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Kresge College is one of the residential colleges that make up the University of California, Santa Cruz. Founded in 1971 and named after Sebastian Kresge, Kresge college is located on the western edge of the UCSC campus. Kresge is the sixth of ten colleges at UCSC, and originally one of the most experimental.
Pages in category "University of California, Santa Cruz colleges" The following 11 pages are in this category, out of 11 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Kresge College, one of the residential colleges that make up the University of California, Santa Cruz; Kresge Auditorium, a main performance space on the campus of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; MIT Chapel or Kresge Chapel, on the campus of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Kresge Building (disambiguation)
Gregory Bateson – late lecturer and fellow of Kresge College; anthropologist, social scientist, linguist, visual anthropologist, semiotician and cyberneticist; George R. Blumenthal – professor of astronomy and astrophysics, and chancellor of the University of California, Santa Cruz; Norman O. Brown – late professor emeritus of humanities
Benjamin F. Porter College, known colloquially as Porter College, is a residential college at the University of California, Santa Cruz. It is located on the lower west side of the university, south of Kresge College and north of Rachel Carson College. The college was founded in 1969 as College Five and formally dedicated on November 21, 1981.
City on a Hill Press, originally launched in 1966 as The Fulcrum, is the weekly student newspaper of the University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC). Designed as a magazine, the weekly tabloid-sized paper releases new issues every Thursday of the fall, winter and spring academic quarters, as well as a back-to-school issue entitled "Primer" at the end of the summer session, for a total of 30 ...
In 1978, she accepted a position as dean of humanities and professor of literature at the University of California, Santa Cruz, becoming the first female dean in the University of California system. [1] From 1978 to 1983, she served as provost of Kresge College; from 1984 to 1989
In the 1970s, he taught at the Humanistic Psychology Institute in San Francisco, which was renamed the Saybrook University, [7] and in 1972 joined the faculty of Kresge College at the University of California, Santa Cruz. [8] In 1976, he was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. [9]