Berlin and the University of Heidelshyberg Germany Dr Joseph Reid Scott also of SJSC at t University of Madrid and the University of Granada Spai and Dr Donald M Castleberry of San Francisco SC who was appointed for the University of Stockholm and the University of U ppsala Sweden

SAN JOSE OFFERS NEW TUTORIALS The usual courses lectures and grades so familiar to colshy

lege students will be unknown in Sep 1965 to a segment of entering freshmen at San Jose SC

Their unfamiliarity will stem from an experimental proshygram which is officially known at Tutorials in Letters and Science

While tutorial programs are not new the abandonment of the course is a startling departure from the usual educational experiments and reforms according to Dr Mervyn L Cadshywallader initiator of the program and associate professor of sociology at SJSC

Instead of the familiar format the new program will make use of individual tutorials group discussions small seminars and laboratory sessions Successful participants will earn 48 semester units of credit

The chief obligation of the student said Dr John Galm assistant professor of English and one of the first six tutors will be to submit written work to his tutor approximately every two weeks and then to have a conference with him A

Dr Cadwallader said a central theme will be featur each of the four semesters As an example four semesters work could be organized around study of four pivotal epochs in

3

Western Civilization Students will be encouraged to particishyte in some of the planning and evaluation of the program

The faculty-student ratio with the tutorial program will be approximately 1-to-20 This will permit the kind of intimiddot mate association and per~nal exchange between college proshyfessors and students that has become notable by its absence on the campuses of our large colleges and universities said Dr Cadwallader

He continued by stating that this return to a personal education may be one answer to the student demonstrations across the country

Other tutors in addition to Drs Cadwallader and Galm are Dr Richard Tansey professor of art Dr David Newman associate professor of psychology Dr Harold DeBey professor of chemistry and Gary Albright assistant professor of philshyosophy

UC COMMISSIONS CSLB ART

The first catalog of the new lrvine campus 6pound UC pubshylished early this month was designed by Dr Joseph Krause professor of art at Cal State Long Beach

Dr Krauses striking designs for various publications at the College caught the eye of Dr Clayton Garrison a former associate professor of speech at CSLB and present dean of UC Irvines fine arts division He requested Krause to design the new UC catalog

Rose Mary Thompson 21-year-old electronics major at Cal Poly Pomona became the first four-year coed to receive an engineering degree from the College when she graduated this summer Women were not enrolled at that campus until 1961

A CAMPUS CONVERTED into an international showcase for monumental sculpture has made Cal State at Long Beach a cynosure of cultural controversy this summer Bold abstract works formed of concrete steel redwood aluminum pipes and paint challenge the viewer as nine world-famous sculptors complete their contributions to the first International Sculpture Symposium in this country Their creations will remain on permanent exhibition at the College Along an area 100 ft in length and about 28 ft wide at the Seventh Street corner of the campus 19 massive forms 8-to-1 0 ft high (model pictured center-left above) constitute the sculpture of J J Beljon director of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in The Hague Holland Sculptor Beljon (upper left) contemplating the extent of his work under construction said wryly Gallery art and art dealers are doomed they have no future Other photos proceeding clockwise show- Gabriel Kohn of the US Andre Bloc of France

osso Eloul of Israel and directly under the center portrait of Piotr Kowalski a Polish sculptor residing in France an interior view of the ulptors workshop with student helper in foreground and with plaster on hand Kenneth Glenn director of the symposium who is also proshyssor of art at CSLB Left corner picture was taken at Bethlehem Steels Terminal Island plant where donated fabrication of plate contributed

by Triangle Steel Co and Ge~teral Pipe amp Supply Co vitalized the designs of Canadian sculptor Robert Murray Also participating in the symshyposium but not shown here are sculptors Kenjiro Azuma and Claire Falkenstein as well as muralist Rita Letendre who is sculptor Elouls wife

4

The ACADEMIC SENATE REGISTER

Headlines in the Los Angeles Times of last Jul 2 anshynounced Educators Hail Budget as Victory Yet I suspect for a large portion of the faculties the salary increase and the state college quality package of funds for research travel sabshybaticals and distinguished teaching represented a hollow vicshytory Not primarily because the salary increase was too little too late (though it was) and certainly not because the other benefits are insignificant Many of us are rather in the position ~f the teenager whose desire to be understood and respected Is not compensated by an increase in his allowance For those who react this way (I include myself) the most hopeful aspects of the past year are to be found in those activities of ad hoc faculty groups professional organizations the Chancellors Office Trustees and Academic Senate which have sought to create and enlarge public respect and support for the goals of the State Colleges

If we have sometimes acted inexpediently or undiploshymatically we need not apologize This is not a job for imageshymakers our problems will not always respond to the tech shyniques of politics as the art of the possible Our task has been to prepare the seedbed for a dialogue with the community and with the Legislature through which the purposes and aspirations of the state college experiment may be clarified We need now to consider as we gain the attention of the public and the Legislature what we are to say

Our problem is put into sharp focus by an observation of the young John Adams in 1765 Reflecting on the advanshytages bequeathed by the early settlers to their progeny Adams noted the unique civil and religious principles on the basis of which they laid very early the foundation of colleges and invested them with ample privileges and emoluments It is remarkable he added that they have left among their posshyterity so universal an affection and veneration for those seminshyaries and for liberal education that the meanest of the people contribute cheerfully to the support and maintenance of them every year and that nothing is more generally popular than projections for the honor reputation and advantage of those seats of learning

Is not our task to rekindle and revitalize the universal affection and veneration which alone in the long run can provide the basis for public support of our seminaries The civil and religious principles which supported it in times past Adams went on to note valued knowledge as the means to liberty Perhaps the purpose of the State Colleges reflects the universalization of that insight If so it is time to get about clarifying our own ideas on the matter and finding the means to communicate them to others If we are to survive we must become the peoples colleges not in an ad-mans empty phrase and not in the peoples present understanding but in a sense we have yet to define clearly for ourselves and then to communicate to the public As the Academic Senate

begins its third year of existence in the shadow of continuitA fiscal crises we will I hope turn part of our energies to ponde ing how to recover and how to deserve that universal affection and veneration -John C Livingston Chairman

STRONG POLICY ON COLLEGE SUPPORT ADOPTED With four new California State Colleges established by

the Legislature-in Contra Costa Kern San Mateo Santa Clara and Ventura counties-the Board of Trustees has adopted a policy to protect the support base of the existing Colleges

In a resolution of Jul 29 the Trustees expressed their concern for the financing of the California State Colleges at a level to maintain and strengthen educational excellence and declared that the financing of existing State Colleges should be maintained at the proper level and not be adversely affected by the financial impact of the addition of new State Colleges

Chancellor Dumke pointed out that the great strides made in the recent legislative session in faculty salary increases library and sabbatical leave augmentations research and travel allowances were the result of hard work in presenting the case for the State Colleges to the Legislature We must make it just as clear he said that our support budget for existing Colleges is still at an inadequate level and must not be diluted further by draining off funds to establish new Colleges

FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS

Three humanities professors from San Francisco SC ha been awarded Guggenheim Fellowships Ruby Cohn associa professor of English and world literarure Mark Harris associshyate professor of English and director of creative writing and Rudolph Weingartner associate professor of philosophy and chairman of the philosophy department

It is believed that no Cal State campus has ever before received three Guggenheims at one time

Dr George Huppert assistant professor of history at Cal State Hayward has been awarded a fellowship by the American Council of Learned Societies to complete research on The New History of the French Renaissance + + + Fellowships for srudy and travel in India have been awarded to Dr Joseph Pugliese CSH associate professor of art and to Glenn Glasow assistant professor of music by the Instirute of International Education Only 2i fellowships were awarded nationwide

Faculty fellowships provided by the National Science Foundation will enable Dr Seymour Mack associate professor of geology at Fresno SC to take his sabbatical leave at Stanford U for study and research in geo-chemistry and hydrology Earl L Pye of the physical sciences faculty at Cal Poly Pomona to complete his chemistry research project on detergent mishycelles at Louisiana State U and Dr Donald E Bianchi associshyate professor of biology at San Fernando Valley SC to spend a year at the University of Geneva Switzerland

==================~middotshyTHE CALIFORNIA_STA~ COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymond A ~ydell Ex~uhve Voce-Chancellor Harry E Brakebill Vice-Chancellor Busness Affaors C Mansel Keene Assost~nt Chancellor Faculty and Staff Affaors The Callforma State Colleges Rev1ew is issued by the Public Affa irs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

Page 8: September 21, 1965 Staff Bulletin

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES

EVIE~ JUNE 1965 VOl 2 No 12

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

Victor H Palmieri was appointed to the Board of Trustees by Governor Brown in July of 1964 A decade before almost to the month Trustee Palmshyieri had graduated from Stanford Law School where he was editor of the Law Review and had been namshyed to the Order of the Coif high-ranking honor soshyciety of the legal profession He also received his undergraduate education at Stanford with a major in history

Following his graduation he joined the law firm of 0Melshyveny amp Myers in Los Angeles where he served until duty with with the US Army Later he returned to OMelveny amp Myshyers where he specialized in orporate and business law

In 1958 Mr Palmieri left private practice to become exshyecutive vice-president of the Janss Investment Corp a leading real estate deshyvelopment firm and in 1963 he was named presishydent of the firm and its affiliated companies

Mr Palmieri has remained continuously acshytive in educational fields A lecturer in law at the Stanford Law School he is currently teaching a course there in legal aspects of real estate transacshytions He also lectu res from time to time at varishyous other graduate schools including the Universishyty of Southern California and UCLA In addition he is a founding member of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions in Santa Barbara

He was born in Chicago Ill but has lived in California since 1939 He has served as a member of a number of state commissions concerned with urban problems As a memb er of the Commission on Metropolitan Area Probl ems the Governors Advisory Commission on Housing and the Coordinashyting Council on Urban Policies he has been closeshyly involved with state-level efforts to meet growth

roblems throu ghout the state

On the occasion of his appointment to the CSC Board of Trustees Governor (Continued on Page 4)

REVISED CSC BUDGET ADOPTED

A pared-down but still substantial CSC support budget which emerged from two legislative sessions and a special hearing held by Governor Brown was finally approved as both the month and fiscal year ended

At the Governors hearing Jun 23 Chancellor Dumke accompanied by Trustees Louis Heilbron Albert J Ruffo and E Guy Warren and Dr John Livingston chairman of the Statewide Academic Senate continued to plead the case of the Colleges for no further cuts in the systems budgetary reshyquests stressing again a pressing need for faculty salary increases

As finally adopted budget figures revealed more gains than losses in key items including a faculty salary increase of approximately 10

Other faculty benefits which became available for the new fiscal year are $250 000 for sabbatishycal leaves $200 000 for leaves of absence to do research in science or creative work in the arts $100 000 for achievement awards to recognize exshycellence in classroom instruction and $96 000 for out-of-state travel related to instruction The apshypropriations likewise provided $100 000 to defray up to 50 of moving costs for relocating new faculty

One million dollars for library books to augshyment existing books -per - student ratios at five of the Colleges was also authorized

On-campus work-study programs employing student assistants were funded with $148 226 to be used with federal matching funds an additional $17 000 was allocated for lectures by visiting scholshyars and the educat ional TV station at San Diego SC as well as the nursery school at San Francisco SC were provided support funds

All of these improvements said Chancellor Dumke will greatly help to relieve the spartan bu dgetunderwhich we have been operating for years but we are still far behind In this regard I am pleased to note that the Legislatu re is planning an interim study on the whole problem of financing pubshylic higher education

SYSTEM HONORS MARK COMMENCEMENTS

Commencement Day at Hwnboldt SC Jun 4 was not only the first in a series of statewide cereshymonies it also marked the granting of the first honorary degree to a CSC alwnnus An honorary Doctor of Laws degree was conferred by the Colshyleges on Dr Monroe E Spaght onetime president of the student body at Humboldt and now managing director and chairman of the board of Europes largest industrial complex Royal Dutch Shell peshytrolewn companies Trustee James F Thacher and HSC President Cornelius H Siemens officiated

A week later on Jun 11 at San Francisco SC s Commencement Trustee Louis H Heilbron and Chancellor Dumke presided with SFSC Presishydent Paul A Dodd at the award of an honorary Docshytor of Hwnane Letters degree to Frank V de Belshylis patron of the arts and donor to the Colleges of the immense collection of books music and objets dart which bears his name in a special section of the library building at SFSC (See photo at right)

De Bellis who was honored for his contribushytions to the preservation of Italian culture and its interpretation to the students and people of Cali shyfornia 11 will be further honored this month at the University of Bari the fourth largest educational institution in Italy which will present him with its sigillum aureum (golden seal) in tribute to his lifeshylong interest in the dissemination of Italian culture

Dr Spaght gave the commencement address at Hwnboldt SC Dr Arthur Stanton Adams former president of the American Council on Education was the principal speaker at the San Francisco cershyemonies

On other campuses of the system _speakers were Chico Dr Harold Benjamin USC Visiting Lecturer Stanislaus Dr John F Olson presishydent of Oklahoma City University Fresno Dr Louis Benezet president of Claremont Graduate School and University Center Sacramento Dr Guy A West retiring president of SSG San Diego Dr Frank Baxter professor emeritus of USC San Fernando Valley Dr R A Billington of the Huntshyington Library San Jose Trustee Louis H Heil shybron Cal State Hayward Dr Mitchell P Briggs executive secretary of the Western Association of Schools and Colleges

Cal State Long Beach Dr E C Stakrnan of the University of Minnesota Rockefeller Foundashytion consultant Cal State Los Angeles Stanley Mosk Associate Justice Supreme Court of Calif Sonoma Rev Dr Samuel DeWitt Proctor of the National Council of the Churches of Christ Cal

2

State Fullerton Trustee Victor H Palmieri Poly San Luis Obispo Charles Luckman chai man CSC Board of Trustees Cal Poly Pomona Mr Bart Lytton president and chairman of Lytton Financial Corp

This year the California State Colleges gradushyated approximately 20000 students a recordnwnshyber Among them was Gunnar Herrstrom of Sonoshyma SC who received his bachelors degree in psyshychology and thus completed a program started at UC which was interrupted by the war World War I that is Mr Herrstrom is 72 years old He plans to return to sse for the summer session to continue studies in Spanish

Commencement at San Francisco SC included presshyentation of honorary L H D to Frank V de Bellis Photo shows 1 to r President Dodd Mr de Belshylis Trustee Louis Heilbron and Chancellor Dumke

FACULTY SALARY ISSUE ON TV

A television docwnentary 11 The Salary Issue Colleges in Crisis 11 was filmed last month at San Diego SC Participants in the program a segment of the Profile series were Trustee Victor H Palmieri Chancellor Dwnke Dr Ernest 0 Byrne Dr James N Tidwell and Dr Donald N Wood of SDSC and Jerry Harmon president of the Associshyated Students at the College They presented a panel discussion Showings were on KOGO San Diego KNBC Los Angeles and KRON San Franshycisco It is scheduled for KVIE Sacramento Jul 2 and subsequently will be made available to stations in Bakersfield Fresno Eureka and Santa Barbara Motion picture prints of the program are on loan to the Colleges from the Chancellors Office

Retirements of Dr H Thurston Hatch associshyate dean of students in charge of placement and DJa William B McCann director of the SchoolAdmini shytration Center and professor of education at Chico SC became effective this month

3

IVINGSTON HEADS STATEWIDE SENATE

Dr John C Livingston of Sacramento SC has been elected chairman of the Statewide Academic Senate for 1965-66 succeeding Dr Samuel E Wishyley of Cal State Long Beach

Meeting May 20-21 at the Long Beach campus the Senate also elected Dr Jesse B Allen of Cal State Los Angeles to a second term as vice-chairshyman named as secretary Dr James P Heath of San Jose SC and reconstituted its Executive Comshymittee by electing as members-at-l arge Mr Leo G McClatchy of San Francisco SC and Dr William R Rogers of San Jose who will serve on the comshymitteewith thenewofficersand Dr Wiley of CSLB past-president

Newly elected to the Senate were Dr Joseph A Wagner of CSLB Drs Lee R Kerschner and Paul J Pastor of Cal State Fullerton replacing Drs Ida Cappolino and Miles D McCarthy Mr Milton Dobkin of Humboldt SC for Dr Hyman Palshyais Mr R Dean Galloway of Stanislaus SC for Dr Max C Norton Dr PeterKoestenbaum of SanJose SC for Dr Dean R Cresap Dr Joseph McGowan of Sacramento SC for Dr James M Bradfield Dr Robert A Mott of Cal Poly SLO for Mr Warren R

nderson Mr Elmer H Rice of Cal Poly Pornoshya for Dr John Fulbeck Dr James N Tidwell of

San Diego SC for Dr Ivan N McCollom and Dr William W Young of Sonoma SC for Dr Cheryl Peterson

Facultymembers whose terms as senators conshytinue are Drs B Gordon Gibb and Lew D Oliver of Chico Drs R Deane Branstetter and James J Hunter of San Diego Drs Richard Axen and John L Clark of San Francisco Dr La Verne Bucy of Cal Poly SLO Dr Bernard A Shepard and Mr Phillip Walker of Fresno Dr Roscoe Peithman of Humboldt Mr William Eshelman and Dr Kenneth A Martyn of Cal State Los Angeles Dr Edward A Nelson of Cal Poly Pomona Dr Nicholas P Hardeman of Cal State Long Beach Drs H Duane Heath and William Sawrey of Cal State Hayward Dr John E Caswell of Stan islaus Dr Warren E Olson of Sonoma Dr Lyle E Gibson of Cal State Palos Verdes and Dr Gerald Scherba of Cal State San Bernardino

