California State University, Fresno
File:CSUFSeal.gif | |
Motto | Lucem Accipe Ut Reddas (Latin, "Receive the light that you may give it forth.") |
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Type | Public |
Established | 1911 |
President | Dr. John Welty |
Academic staff | 2,109 |
Undergraduates | 18,000 |
Postgraduates | 3,000 |
Location | , , |
Campus | Urban, 327 acres and 1,083-acre University Farm |
Colors | Cardinal and blue |
Mascot | Bulldog |
Website | csufresno |
California State University, Fresno, commonly referred to as Fresno State, is one of the campuses of California State University, located at the northeast edge of Fresno, California, at the foot of the majestic Sierra Nevada mountain range in the San Joaquin Valley. Fresno County is the sixth largest metropolitan area in California. The university is within an hour's drive of many mountain and lake resorts and within a three- or four-hour drive of both Los Angeles and San Francisco.
Fall semester runs from late August through December. The spring semester runs from mid-January through mid-May. Short sessions are offered throughout the summer.
Campus
Fresno State was officially designated as an arboretum in 1978 and now boasts more than 4,000 trees on campus. The 388-acre main campus features more than 46 traditional and modern buildings. An additional 34 structures are on the 1,022-acre University Farm, which is considered one of the most modern and best equipped agricultural facilities in the West. In February of 2006, the Student Recreation Center opened. A greatly anticipated complex that was/is fully funded by private donations and a semester student-use fee, the complex is among the finest on the west coast. The wellness center boasts 4 full-size basketball courts, a dance studio, locker rooms, 2 sleek raquetball courts, aerobic equipment, and weight-lifting machines (various types).
Greater campus extends from Fraternity Row off of Millbrook and Bulldog Stadium in the west to the Save Mart Center and soon to be constructed Campus Pointe and Highway 168 in the east
Fresno State purports to have the only commercial winery operating on a college campus in America. Does UC Davis have the other?
The campus is one of the nation's most ethnically diverse
Under construction are a variety of projects that should elevate Fresno State into one of the finest regional public universities in the nation.
Academics
Smittcamp Honors College
Craig School of Business considered one of the top business schools in the west
Accreditation
Fresno State is accredited by California Board of Education and the Western Association of Schools and Colleges. The university has 23 nationally accredited departmental programs, among the highest number within the CSU system.
Colleges
- College of Agricultural Sciences and Technology
- College of Arts and Humanities
- Craig School of Business
- Kremen School of Education and Human Development
- College of Engineering
- College of Health and Human Services
- College of Science and Mathematics
- College of Social Sciences
Athletics and traditions
Fresno State is a member of the NCAA's Division I. Fresno State has been a member of the Western Athletic Conference since 1992. Before that, it had been a member of the Big West Conference since 1988. Fresno State was also a member of the Big West's predecessor, the Pacific Coast Athletic Association since its inception in 1969 and was a member of the California Collegiate Athletic Association from its beginning in 1939 (when Fresno State was in Division II).
Fresno State's football team, currently coached by Pat Hill, has garnered a reputation for being willing to play any top-ranked opponent, anytime, anywhere (usually on the opponent's field). Fresno State (as of December 2005) has achieved success with a 10-8 record against BCS teams, the most by any program not in a BCS conference. This has not only helped Fresno State gain revenue from top-ranked programs, it has also provided the Bulldogs a following among college football fans who admire its willingness to challenge the best teams (and has resulted in the Bulldogs being featured more regularly on college football TV programs than most non-BCS conference teams). However, their success in their non conference games hasn't translated to championships in conference play. The Bulldogs haven't won the WAC title since sharing it in 1999. Fresno State often travels between 10,000-20,000 miles during its football season, between its WAC conference games (the conference itself is spread from Ruston, Louisiana to Honolulu Hawaii) and its usually brutal non-conference schedule.
Sports
Fresno State fields seven sports for men. They are:
Fresno State fields nine sports for women. They are:
Sports facilities
- Bulldog Stadium, football
- Save Mart Center, basketball, volleyball
- Pete Beiden Field, baseball
- Bulldog Diamond, softball
- Student Horse Center, equestrian
- Warmerdam Field, track and field
- North Gym, volleyball
- Spalding G. Wathen Tennis Center, tennis
Traditions
- Official colors are Cardinal and Blue
- The mascot of Fresno State is a bulldog named Timeout.
