Carl W. McIntosh

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Carl_W._McIntosh an entity of type: Thing

Carl Weston McIntosh, Jr. (December 1, 1914 – January 19, 2009) was an American professor of forensics and acting. He served as president of Idaho State College (now Idaho State University) from 1947 to 1959. He was acting executive dean when the college achieved its independence from the University of Idaho in March 1947, and he elevated it into a four-year, bachelor's degree-granting institution in December 1948. He left Idaho in 1959 to become president of Long Beach State College (now known as California State University, Long Beach). He oversaw the college's rapid growth from less than 10,000 students to 28,000 and two name changes (to California State College at Long Beach in 1964 and to California State College, Long Beach in 1968). He was named president of Montana State University rdf:langString
rdf:langString Carl W. McIntosh
rdf:langString Carl W. McIntosh
rdf:langString Carl W. McIntosh
rdf:langString Bozeman, Montana, United States
xsd:date 2009-01-19
rdf:langString Redlands, California, United States
xsd:date 1914-12-01
xsd:integer 40251472
xsd:integer 1119608620
xsd:date 1914-12-01
rdf:langString Diana McIntosh
xsd:date 2009-01-19
xsd:integer 8
rdf:langString Professor of Forensics and Acting
rdf:langString Mary Carroll Donnelly McIntosh
xsd:integer 1977
xsd:integer 1970
rdf:langString President of
rdf:langString Carl Weston McIntosh, Jr. (December 1, 1914 – January 19, 2009) was an American professor of forensics and acting. He served as president of Idaho State College (now Idaho State University) from 1947 to 1959. He was acting executive dean when the college achieved its independence from the University of Idaho in March 1947, and he elevated it into a four-year, bachelor's degree-granting institution in December 1948. He left Idaho in 1959 to become president of Long Beach State College (now known as California State University, Long Beach). He oversaw the college's rapid growth from less than 10,000 students to 28,000 and two name changes (to California State College at Long Beach in 1964 and to California State College, Long Beach in 1968). He was named president of Montana State University in 1970. He established the university's nursing and pre-medical education programs and completed its first football stadium and creative arts complex, but also faced a years of fiscal austerity imposed by the state legislature. He retired in 1977.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 17211

data from the linked data cloud