ANGELL TO CHANCELLORS OFFICE

Dr Melvin A Angell associate dean of stushydents for counseling at Fresn oSC has been appoinshy

d associate dean of student affairs in the Chancelshyr1 s Office He will be on leave of absence from

his FSC position during the 1965-66 academic year to ~ccept the post

SCULPTURE SYMPOSIUM SET FOR CSLB

The first international sculpture symposium in the US opened Jun 21 at Cal State Long Beach where 14 of the worlds great modern sculptors were scheduled to begin work on monumental sculptures Sculptors participating include Kosso Eloul of Isshyrael Andre Bloc of France Kenjiro Azuma of Mishylan Italy J J Beljon of Holland and Gabriel Kohn of the U S The event will be open to the public without charge through Aug 14

SONOMA SC OFFERS FAR WEST INSTITUTE

For the fourth summer Sonoma SC and the California Folklore Society will co-sponsor an Inshystitute of Far Western American Culture beginning Aug 2 This years themeis FolkMusic and Othshyer Folklore of Minority Groups in the Far West Previous themes were folklore and local history folklore and fiction and art architecture and folkshylore

Participating specialists include Dr Stith Thompson emeritus professor of English and folkshylore Indiana U Chingwah Lee curator of the Kuan Yin temple in San Franciscos Chinatown and Ralph J Gleason nationally known jazz music authority

Dr Hector Lee dean of in struction at SSC and executive vice-president of the California Folkshylore Society will direct the institute which is reshylated to several American Studies courses and degree programs comprising a part of the area studies offered by the Colleges

FIRST JOINT DOCTORATE OFFERED

The first doctoral program to be offered jointshyly by a California State College and the University of California will be initiated at San Diego SC this fall it was announced this month by Chancellor Dumshyke and University President Clark Kerr It will be offered in chemistry by UC s San Diego campus and SDSC Granting of joint doctorates was authorized in 1960 under the Master Plan and approval of the chemistry program was granted by a joint graduate board of final academic review composed of represhysentatives from the Colleges and the University

SUPREME COURTS ACCREDIT CHAPMAN

Attorney Mayer Chapman now associate counshysel of the esc legal staff has been admitted to the U S Supreme Court for p r actice before that body and also admitted to the Court of Military Appeals highest military court He earned his undergradushyate and law degree at UCLA where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and the Order of the Coif

4

STATEWIDE NEWS BRIEFS

San Jose SC-- Lowell C Pratt dean of CSC public information directors retires this month after 18 years at the College He will be succeedshyed by James E Noah his assistant for the past three years + + +A two-year study financed by the federal government through the States Division of Highways will be conducted by SJSC to determine whether a special course of driver training will improve driving habits of traffic violators

San Diego SC --Dr Malcolm A Love presishydent of SDSC has been triply honored by the American Association of University Professors at the annual banquet of its San Diego chapter by Colshyorado State College at Greeley where he delivered the commencement address and by the University of Nevada which this month awarded him an honorshyary LLD degree + + + Cap and Gown SDSC s honor society for women is now a chapter of Morshytar Board the only national honorary organization recognizing outstanding senior womens societies in American colleges and universities Cap and Gown thus becomes the first CSC chapter of Morshytar Board and the 117th in the nation

The Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany was awarded to Chancellor Dumke at a reshycent ceremony in Los Angeles Phoshytograph shows Hans RolfKiderlen Gershyman Consul-General congratulating Dr and Mrs Dumke following presentashytion of the Orders medal and citation which Dr Dumke holds The decorashytion was conferred in appreciation of the Chancellors part in establishing esc international programs overshyseas and for encouraging instruction in foreign lanshyguages including German throughout the college system

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

(Continued from Page 1) Brown commented I have verydeliberately sought to recognize the importance and the standing of the California State Colleges in my appointments to the Board and to push for their continued development as centers of academic exshycellence Mr Palmieris appointment contributes to both of those goals 1 Trustee Palmieri is marshy

ried His wife the former Martha Cooley of Pasashydena is also a Stanford graduate They have thr sons Victor Jr Matthew B and John W Th family home is in Malibu on Colony Drive

FALK TO HEAD INTERNATIONAL UNIT

Dr Karl L Falk professor of economics at Fresno SC and an authority on comparative economshyic systems and international housing has been namshyed director of international affairs for the Califorshynia State Colleges

In making the appointment Chancellor Dumke said Falk will head an expanded program of intershynational activities coordinating existing and new programs including foreign aid international study student and faculty exchanges with other countries and overseas projects sponsored by private foundashytions

One important phase of State College overseas operation consists of programs of study abroad for State College students in France Germany Japan Spain Sweden and Taiwan under the direction of Dr Thomas P Lantos of San Francisco SC who according to Dr Falk will continue in this aspect of international activities

Falk has been on the Fresno SC faculty sinshy1938 He received his undergraduate training at Stanford U and his doctoral degree at the Univershysity of Berlin Germany

He is chairman of the Fresno City Housing Aushythority vice-chairman of the Governors Advisory Committee on Housing Probl ems and past-president of the NationalAssociationof Housing and Redevelshyopment Officials He is an official of several finanshycial institutions and a former member of the board of the California Savings and Loan League

In his new post which he assumes Aug 1 Falk will be headquartered at the Chancellors Office Inglewood

SIEMENS JOINS CONSTITUTION COMMITTEE

Humboldt SC President Cornelius H Siemens has been elected to membership on the state 1 s Conshystitutional Revision Commission established by the 1963 Legislature for the purpose of recommending revisions to the Constitution for placement on the 1966 November ballot

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymo A Rydell Executive Vice-Chancellor John F Richardson Vice-Chancell Business Affairs C Mansel Keene Assistant Chancellor Faculty and Sta Affairs The California State Colleges Review is issued by the Public Affairs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES

EVIE~

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

Governor Edmund G Brown recently appointed Chester R Bartalini 62 president of the California State Council of Carpenters to succeed Thomas L Pitts secretary-treasurer of the California Labor Federation as a member of CSCs Board of Trustees

Trustee Pitts said he had asked the Governor to replace him on the board because the demands of his union post have made it impossible for me to give as much time to the State Colleges as I felt necessary

Pitts told Governor Brown that he was most pleased with Mr Barshytalinis appointment I know he will do a great job for the people of California on this board

The Governor said I regret ne loss of Tom Pitts from this imshy~rtant board very much He served

with great distinction and his good Chester R Bartalinijudgment will certainly be missed

Governor Brown said that he was however very happy to have the service of Chester Bartalini who has proved himshyself in many ways a truly dedicated Californian

In his long service in the Carpenters union Chester Bartalini has shown great administrative talent and executive ability As a union leader he has learned to appreciate the need to keep alive and strengthen Californias system of tuition-free education

Trustee Bartalini is a native of Michigan and has lived here since 1936 He served two terms as a member of the state Correctional Industry Commission and has been executive secretary of the Bay Counties District Council of Carpenters San Francisco since 1950

He is a member of the Commonwealth Club the Elks Eagles Associated Sportsmen of California and the Alameda Rod and Gun Club

He is a director of the Alameda Boys Oub and a member of the Joint Labor University of California committee

He has been president of the California State Council of orpenters since 1958

Trustee Bartalini lives at 1446 Eastshore Drive Alameda with his wife Florinda He has six children and seven grandshychildren

AUGUST 1965

VOL 3 N o 2

FISCAL TASK FORCES DEPLOYED

More efficient ways of staffing and funding systemwide college operations at every level of support are now being sought by eight task forces representing all of the Colleges

Members of the task-force groups were appointed by the CSC Committee on Fiscal Responsibility which was formed in May to implement the provisions of Senate Concurrent Resoshylution No 29 calling for a study of greater fiscal flexibility for the college system

Under the leadership of Harry W Brakebill vice-presishydent at San Francisco SC and permanent chairman of the committee together with Sol Buchalter chairman of the deshypartment of finance and law at San Fernando Valley SC who is serving as the committees executive officer on a fulltime basis during the summer months the task forces will engage in an all-out assault on the CSCs financial problems

Scope of the effort is shown by the assignments given to the groups ( 1) relationships and responsibilities of state agencies involved ( 2) budget formulation processes ( 3) deshytermination of level of support ( 4) budget administration ( 5) accounting and reporting ( 6-7-8) self-supporting funcshytions designated as noninstructional college foundation and summer-session and extension activities

Before hearings start on SCR 29 next Oct the specific tasks that these forces have set for themselves are in order of priority suggesting feasible and attainable methods for imshyproving budget administration defining means for determining adequate support levels and creating a model arrangement for fulfilling accountability requirements relating to expenditure of funds provided by the Legislature In the matter of accountshyability both internal management aspects and external public interest in quality education are being considered by the comshymittee and its forces

Some eighty representatives of the Colleges and the Chanshycellors Office including presidents deans business managers and students have already been named to the various task forces and most of the groups have started work

FIRST SCHOLARSHIP FOR CSSB

A $1000 check has established the first scholarship fund sponsored by a private organization for Cal State San Bernarshydino Donated by The Social Lites a Negro womens social and civic organization it provides an initial $300 for some deservshying student from the San Bernardino area Income from the remainder will go into a permanent fund to which the womens organization will continue to add until a complete scholarship program can be financed from the funds income alone

2

BOOKS MAGAZINES AND PAPERS At the end of last June Dr Monroe E Spaght the forshy

mer student body president at Humboldt SC who is now managing director of more than 500 companies operated by Royal Dutch Shell- a position of corporate eminence never before achieved by any American- became not only an honorary Doctor of Laws by virtue of his CSC degree but also an author of belles-lettres by virtue of his book The Bright Key

Dr Monroe E Spaght (right) receiving the LLD dregree from Trustee James F Thatcher at Humboldt State College June 4 1965

Just published by Appleton-Century-Crofts the book defends with truth urbanity and wit his strong belief that business has real responsibilities to our educational system Dr Spaght earned his PhD in chemistry at a time when much of the business world was convinced such training rendered a man unfit for a life of decision and action Today he is recognized as a leading spokesman for industry on the role of education in contemporary society A trustee of Stanford U he is chairshyman of the Committee for Corporate Support of American Universities and chairman of the New York State Science and Technology Foundation

Literary honors for two other Humboldt alumni were also in the news Mr James Yoakum and Mr Sherman Pearl won first prize in the full-color category of the 1965 Governmentshywide Publications Contest sponsored by the Federal Editors Association with Wildlife on the Public Lands produced for the US Dept of the Interior Bureau of Land Management Mr Yoakum presently a lecturer in natural resources at the College was chief color photographer for the publication Mr Pearl is with the Nevada office of the Bureau Their document is the No 1 seller of the Government Printing Office with the widest distribution of any federal book and is now being transshylated into several foreign languages

A textbook on wildlife management by Dr Raymond Dasmann chairman of HSCs division of natural resources was recently published by John Wiley amp Sons It is his second text The first Environmental Conservation came out in 1959

Dr Ralph Samuelson chairman of the division of lanshyguage arts at the College has been notified that Nineteenth Century American Authors a syllabus of American Literature of which he was an editor is now being published by the

Eurasia Press in New Delhi India for use by more than 30 Indian universities e

College Information Officer Vivienne L George received first place award from the California Press Women for producshytion of Challenge 1964 the first annual Presidents Report In other categories Mrs George received third place for a feature article The Grapes Run Dry Along the Mayacamas published in a national magazine and top honorable mention for a series of newspaper articles about faculty members pubshylished last fall

Dr Clay Hatfield of the biological sciences department at Cal Poly SLO and John Applegarth also a member of the biological sciences faculty have collaborated in the production of a new college biology textbook Applied Microbiology reflecting Dr Hatfields more than 20 years experience as a microbio~ogist National Press Palo Alto published

OVERSEAS DIRECTORS NAMED Resident directors of CSCs International Programs durshy

ing the 1965-66 academic year have been announced by Chancellor Dumke

Named were Dr Leonard Messier of San Diego SC who will supervise the program at the University of Aix-Marseille France Dr John E Merrill also of SDSC at Waseda Univershysity in Tokyo Japan Dr Joachim Stanzel of San Jose SC at the Free University of Berlin and the University of Heidelshyberg Germany Dr Joseph Reid Scott also of SJSC at t University of Madrid and the University of Granada Spai and Dr Donald M Castleberry of San Francisco SC who was appointed for the University of Stockholm and the University of U ppsala Sweden

SAN JOSE OFFERS NEW TUTORIALS The usual courses lectures and grades so familiar to colshy

lege students will be unknown in Sep 1965 to a segment of entering freshmen at San Jose SC

Their unfamiliarity will stem from an experimental proshygram which is officially known at Tutorials in Letters and Science

While tutorial programs are not new the abandonment of the course is a startling departure from the usual educational experiments and reforms according to Dr Mervyn L Cadshywallader initiator of the program and associate professor of sociology at SJSC

Instead of the familiar format the new program will make use of individual tutorials group discussions small seminars and laboratory sessions Successful participants will earn 48 semester units of credit

The chief obligation of the student said Dr John Galm assistant professor of English and one of the first six tutors will be to submit written work to his tutor approximately every two weeks and then to have a conference with him A

Dr Cadwallader said a central theme will be featur each of the four semesters As an example four semesters work could be organized around study of four pivotal epochs in

3

Western Civilization Students will be encouraged to particishyte in some of the planning and evaluation of the program

The faculty-student ratio with the tutorial program will be approximately 1-to-20 This will permit the kind of intimiddot mate association and per~nal exchange between college proshyfessors and students that has become notable by its absence on the campuses of our large colleges and universities said Dr Cadwallader

He continued by stating that this return to a personal education may be one answer to the student demonstrations across the country

Other tutors in addition to Drs Cadwallader and Galm are Dr Richard Tansey professor of art Dr David Newman associate professor of psychology Dr Harold DeBey professor of chemistry and Gary Albright assistant professor of philshyosophy

UC COMMISSIONS CSLB ART

The first catalog of the new lrvine campus 6pound UC pubshylished early this month was designed by Dr Joseph Krause professor of art at Cal State Long Beach

Dr Krauses striking designs for various publications at the College caught the eye of Dr Clayton Garrison a former associate professor of speech at CSLB and present dean of UC Irvines fine arts division He requested Krause to design the new UC catalog

Rose Mary Thompson 21-year-old electronics major at Cal Poly Pomona became the first four-year coed to receive an engineering degree from the College when she graduated this summer Women were not enrolled at that campus until 1961

A CAMPUS CONVERTED into an international showcase for monumental sculpture has made Cal State at Long Beach a cynosure of cultural controversy this summer Bold abstract works formed of concrete steel redwood aluminum pipes and paint challenge the viewer as nine world-famous sculptors complete their contributions to the first International Sculpture Symposium in this country Their creations will remain on permanent exhibition at the College Along an area 100 ft in length and about 28 ft wide at the Seventh Street corner of the campus 19 massive forms 8-to-1 0 ft high (model pictured center-left above) constitute the sculpture of J J Beljon director of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in The Hague Holland Sculptor Beljon (upper left) contemplating the extent of his work under construction said wryly Gallery art and art dealers are doomed they have no future Other photos proceeding clockwise show- Gabriel Kohn of the US Andre Bloc of France

osso Eloul of Israel and directly under the center portrait of Piotr Kowalski a Polish sculptor residing in France an interior view of the ulptors workshop with student helper in foreground and with plaster on hand Kenneth Glenn director of the symposium who is also proshyssor of art at CSLB Left corner picture was taken at Bethlehem Steels Terminal Island plant where donated fabrication of plate contributed

by Triangle Steel Co and Ge~teral Pipe amp Supply Co vitalized the designs of Canadian sculptor Robert Murray Also participating in the symshyposium but not shown here are sculptors Kenjiro Azuma and Claire Falkenstein as well as muralist Rita Letendre who is sculptor Elouls wife

4

The ACADEMIC SENATE REGISTER

Headlines in the Los Angeles Times of last Jul 2 anshynounced Educators Hail Budget as Victory Yet I suspect for a large portion of the faculties the salary increase and the state college quality package of funds for research travel sabshybaticals and distinguished teaching represented a hollow vicshytory Not primarily because the salary increase was too little too late (though it was) and certainly not because the other benefits are insignificant Many of us are rather in the position ~f the teenager whose desire to be understood and respected Is not compensated by an increase in his allowance For those who react this way (I include myself) the most hopeful aspects of the past year are to be found in those activities of ad hoc faculty groups professional organizations the Chancellors Office Trustees and Academic Senate which have sought to create and enlarge public respect and support for the goals of the State Colleges

If we have sometimes acted inexpediently or undiploshymatically we need not apologize This is not a job for imageshymakers our problems will not always respond to the tech shyniques of politics as the art of the possible Our task has been to prepare the seedbed for a dialogue with the community and with the Legislature through which the purposes and aspirations of the state college experiment may be clarified We need now to consider as we gain the attention of the public and the Legislature what we are to say

Our problem is put into sharp focus by an observation of the young John Adams in 1765 Reflecting on the advanshytages bequeathed by the early settlers to their progeny Adams noted the unique civil and religious principles on the basis of which they laid very early the foundation of colleges and invested them with ample privileges and emoluments It is remarkable he added that they have left among their posshyterity so universal an affection and veneration for those seminshyaries and for liberal education that the meanest of the people contribute cheerfully to the support and maintenance of them every year and that nothing is more generally popular than projections for the honor reputation and advantage of those seats of learning

Is not our task to rekindle and revitalize the universal affection and veneration which alone in the long run can provide the basis for public support of our seminaries The civil and religious principles which supported it in times past Adams went on to note valued knowledge as the means to liberty Perhaps the purpose of the State Colleges reflects the universalization of that insight If so it is time to get about clarifying our own ideas on the matter and finding the means to communicate them to others If we are to survive we must become the peoples colleges not in an ad-mans empty phrase and not in the peoples present understanding but in a sense we have yet to define clearly for ourselves and then to communicate to the public As the Academic Senate

begins its third year of existence in the shadow of continuitA fiscal crises we will I hope turn part of our energies to ponde ing how to recover and how to deserve that universal affection and veneration -John C Livingston Chairman

STRONG POLICY ON COLLEGE SUPPORT ADOPTED With four new California State Colleges established by

the Legislature-in Contra Costa Kern San Mateo Santa Clara and Ventura counties-the Board of Trustees has adopted a policy to protect the support base of the existing Colleges