- The green "V" worn on the back of the football players' helmets (and also on the front of the basketball uniforms along the neckline) honors the agricultural industry of the San Joaquin Valley, and the importance it plays in financially supporting Fresno State (as well as the university's contributions to the area economy).
Fight song
Fight Varsity
On your toes dig in and hit that line!
We're all pulling hard for you
So fight and give the best there is in you
Fight Varsity
On your toes and hit that line!
We'll fight on to victory
We're always true to Fresno State!
Alma Mater
Let us in song, our voices raise
In cloistered courts, to sound thy praise.
Each voice and heart that sings is true
To thee, oh, Cardinal and Blue.
For thee, our hopes and memories;
For thee, our hearts and loyalties.
Thy sons and daughters hail thee great,
Our Alma Mater, Fresno State!
Notable alumni
- Armen A. Alchian, Professor Emeritus, Founder of the "UCLA Tradition" in Economics
- Verna L. Allen, Exec. Dir. Arizona Commission for Postsecondary Ed
- Theresa Alvillar-Speake, Director of the Office of Minority Economic Impact, Department of Energy
- Marvin Baxter, Justice, California Supreme Court
- Prof. Wendell Bell, Yale University's Graduate Studies Director
- William Boyanjian, President, Gemological Institute of America
- Lee P. Brown, former Mayor of Houston, former New York Police Commissioner
- Ezunial Burts, President - Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce
- Cruz Bustamante, California Lieutenant Governor
- Joe Cafaro, Cafaro Cellars, Napa Valley, California
- Malinda Chouinard, Owner of Patagonia, one of the world's most successful designers of outdoor clothing and gear
- Roy Christopher, Emmy Award winning set designer
- Jac Cole, Winemaker for the Charles Krug Winery
- Jim Costa, former California State Senator
- Joy Covey, Former Chief Strategy Officer, Amazon.com
- Sid Craig, CEO, Co-Founder and Chairman of the Board of Jenny Craig, Inc.
- Dr. Joseph Crowley, President Emeritus, University of Nevada
- Larry S. Dickenson, Senior VP Sales, Boeing
- Nat DiBuduo, President, Allied Grape Growers of California
- William Everson, poet (did not graduate)
- David Fillpot, President of Alaras Software, enterprise software development
- Major General Jon Gallinetti, Commander Joint Warfighting Center, and Director, Joint Training, J-7, U.S. Joint Forces Command
- Geoffrey Gamble, President, Montana State Univ.
- Jim Ganduglia; Touring musician with Johnny Mathis
- Kirk D. Grimes, Exec. of Energy & Chemicals, Fluor Corp
- Kenny Guinn, Governor of Nevada
- Robert Hanashiro, USA Today Photographer
- Richard Douglas Husband, mission commander, shuttle Columbia STS107, 2003
- Sam Iacobellis, CEO, Rockwell International (retired). Led development of B1 bomber
- Bill Jones, former California Secretary of State
- Emily Kuroda, Award-Winning Actress
- Joe Lizama, Touring musician with Johnny Mathis
- Alex A. Martinez, Deputy CAO, San Diego County
- Manny Mashouf, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, bebe fashions
- Eric McAfee, Co-founder of Cagan McAfee Capital Partners
- Dennis Morgigno, Station Manager, Channel 4, San Diego
- Col. Steven Nagel, NASA Astronaut
- Paul O'Neill, former U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, CEO of Alcoa Corporation
- Dr. Norval Pohl, President, University of North Texas
- Charles Poochigian, California State Senator
- Tammy Savage, Manager of Business Development, Microsoft
- Gary Soto, acclaimed poet, essayist, and fiction writer
- Roberta Spear, Award-Winning Poet
- Michael N. Villines, California State Assemblyman
- Sherley Anne Williams, Author, National Book Award Nominee, Emmy Award Winner
Notable athletes
- Stephen Abas, 2004 Olympics Silver medalist Freestyle Wrestling
- Courtney Alexander, NBA lottery pick, NCAA scoring leader 2001-02
- Rafer Alston, Houston Rockets point guard
- Laura Berg, three-time Olympic gold-medalist, softball
- Bernard Berrian, wide receiver, Chicago Bears
- Frenchy Bordagaray, former Major League Baseball player
