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Page 29 text:
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Student Activities Personnel Staff The Student Affairs Building or better known as the White House ' is the only remaining structure from YJC ' s past. It stands alone near the entrance of the college. Here, the students are encouraged to take their problems to the Guidance Counselors. Devotion, efficiency, and understanding typify those em- ployed in the White House. The secretaries proceed with their assignments in a devoted manner; the records office clerks operate the complex machinery for keeping transcripts of our grades; and the counseling staff will test us to find our aptitudes, listen to our problems and give advice. Instrumental to the student life and activities on the campus is the Dean of Student Affairs, Dr. Claude Gates, whose jobs of counseling in personal problems, set- tling disputes in the dorms, and initiating student activities, keep him very busy. DEAN OF WOMEN: Miss Elizabeth Taylc In the Student Center on the lower floor is an attractive office presided over by the Dean of Women, Miss Taylor. Frequently on the hour between classes, girls will be waiting in the adjacent lounge to make an appointment to talk over problems with the Dean. Miss Taylor also has taken over the adviser ' s respon- sibility of the Student Senate. Through this medium, she correlates the activities of the dorm and campus. GUIDANCE AND WHITE HOUSE PERSONNEL: Dr. Claude L. Gates. Miss Brenda Tarbert. Mrs. Dorothy Root. Mrs. Nancy Knaub, Mrs. Jean Semmelman. Mrs. Ethel Foose. Thomas Treadwell, Mrs. Ruth Landis. 2--) Secretary: Heidi Levis. Faculty secretaries: Sue Hudson, Peggy Yingling.
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Page 28 text:
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Academic and Business Staff York Hall is our symbol of knowledge: the classroom and the laboratory. It is the place where teacher and student meet in a quest for facts, for the give-and-take in the ex- change of ideas. York Hall offers all the modern facilities for an education: well-equipped laboratories for the sciences and languages; comfortable classrooms for lectures and the use of visual aids. The Dean of Academic Affairs, Mr. Fred Smith, presides over York Hall. He handles stu- dents ' academic problems, as well as the class schedules of students. DEAN OF ACADEMIC AFFAIRS: Fred C. Smith, Mrs. Edith Lookingbill, Mrs. Ronnie Baesik. The Student Center is the place where Mr. Williams, the college bursar, directs his staff of workers. At all hours of the day students, custodi- ans, salesmen, or business men can be found standing at the business office window. Any financial problem related to bills, govern- ment aid programs, loans, purchases, or checks will be answered by the Business Office staff. BUSINESS STAFF: Alfred F. Williams. J. David Eisenhart. Mrs. Marguerite Lauer. Mrs. Mar- ion Bubb. ADMISSIONS DIRECTOR: Bradley Culbertson, Mrs. Connie Johnesse Mrs. Janet Brownell. SECRETARY TO PRESIDENT: Mrs. Marian Kieffer.
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Page 30 text:
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I.B.M. Evening students wire the Control Panel for the IBM 402 Ac counting machine. From its beginning four years ago the college I.B.M. de- partment, under the direction of Mr. Leo Ruvolis, has grown to be a complete all-purpose system of data pro- cessing, The department offers business courses dealing with punch-card equipment, and electronic computer in- struction for complete, accurate, and instantaneous solu- tions of problems for the math student. In addition to providing instruction in data processing, the I.B.M. department processes most of the administrative records for the college. It works with community agencies and firms in processing the results of projects and surveys. It has also prepared statistical studies of the experimental classroom instruction in Project English. During Freshman Orientation Week, the I.B.M. depart- ment played a new role in campus projects. The names of students, along with additional data about each student, were fed into the 1620 computer to select suitable partners for the weekend dance. The I.B.M. department employs three local men for evening instruction: Leonard Iaria, manager in data pro- cessing for P. A. and Small Company; Joseph Cannata and Norman Bell, systems engineers for I.B.M. Corporation. Anne Reinhard — Data Processing lab. What a puzzle! Leo Ruvolis — director of the IBM Center. L r.
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