In a resolution of Jul 29 the Trustees expressed their concern for the financing of the California State Colleges at a level to maintain and strengthen educational excellence and declared that the financing of existing State Colleges should be maintained at the proper level and not be adversely affected by the financial impact of the addition of new State Colleges

Chancellor Dumke pointed out that the great strides made in the recent legislative session in faculty salary increases library and sabbatical leave augmentations research and travel allowances were the result of hard work in presenting the case for the State Colleges to the Legislature We must make it just as clear he said that our support budget for existing Colleges is still at an inadequate level and must not be diluted further by draining off funds to establish new Colleges

FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS

Three humanities professors from San Francisco SC ha been awarded Guggenheim Fellowships Ruby Cohn associa professor of English and world literarure Mark Harris associshyate professor of English and director of creative writing and Rudolph Weingartner associate professor of philosophy and chairman of the philosophy department

It is believed that no Cal State campus has ever before received three Guggenheims at one time

Dr George Huppert assistant professor of history at Cal State Hayward has been awarded a fellowship by the American Council of Learned Societies to complete research on The New History of the French Renaissance + + + Fellowships for srudy and travel in India have been awarded to Dr Joseph Pugliese CSH associate professor of art and to Glenn Glasow assistant professor of music by the Instirute of International Education Only 2i fellowships were awarded nationwide

Faculty fellowships provided by the National Science Foundation will enable Dr Seymour Mack associate professor of geology at Fresno SC to take his sabbatical leave at Stanford U for study and research in geo-chemistry and hydrology Earl L Pye of the physical sciences faculty at Cal Poly Pomona to complete his chemistry research project on detergent mishycelles at Louisiana State U and Dr Donald E Bianchi associshyate professor of biology at San Fernando Valley SC to spend a year at the University of Geneva Switzerland

==================~middotshyTHE CALIFORNIA_STA~ COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymond A ~ydell Ex~uhve Voce-Chancellor Harry E Brakebill Vice-Chancellor Busness Affaors C Mansel Keene Assost~nt Chancellor Faculty and Staff Affaors The Callforma State Colleges Rev1ew is issued by the Public Affa irs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

Page 9: September 21, 1965 Staff Bulletin

SYSTEM HONORS MARK COMMENCEMENTS

Commencement Day at Hwnboldt SC Jun 4 was not only the first in a series of statewide cereshymonies it also marked the granting of the first honorary degree to a CSC alwnnus An honorary Doctor of Laws degree was conferred by the Colshyleges on Dr Monroe E Spaght onetime president of the student body at Humboldt and now managing director and chairman of the board of Europes largest industrial complex Royal Dutch Shell peshytrolewn companies Trustee James F Thacher and HSC President Cornelius H Siemens officiated

A week later on Jun 11 at San Francisco SC s Commencement Trustee Louis H Heilbron and Chancellor Dumke presided with SFSC Presishydent Paul A Dodd at the award of an honorary Docshytor of Hwnane Letters degree to Frank V de Belshylis patron of the arts and donor to the Colleges of the immense collection of books music and objets dart which bears his name in a special section of the library building at SFSC (See photo at right)

De Bellis who was honored for his contribushytions to the preservation of Italian culture and its interpretation to the students and people of Cali shyfornia 11 will be further honored this month at the University of Bari the fourth largest educational institution in Italy which will present him with its sigillum aureum (golden seal) in tribute to his lifeshylong interest in the dissemination of Italian culture

Dr Spaght gave the commencement address at Hwnboldt SC Dr Arthur Stanton Adams former president of the American Council on Education was the principal speaker at the San Francisco cershyemonies

On other campuses of the system _speakers were Chico Dr Harold Benjamin USC Visiting Lecturer Stanislaus Dr John F Olson presishydent of Oklahoma City University Fresno Dr Louis Benezet president of Claremont Graduate School and University Center Sacramento Dr Guy A West retiring president of SSG San Diego Dr Frank Baxter professor emeritus of USC San Fernando Valley Dr R A Billington of the Huntshyington Library San Jose Trustee Louis H Heil shybron Cal State Hayward Dr Mitchell P Briggs executive secretary of the Western Association of Schools and Colleges

Cal State Long Beach Dr E C Stakrnan of the University of Minnesota Rockefeller Foundashytion consultant Cal State Los Angeles Stanley Mosk Associate Justice Supreme Court of Calif Sonoma Rev Dr Samuel DeWitt Proctor of the National Council of the Churches of Christ Cal

2

State Fullerton Trustee Victor H Palmieri Poly San Luis Obispo Charles Luckman chai man CSC Board of Trustees Cal Poly Pomona Mr Bart Lytton president and chairman of Lytton Financial Corp

This year the California State Colleges gradushyated approximately 20000 students a recordnwnshyber Among them was Gunnar Herrstrom of Sonoshyma SC who received his bachelors degree in psyshychology and thus completed a program started at UC which was interrupted by the war World War I that is Mr Herrstrom is 72 years old He plans to return to sse for the summer session to continue studies in Spanish

Commencement at San Francisco SC included presshyentation of honorary L H D to Frank V de Bellis Photo shows 1 to r President Dodd Mr de Belshylis Trustee Louis Heilbron and Chancellor Dumke

FACULTY SALARY ISSUE ON TV

A television docwnentary 11 The Salary Issue Colleges in Crisis 11 was filmed last month at San Diego SC Participants in the program a segment of the Profile series were Trustee Victor H Palmieri Chancellor Dwnke Dr Ernest 0 Byrne Dr James N Tidwell and Dr Donald N Wood of SDSC and Jerry Harmon president of the Associshyated Students at the College They presented a panel discussion Showings were on KOGO San Diego KNBC Los Angeles and KRON San Franshycisco It is scheduled for KVIE Sacramento Jul 2 and subsequently will be made available to stations in Bakersfield Fresno Eureka and Santa Barbara Motion picture prints of the program are on loan to the Colleges from the Chancellors Office

Retirements of Dr H Thurston Hatch associshyate dean of students in charge of placement and DJa William B McCann director of the SchoolAdmini shytration Center and professor of education at Chico SC became effective this month

3

IVINGSTON HEADS STATEWIDE SENATE

Dr John C Livingston of Sacramento SC has been elected chairman of the Statewide Academic Senate for 1965-66 succeeding Dr Samuel E Wishyley of Cal State Long Beach

Meeting May 20-21 at the Long Beach campus the Senate also elected Dr Jesse B Allen of Cal State Los Angeles to a second term as vice-chairshyman named as secretary Dr James P Heath of San Jose SC and reconstituted its Executive Comshymittee by electing as members-at-l arge Mr Leo G McClatchy of San Francisco SC and Dr William R Rogers of San Jose who will serve on the comshymitteewith thenewofficersand Dr Wiley of CSLB past-president

Newly elected to the Senate were Dr Joseph A Wagner of CSLB Drs Lee R Kerschner and Paul J Pastor of Cal State Fullerton replacing Drs Ida Cappolino and Miles D McCarthy Mr Milton Dobkin of Humboldt SC for Dr Hyman Palshyais Mr R Dean Galloway of Stanislaus SC for Dr Max C Norton Dr PeterKoestenbaum of SanJose SC for Dr Dean R Cresap Dr Joseph McGowan of Sacramento SC for Dr James M Bradfield Dr Robert A Mott of Cal Poly SLO for Mr Warren R

nderson Mr Elmer H Rice of Cal Poly Pornoshya for Dr John Fulbeck Dr James N Tidwell of

San Diego SC for Dr Ivan N McCollom and Dr William W Young of Sonoma SC for Dr Cheryl Peterson

Facultymembers whose terms as senators conshytinue are Drs B Gordon Gibb and Lew D Oliver of Chico Drs R Deane Branstetter and James J Hunter of San Diego Drs Richard Axen and John L Clark of San Francisco Dr La Verne Bucy of Cal Poly SLO Dr Bernard A Shepard and Mr Phillip Walker of Fresno Dr Roscoe Peithman of Humboldt Mr William Eshelman and Dr Kenneth A Martyn of Cal State Los Angeles Dr Edward A Nelson of Cal Poly Pomona Dr Nicholas P Hardeman of Cal State Long Beach Drs H Duane Heath and William Sawrey of Cal State Hayward Dr John E Caswell of Stan islaus Dr Warren E Olson of Sonoma Dr Lyle E Gibson of Cal State Palos Verdes and Dr Gerald Scherba of Cal State San Bernardino

ANGELL TO CHANCELLORS OFFICE

Dr Melvin A Angell associate dean of stushydents for counseling at Fresn oSC has been appoinshy

d associate dean of student affairs in the Chancelshyr1 s Office He will be on leave of absence from

his FSC position during the 1965-66 academic year to ~ccept the post

SCULPTURE SYMPOSIUM SET FOR CSLB

The first international sculpture symposium in the US opened Jun 21 at Cal State Long Beach where 14 of the worlds great modern sculptors were scheduled to begin work on monumental sculptures Sculptors participating include Kosso Eloul of Isshyrael Andre Bloc of France Kenjiro Azuma of Mishylan Italy J J Beljon of Holland and Gabriel Kohn of the U S The event will be open to the public without charge through Aug 14

SONOMA SC OFFERS FAR WEST INSTITUTE

For the fourth summer Sonoma SC and the California Folklore Society will co-sponsor an Inshystitute of Far Western American Culture beginning Aug 2 This years themeis FolkMusic and Othshyer Folklore of Minority Groups in the Far West Previous themes were folklore and local history folklore and fiction and art architecture and folkshylore

Participating specialists include Dr Stith Thompson emeritus professor of English and folkshylore Indiana U Chingwah Lee curator of the Kuan Yin temple in San Franciscos Chinatown and Ralph J Gleason nationally known jazz music authority

Dr Hector Lee dean of in struction at SSC and executive vice-president of the California Folkshylore Society will direct the institute which is reshylated to several American Studies courses and degree programs comprising a part of the area studies offered by the Colleges

FIRST JOINT DOCTORATE OFFERED

The first doctoral program to be offered jointshyly by a California State College and the University of California will be initiated at San Diego SC this fall it was announced this month by Chancellor Dumshyke and University President Clark Kerr It will be offered in chemistry by UC s San Diego campus and SDSC Granting of joint doctorates was authorized in 1960 under the Master Plan and approval of the chemistry program was granted by a joint graduate board of final academic review composed of represhysentatives from the Colleges and the University

SUPREME COURTS ACCREDIT CHAPMAN

Attorney Mayer Chapman now associate counshysel of the esc legal staff has been admitted to the U S Supreme Court for p r actice before that body and also admitted to the Court of Military Appeals highest military court He earned his undergradushyate and law degree at UCLA where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and the Order of the Coif

4

STATEWIDE NEWS BRIEFS

San Jose SC-- Lowell C Pratt dean of CSC public information directors retires this month after 18 years at the College He will be succeedshyed by James E Noah his assistant for the past three years + + +A two-year study financed by the federal government through the States Division of Highways will be conducted by SJSC to determine whether a special course of driver training will improve driving habits of traffic violators

San Diego SC --Dr Malcolm A Love presishydent of SDSC has been triply honored by the American Association of University Professors at the annual banquet of its San Diego chapter by Colshyorado State College at Greeley where he delivered the commencement address and by the University of Nevada which this month awarded him an honorshyary LLD degree + + + Cap and Gown SDSC s honor society for women is now a chapter of Morshytar Board the only national honorary organization recognizing outstanding senior womens societies in American colleges and universities Cap and Gown thus becomes the first CSC chapter of Morshytar Board and the 117th in the nation

The Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany was awarded to Chancellor Dumke at a reshycent ceremony in Los Angeles Phoshytograph shows Hans RolfKiderlen Gershyman Consul-General congratulating Dr and Mrs Dumke following presentashytion of the Orders medal and citation which Dr Dumke holds The decorashytion was conferred in appreciation of the Chancellors part in establishing esc international programs overshyseas and for encouraging instruction in foreign lanshyguages including German throughout the college system

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

(Continued from Page 1) Brown commented I have verydeliberately sought to recognize the importance and the standing of the California State Colleges in my appointments to the Board and to push for their continued development as centers of academic exshycellence Mr Palmieris appointment contributes to both of those goals 1 Trustee Palmieri is marshy

ried His wife the former Martha Cooley of Pasashydena is also a Stanford graduate They have thr sons Victor Jr Matthew B and John W Th family home is in Malibu on Colony Drive

FALK TO HEAD INTERNATIONAL UNIT

Dr Karl L Falk professor of economics at Fresno SC and an authority on comparative economshyic systems and international housing has been namshyed director of international affairs for the Califorshynia State Colleges

In making the appointment Chancellor Dumke said Falk will head an expanded program of intershynational activities coordinating existing and new programs including foreign aid international study student and faculty exchanges with other countries and overseas projects sponsored by private foundashytions

One important phase of State College overseas operation consists of programs of study abroad for State College students in France Germany Japan Spain Sweden and Taiwan under the direction of Dr Thomas P Lantos of San Francisco SC who according to Dr Falk will continue in this aspect of international activities

Falk has been on the Fresno SC faculty sinshy1938 He received his undergraduate training at Stanford U and his doctoral degree at the Univershysity of Berlin Germany

He is chairman of the Fresno City Housing Aushythority vice-chairman of the Governors Advisory Committee on Housing Probl ems and past-president of the NationalAssociationof Housing and Redevelshyopment Officials He is an official of several finanshycial institutions and a former member of the board of the California Savings and Loan League

In his new post which he assumes Aug 1 Falk will be headquartered at the Chancellors Office Inglewood

SIEMENS JOINS CONSTITUTION COMMITTEE

Humboldt SC President Cornelius H Siemens has been elected to membership on the state 1 s Conshystitutional Revision Commission established by the 1963 Legislature for the purpose of recommending revisions to the Constitution for placement on the 1966 November ballot

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymo A Rydell Executive Vice-Chancellor John F Richardson Vice-Chancell Business Affairs C Mansel Keene Assistant Chancellor Faculty and Sta Affairs The California State Colleges Review is issued by the Public Affairs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES

EVIE~

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

Governor Edmund G Brown recently appointed Chester R Bartalini 62 president of the California State Council of Carpenters to succeed Thomas L Pitts secretary-treasurer of the California Labor Federation as a member of CSCs Board of Trustees

Trustee Pitts said he had asked the Governor to replace him on the board because the demands of his union post have made it impossible for me to give as much time to the State Colleges as I felt necessary

Pitts told Governor Brown that he was most pleased with Mr Barshytalinis appointment I know he will do a great job for the people of California on this board

The Governor said I regret ne loss of Tom Pitts from this imshy~rtant board very much He served

with great distinction and his good Chester R Bartalinijudgment will certainly be missed

Governor Brown said that he was however very happy to have the service of Chester Bartalini who has proved himshyself in many ways a truly dedicated Californian

In his long service in the Carpenters union Chester Bartalini has shown great administrative talent and executive ability As a union leader he has learned to appreciate the need to keep alive and strengthen Californias system of tuition-free education

Trustee Bartalini is a native of Michigan and has lived here since 1936 He served two terms as a member of the state Correctional Industry Commission and has been executive secretary of the Bay Counties District Council of Carpenters San Francisco since 1950

He is a member of the Commonwealth Club the Elks Eagles Associated Sportsmen of California and the Alameda Rod and Gun Club

He is a director of the Alameda Boys Oub and a member of the Joint Labor University of California committee

He has been president of the California State Council of orpenters since 1958

Trustee Bartalini lives at 1446 Eastshore Drive Alameda with his wife Florinda He has six children and seven grandshychildren

AUGUST 1965

VOL 3 N o 2

FISCAL TASK FORCES DEPLOYED

More efficient ways of staffing and funding systemwide college operations at every level of support are now being sought by eight task forces representing all of the Colleges

Members of the task-force groups were appointed by the CSC Committee on Fiscal Responsibility which was formed in May to implement the provisions of Senate Concurrent Resoshylution No 29 calling for a study of greater fiscal flexibility for the college system

Under the leadership of Harry W Brakebill vice-presishydent at San Francisco SC and permanent chairman of the committee together with Sol Buchalter chairman of the deshypartment of finance and law at San Fernando Valley SC who is serving as the committees executive officer on a fulltime basis during the summer months the task forces will engage in an all-out assault on the CSCs financial problems

Scope of the effort is shown by the assignments given to the groups ( 1) relationships and responsibilities of state agencies involved ( 2) budget formulation processes ( 3) deshytermination of level of support ( 4) budget administration ( 5) accounting and reporting ( 6-7-8) self-supporting funcshytions designated as noninstructional college foundation and summer-session and extension activities

Before hearings start on SCR 29 next Oct the specific tasks that these forces have set for themselves are in order of priority suggesting feasible and attainable methods for imshyproving budget administration defining means for determining adequate support levels and creating a model arrangement for fulfilling accountability requirements relating to expenditure of funds provided by the Legislature In the matter of accountshyability both internal management aspects and external public interest in quality education are being considered by the comshymittee and its forces

Some eighty representatives of the Colleges and the Chanshycellors Office including presidents deans business managers and students have already been named to the various task forces and most of the groups have started work

FIRST SCHOLARSHIP FOR CSSB

A $1000 check has established the first scholarship fund sponsored by a private organization for Cal State San Bernarshydino Donated by The Social Lites a Negro womens social and civic organization it provides an initial $300 for some deservshying student from the San Bernardino area Income from the remainder will go into a permanent fund to which the womens organization will continue to add until a complete scholarship program can be financed from the funds income alone

2

BOOKS MAGAZINES AND PAPERS At the end of last June Dr Monroe E Spaght the forshy

mer student body president at Humboldt SC who is now managing director of more than 500 companies operated by Royal Dutch Shell- a position of corporate eminence never before achieved by any American- became not only an honorary Doctor of Laws by virtue of his CSC degree but also an author of belles-lettres by virtue of his book The Bright Key

Dr Monroe E Spaght (right) receiving the LLD dregree from Trustee James F Thatcher at Humboldt State College June 4 1965