- David Carr, Houston Texans quarterback
- Ron Cox, former NFL linebacker (Chicago Bears, Green Bay Packers), NCAA sacks leader
- Tyrone Culver, NFL safety, Green Bay Packers
- Trent Dilfer, San Francisco 49ers former NFL All-Pro and Super Bowl-champion quarterback as member of the Baltimore Ravens, 1994 first-round draft (No. 6 overall) choice of Tampa Bay Buccaneers
- Henry Ellard, one of top five wide receivers in NFL history (Los Angeles Rams, New England Patriots, Washington Redskins)
- Melvin Ely, NBA's Charlotte Bobcats, two-time WAC Player of the Year
- Noel Felix, NBA forward, Seattle Sonics
- Tremaine Fowlkes, NBA forward
- Tom Goodwin, Major League Baseball outfielder, former NCAA steals leader
- Dan Gladden, former Minnesota Twins outfielder
- Chris Herren, former Boston Celtics guard
- Rod Higgins, General Manager, Golden State Warriors
- Orlando Huff, NFL linebacker, Arizona Cardinals
- Adam Jennings, NFL wide receiver, Atlanta Falcons
- Bobby Jones, former Major League pitcher (New York Mets, San Diego Padres), 1991 NCAA Pitcher of the Year
- Robin Mackin, Team Canada softball (University Games, World Cup II)
- Logan Mankins, NFL offensive lineman, New England Patriots (first-round draft pick 2005)
- Richard Marshall, cornerback, Carolina Panthers
- Garrett McIntyre, 2005 WAC Defensive Player of the Year
- Lorenzo Neal, All-pro NFL Fullback, San Diego Chargers
- Stephone Paige, former NFL wide receiver, Kansas City Chiefs
- Terry Pendleton, former National League MVP Atlanta Braves
- Terry Pettis, Fresno State hoopster, charged with murder of Rene Abbott
- Paul Pinegar, NFL quarterback, Jacksonville Jaguars
- Michael Pittman, NFL Running Back, Tampa Bay Buccaneers
- James Sanders, NFL strong safety, New England Patriots
- Jamie Southern, Team USA softball
- Kevin Sweeney, former NCAA record-holder for career passing yards
- Jerry Tarkanian, legendary basketball coach (Fresno State, UNLV, San Antonio Spurs)
- Jeff Tedford, Head Football Coach, University of California, Berkeley
- Billy Volek, quarterback, Tennessee Titans
- Cornelius Warmerdam, former Pole Vault world record holder
- Jeff Weaver, Major League Baseball pitcher St. Louis Cardinals
- J.D. Wiliams, defensive back, four Super Bowls with Buffalo Bills
Notable faculty and staff
- Kenneth Fugelsang, Fresno State Winemaster--leads world-renowned enology program
- Eric W. Hickey, Criminology Professor - Noted criminologist and author.
- Bruce Thornton, Humanities and Classics
- Victor Davis Hansen - Regular on C-SPAN, PBS, History Channel and HBO's Real Time with Bill Maher
Notable former faculty and staff
- Victor Davis Hanson, founder of Classics Department--historian, essayist, columnist
- Philip Levine, English--widely known poet and Pulitzer Prize winner
- Roger Tatarian, journalism--editor-in-chief, United Press International (deceased)
- Lawrence Sutherland has served as Director of Bands and Professor of Music at California State University, Fresno since 1969. He earned his Bachelor of Science degree in Music Education from the University of Tulsa and his Master of Arts degree in Music Theory from the University of Missouri. His Doctor of Musical Arts degree in conducting was the first such degree to be awarded by the University. Sutherland has performing credits as a trombone and euphonium player with the St.Louis Symphony, the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra, the Tulsa Philharmonic Orchestra and Tucson Symphony, Fresno Philharmonic and the Tommy Dorsey, Ralph Marterie, Richard Maltby, and Woody Herman bands. He has served as guest conductor and adjudicator throughout the United States, Alaska, Canada, Europe, New Zealand, England and Japan. Sutherland is the only person to have directed all three California Music Educators All-State instrumental honor groups - Orchestra, Symphonic Band and Jazz Band. He has been a three-time conductor of the California Band Directors All-State Concert Band and regularly conducts band and orchestra throughout the west.