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Image provided by: Niagara County Community College
ENTRICY HERALD \Voice of tho Niagara Cooaty Community Collogo\ VOL. 1, NO. 1 NIAGARA FALLS, NLVV YORK SEPT. 21, 19C4 \AND NOW, STUDENTS\ - Ex- plaining the NCCC Orientation Week phase, conducted here Sept. 14-18, is Mr. DonaldG. Leonard, Dean of Students who called for a \history-making tradition- setting Class of '66\. Looking on is Dr. Ernest Notar, Pres- ident of the Niagara County Com- munity College. Student Government Constitution Readied Rilirudi* Scheduled Oct. 15, 16 NCCC students will vote to ap- prove, or disapprove, a consti- tution for the Student Govern- ment Association at a referendum call here October 15 and 16. Prepared by a special committee, the constitution provides detailed guidelines for the operation of the Association. Basically, according to student officers, the Association was est- ablished \to encourage a dem- ocratic form of student govern- ment as a means of developing initiative and a sense of individual and group responsibility.\ Bylaws provide for the election of council representatives from each NCCC curriculum. Tenta- tive plans call for a varying num- ber of representatives, for each curriculum, \depending on total enrollment in each.\ A Student Government Associa- tion President, Vice-President, Secretary and Treasurer will be elected aiuiually by the students. Candidates are to be nominated at a student convention. The Association will assume responsibility for student affairs not academic in nature. It will coordinate studenl projects, authorize clubs, sponsor social activities, and promote student welfare. Copies of the constitution and bylaws will be posted on student bulletin boards \at least one week prior to the referendum\ Mr. Joseph J. Mosier, Student Gov- ernment Association President said today. Association officers, in addition to Mr. Mosier, are, Mr. Roy G. Mort, Vice-President; Miss Susan Gorbaty, Secretary; and and Mr. Gary J. Vorel, Trea- surer. None had announced their candidacy for re-election at press time today. Also serving on the Student Government Association Execu- tive Board are, Mr. Donald H. Leonard, Dean of Students, and Miss Patricia Merino and Mr. Richard Cavall, Faculty Ad- visors. Plans for the nominating con- vention and general election will be announced in the N.C.C.C. DA 11 V BRIEFS, Mr. Mosier indicated. Personally, we're in favor of an all-out, stepped-up outer space program. We'll feel much safer when we can have our major crises on another planet. MR. JOSEPH J. MOSIER Proxy Pleased With Report of Progress Joseph J. Mosier, President of the NCCC Student Government Association, today lauded \the many student committees for working so diligently this sum- mer in preparing plans for fall activities.\ He hailed the activity calendar, printed in the recently issued Student Handbook, as \a giant step forward\ and asked for thorough planning by responsible committees to assure the success of each scheduled event. Several additional Freshmen and Sophomores will be named to standing committees within the next few weeks, he said. He urged \full participation\ in all activities. Evening Division To Open Here Tonight More than 000 adults will be- gin a 15-week program of even- ing studies at NCCC tonight and Tuesday, Mr. Joseph P. DeSantis, Evening Division Director an- nounced this morning. Courses, ranging from A-to-Z, art to zoology, include both college degree and non-degree studies. The degree courses par- allel day school studies. Approximately 400 students were enrolled in the first NCCC Evening Division inaugurated in February. Special institutes sponsored by the Division includ- ed an Administrative Manage- ment Institute and a Travel and Tourism Institute. Frosh Fun Week To Begin Today; Events Planned Frosh Fun Week, a program destined to become a traditional \NCCC Welcome Fest\ is sche- duled to begin today under the direction of the College Social Affairs Committee. In compliance with the spirit of Fun Week, members of the Freshmen Class will wear foot- long personal identification cards while on campus during the \The Week.\ Violators are subject to penalties to be levied by the NCCC Student Court. Fun Week regulations also call for Freshmen to memorize Page 6 of the Student Handbook and to recite it at the request of any Sophmore. It is also mandatory for Fresh- men to address Sophomores as \Mr. or Miss. Sophomore\ dur- ing \The Week\. Events planned for today include a Freshmen-Sophomore Convo- cation to be held on campus at 3 P.M.; a student march, and a grand finale to be announced by the Social Affairs Committee Chairman. Freshmen attendance will be taken by upper classmen. \It's a wonderful generation to belong to,\ declared a Freshman last week. \Everything that's wrong is the fault of the gener- ation before us, and is going to have to be corrected by the one after us.\ Enrollment Soars At NCCC; 825 + Students Overflow Facilities Frosb Ootooabor Sophonoros 3 to 1; Moi Oataiabor Wonoi by Somo Ratio Although final registration totals were not available at press time today, College officials said enrollment would be \approxi- mately 825 students.\ ENTRICY HERALD staffers, assigned to interview students Wednesday, claim the total \is really high.\ \We know now that the Freshmen outnumber the Sophomores by at least 3 to 1\ said ENTRICY HERALD Editor, John A. Lewis. \Once again,\ he added, \Women students are in the min- ority, too. Men also outnumber the women by 3 to 1. \ While advance indications point to heavy enrollment in the two Liberal Arts curriculums, Ca- reer Program curriculums also show substantia! enrollment in- creases. Expansion of campus facilities to include a nine-room former public school building located two blocks from the NCCC main building, is expected to partially relieve space problems here this fall. The building will be utilized ts a technical building for semi- professional career studies. M will house the college instru- mentation laboi atoi v, drafting room, business subject classes, and music and art studios. Still in the planning stages are a machine tool laboratory and a material testing laboratory ten- tively scheduled to be located at the technical building. Numerous facility changes in the main building noted by returning Sophomores include construction of an on-campus Book Store loca- ted on the Third Floor; provision of a student lounge; installation of offices for the Dean of Stu- dents and Counselors, and the addition of four extra classrooms through the transfer of business classes to the technical building. Class periods too, they noted, have been cut to 50 minutes. \All in all,\ they agreed, \It's good to be back.\ And the Fresh- men? \We're going to rea»l> like this,\ they say. The contentious man who is al- ways demanding his rights usually gets left. Dr. Notar Commends Student Aid Corps Dr. Ernest Notar, President of the College, has commended \the scores of dedicated Sophomore students who served so diligently as members of the student orien- tation corps here last week.\ In a statement issued this morn- ing he singled out Miss Susan Gorbaty, Mr. Joseph J. Mosier, Mr. Gary Voral and Mr. Hoy G. Mort, Student Government As- sociation officers, for special praise. \They and many others, have demonstrated a true concept of leadership,\ Dr. Notar said. \We are deeply appreciative of their untiring dedication to the Niagara County Community College.\ . . .DR. ERNEST NOTAR OUTNUMBERt;D -- NCCC men continue to out- number the women 3 to 1. Pictured are 13 of the outnumbered 200 girls. Standing, left to right are, Misses Sheila Overhiser, Sandra Van Sice, Barbara Nash, Anne Stevenson, Susan Mor- gan, Melanie Wozniak, Helen Petrakis and Carol Martinkowski. Seated are, Misses Janice Stefonetti, Barbara Williams, Cind\ Rice, Janice Hech and Susan Tuva. The 13 members of the NCCC Class of 'GG were photographed at a Freshmen orientation session.