Just published by Appleton-Century-Crofts the book defends with truth urbanity and wit his strong belief that business has real responsibilities to our educational system Dr Spaght earned his PhD in chemistry at a time when much of the business world was convinced such training rendered a man unfit for a life of decision and action Today he is recognized as a leading spokesman for industry on the role of education in contemporary society A trustee of Stanford U he is chairshyman of the Committee for Corporate Support of American Universities and chairman of the New York State Science and Technology Foundation

Literary honors for two other Humboldt alumni were also in the news Mr James Yoakum and Mr Sherman Pearl won first prize in the full-color category of the 1965 Governmentshywide Publications Contest sponsored by the Federal Editors Association with Wildlife on the Public Lands produced for the US Dept of the Interior Bureau of Land Management Mr Yoakum presently a lecturer in natural resources at the College was chief color photographer for the publication Mr Pearl is with the Nevada office of the Bureau Their document is the No 1 seller of the Government Printing Office with the widest distribution of any federal book and is now being transshylated into several foreign languages

A textbook on wildlife management by Dr Raymond Dasmann chairman of HSCs division of natural resources was recently published by John Wiley amp Sons It is his second text The first Environmental Conservation came out in 1959

Dr Ralph Samuelson chairman of the division of lanshyguage arts at the College has been notified that Nineteenth Century American Authors a syllabus of American Literature of which he was an editor is now being published by the

Eurasia Press in New Delhi India for use by more than 30 Indian universities e

College Information Officer Vivienne L George received first place award from the California Press Women for producshytion of Challenge 1964 the first annual Presidents Report In other categories Mrs George received third place for a feature article The Grapes Run Dry Along the Mayacamas published in a national magazine and top honorable mention for a series of newspaper articles about faculty members pubshylished last fall

Dr Clay Hatfield of the biological sciences department at Cal Poly SLO and John Applegarth also a member of the biological sciences faculty have collaborated in the production of a new college biology textbook Applied Microbiology reflecting Dr Hatfields more than 20 years experience as a microbio~ogist National Press Palo Alto published

OVERSEAS DIRECTORS NAMED Resident directors of CSCs International Programs durshy

ing the 1965-66 academic year have been announced by Chancellor Dumke

Named were Dr Leonard Messier of San Diego SC who will supervise the program at the University of Aix-Marseille France Dr John E Merrill also of SDSC at Waseda Univershysity in Tokyo Japan Dr Joachim Stanzel of San Jose SC at the Free University of Berlin and the University of Heidelshyberg Germany Dr Joseph Reid Scott also of SJSC at t University of Madrid and the University of Granada Spai and Dr Donald M Castleberry of San Francisco SC who was appointed for the University of Stockholm and the University of U ppsala Sweden

SAN JOSE OFFERS NEW TUTORIALS The usual courses lectures and grades so familiar to colshy

lege students will be unknown in Sep 1965 to a segment of entering freshmen at San Jose SC

Their unfamiliarity will stem from an experimental proshygram which is officially known at Tutorials in Letters and Science

While tutorial programs are not new the abandonment of the course is a startling departure from the usual educational experiments and reforms according to Dr Mervyn L Cadshywallader initiator of the program and associate professor of sociology at SJSC

Instead of the familiar format the new program will make use of individual tutorials group discussions small seminars and laboratory sessions Successful participants will earn 48 semester units of credit

The chief obligation of the student said Dr John Galm assistant professor of English and one of the first six tutors will be to submit written work to his tutor approximately every two weeks and then to have a conference with him A

Dr Cadwallader said a central theme will be featur each of the four semesters As an example four semesters work could be organized around study of four pivotal epochs in

3

Western Civilization Students will be encouraged to particishyte in some of the planning and evaluation of the program

The faculty-student ratio with the tutorial program will be approximately 1-to-20 This will permit the kind of intimiddot mate association and per~nal exchange between college proshyfessors and students that has become notable by its absence on the campuses of our large colleges and universities said Dr Cadwallader

He continued by stating that this return to a personal education may be one answer to the student demonstrations across the country

Other tutors in addition to Drs Cadwallader and Galm are Dr Richard Tansey professor of art Dr David Newman associate professor of psychology Dr Harold DeBey professor of chemistry and Gary Albright assistant professor of philshyosophy

UC COMMISSIONS CSLB ART

The first catalog of the new lrvine campus 6pound UC pubshylished early this month was designed by Dr Joseph Krause professor of art at Cal State Long Beach

Dr Krauses striking designs for various publications at the College caught the eye of Dr Clayton Garrison a former associate professor of speech at CSLB and present dean of UC Irvines fine arts division He requested Krause to design the new UC catalog

Rose Mary Thompson 21-year-old electronics major at Cal Poly Pomona became the first four-year coed to receive an engineering degree from the College when she graduated this summer Women were not enrolled at that campus until 1961

A CAMPUS CONVERTED into an international showcase for monumental sculpture has made Cal State at Long Beach a cynosure of cultural controversy this summer Bold abstract works formed of concrete steel redwood aluminum pipes and paint challenge the viewer as nine world-famous sculptors complete their contributions to the first International Sculpture Symposium in this country Their creations will remain on permanent exhibition at the College Along an area 100 ft in length and about 28 ft wide at the Seventh Street corner of the campus 19 massive forms 8-to-1 0 ft high (model pictured center-left above) constitute the sculpture of J J Beljon director of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in The Hague Holland Sculptor Beljon (upper left) contemplating the extent of his work under construction said wryly Gallery art and art dealers are doomed they have no future Other photos proceeding clockwise show- Gabriel Kohn of the US Andre Bloc of France

osso Eloul of Israel and directly under the center portrait of Piotr Kowalski a Polish sculptor residing in France an interior view of the ulptors workshop with student helper in foreground and with plaster on hand Kenneth Glenn director of the symposium who is also proshyssor of art at CSLB Left corner picture was taken at Bethlehem Steels Terminal Island plant where donated fabrication of plate contributed

by Triangle Steel Co and Ge~teral Pipe amp Supply Co vitalized the designs of Canadian sculptor Robert Murray Also participating in the symshyposium but not shown here are sculptors Kenjiro Azuma and Claire Falkenstein as well as muralist Rita Letendre who is sculptor Elouls wife

4

The ACADEMIC SENATE REGISTER

Headlines in the Los Angeles Times of last Jul 2 anshynounced Educators Hail Budget as Victory Yet I suspect for a large portion of the faculties the salary increase and the state college quality package of funds for research travel sabshybaticals and distinguished teaching represented a hollow vicshytory Not primarily because the salary increase was too little too late (though it was) and certainly not because the other benefits are insignificant Many of us are rather in the position ~f the teenager whose desire to be understood and respected Is not compensated by an increase in his allowance For those who react this way (I include myself) the most hopeful aspects of the past year are to be found in those activities of ad hoc faculty groups professional organizations the Chancellors Office Trustees and Academic Senate which have sought to create and enlarge public respect and support for the goals of the State Colleges

If we have sometimes acted inexpediently or undiploshymatically we need not apologize This is not a job for imageshymakers our problems will not always respond to the tech shyniques of politics as the art of the possible Our task has been to prepare the seedbed for a dialogue with the community and with the Legislature through which the purposes and aspirations of the state college experiment may be clarified We need now to consider as we gain the attention of the public and the Legislature what we are to say

Our problem is put into sharp focus by an observation of the young John Adams in 1765 Reflecting on the advanshytages bequeathed by the early settlers to their progeny Adams noted the unique civil and religious principles on the basis of which they laid very early the foundation of colleges and invested them with ample privileges and emoluments It is remarkable he added that they have left among their posshyterity so universal an affection and veneration for those seminshyaries and for liberal education that the meanest of the people contribute cheerfully to the support and maintenance of them every year and that nothing is more generally popular than projections for the honor reputation and advantage of those seats of learning

Is not our task to rekindle and revitalize the universal affection and veneration which alone in the long run can provide the basis for public support of our seminaries The civil and religious principles which supported it in times past Adams went on to note valued knowledge as the means to liberty Perhaps the purpose of the State Colleges reflects the universalization of that insight If so it is time to get about clarifying our own ideas on the matter and finding the means to communicate them to others If we are to survive we must become the peoples colleges not in an ad-mans empty phrase and not in the peoples present understanding but in a sense we have yet to define clearly for ourselves and then to communicate to the public As the Academic Senate

begins its third year of existence in the shadow of continuitA fiscal crises we will I hope turn part of our energies to ponde ing how to recover and how to deserve that universal affection and veneration -John C Livingston Chairman

STRONG POLICY ON COLLEGE SUPPORT ADOPTED With four new California State Colleges established by

the Legislature-in Contra Costa Kern San Mateo Santa Clara and Ventura counties-the Board of Trustees has adopted a policy to protect the support base of the existing Colleges

In a resolution of Jul 29 the Trustees expressed their concern for the financing of the California State Colleges at a level to maintain and strengthen educational excellence and declared that the financing of existing State Colleges should be maintained at the proper level and not be adversely affected by the financial impact of the addition of new State Colleges

Chancellor Dumke pointed out that the great strides made in the recent legislative session in faculty salary increases library and sabbatical leave augmentations research and travel allowances were the result of hard work in presenting the case for the State Colleges to the Legislature We must make it just as clear he said that our support budget for existing Colleges is still at an inadequate level and must not be diluted further by draining off funds to establish new Colleges

FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS

Three humanities professors from San Francisco SC ha been awarded Guggenheim Fellowships Ruby Cohn associa professor of English and world literarure Mark Harris associshyate professor of English and director of creative writing and Rudolph Weingartner associate professor of philosophy and chairman of the philosophy department

It is believed that no Cal State campus has ever before received three Guggenheims at one time

Dr George Huppert assistant professor of history at Cal State Hayward has been awarded a fellowship by the American Council of Learned Societies to complete research on The New History of the French Renaissance + + + Fellowships for srudy and travel in India have been awarded to Dr Joseph Pugliese CSH associate professor of art and to Glenn Glasow assistant professor of music by the Instirute of International Education Only 2i fellowships were awarded nationwide

Faculty fellowships provided by the National Science Foundation will enable Dr Seymour Mack associate professor of geology at Fresno SC to take his sabbatical leave at Stanford U for study and research in geo-chemistry and hydrology Earl L Pye of the physical sciences faculty at Cal Poly Pomona to complete his chemistry research project on detergent mishycelles at Louisiana State U and Dr Donald E Bianchi associshyate professor of biology at San Fernando Valley SC to spend a year at the University of Geneva Switzerland

==================~middotshyTHE CALIFORNIA_STA~ COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymond A ~ydell Ex~uhve Voce-Chancellor Harry E Brakebill Vice-Chancellor Busness Affaors C Mansel Keene Assost~nt Chancellor Faculty and Staff Affaors The Callforma State Colleges Rev1ew is issued by the Public Affa irs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

Page 10: September 21, 1965 Staff Bulletin

3

IVINGSTON HEADS STATEWIDE SENATE

Dr John C Livingston of Sacramento SC has been elected chairman of the Statewide Academic Senate for 1965-66 succeeding Dr Samuel E Wishyley of Cal State Long Beach

Meeting May 20-21 at the Long Beach campus the Senate also elected Dr Jesse B Allen of Cal State Los Angeles to a second term as vice-chairshyman named as secretary Dr James P Heath of San Jose SC and reconstituted its Executive Comshymittee by electing as members-at-l arge Mr Leo G McClatchy of San Francisco SC and Dr William R Rogers of San Jose who will serve on the comshymitteewith thenewofficersand Dr Wiley of CSLB past-president

Newly elected to the Senate were Dr Joseph A Wagner of CSLB Drs Lee R Kerschner and Paul J Pastor of Cal State Fullerton replacing Drs Ida Cappolino and Miles D McCarthy Mr Milton Dobkin of Humboldt SC for Dr Hyman Palshyais Mr R Dean Galloway of Stanislaus SC for Dr Max C Norton Dr PeterKoestenbaum of SanJose SC for Dr Dean R Cresap Dr Joseph McGowan of Sacramento SC for Dr James M Bradfield Dr Robert A Mott of Cal Poly SLO for Mr Warren R

nderson Mr Elmer H Rice of Cal Poly Pornoshya for Dr John Fulbeck Dr James N Tidwell of

San Diego SC for Dr Ivan N McCollom and Dr William W Young of Sonoma SC for Dr Cheryl Peterson

Facultymembers whose terms as senators conshytinue are Drs B Gordon Gibb and Lew D Oliver of Chico Drs R Deane Branstetter and James J Hunter of San Diego Drs Richard Axen and John L Clark of San Francisco Dr La Verne Bucy of Cal Poly SLO Dr Bernard A Shepard and Mr Phillip Walker of Fresno Dr Roscoe Peithman of Humboldt Mr William Eshelman and Dr Kenneth A Martyn of Cal State Los Angeles Dr Edward A Nelson of Cal Poly Pomona Dr Nicholas P Hardeman of Cal State Long Beach Drs H Duane Heath and William Sawrey of Cal State Hayward Dr John E Caswell of Stan islaus Dr Warren E Olson of Sonoma Dr Lyle E Gibson of Cal State Palos Verdes and Dr Gerald Scherba of Cal State San Bernardino

ANGELL TO CHANCELLORS OFFICE

Dr Melvin A Angell associate dean of stushydents for counseling at Fresn oSC has been appoinshy

d associate dean of student affairs in the Chancelshyr1 s Office He will be on leave of absence from

his FSC position during the 1965-66 academic year to ~ccept the post

SCULPTURE SYMPOSIUM SET FOR CSLB

The first international sculpture symposium in the US opened Jun 21 at Cal State Long Beach where 14 of the worlds great modern sculptors were scheduled to begin work on monumental sculptures Sculptors participating include Kosso Eloul of Isshyrael Andre Bloc of France Kenjiro Azuma of Mishylan Italy J J Beljon of Holland and Gabriel Kohn of the U S The event will be open to the public without charge through Aug 14

SONOMA SC OFFERS FAR WEST INSTITUTE

For the fourth summer Sonoma SC and the California Folklore Society will co-sponsor an Inshystitute of Far Western American Culture beginning Aug 2 This years themeis FolkMusic and Othshyer Folklore of Minority Groups in the Far West Previous themes were folklore and local history folklore and fiction and art architecture and folkshylore

Participating specialists include Dr Stith Thompson emeritus professor of English and folkshylore Indiana U Chingwah Lee curator of the Kuan Yin temple in San Franciscos Chinatown and Ralph J Gleason nationally known jazz music authority

Dr Hector Lee dean of in struction at SSC and executive vice-president of the California Folkshylore Society will direct the institute which is reshylated to several American Studies courses and degree programs comprising a part of the area studies offered by the Colleges

FIRST JOINT DOCTORATE OFFERED

The first doctoral program to be offered jointshyly by a California State College and the University of California will be initiated at San Diego SC this fall it was announced this month by Chancellor Dumshyke and University President Clark Kerr It will be offered in chemistry by UC s San Diego campus and SDSC Granting of joint doctorates was authorized in 1960 under the Master Plan and approval of the chemistry program was granted by a joint graduate board of final academic review composed of represhysentatives from the Colleges and the University

SUPREME COURTS ACCREDIT CHAPMAN

Attorney Mayer Chapman now associate counshysel of the esc legal staff has been admitted to the U S Supreme Court for p r actice before that body and also admitted to the Court of Military Appeals highest military court He earned his undergradushyate and law degree at UCLA where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and the Order of the Coif

4

STATEWIDE NEWS BRIEFS

San Jose SC-- Lowell C Pratt dean of CSC public information directors retires this month after 18 years at the College He will be succeedshyed by James E Noah his assistant for the past three years + + +A two-year study financed by the federal government through the States Division of Highways will be conducted by SJSC to determine whether a special course of driver training will improve driving habits of traffic violators

San Diego SC --Dr Malcolm A Love presishydent of SDSC has been triply honored by the American Association of University Professors at the annual banquet of its San Diego chapter by Colshyorado State College at Greeley where he delivered the commencement address and by the University of Nevada which this month awarded him an honorshyary LLD degree + + + Cap and Gown SDSC s honor society for women is now a chapter of Morshytar Board the only national honorary organization recognizing outstanding senior womens societies in American colleges and universities Cap and Gown thus becomes the first CSC chapter of Morshytar Board and the 117th in the nation

The Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany was awarded to Chancellor Dumke at a reshycent ceremony in Los Angeles Phoshytograph shows Hans RolfKiderlen Gershyman Consul-General congratulating Dr and Mrs Dumke following presentashytion of the Orders medal and citation which Dr Dumke holds The decorashytion was conferred in appreciation of the Chancellors part in establishing esc international programs overshyseas and for encouraging instruction in foreign lanshyguages including German throughout the college system

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

(Continued from Page 1) Brown commented I have verydeliberately sought to recognize the importance and the standing of the California State Colleges in my appointments to the Board and to push for their continued development as centers of academic exshycellence Mr Palmieris appointment contributes to both of those goals 1 Trustee Palmieri is marshy

ried His wife the former Martha Cooley of Pasashydena is also a Stanford graduate They have thr sons Victor Jr Matthew B and John W Th family home is in Malibu on Colony Drive

FALK TO HEAD INTERNATIONAL UNIT

Dr Karl L Falk professor of economics at Fresno SC and an authority on comparative economshyic systems and international housing has been namshyed director of international affairs for the Califorshynia State Colleges

In making the appointment Chancellor Dumke said Falk will head an expanded program of intershynational activities coordinating existing and new programs including foreign aid international study student and faculty exchanges with other countries and overseas projects sponsored by private foundashytions

One important phase of State College overseas operation consists of programs of study abroad for State College students in France Germany Japan Spain Sweden and Taiwan under the direction of Dr Thomas P Lantos of San Francisco SC who according to Dr Falk will continue in this aspect of international activities

Falk has been on the Fresno SC faculty sinshy1938 He received his undergraduate training at Stanford U and his doctoral degree at the Univershysity of Berlin Germany

