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Box 7 contains materials on the administration of Central Washington University's Department of Psychology, as well as the university's Faculty Senate and the Douglas Honors College. Box 5 contains Street’s research and publications. Boxes 3-4 cover Street's teaching career and comprise psychology exams and syllabi. Box 2 contains items relevant to Street’s career in service, including material on the founding of the Douglas Honors College. This collection includes the following: Box 1 comprises biographical information on Warren Street, including applications for merit and promotion as well as multiple CVs and transcripts. Street was also an accomplished cartoonist, and his papers contain some of his numerous illustrations as well as programs and publications at CWU.
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His presentations and service to both Central and the profession of psychology are too numerous to list in this brief biography. He served as an editorial board member for the journal The Behavior Analyst and as an associate editor for the Encyclopedia of Psychology. Street published two books while at CWU and seven refereed journal articles. Douglas Honors College, and Chair of the Department of Psychology. He held positions at the University as an Associate Dean of the College of Sciences, Associate Dean of the Graduate Studies and Research, Interim Director of Academic Computing, Acting Dean of the School of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Director of the William O.
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While at Central, Street was promoted first to associate (1971) then to full professor (1979) in the Psychology department. He and his wife Libby remain in Ellensburg until this writing (2012). While in graduate school, he worked as a teaching assistant at Claremont before accepting the position as a visiting professor of history at Central Washington University for the 1967 summer session and as an assistant professor for the fall 1967 session. Street was a National Defense Education Act Fellow for both the MA and PhD.
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In 1966, Street received his Masters in Psychology from Claremont Graduate School, where he also obtained his Ph.D. Street went on to Occidental College in Los Angeles, where he received his BA degree (cum laude, California State Scholar) in Psychology in 1964. Warren Street was born in Alhambra, California, in 1942 and he attended Arcadia High School in Arcadia, California.
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