He is chairman of the Fresno City Housing Aushythority vice-chairman of the Governors Advisory Committee on Housing Probl ems and past-president of the NationalAssociationof Housing and Redevelshyopment Officials He is an official of several finanshycial institutions and a former member of the board of the California Savings and Loan League

In his new post which he assumes Aug 1 Falk will be headquartered at the Chancellors Office Inglewood

SIEMENS JOINS CONSTITUTION COMMITTEE

Humboldt SC President Cornelius H Siemens has been elected to membership on the state 1 s Conshystitutional Revision Commission established by the 1963 Legislature for the purpose of recommending revisions to the Constitution for placement on the 1966 November ballot

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymo A Rydell Executive Vice-Chancellor John F Richardson Vice-Chancell Business Affairs C Mansel Keene Assistant Chancellor Faculty and Sta Affairs The California State Colleges Review is issued by the Public Affairs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES

EVIE~

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

Governor Edmund G Brown recently appointed Chester R Bartalini 62 president of the California State Council of Carpenters to succeed Thomas L Pitts secretary-treasurer of the California Labor Federation as a member of CSCs Board of Trustees

Trustee Pitts said he had asked the Governor to replace him on the board because the demands of his union post have made it impossible for me to give as much time to the State Colleges as I felt necessary

Pitts told Governor Brown that he was most pleased with Mr Barshytalinis appointment I know he will do a great job for the people of California on this board

The Governor said I regret ne loss of Tom Pitts from this imshy~rtant board very much He served

with great distinction and his good Chester R Bartalinijudgment will certainly be missed

Governor Brown said that he was however very happy to have the service of Chester Bartalini who has proved himshyself in many ways a truly dedicated Californian

In his long service in the Carpenters union Chester Bartalini has shown great administrative talent and executive ability As a union leader he has learned to appreciate the need to keep alive and strengthen Californias system of tuition-free education

Trustee Bartalini is a native of Michigan and has lived here since 1936 He served two terms as a member of the state Correctional Industry Commission and has been executive secretary of the Bay Counties District Council of Carpenters San Francisco since 1950

He is a member of the Commonwealth Club the Elks Eagles Associated Sportsmen of California and the Alameda Rod and Gun Club

He is a director of the Alameda Boys Oub and a member of the Joint Labor University of California committee

He has been president of the California State Council of orpenters since 1958

Trustee Bartalini lives at 1446 Eastshore Drive Alameda with his wife Florinda He has six children and seven grandshychildren

AUGUST 1965

VOL 3 N o 2

FISCAL TASK FORCES DEPLOYED

More efficient ways of staffing and funding systemwide college operations at every level of support are now being sought by eight task forces representing all of the Colleges

Members of the task-force groups were appointed by the CSC Committee on Fiscal Responsibility which was formed in May to implement the provisions of Senate Concurrent Resoshylution No 29 calling for a study of greater fiscal flexibility for the college system

Under the leadership of Harry W Brakebill vice-presishydent at San Francisco SC and permanent chairman of the committee together with Sol Buchalter chairman of the deshypartment of finance and law at San Fernando Valley SC who is serving as the committees executive officer on a fulltime basis during the summer months the task forces will engage in an all-out assault on the CSCs financial problems

Scope of the effort is shown by the assignments given to the groups ( 1) relationships and responsibilities of state agencies involved ( 2) budget formulation processes ( 3) deshytermination of level of support ( 4) budget administration ( 5) accounting and reporting ( 6-7-8) self-supporting funcshytions designated as noninstructional college foundation and summer-session and extension activities

Before hearings start on SCR 29 next Oct the specific tasks that these forces have set for themselves are in order of priority suggesting feasible and attainable methods for imshyproving budget administration defining means for determining adequate support levels and creating a model arrangement for fulfilling accountability requirements relating to expenditure of funds provided by the Legislature In the matter of accountshyability both internal management aspects and external public interest in quality education are being considered by the comshymittee and its forces

Some eighty representatives of the Colleges and the Chanshycellors Office including presidents deans business managers and students have already been named to the various task forces and most of the groups have started work

FIRST SCHOLARSHIP FOR CSSB

A $1000 check has established the first scholarship fund sponsored by a private organization for Cal State San Bernarshydino Donated by The Social Lites a Negro womens social and civic organization it provides an initial $300 for some deservshying student from the San Bernardino area Income from the remainder will go into a permanent fund to which the womens organization will continue to add until a complete scholarship program can be financed from the funds income alone

2

BOOKS MAGAZINES AND PAPERS At the end of last June Dr Monroe E Spaght the forshy

mer student body president at Humboldt SC who is now managing director of more than 500 companies operated by Royal Dutch Shell- a position of corporate eminence never before achieved by any American- became not only an honorary Doctor of Laws by virtue of his CSC degree but also an author of belles-lettres by virtue of his book The Bright Key

Dr Monroe E Spaght (right) receiving the LLD dregree from Trustee James F Thatcher at Humboldt State College June 4 1965

Just published by Appleton-Century-Crofts the book defends with truth urbanity and wit his strong belief that business has real responsibilities to our educational system Dr Spaght earned his PhD in chemistry at a time when much of the business world was convinced such training rendered a man unfit for a life of decision and action Today he is recognized as a leading spokesman for industry on the role of education in contemporary society A trustee of Stanford U he is chairshyman of the Committee for Corporate Support of American Universities and chairman of the New York State Science and Technology Foundation

Literary honors for two other Humboldt alumni were also in the news Mr James Yoakum and Mr Sherman Pearl won first prize in the full-color category of the 1965 Governmentshywide Publications Contest sponsored by the Federal Editors Association with Wildlife on the Public Lands produced for the US Dept of the Interior Bureau of Land Management Mr Yoakum presently a lecturer in natural resources at the College was chief color photographer for the publication Mr Pearl is with the Nevada office of the Bureau Their document is the No 1 seller of the Government Printing Office with the widest distribution of any federal book and is now being transshylated into several foreign languages

A textbook on wildlife management by Dr Raymond Dasmann chairman of HSCs division of natural resources was recently published by John Wiley amp Sons It is his second text The first Environmental Conservation came out in 1959

Dr Ralph Samuelson chairman of the division of lanshyguage arts at the College has been notified that Nineteenth Century American Authors a syllabus of American Literature of which he was an editor is now being published by the

Eurasia Press in New Delhi India for use by more than 30 Indian universities e

College Information Officer Vivienne L George received first place award from the California Press Women for producshytion of Challenge 1964 the first annual Presidents Report In other categories Mrs George received third place for a feature article The Grapes Run Dry Along the Mayacamas published in a national magazine and top honorable mention for a series of newspaper articles about faculty members pubshylished last fall

Dr Clay Hatfield of the biological sciences department at Cal Poly SLO and John Applegarth also a member of the biological sciences faculty have collaborated in the production of a new college biology textbook Applied Microbiology reflecting Dr Hatfields more than 20 years experience as a microbio~ogist National Press Palo Alto published

OVERSEAS DIRECTORS NAMED Resident directors of CSCs International Programs durshy

ing the 1965-66 academic year have been announced by Chancellor Dumke

Named were Dr Leonard Messier of San Diego SC who will supervise the program at the University of Aix-Marseille France Dr John E Merrill also of SDSC at Waseda Univershysity in Tokyo Japan Dr Joachim Stanzel of San Jose SC at the Free University of Berlin and the University of Heidelshyberg Germany Dr Joseph Reid Scott also of SJSC at t University of Madrid and the University of Granada Spai and Dr Donald M Castleberry of San Francisco SC who was appointed for the University of Stockholm and the University of U ppsala Sweden

SAN JOSE OFFERS NEW TUTORIALS The usual courses lectures and grades so familiar to colshy

lege students will be unknown in Sep 1965 to a segment of entering freshmen at San Jose SC

Their unfamiliarity will stem from an experimental proshygram which is officially known at Tutorials in Letters and Science

While tutorial programs are not new the abandonment of the course is a startling departure from the usual educational experiments and reforms according to Dr Mervyn L Cadshywallader initiator of the program and associate professor of sociology at SJSC

Instead of the familiar format the new program will make use of individual tutorials group discussions small seminars and laboratory sessions Successful participants will earn 48 semester units of credit

The chief obligation of the student said Dr John Galm assistant professor of English and one of the first six tutors will be to submit written work to his tutor approximately every two weeks and then to have a conference with him A

Dr Cadwallader said a central theme will be featur each of the four semesters As an example four semesters work could be organized around study of four pivotal epochs in

3

Western Civilization Students will be encouraged to particishyte in some of the planning and evaluation of the program

The faculty-student ratio with the tutorial program will be approximately 1-to-20 This will permit the kind of intimiddot mate association and per~nal exchange between college proshyfessors and students that has become notable by its absence on the campuses of our large colleges and universities said Dr Cadwallader

He continued by stating that this return to a personal education may be one answer to the student demonstrations across the country

Other tutors in addition to Drs Cadwallader and Galm are Dr Richard Tansey professor of art Dr David Newman associate professor of psychology Dr Harold DeBey professor of chemistry and Gary Albright assistant professor of philshyosophy

UC COMMISSIONS CSLB ART

The first catalog of the new lrvine campus 6pound UC pubshylished early this month was designed by Dr Joseph Krause professor of art at Cal State Long Beach

Dr Krauses striking designs for various publications at the College caught the eye of Dr Clayton Garrison a former associate professor of speech at CSLB and present dean of UC Irvines fine arts division He requested Krause to design the new UC catalog

Rose Mary Thompson 21-year-old electronics major at Cal Poly Pomona became the first four-year coed to receive an engineering degree from the College when she graduated this summer Women were not enrolled at that campus until 1961

A CAMPUS CONVERTED into an international showcase for monumental sculpture has made Cal State at Long Beach a cynosure of cultural controversy this summer Bold abstract works formed of concrete steel redwood aluminum pipes and paint challenge the viewer as nine world-famous sculptors complete their contributions to the first International Sculpture Symposium in this country Their creations will remain on permanent exhibition at the College Along an area 100 ft in length and about 28 ft wide at the Seventh Street corner of the campus 19 massive forms 8-to-1 0 ft high (model pictured center-left above) constitute the sculpture of J J Beljon director of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in The Hague Holland Sculptor Beljon (upper left) contemplating the extent of his work under construction said wryly Gallery art and art dealers are doomed they have no future Other photos proceeding clockwise show- Gabriel Kohn of the US Andre Bloc of France

osso Eloul of Israel and directly under the center portrait of Piotr Kowalski a Polish sculptor residing in France an interior view of the ulptors workshop with student helper in foreground and with plaster on hand Kenneth Glenn director of the symposium who is also proshyssor of art at CSLB Left corner picture was taken at Bethlehem Steels Terminal Island plant where donated fabrication of plate contributed

by Triangle Steel Co and Ge~teral Pipe amp Supply Co vitalized the designs of Canadian sculptor Robert Murray Also participating in the symshyposium but not shown here are sculptors Kenjiro Azuma and Claire Falkenstein as well as muralist Rita Letendre who is sculptor Elouls wife

4

The ACADEMIC SENATE REGISTER

Headlines in the Los Angeles Times of last Jul 2 anshynounced Educators Hail Budget as Victory Yet I suspect for a large portion of the faculties the salary increase and the state college quality package of funds for research travel sabshybaticals and distinguished teaching represented a hollow vicshytory Not primarily because the salary increase was too little too late (though it was) and certainly not because the other benefits are insignificant Many of us are rather in the position ~f the teenager whose desire to be understood and respected Is not compensated by an increase in his allowance For those who react this way (I include myself) the most hopeful aspects of the past year are to be found in those activities of ad hoc faculty groups professional organizations the Chancellors Office Trustees and Academic Senate which have sought to create and enlarge public respect and support for the goals of the State Colleges

If we have sometimes acted inexpediently or undiploshymatically we need not apologize This is not a job for imageshymakers our problems will not always respond to the tech shyniques of politics as the art of the possible Our task has been to prepare the seedbed for a dialogue with the community and with the Legislature through which the purposes and aspirations of the state college experiment may be clarified We need now to consider as we gain the attention of the public and the Legislature what we are to say

Our problem is put into sharp focus by an observation of the young John Adams in 1765 Reflecting on the advanshytages bequeathed by the early settlers to their progeny Adams noted the unique civil and religious principles on the basis of which they laid very early the foundation of colleges and invested them with ample privileges and emoluments It is remarkable he added that they have left among their posshyterity so universal an affection and veneration for those seminshyaries and for liberal education that the meanest of the people contribute cheerfully to the support and maintenance of them every year and that nothing is more generally popular than projections for the honor reputation and advantage of those seats of learning

Is not our task to rekindle and revitalize the universal affection and veneration which alone in the long run can provide the basis for public support of our seminaries The civil and religious principles which supported it in times past Adams went on to note valued knowledge as the means to liberty Perhaps the purpose of the State Colleges reflects the universalization of that insight If so it is time to get about clarifying our own ideas on the matter and finding the means to communicate them to others If we are to survive we must become the peoples colleges not in an ad-mans empty phrase and not in the peoples present understanding but in a sense we have yet to define clearly for ourselves and then to communicate to the public As the Academic Senate

begins its third year of existence in the shadow of continuitA fiscal crises we will I hope turn part of our energies to ponde ing how to recover and how to deserve that universal affection and veneration -John C Livingston Chairman

STRONG POLICY ON COLLEGE SUPPORT ADOPTED With four new California State Colleges established by

the Legislature-in Contra Costa Kern San Mateo Santa Clara and Ventura counties-the Board of Trustees has adopted a policy to protect the support base of the existing Colleges

In a resolution of Jul 29 the Trustees expressed their concern for the financing of the California State Colleges at a level to maintain and strengthen educational excellence and declared that the financing of existing State Colleges should be maintained at the proper level and not be adversely affected by the financial impact of the addition of new State Colleges

Chancellor Dumke pointed out that the great strides made in the recent legislative session in faculty salary increases library and sabbatical leave augmentations research and travel allowances were the result of hard work in presenting the case for the State Colleges to the Legislature We must make it just as clear he said that our support budget for existing Colleges is still at an inadequate level and must not be diluted further by draining off funds to establish new Colleges

FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS

Three humanities professors from San Francisco SC ha been awarded Guggenheim Fellowships Ruby Cohn associa professor of English and world literarure Mark Harris associshyate professor of English and director of creative writing and Rudolph Weingartner associate professor of philosophy and chairman of the philosophy department

It is believed that no Cal State campus has ever before received three Guggenheims at one time

Dr George Huppert assistant professor of history at Cal State Hayward has been awarded a fellowship by the American Council of Learned Societies to complete research on The New History of the French Renaissance + + + Fellowships for srudy and travel in India have been awarded to Dr Joseph Pugliese CSH associate professor of art and to Glenn Glasow assistant professor of music by the Instirute of International Education Only 2i fellowships were awarded nationwide

Faculty fellowships provided by the National Science Foundation will enable Dr Seymour Mack associate professor of geology at Fresno SC to take his sabbatical leave at Stanford U for study and research in geo-chemistry and hydrology Earl L Pye of the physical sciences faculty at Cal Poly Pomona to complete his chemistry research project on detergent mishycelles at Louisiana State U and Dr Donald E Bianchi associshyate professor of biology at San Fernando Valley SC to spend a year at the University of Geneva Switzerland

==================~middotshyTHE CALIFORNIA_STA~ COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymond A ~ydell Ex~uhve Voce-Chancellor Harry E Brakebill Vice-Chancellor Busness Affaors C Mansel Keene Assost~nt Chancellor Faculty and Staff Affaors The Callforma State Colleges Rev1ew is issued by the Public Affa irs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

Page 11: September 21, 1965 Staff Bulletin

4

STATEWIDE NEWS BRIEFS

San Jose SC-- Lowell C Pratt dean of CSC public information directors retires this month after 18 years at the College He will be succeedshyed by James E Noah his assistant for the past three years + + +A two-year study financed by the federal government through the States Division of Highways will be conducted by SJSC to determine whether a special course of driver training will improve driving habits of traffic violators

San Diego SC --Dr Malcolm A Love presishydent of SDSC has been triply honored by the American Association of University Professors at the annual banquet of its San Diego chapter by Colshyorado State College at Greeley where he delivered the commencement address and by the University of Nevada which this month awarded him an honorshyary LLD degree + + + Cap and Gown SDSC s honor society for women is now a chapter of Morshytar Board the only national honorary organization recognizing outstanding senior womens societies in American colleges and universities Cap and Gown thus becomes the first CSC chapter of Morshytar Board and the 117th in the nation

The Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany was awarded to Chancellor Dumke at a reshycent ceremony in Los Angeles Phoshytograph shows Hans RolfKiderlen Gershyman Consul-General congratulating Dr and Mrs Dumke following presentashytion of the Orders medal and citation which Dr Dumke holds The decorashytion was conferred in appreciation of the Chancellors part in establishing esc international programs overshyseas and for encouraging instruction in foreign lanshyguages including German throughout the college system

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

(Continued from Page 1) Brown commented I have verydeliberately sought to recognize the importance and the standing of the California State Colleges in my appointments to the Board and to push for their continued development as centers of academic exshycellence Mr Palmieris appointment contributes to both of those goals 1 Trustee Palmieri is marshy

ried His wife the former Martha Cooley of Pasashydena is also a Stanford graduate They have thr sons Victor Jr Matthew B and John W Th family home is in Malibu on Colony Drive

FALK TO HEAD INTERNATIONAL UNIT

Dr Karl L Falk professor of economics at Fresno SC and an authority on comparative economshyic systems and international housing has been namshyed director of international affairs for the Califorshynia State Colleges

In making the appointment Chancellor Dumke said Falk will head an expanded program of intershynational activities coordinating existing and new programs including foreign aid international study student and faculty exchanges with other countries and overseas projects sponsored by private foundashytions

One important phase of State College overseas operation consists of programs of study abroad for State College students in France Germany Japan Spain Sweden and Taiwan under the direction of Dr Thomas P Lantos of San Francisco SC who according to Dr Falk will continue in this aspect of international activities

Falk has been on the Fresno SC faculty sinshy1938 He received his undergraduate training at Stanford U and his doctoral degree at the Univershysity of Berlin Germany

He is chairman of the Fresno City Housing Aushythority vice-chairman of the Governors Advisory Committee on Housing Probl ems and past-president of the NationalAssociationof Housing and Redevelshyopment Officials He is an official of several finanshycial institutions and a former member of the board of the California Savings and Loan League

In his new post which he assumes Aug 1 Falk will be headquartered at the Chancellors Office Inglewood

SIEMENS JOINS CONSTITUTION COMMITTEE

Humboldt SC President Cornelius H Siemens has been elected to membership on the state 1 s Conshystitutional Revision Commission established by the 1963 Legislature for the purpose of recommending revisions to the Constitution for placement on the 1966 November ballot

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymo A Rydell Executive Vice-Chancellor John F Richardson Vice-Chancell Business Affairs C Mansel Keene Assistant Chancellor Faculty and Sta Affairs The California State Colleges Review is issued by the Public Affairs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES

EVIE~

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

Governor Edmund G Brown recently appointed Chester R Bartalini 62 president of the California State Council of Carpenters to succeed Thomas L Pitts secretary-treasurer of the California Labor Federation as a member of CSCs Board of Trustees

Trustee Pitts said he had asked the Governor to replace him on the board because the demands of his union post have made it impossible for me to give as much time to the State Colleges as I felt necessary

Pitts told Governor Brown that he was most pleased with Mr Barshytalinis appointment I know he will do a great job for the people of California on this board

The Governor said I regret ne loss of Tom Pitts from this imshy~rtant board very much He served

with great distinction and his good Chester R Bartalinijudgment will certainly be missed

Governor Brown said that he was however very happy to have the service of Chester Bartalini who has proved himshyself in many ways a truly dedicated Californian

In his long service in the Carpenters union Chester Bartalini has shown great administrative talent and executive ability As a union leader he has learned to appreciate the need to keep alive and strengthen Californias system of tuition-free education

Trustee Bartalini is a native of Michigan and has lived here since 1936 He served two terms as a member of the state Correctional Industry Commission and has been executive secretary of the Bay Counties District Council of Carpenters San Francisco since 1950

He is a member of the Commonwealth Club the Elks Eagles Associated Sportsmen of California and the Alameda Rod and Gun Club

He is a director of the Alameda Boys Oub and a member of the Joint Labor University of California committee

He has been president of the California State Council of orpenters since 1958

Trustee Bartalini lives at 1446 Eastshore Drive Alameda with his wife Florinda He has six children and seven grandshychildren

AUGUST 1965

VOL 3 N o 2

FISCAL TASK FORCES DEPLOYED

More efficient ways of staffing and funding systemwide college operations at every level of support are now being sought by eight task forces representing all of the Colleges

Members of the task-force groups were appointed by the CSC Committee on Fiscal Responsibility which was formed in May to implement the provisions of Senate Concurrent Resoshylution No 29 calling for a study of greater fiscal flexibility for the college system

Under the leadership of Harry W Brakebill vice-presishydent at San Francisco SC and permanent chairman of the committee together with Sol Buchalter chairman of the deshypartment of finance and law at San Fernando Valley SC who is serving as the committees executive officer on a fulltime basis during the summer months the task forces will engage in an all-out assault on the CSCs financial problems

Scope of the effort is shown by the assignments given to the groups ( 1) relationships and responsibilities of state agencies involved ( 2) budget formulation processes ( 3) deshytermination of level of support ( 4) budget administration ( 5) accounting and reporting ( 6-7-8) self-supporting funcshytions designated as noninstructional college foundation and summer-session and extension activities

Before hearings start on SCR 29 next Oct the specific tasks that these forces have set for themselves are in order of priority suggesting feasible and attainable methods for imshyproving budget administration defining means for determining adequate support levels and creating a model arrangement for fulfilling accountability requirements relating to expenditure of funds provided by the Legislature In the matter of accountshyability both internal management aspects and external public interest in quality education are being considered by the comshymittee and its forces

Some eighty representatives of the Colleges and the Chanshycellors Office including presidents deans business managers and students have already been named to the various task forces and most of the groups have started work

FIRST SCHOLARSHIP FOR CSSB

A $1000 check has established the first scholarship fund sponsored by a private organization for Cal State San Bernarshydino Donated by The Social Lites a Negro womens social and civic organization it provides an initial $300 for some deservshying student from the San Bernardino area Income from the remainder will go into a permanent fund to which the womens organization will continue to add until a complete scholarship program can be financed from the funds income alone

2

BOOKS MAGAZINES AND PAPERS At the end of last June Dr Monroe E Spaght the forshy

mer student body president at Humboldt SC who is now managing director of more than 500 companies operated by Royal Dutch Shell- a position of corporate eminence never before achieved by any American- became not only an honorary Doctor of Laws by virtue of his CSC degree but also an author of belles-lettres by virtue of his book The Bright Key

Dr Monroe E Spaght (right) receiving the LLD dregree from Trustee James F Thatcher at Humboldt State College June 4 1965

Just published by Appleton-Century-Crofts the book defends with truth urbanity and wit his strong belief that business has real responsibilities to our educational system Dr Spaght earned his PhD in chemistry at a time when much of the business world was convinced such training rendered a man unfit for a life of decision and action Today he is recognized as a leading spokesman for industry on the role of education in contemporary society A trustee of Stanford U he is chairshyman of the Committee for Corporate Support of American Universities and chairman of the New York State Science and Technology Foundation

Literary honors for two other Humboldt alumni were also in the news Mr James Yoakum and Mr Sherman Pearl won first prize in the full-color category of the 1965 Governmentshywide Publications Contest sponsored by the Federal Editors Association with Wildlife on the Public Lands produced for the US Dept of the Interior Bureau of Land Management Mr Yoakum presently a lecturer in natural resources at the College was chief color photographer for the publication Mr Pearl is with the Nevada office of the Bureau Their document is the No 1 seller of the Government Printing Office with the widest distribution of any federal book and is now being transshylated into several foreign languages

A textbook on wildlife management by Dr Raymond Dasmann chairman of HSCs division of natural resources was recently published by John Wiley amp Sons It is his second text The first Environmental Conservation came out in 1959

Dr Ralph Samuelson chairman of the division of lanshyguage arts at the College has been notified that Nineteenth Century American Authors a syllabus of American Literature of which he was an editor is now being published by the

Eurasia Press in New Delhi India for use by more than 30 Indian universities e

College Information Officer Vivienne L George received first place award from the California Press Women for producshytion of Challenge 1964 the first annual Presidents Report In other categories Mrs George received third place for a feature article The Grapes Run Dry Along the Mayacamas published in a national magazine and top honorable mention for a series of newspaper articles about faculty members pubshylished last fall

Dr Clay Hatfield of the biological sciences department at Cal Poly SLO and John Applegarth also a member of the biological sciences faculty have collaborated in the production of a new college biology textbook Applied Microbiology reflecting Dr Hatfields more than 20 years experience as a microbio~ogist National Press Palo Alto published

OVERSEAS DIRECTORS NAMED Resident directors of CSCs International Programs durshy

ing the 1965-66 academic year have been announced by Chancellor Dumke

Named were Dr Leonard Messier of San Diego SC who will supervise the program at the University of Aix-Marseille France Dr John E Merrill also of SDSC at Waseda Univershysity in Tokyo Japan Dr Joachim Stanzel of San Jose SC at the Free University of Berlin and the University of Heidelshyberg Germany Dr Joseph Reid Scott also of SJSC at t University of Madrid and the University of Granada Spai and Dr Donald M Castleberry of San Francisco SC who was appointed for the University of Stockholm and the University of U ppsala Sweden

SAN JOSE OFFERS NEW TUTORIALS The usual courses lectures and grades so familiar to colshy

lege students will be unknown in Sep 1965 to a segment of entering freshmen at San Jose SC

Their unfamiliarity will stem from an experimental proshygram which is officially known at Tutorials in Letters and Science

While tutorial programs are not new the abandonment of the course is a startling departure from the usual educational experiments and reforms according to Dr Mervyn L Cadshywallader initiator of the program and associate professor of sociology at SJSC

Instead of the familiar format the new program will make use of individual tutorials group discussions small seminars and laboratory sessions Successful participants will earn 48 semester units of credit

The chief obligation of the student said Dr John Galm assistant professor of English and one of the first six tutors will be to submit written work to his tutor approximately every two weeks and then to have a conference with him A

Dr Cadwallader said a central theme will be featur each of the four semesters As an example four semesters work could be organized around study of four pivotal epochs in

3

Western Civilization Students will be encouraged to particishyte in some of the planning and evaluation of the program

The faculty-student ratio with the tutorial program will be approximately 1-to-20 This will permit the kind of intimiddot mate association and per~nal exchange between college proshyfessors and students that has become notable by its absence on the campuses of our large colleges and universities said Dr Cadwallader

He continued by stating that this return to a personal education may be one answer to the student demonstrations across the country

Other tutors in addition to Drs Cadwallader and Galm are Dr Richard Tansey professor of art Dr David Newman associate professor of psychology Dr Harold DeBey professor of chemistry and Gary Albright assistant professor of philshyosophy

UC COMMISSIONS CSLB ART

The first catalog of the new lrvine campus 6pound UC pubshylished early this month was designed by Dr Joseph Krause professor of art at Cal State Long Beach

Dr Krauses striking designs for various publications at the College caught the eye of Dr Clayton Garrison a former associate professor of speech at CSLB and present dean of UC Irvines fine arts division He requested Krause to design the new UC catalog

Rose Mary Thompson 21-year-old electronics major at Cal Poly Pomona became the first four-year coed to receive an engineering degree from the College when she graduated this summer Women were not enrolled at that campus until 1961

A CAMPUS CONVERTED into an international showcase for monumental sculpture has made Cal State at Long Beach a cynosure of cultural controversy this summer Bold abstract works formed of concrete steel redwood aluminum pipes and paint challenge the viewer as nine world-famous sculptors complete their contributions to the first International Sculpture Symposium in this country Their creations will remain on permanent exhibition at the College Along an area 100 ft in length and about 28 ft wide at the Seventh Street corner of the campus 19 massive forms 8-to-1 0 ft high (model pictured center-left above) constitute the sculpture of J J Beljon director of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in The Hague Holland Sculptor Beljon (upper left) contemplating the extent of his work under construction said wryly Gallery art and art dealers are doomed they have no future Other photos proceeding clockwise show- Gabriel Kohn of the US Andre Bloc of France

osso Eloul of Israel and directly under the center portrait of Piotr Kowalski a Polish sculptor residing in France an interior view of the ulptors workshop with student helper in foreground and with plaster on hand Kenneth Glenn director of the symposium who is also proshyssor of art at CSLB Left corner picture was taken at Bethlehem Steels Terminal Island plant where donated fabrication of plate contributed

by Triangle Steel Co and Ge~teral Pipe amp Supply Co vitalized the designs of Canadian sculptor Robert Murray Also participating in the symshyposium but not shown here are sculptors Kenjiro Azuma and Claire Falkenstein as well as muralist Rita Letendre who is sculptor Elouls wife

4

The ACADEMIC SENATE REGISTER

Headlines in the Los Angeles Times of last Jul 2 anshynounced Educators Hail Budget as Victory Yet I suspect for a large portion of the faculties the salary increase and the state college quality package of funds for research travel sabshybaticals and distinguished teaching represented a hollow vicshytory Not primarily because the salary increase was too little too late (though it was) and certainly not because the other benefits are insignificant Many of us are rather in the position ~f the teenager whose desire to be understood and respected Is not compensated by an increase in his allowance For those who react this way (I include myself) the most hopeful aspects of the past year are to be found in those activities of ad hoc faculty groups professional organizations the Chancellors Office Trustees and Academic Senate which have sought to create and enlarge public respect and support for the goals of the State Colleges

If we have sometimes acted inexpediently or undiploshymatically we need not apologize This is not a job for imageshymakers our problems will not always respond to the tech shyniques of politics as the art of the possible Our task has been to prepare the seedbed for a dialogue with the community and with the Legislature through which the purposes and aspirations of the state college experiment may be clarified We need now to consider as we gain the attention of the public and the Legislature what we are to say

Our problem is put into sharp focus by an observation of the young John Adams in 1765 Reflecting on the advanshytages bequeathed by the early settlers to their progeny Adams noted the unique civil and religious principles on the basis of which they laid very early the foundation of colleges and invested them with ample privileges and emoluments It is remarkable he added that they have left among their posshyterity so universal an affection and veneration for those seminshyaries and for liberal education that the meanest of the people contribute cheerfully to the support and maintenance of them every year and that nothing is more generally popular than projections for the honor reputation and advantage of those seats of learning

Is not our task to rekindle and revitalize the universal affection and veneration which alone in the long run can provide the basis for public support of our seminaries The civil and religious principles which supported it in times past Adams went on to note valued knowledge as the means to liberty Perhaps the purpose of the State Colleges reflects the universalization of that insight If so it is time to get about clarifying our own ideas on the matter and finding the means to communicate them to others If we are to survive we must become the peoples colleges not in an ad-mans empty phrase and not in the peoples present understanding but in a sense we have yet to define clearly for ourselves and then to communicate to the public As the Academic Senate

begins its third year of existence in the shadow of continuitA fiscal crises we will I hope turn part of our energies to ponde ing how to recover and how to deserve that universal affection and veneration -John C Livingston Chairman

STRONG POLICY ON COLLEGE SUPPORT ADOPTED With four new California State Colleges established by

the Legislature-in Contra Costa Kern San Mateo Santa Clara and Ventura counties-the Board of Trustees has adopted a policy to protect the support base of the existing Colleges

In a resolution of Jul 29 the Trustees expressed their concern for the financing of the California State Colleges at a level to maintain and strengthen educational excellence and declared that the financing of existing State Colleges should be maintained at the proper level and not be adversely affected by the financial impact of the addition of new State Colleges

Chancellor Dumke pointed out that the great strides made in the recent legislative session in faculty salary increases library and sabbatical leave augmentations research and travel allowances were the result of hard work in presenting the case for the State Colleges to the Legislature We must make it just as clear he said that our support budget for existing Colleges is still at an inadequate level and must not be diluted further by draining off funds to establish new Colleges

FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS

Three humanities professors from San Francisco SC ha been awarded Guggenheim Fellowships Ruby Cohn associa professor of English and world literarure Mark Harris associshyate professor of English and director of creative writing and Rudolph Weingartner associate professor of philosophy and chairman of the philosophy department

It is believed that no Cal State campus has ever before received three Guggenheims at one time

Dr George Huppert assistant professor of history at Cal State Hayward has been awarded a fellowship by the American Council of Learned Societies to complete research on The New History of the French Renaissance + + + Fellowships for srudy and travel in India have been awarded to Dr Joseph Pugliese CSH associate professor of art and to Glenn Glasow assistant professor of music by the Instirute of International Education Only 2i fellowships were awarded nationwide

Faculty fellowships provided by the National Science Foundation will enable Dr Seymour Mack associate professor of geology at Fresno SC to take his sabbatical leave at Stanford U for study and research in geo-chemistry and hydrology Earl L Pye of the physical sciences faculty at Cal Poly Pomona to complete his chemistry research project on detergent mishycelles at Louisiana State U and Dr Donald E Bianchi associshyate professor of biology at San Fernando Valley SC to spend a year at the University of Geneva Switzerland

==================~middotshyTHE CALIFORNIA_STA~ COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymond A ~ydell Ex~uhve Voce-Chancellor Harry E Brakebill Vice-Chancellor Busness Affaors C Mansel Keene Assost~nt Chancellor Faculty and Staff Affaors The Callforma State Colleges Rev1ew is issued by the Public Affa irs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

Page 12: September 21, 1965 Staff Bulletin

THE CALIFORNIA STATE COLLEGES

EVIE~

TRUSTEES IN REVIEW

Governor Edmund G Brown recently appointed Chester R Bartalini 62 president of the California State Council of Carpenters to succeed Thomas L Pitts secretary-treasurer of the California Labor Federation as a member of CSCs Board of Trustees

Trustee Pitts said he had asked the Governor to replace him on the board because the demands of his union post have made it impossible for me to give as much time to the State Colleges as I felt necessary

Pitts told Governor Brown that he was most pleased with Mr Barshytalinis appointment I know he will do a great job for the people of California on this board

The Governor said I regret ne loss of Tom Pitts from this imshy~rtant board very much He served

with great distinction and his good Chester R Bartalinijudgment will certainly be missed

Governor Brown said that he was however very happy to have the service of Chester Bartalini who has proved himshyself in many ways a truly dedicated Californian

In his long service in the Carpenters union Chester Bartalini has shown great administrative talent and executive ability As a union leader he has learned to appreciate the need to keep alive and strengthen Californias system of tuition-free education

Trustee Bartalini is a native of Michigan and has lived here since 1936 He served two terms as a member of the state Correctional Industry Commission and has been executive secretary of the Bay Counties District Council of Carpenters San Francisco since 1950

He is a member of the Commonwealth Club the Elks Eagles Associated Sportsmen of California and the Alameda Rod and Gun Club

He is a director of the Alameda Boys Oub and a member of the Joint Labor University of California committee

He has been president of the California State Council of orpenters since 1958

Trustee Bartalini lives at 1446 Eastshore Drive Alameda with his wife Florinda He has six children and seven grandshychildren

AUGUST 1965

VOL 3 N o 2

FISCAL TASK FORCES DEPLOYED

More efficient ways of staffing and funding systemwide college operations at every level of support are now being sought by eight task forces representing all of the Colleges

Members of the task-force groups were appointed by the CSC Committee on Fiscal Responsibility which was formed in May to implement the provisions of Senate Concurrent Resoshylution No 29 calling for a study of greater fiscal flexibility for the college system

Under the leadership of Harry W Brakebill vice-presishydent at San Francisco SC and permanent chairman of the committee together with Sol Buchalter chairman of the deshypartment of finance and law at San Fernando Valley SC who is serving as the committees executive officer on a fulltime basis during the summer months the task forces will engage in an all-out assault on the CSCs financial problems

Scope of the effort is shown by the assignments given to the groups ( 1) relationships and responsibilities of state agencies involved ( 2) budget formulation processes ( 3) deshytermination of level of support ( 4) budget administration ( 5) accounting and reporting ( 6-7-8) self-supporting funcshytions designated as noninstructional college foundation and summer-session and extension activities

Before hearings start on SCR 29 next Oct the specific tasks that these forces have set for themselves are in order of priority suggesting feasible and attainable methods for imshyproving budget administration defining means for determining adequate support levels and creating a model arrangement for fulfilling accountability requirements relating to expenditure of funds provided by the Legislature In the matter of accountshyability both internal management aspects and external public interest in quality education are being considered by the comshymittee and its forces

Some eighty representatives of the Colleges and the Chanshycellors Office including presidents deans business managers and students have already been named to the various task forces and most of the groups have started work

FIRST SCHOLARSHIP FOR CSSB

A $1000 check has established the first scholarship fund sponsored by a private organization for Cal State San Bernarshydino Donated by The Social Lites a Negro womens social and civic organization it provides an initial $300 for some deservshying student from the San Bernardino area Income from the remainder will go into a permanent fund to which the womens organization will continue to add until a complete scholarship program can be financed from the funds income alone

2

BOOKS MAGAZINES AND PAPERS At the end of last June Dr Monroe E Spaght the forshy

mer student body president at Humboldt SC who is now managing director of more than 500 companies operated by Royal Dutch Shell- a position of corporate eminence never before achieved by any American- became not only an honorary Doctor of Laws by virtue of his CSC degree but also an author of belles-lettres by virtue of his book The Bright Key

Dr Monroe E Spaght (right) receiving the LLD dregree from Trustee James F Thatcher at Humboldt State College June 4 1965

Just published by Appleton-Century-Crofts the book defends with truth urbanity and wit his strong belief that business has real responsibilities to our educational system Dr Spaght earned his PhD in chemistry at a time when much of the business world was convinced such training rendered a man unfit for a life of decision and action Today he is recognized as a leading spokesman for industry on the role of education in contemporary society A trustee of Stanford U he is chairshyman of the Committee for Corporate Support of American Universities and chairman of the New York State Science and Technology Foundation

Literary honors for two other Humboldt alumni were also in the news Mr James Yoakum and Mr Sherman Pearl won first prize in the full-color category of the 1965 Governmentshywide Publications Contest sponsored by the Federal Editors Association with Wildlife on the Public Lands produced for the US Dept of the Interior Bureau of Land Management Mr Yoakum presently a lecturer in natural resources at the College was chief color photographer for the publication Mr Pearl is with the Nevada office of the Bureau Their document is the No 1 seller of the Government Printing Office with the widest distribution of any federal book and is now being transshylated into several foreign languages

A textbook on wildlife management by Dr Raymond Dasmann chairman of HSCs division of natural resources was recently published by John Wiley amp Sons It is his second text The first Environmental Conservation came out in 1959

Dr Ralph Samuelson chairman of the division of lanshyguage arts at the College has been notified that Nineteenth Century American Authors a syllabus of American Literature of which he was an editor is now being published by the

Eurasia Press in New Delhi India for use by more than 30 Indian universities e

College Information Officer Vivienne L George received first place award from the California Press Women for producshytion of Challenge 1964 the first annual Presidents Report In other categories Mrs George received third place for a feature article The Grapes Run Dry Along the Mayacamas published in a national magazine and top honorable mention for a series of newspaper articles about faculty members pubshylished last fall

Dr Clay Hatfield of the biological sciences department at Cal Poly SLO and John Applegarth also a member of the biological sciences faculty have collaborated in the production of a new college biology textbook Applied Microbiology reflecting Dr Hatfields more than 20 years experience as a microbio~ogist National Press Palo Alto published

OVERSEAS DIRECTORS NAMED Resident directors of CSCs International Programs durshy

ing the 1965-66 academic year have been announced by Chancellor Dumke

Named were Dr Leonard Messier of San Diego SC who will supervise the program at the University of Aix-Marseille France Dr John E Merrill also of SDSC at Waseda Univershysity in Tokyo Japan Dr Joachim Stanzel of San Jose SC at the Free University of Berlin and the University of Heidelshyberg Germany Dr Joseph Reid Scott also of SJSC at t University of Madrid and the University of Granada Spai and Dr Donald M Castleberry of San Francisco SC who was appointed for the University of Stockholm and the University of U ppsala Sweden

SAN JOSE OFFERS NEW TUTORIALS The usual courses lectures and grades so familiar to colshy

lege students will be unknown in Sep 1965 to a segment of entering freshmen at San Jose SC

Their unfamiliarity will stem from an experimental proshygram which is officially known at Tutorials in Letters and Science

While tutorial programs are not new the abandonment of the course is a startling departure from the usual educational experiments and reforms according to Dr Mervyn L Cadshywallader initiator of the program and associate professor of sociology at SJSC

Instead of the familiar format the new program will make use of individual tutorials group discussions small seminars and laboratory sessions Successful participants will earn 48 semester units of credit

The chief obligation of the student said Dr John Galm assistant professor of English and one of the first six tutors will be to submit written work to his tutor approximately every two weeks and then to have a conference with him A

Dr Cadwallader said a central theme will be featur each of the four semesters As an example four semesters work could be organized around study of four pivotal epochs in

3

Western Civilization Students will be encouraged to particishyte in some of the planning and evaluation of the program

The faculty-student ratio with the tutorial program will be approximately 1-to-20 This will permit the kind of intimiddot mate association and per~nal exchange between college proshyfessors and students that has become notable by its absence on the campuses of our large colleges and universities said Dr Cadwallader

He continued by stating that this return to a personal education may be one answer to the student demonstrations across the country

Other tutors in addition to Drs Cadwallader and Galm are Dr Richard Tansey professor of art Dr David Newman associate professor of psychology Dr Harold DeBey professor of chemistry and Gary Albright assistant professor of philshyosophy

UC COMMISSIONS CSLB ART

The first catalog of the new lrvine campus 6pound UC pubshylished early this month was designed by Dr Joseph Krause professor of art at Cal State Long Beach

Dr Krauses striking designs for various publications at the College caught the eye of Dr Clayton Garrison a former associate professor of speech at CSLB and present dean of UC Irvines fine arts division He requested Krause to design the new UC catalog

Rose Mary Thompson 21-year-old electronics major at Cal Poly Pomona became the first four-year coed to receive an engineering degree from the College when she graduated this summer Women were not enrolled at that campus until 1961

A CAMPUS CONVERTED into an international showcase for monumental sculpture has made Cal State at Long Beach a cynosure of cultural controversy this summer Bold abstract works formed of concrete steel redwood aluminum pipes and paint challenge the viewer as nine world-famous sculptors complete their contributions to the first International Sculpture Symposium in this country Their creations will remain on permanent exhibition at the College Along an area 100 ft in length and about 28 ft wide at the Seventh Street corner of the campus 19 massive forms 8-to-1 0 ft high (model pictured center-left above) constitute the sculpture of J J Beljon director of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in The Hague Holland Sculptor Beljon (upper left) contemplating the extent of his work under construction said wryly Gallery art and art dealers are doomed they have no future Other photos proceeding clockwise show- Gabriel Kohn of the US Andre Bloc of France

osso Eloul of Israel and directly under the center portrait of Piotr Kowalski a Polish sculptor residing in France an interior view of the ulptors workshop with student helper in foreground and with plaster on hand Kenneth Glenn director of the symposium who is also proshyssor of art at CSLB Left corner picture was taken at Bethlehem Steels Terminal Island plant where donated fabrication of plate contributed

by Triangle Steel Co and Ge~teral Pipe amp Supply Co vitalized the designs of Canadian sculptor Robert Murray Also participating in the symshyposium but not shown here are sculptors Kenjiro Azuma and Claire Falkenstein as well as muralist Rita Letendre who is sculptor Elouls wife

4

The ACADEMIC SENATE REGISTER

Headlines in the Los Angeles Times of last Jul 2 anshynounced Educators Hail Budget as Victory Yet I suspect for a large portion of the faculties the salary increase and the state college quality package of funds for research travel sabshybaticals and distinguished teaching represented a hollow vicshytory Not primarily because the salary increase was too little too late (though it was) and certainly not because the other benefits are insignificant Many of us are rather in the position ~f the teenager whose desire to be understood and respected Is not compensated by an increase in his allowance For those who react this way (I include myself) the most hopeful aspects of the past year are to be found in those activities of ad hoc faculty groups professional organizations the Chancellors Office Trustees and Academic Senate which have sought to create and enlarge public respect and support for the goals of the State Colleges

If we have sometimes acted inexpediently or undiploshymatically we need not apologize This is not a job for imageshymakers our problems will not always respond to the tech shyniques of politics as the art of the possible Our task has been to prepare the seedbed for a dialogue with the community and with the Legislature through which the purposes and aspirations of the state college experiment may be clarified We need now to consider as we gain the attention of the public and the Legislature what we are to say

Our problem is put into sharp focus by an observation of the young John Adams in 1765 Reflecting on the advanshytages bequeathed by the early settlers to their progeny Adams noted the unique civil and religious principles on the basis of which they laid very early the foundation of colleges and invested them with ample privileges and emoluments It is remarkable he added that they have left among their posshyterity so universal an affection and veneration for those seminshyaries and for liberal education that the meanest of the people contribute cheerfully to the support and maintenance of them every year and that nothing is more generally popular than projections for the honor reputation and advantage of those seats of learning

Is not our task to rekindle and revitalize the universal affection and veneration which alone in the long run can provide the basis for public support of our seminaries The civil and religious principles which supported it in times past Adams went on to note valued knowledge as the means to liberty Perhaps the purpose of the State Colleges reflects the universalization of that insight If so it is time to get about clarifying our own ideas on the matter and finding the means to communicate them to others If we are to survive we must become the peoples colleges not in an ad-mans empty phrase and not in the peoples present understanding but in a sense we have yet to define clearly for ourselves and then to communicate to the public As the Academic Senate

begins its third year of existence in the shadow of continuitA fiscal crises we will I hope turn part of our energies to ponde ing how to recover and how to deserve that universal affection and veneration -John C Livingston Chairman

STRONG POLICY ON COLLEGE SUPPORT ADOPTED With four new California State Colleges established by

the Legislature-in Contra Costa Kern San Mateo Santa Clara and Ventura counties-the Board of Trustees has adopted a policy to protect the support base of the existing Colleges

In a resolution of Jul 29 the Trustees expressed their concern for the financing of the California State Colleges at a level to maintain and strengthen educational excellence and declared that the financing of existing State Colleges should be maintained at the proper level and not be adversely affected by the financial impact of the addition of new State Colleges

Chancellor Dumke pointed out that the great strides made in the recent legislative session in faculty salary increases library and sabbatical leave augmentations research and travel allowances were the result of hard work in presenting the case for the State Colleges to the Legislature We must make it just as clear he said that our support budget for existing Colleges is still at an inadequate level and must not be diluted further by draining off funds to establish new Colleges

FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS

Three humanities professors from San Francisco SC ha been awarded Guggenheim Fellowships Ruby Cohn associa professor of English and world literarure Mark Harris associshyate professor of English and director of creative writing and Rudolph Weingartner associate professor of philosophy and chairman of the philosophy department

It is believed that no Cal State campus has ever before received three Guggenheims at one time

Dr George Huppert assistant professor of history at Cal State Hayward has been awarded a fellowship by the American Council of Learned Societies to complete research on The New History of the French Renaissance + + + Fellowships for srudy and travel in India have been awarded to Dr Joseph Pugliese CSH associate professor of art and to Glenn Glasow assistant professor of music by the Instirute of International Education Only 2i fellowships were awarded nationwide

Faculty fellowships provided by the National Science Foundation will enable Dr Seymour Mack associate professor of geology at Fresno SC to take his sabbatical leave at Stanford U for study and research in geo-chemistry and hydrology Earl L Pye of the physical sciences faculty at Cal Poly Pomona to complete his chemistry research project on detergent mishycelles at Louisiana State U and Dr Donald E Bianchi associshyate professor of biology at San Fernando Valley SC to spend a year at the University of Geneva Switzerland

==================~middotshyTHE CALIFORNIA_STA~ COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymond A ~ydell Ex~uhve Voce-Chancellor Harry E Brakebill Vice-Chancellor Busness Affaors C Mansel Keene Assost~nt Chancellor Faculty and Staff Affaors The Callforma State Colleges Rev1ew is issued by the Public Affa irs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

Page 13: September 21, 1965 Staff Bulletin

2

BOOKS MAGAZINES AND PAPERS At the end of last June Dr Monroe E Spaght the forshy

mer student body president at Humboldt SC who is now managing director of more than 500 companies operated by Royal Dutch Shell- a position of corporate eminence never before achieved by any American- became not only an honorary Doctor of Laws by virtue of his CSC degree but also an author of belles-lettres by virtue of his book The Bright Key

Dr Monroe E Spaght (right) receiving the LLD dregree from Trustee James F Thatcher at Humboldt State College June 4 1965

Just published by Appleton-Century-Crofts the book defends with truth urbanity and wit his strong belief that business has real responsibilities to our educational system Dr Spaght earned his PhD in chemistry at a time when much of the business world was convinced such training rendered a man unfit for a life of decision and action Today he is recognized as a leading spokesman for industry on the role of education in contemporary society A trustee of Stanford U he is chairshyman of the Committee for Corporate Support of American Universities and chairman of the New York State Science and Technology Foundation

Literary honors for two other Humboldt alumni were also in the news Mr James Yoakum and Mr Sherman Pearl won first prize in the full-color category of the 1965 Governmentshywide Publications Contest sponsored by the Federal Editors Association with Wildlife on the Public Lands produced for the US Dept of the Interior Bureau of Land Management Mr Yoakum presently a lecturer in natural resources at the College was chief color photographer for the publication Mr Pearl is with the Nevada office of the Bureau Their document is the No 1 seller of the Government Printing Office with the widest distribution of any federal book and is now being transshylated into several foreign languages

A textbook on wildlife management by Dr Raymond Dasmann chairman of HSCs division of natural resources was recently published by John Wiley amp Sons It is his second text The first Environmental Conservation came out in 1959

Dr Ralph Samuelson chairman of the division of lanshyguage arts at the College has been notified that Nineteenth Century American Authors a syllabus of American Literature of which he was an editor is now being published by the

Eurasia Press in New Delhi India for use by more than 30 Indian universities e

College Information Officer Vivienne L George received first place award from the California Press Women for producshytion of Challenge 1964 the first annual Presidents Report In other categories Mrs George received third place for a feature article The Grapes Run Dry Along the Mayacamas published in a national magazine and top honorable mention for a series of newspaper articles about faculty members pubshylished last fall

Dr Clay Hatfield of the biological sciences department at Cal Poly SLO and John Applegarth also a member of the biological sciences faculty have collaborated in the production of a new college biology textbook Applied Microbiology reflecting Dr Hatfields more than 20 years experience as a microbio~ogist National Press Palo Alto published

OVERSEAS DIRECTORS NAMED Resident directors of CSCs International Programs durshy

ing the 1965-66 academic year have been announced by Chancellor Dumke

Named were Dr Leonard Messier of San Diego SC who will supervise the program at the University of Aix-Marseille France Dr John E Merrill also of SDSC at Waseda Univershysity in Tokyo Japan Dr Joachim Stanzel of San Jose SC at the Free University of Berlin and the University of Heidelshyberg Germany Dr Joseph Reid Scott also of SJSC at t University of Madrid and the University of Granada Spai and Dr Donald M Castleberry of San Francisco SC who was appointed for the University of Stockholm and the University of U ppsala Sweden

SAN JOSE OFFERS NEW TUTORIALS The usual courses lectures and grades so familiar to colshy

lege students will be unknown in Sep 1965 to a segment of entering freshmen at San Jose SC

Their unfamiliarity will stem from an experimental proshygram which is officially known at Tutorials in Letters and Science

While tutorial programs are not new the abandonment of the course is a startling departure from the usual educational experiments and reforms according to Dr Mervyn L Cadshywallader initiator of the program and associate professor of sociology at SJSC

Instead of the familiar format the new program will make use of individual tutorials group discussions small seminars and laboratory sessions Successful participants will earn 48 semester units of credit

The chief obligation of the student said Dr John Galm assistant professor of English and one of the first six tutors will be to submit written work to his tutor approximately every two weeks and then to have a conference with him A

Dr Cadwallader said a central theme will be featur each of the four semesters As an example four semesters work could be organized around study of four pivotal epochs in

3

Western Civilization Students will be encouraged to particishyte in some of the planning and evaluation of the program

The faculty-student ratio with the tutorial program will be approximately 1-to-20 This will permit the kind of intimiddot mate association and per~nal exchange between college proshyfessors and students that has become notable by its absence on the campuses of our large colleges and universities said Dr Cadwallader

He continued by stating that this return to a personal education may be one answer to the student demonstrations across the country

Other tutors in addition to Drs Cadwallader and Galm are Dr Richard Tansey professor of art Dr David Newman associate professor of psychology Dr Harold DeBey professor of chemistry and Gary Albright assistant professor of philshyosophy

UC COMMISSIONS CSLB ART

The first catalog of the new lrvine campus 6pound UC pubshylished early this month was designed by Dr Joseph Krause professor of art at Cal State Long Beach

Dr Krauses striking designs for various publications at the College caught the eye of Dr Clayton Garrison a former associate professor of speech at CSLB and present dean of UC Irvines fine arts division He requested Krause to design the new UC catalog

Rose Mary Thompson 21-year-old electronics major at Cal Poly Pomona became the first four-year coed to receive an engineering degree from the College when she graduated this summer Women were not enrolled at that campus until 1961

A CAMPUS CONVERTED into an international showcase for monumental sculpture has made Cal State at Long Beach a cynosure of cultural controversy this summer Bold abstract works formed of concrete steel redwood aluminum pipes and paint challenge the viewer as nine world-famous sculptors complete their contributions to the first International Sculpture Symposium in this country Their creations will remain on permanent exhibition at the College Along an area 100 ft in length and about 28 ft wide at the Seventh Street corner of the campus 19 massive forms 8-to-1 0 ft high (model pictured center-left above) constitute the sculpture of J J Beljon director of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in The Hague Holland Sculptor Beljon (upper left) contemplating the extent of his work under construction said wryly Gallery art and art dealers are doomed they have no future Other photos proceeding clockwise show- Gabriel Kohn of the US Andre Bloc of France

osso Eloul of Israel and directly under the center portrait of Piotr Kowalski a Polish sculptor residing in France an interior view of the ulptors workshop with student helper in foreground and with plaster on hand Kenneth Glenn director of the symposium who is also proshyssor of art at CSLB Left corner picture was taken at Bethlehem Steels Terminal Island plant where donated fabrication of plate contributed

by Triangle Steel Co and Ge~teral Pipe amp Supply Co vitalized the designs of Canadian sculptor Robert Murray Also participating in the symshyposium but not shown here are sculptors Kenjiro Azuma and Claire Falkenstein as well as muralist Rita Letendre who is sculptor Elouls wife

4

The ACADEMIC SENATE REGISTER

Headlines in the Los Angeles Times of last Jul 2 anshynounced Educators Hail Budget as Victory Yet I suspect for a large portion of the faculties the salary increase and the state college quality package of funds for research travel sabshybaticals and distinguished teaching represented a hollow vicshytory Not primarily because the salary increase was too little too late (though it was) and certainly not because the other benefits are insignificant Many of us are rather in the position ~f the teenager whose desire to be understood and respected Is not compensated by an increase in his allowance For those who react this way (I include myself) the most hopeful aspects of the past year are to be found in those activities of ad hoc faculty groups professional organizations the Chancellors Office Trustees and Academic Senate which have sought to create and enlarge public respect and support for the goals of the State Colleges

If we have sometimes acted inexpediently or undiploshymatically we need not apologize This is not a job for imageshymakers our problems will not always respond to the tech shyniques of politics as the art of the possible Our task has been to prepare the seedbed for a dialogue with the community and with the Legislature through which the purposes and aspirations of the state college experiment may be clarified We need now to consider as we gain the attention of the public and the Legislature what we are to say

Our problem is put into sharp focus by an observation of the young John Adams in 1765 Reflecting on the advanshytages bequeathed by the early settlers to their progeny Adams noted the unique civil and religious principles on the basis of which they laid very early the foundation of colleges and invested them with ample privileges and emoluments It is remarkable he added that they have left among their posshyterity so universal an affection and veneration for those seminshyaries and for liberal education that the meanest of the people contribute cheerfully to the support and maintenance of them every year and that nothing is more generally popular than projections for the honor reputation and advantage of those seats of learning

Is not our task to rekindle and revitalize the universal affection and veneration which alone in the long run can provide the basis for public support of our seminaries The civil and religious principles which supported it in times past Adams went on to note valued knowledge as the means to liberty Perhaps the purpose of the State Colleges reflects the universalization of that insight If so it is time to get about clarifying our own ideas on the matter and finding the means to communicate them to others If we are to survive we must become the peoples colleges not in an ad-mans empty phrase and not in the peoples present understanding but in a sense we have yet to define clearly for ourselves and then to communicate to the public As the Academic Senate

begins its third year of existence in the shadow of continuitA fiscal crises we will I hope turn part of our energies to ponde ing how to recover and how to deserve that universal affection and veneration -John C Livingston Chairman

STRONG POLICY ON COLLEGE SUPPORT ADOPTED With four new California State Colleges established by

the Legislature-in Contra Costa Kern San Mateo Santa Clara and Ventura counties-the Board of Trustees has adopted a policy to protect the support base of the existing Colleges

In a resolution of Jul 29 the Trustees expressed their concern for the financing of the California State Colleges at a level to maintain and strengthen educational excellence and declared that the financing of existing State Colleges should be maintained at the proper level and not be adversely affected by the financial impact of the addition of new State Colleges

Chancellor Dumke pointed out that the great strides made in the recent legislative session in faculty salary increases library and sabbatical leave augmentations research and travel allowances were the result of hard work in presenting the case for the State Colleges to the Legislature We must make it just as clear he said that our support budget for existing Colleges is still at an inadequate level and must not be diluted further by draining off funds to establish new Colleges

FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS

Three humanities professors from San Francisco SC ha been awarded Guggenheim Fellowships Ruby Cohn associa professor of English and world literarure Mark Harris associshyate professor of English and director of creative writing and Rudolph Weingartner associate professor of philosophy and chairman of the philosophy department

It is believed that no Cal State campus has ever before received three Guggenheims at one time

Dr George Huppert assistant professor of history at Cal State Hayward has been awarded a fellowship by the American Council of Learned Societies to complete research on The New History of the French Renaissance + + + Fellowships for srudy and travel in India have been awarded to Dr Joseph Pugliese CSH associate professor of art and to Glenn Glasow assistant professor of music by the Instirute of International Education Only 2i fellowships were awarded nationwide

Faculty fellowships provided by the National Science Foundation will enable Dr Seymour Mack associate professor of geology at Fresno SC to take his sabbatical leave at Stanford U for study and research in geo-chemistry and hydrology Earl L Pye of the physical sciences faculty at Cal Poly Pomona to complete his chemistry research project on detergent mishycelles at Louisiana State U and Dr Donald E Bianchi associshyate professor of biology at San Fernando Valley SC to spend a year at the University of Geneva Switzerland

==================~middotshyTHE CALIFORNIA_STA~ COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymond A ~ydell Ex~uhve Voce-Chancellor Harry E Brakebill Vice-Chancellor Busness Affaors C Mansel Keene Assost~nt Chancellor Faculty and Staff Affaors The Callforma State Colleges Rev1ew is issued by the Public Affa irs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

Page 14: September 21, 1965 Staff Bulletin

3

Western Civilization Students will be encouraged to particishyte in some of the planning and evaluation of the program

The faculty-student ratio with the tutorial program will be approximately 1-to-20 This will permit the kind of intimiddot mate association and per~nal exchange between college proshyfessors and students that has become notable by its absence on the campuses of our large colleges and universities said Dr Cadwallader

He continued by stating that this return to a personal education may be one answer to the student demonstrations across the country

Other tutors in addition to Drs Cadwallader and Galm are Dr Richard Tansey professor of art Dr David Newman associate professor of psychology Dr Harold DeBey professor of chemistry and Gary Albright assistant professor of philshyosophy

UC COMMISSIONS CSLB ART

The first catalog of the new lrvine campus 6pound UC pubshylished early this month was designed by Dr Joseph Krause professor of art at Cal State Long Beach

Dr Krauses striking designs for various publications at the College caught the eye of Dr Clayton Garrison a former associate professor of speech at CSLB and present dean of UC Irvines fine arts division He requested Krause to design the new UC catalog

Rose Mary Thompson 21-year-old electronics major at Cal Poly Pomona became the first four-year coed to receive an engineering degree from the College when she graduated this summer Women were not enrolled at that campus until 1961

A CAMPUS CONVERTED into an international showcase for monumental sculpture has made Cal State at Long Beach a cynosure of cultural controversy this summer Bold abstract works formed of concrete steel redwood aluminum pipes and paint challenge the viewer as nine world-famous sculptors complete their contributions to the first International Sculpture Symposium in this country Their creations will remain on permanent exhibition at the College Along an area 100 ft in length and about 28 ft wide at the Seventh Street corner of the campus 19 massive forms 8-to-1 0 ft high (model pictured center-left above) constitute the sculpture of J J Beljon director of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in The Hague Holland Sculptor Beljon (upper left) contemplating the extent of his work under construction said wryly Gallery art and art dealers are doomed they have no future Other photos proceeding clockwise show- Gabriel Kohn of the US Andre Bloc of France

osso Eloul of Israel and directly under the center portrait of Piotr Kowalski a Polish sculptor residing in France an interior view of the ulptors workshop with student helper in foreground and with plaster on hand Kenneth Glenn director of the symposium who is also proshyssor of art at CSLB Left corner picture was taken at Bethlehem Steels Terminal Island plant where donated fabrication of plate contributed

by Triangle Steel Co and Ge~teral Pipe amp Supply Co vitalized the designs of Canadian sculptor Robert Murray Also participating in the symshyposium but not shown here are sculptors Kenjiro Azuma and Claire Falkenstein as well as muralist Rita Letendre who is sculptor Elouls wife

4

The ACADEMIC SENATE REGISTER

Headlines in the Los Angeles Times of last Jul 2 anshynounced Educators Hail Budget as Victory Yet I suspect for a large portion of the faculties the salary increase and the state college quality package of funds for research travel sabshybaticals and distinguished teaching represented a hollow vicshytory Not primarily because the salary increase was too little too late (though it was) and certainly not because the other benefits are insignificant Many of us are rather in the position ~f the teenager whose desire to be understood and respected Is not compensated by an increase in his allowance For those who react this way (I include myself) the most hopeful aspects of the past year are to be found in those activities of ad hoc faculty groups professional organizations the Chancellors Office Trustees and Academic Senate which have sought to create and enlarge public respect and support for the goals of the State Colleges

If we have sometimes acted inexpediently or undiploshymatically we need not apologize This is not a job for imageshymakers our problems will not always respond to the tech shyniques of politics as the art of the possible Our task has been to prepare the seedbed for a dialogue with the community and with the Legislature through which the purposes and aspirations of the state college experiment may be clarified We need now to consider as we gain the attention of the public and the Legislature what we are to say

Our problem is put into sharp focus by an observation of the young John Adams in 1765 Reflecting on the advanshytages bequeathed by the early settlers to their progeny Adams noted the unique civil and religious principles on the basis of which they laid very early the foundation of colleges and invested them with ample privileges and emoluments It is remarkable he added that they have left among their posshyterity so universal an affection and veneration for those seminshyaries and for liberal education that the meanest of the people contribute cheerfully to the support and maintenance of them every year and that nothing is more generally popular than projections for the honor reputation and advantage of those seats of learning

Is not our task to rekindle and revitalize the universal affection and veneration which alone in the long run can provide the basis for public support of our seminaries The civil and religious principles which supported it in times past Adams went on to note valued knowledge as the means to liberty Perhaps the purpose of the State Colleges reflects the universalization of that insight If so it is time to get about clarifying our own ideas on the matter and finding the means to communicate them to others If we are to survive we must become the peoples colleges not in an ad-mans empty phrase and not in the peoples present understanding but in a sense we have yet to define clearly for ourselves and then to communicate to the public As the Academic Senate

begins its third year of existence in the shadow of continuitA fiscal crises we will I hope turn part of our energies to ponde ing how to recover and how to deserve that universal affection and veneration -John C Livingston Chairman

STRONG POLICY ON COLLEGE SUPPORT ADOPTED With four new California State Colleges established by

the Legislature-in Contra Costa Kern San Mateo Santa Clara and Ventura counties-the Board of Trustees has adopted a policy to protect the support base of the existing Colleges

In a resolution of Jul 29 the Trustees expressed their concern for the financing of the California State Colleges at a level to maintain and strengthen educational excellence and declared that the financing of existing State Colleges should be maintained at the proper level and not be adversely affected by the financial impact of the addition of new State Colleges

Chancellor Dumke pointed out that the great strides made in the recent legislative session in faculty salary increases library and sabbatical leave augmentations research and travel allowances were the result of hard work in presenting the case for the State Colleges to the Legislature We must make it just as clear he said that our support budget for existing Colleges is still at an inadequate level and must not be diluted further by draining off funds to establish new Colleges

FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS

Three humanities professors from San Francisco SC ha been awarded Guggenheim Fellowships Ruby Cohn associa professor of English and world literarure Mark Harris associshyate professor of English and director of creative writing and Rudolph Weingartner associate professor of philosophy and chairman of the philosophy department

It is believed that no Cal State campus has ever before received three Guggenheims at one time

Dr George Huppert assistant professor of history at Cal State Hayward has been awarded a fellowship by the American Council of Learned Societies to complete research on The New History of the French Renaissance + + + Fellowships for srudy and travel in India have been awarded to Dr Joseph Pugliese CSH associate professor of art and to Glenn Glasow assistant professor of music by the Instirute of International Education Only 2i fellowships were awarded nationwide

Faculty fellowships provided by the National Science Foundation will enable Dr Seymour Mack associate professor of geology at Fresno SC to take his sabbatical leave at Stanford U for study and research in geo-chemistry and hydrology Earl L Pye of the physical sciences faculty at Cal Poly Pomona to complete his chemistry research project on detergent mishycelles at Louisiana State U and Dr Donald E Bianchi associshyate professor of biology at San Fernando Valley SC to spend a year at the University of Geneva Switzerland

==================~middotshyTHE CALIFORNIA_STA~ COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymond A ~ydell Ex~uhve Voce-Chancellor Harry E Brakebill Vice-Chancellor Busness Affaors C Mansel Keene Assost~nt Chancellor Faculty and Staff Affaors The Callforma State Colleges Rev1ew is issued by the Public Affa irs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303

Page 15: September 21, 1965 Staff Bulletin

4

The ACADEMIC SENATE REGISTER

Headlines in the Los Angeles Times of last Jul 2 anshynounced Educators Hail Budget as Victory Yet I suspect for a large portion of the faculties the salary increase and the state college quality package of funds for research travel sabshybaticals and distinguished teaching represented a hollow vicshytory Not primarily because the salary increase was too little too late (though it was) and certainly not because the other benefits are insignificant Many of us are rather in the position ~f the teenager whose desire to be understood and respected Is not compensated by an increase in his allowance For those who react this way (I include myself) the most hopeful aspects of the past year are to be found in those activities of ad hoc faculty groups professional organizations the Chancellors Office Trustees and Academic Senate which have sought to create and enlarge public respect and support for the goals of the State Colleges

If we have sometimes acted inexpediently or undiploshymatically we need not apologize This is not a job for imageshymakers our problems will not always respond to the tech shyniques of politics as the art of the possible Our task has been to prepare the seedbed for a dialogue with the community and with the Legislature through which the purposes and aspirations of the state college experiment may be clarified We need now to consider as we gain the attention of the public and the Legislature what we are to say

Our problem is put into sharp focus by an observation of the young John Adams in 1765 Reflecting on the advanshytages bequeathed by the early settlers to their progeny Adams noted the unique civil and religious principles on the basis of which they laid very early the foundation of colleges and invested them with ample privileges and emoluments It is remarkable he added that they have left among their posshyterity so universal an affection and veneration for those seminshyaries and for liberal education that the meanest of the people contribute cheerfully to the support and maintenance of them every year and that nothing is more generally popular than projections for the honor reputation and advantage of those seats of learning

Is not our task to rekindle and revitalize the universal affection and veneration which alone in the long run can provide the basis for public support of our seminaries The civil and religious principles which supported it in times past Adams went on to note valued knowledge as the means to liberty Perhaps the purpose of the State Colleges reflects the universalization of that insight If so it is time to get about clarifying our own ideas on the matter and finding the means to communicate them to others If we are to survive we must become the peoples colleges not in an ad-mans empty phrase and not in the peoples present understanding but in a sense we have yet to define clearly for ourselves and then to communicate to the public As the Academic Senate

begins its third year of existence in the shadow of continuitA fiscal crises we will I hope turn part of our energies to ponde ing how to recover and how to deserve that universal affection and veneration -John C Livingston Chairman

STRONG POLICY ON COLLEGE SUPPORT ADOPTED With four new California State Colleges established by

the Legislature-in Contra Costa Kern San Mateo Santa Clara and Ventura counties-the Board of Trustees has adopted a policy to protect the support base of the existing Colleges

In a resolution of Jul 29 the Trustees expressed their concern for the financing of the California State Colleges at a level to maintain and strengthen educational excellence and declared that the financing of existing State Colleges should be maintained at the proper level and not be adversely affected by the financial impact of the addition of new State Colleges

Chancellor Dumke pointed out that the great strides made in the recent legislative session in faculty salary increases library and sabbatical leave augmentations research and travel allowances were the result of hard work in presenting the case for the State Colleges to the Legislature We must make it just as clear he said that our support budget for existing Colleges is still at an inadequate level and must not be diluted further by draining off funds to establish new Colleges

FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS

Three humanities professors from San Francisco SC ha been awarded Guggenheim Fellowships Ruby Cohn associa professor of English and world literarure Mark Harris associshyate professor of English and director of creative writing and Rudolph Weingartner associate professor of philosophy and chairman of the philosophy department

It is believed that no Cal State campus has ever before received three Guggenheims at one time

Dr George Huppert assistant professor of history at Cal State Hayward has been awarded a fellowship by the American Council of Learned Societies to complete research on The New History of the French Renaissance + + + Fellowships for srudy and travel in India have been awarded to Dr Joseph Pugliese CSH associate professor of art and to Glenn Glasow assistant professor of music by the Instirute of International Education Only 2i fellowships were awarded nationwide

Faculty fellowships provided by the National Science Foundation will enable Dr Seymour Mack associate professor of geology at Fresno SC to take his sabbatical leave at Stanford U for study and research in geo-chemistry and hydrology Earl L Pye of the physical sciences faculty at Cal Poly Pomona to complete his chemistry research project on detergent mishycelles at Louisiana State U and Dr Donald E Bianchi associshyate professor of biology at San Fernando Valley SC to spend a year at the University of Geneva Switzerland

==================~middotshyTHE CALIFORNIA_STA~ COLLEGES GlennS Dumke Chancellor Raymond A ~ydell Ex~uhve Voce-Chancellor Harry E Brakebill Vice-Chancellor Busness Affaors C Mansel Keene Assost~nt Chancellor Faculty and Staff Affaors The Callforma State Colleges Rev1ew is issued by the Public Affa irs Office 2930 West Imperial Highway Inglewood California 90303