USD Annual Report 1980/81

LD 4881 .S1565 A15 1980/81

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University of £an Diego

ANNUAL REPORT 1980/81

University of San Diego Archives

AN OPEN LETTER TO AUTHOR E. HUGHES

roJ msTORY IS)

It is my privilege as chairman of the Board of Trustees of the University of San Diego to take this means of expressing, in an official public document of the institution which you head, and on behalf of the entire Board, our deep gratitude for all you have accomplished in the past decade and our profound esteem for you as an exemplar of the meaning of Christian values and service. As a man of faith, intelligence, vision and courage; as an administrator of acuity, dedication, compassion and dynamic leadership, you have made an immeasurable contribution not only to the University and to the community of San Diego which forms its matrix, but to the life of each man and woman who has been beneficiary of the USD experience, which extends to ever y community where graduates of the University live and work. In this tenth anniversary year of your arrival at the University of San Diego, with grateful thanks we salute you and your devoted wife Marjorie, who likewise has made a great contribution to the University of San Diego .

The vigorous university which occupies the 180-acre mesatop campus overlooking Mission Bay emerged from the vision of Bishop Charles F. Buddy, to whom it was imperative that higher education in San Diego include a quality private Catholic institution. Through his efforts and those of Reverend Mother Rosalie Hill, RSCJ, the University's predecessor institutions were established: the College for Women by the Religious of the Sacred Heart in 1952, and the College for Men and School of Law in 1954. Over the y ears, the three institutions worked more and more closely, sharing not only the campus but often facilities and faculty. Eventually the need for full unification was clear, and it was determined that the institutions should merge, governed by a single board of trustees, w ith one student body, one faculty, and one president . Dr. Author E. Hughes was appointed to the presidency, and under his leadership legal unification took place in 1972, actualizing the University of San Diego which had been chartered nearly a quarter of a century earlier through the foresight of Bishop Buddy. Today the University of San Diego enrolls nearly 5,000 students in four professional schools-law, nursing , business administration, and education-the School of Graduate and Continuing Education, and the undergraduate College of Arts and Sciences.

+ Leo T. Maher, D.D. Bishop of San Diego Chainnan, Board of Trustees

The 1980-1981 Annual Report of the University of San Diego is published as an information service by the Office of Public Relations, Sara 5. Finn, APR, Director. Editor, Sandra Prewitt Edelman , Publications and Information Officer. Design by O'Shaughnessy and Willett. Con tributing photographers, Doti Corser, Michael Fawlkes, Bob Glasheen, and Roy Porello. The University gratefully acknawledges the contributed services of JetCopter of Los Angeles, Mr. Peter McKiernan, Presiden t, which made possible the aerial photograph used in this publication.

University of San Diego Archives

FROM THE PRESIDENT

BOARD OF TRUSTEES, 1980-1981

IS) The Most Reverend Leo T. Maher, D.D. Chairman of the Board Anita V. Figueredo, M.D. Vice Chairman of the Board Reverend Monsignor I. Brent Eagen

In considering the various messages which might appropriately be conveyed to our University constituents and friends in this second Annual Report, I recalled a question asked of me in a recent interview: what would I wish to see included in a report on the University in another decade. The answers I gave then focussed on two major areas: growth, both in academic programs and in campus facilities; and stature, the achievement of regional and national recognition for the excellence of this institution. As I review the year just passed, I have a •clear and strong sense of how capably, how dynamically we have already moved towards the accomplishments I would wish to report on in 1991. Each of the University's academic units has broken new ground, launching new programs such as the Organizational Skills Certification program and a number of interdisciplinary courses in the four professional schools . Each unit is engaged in a continuing, meticulous evaluation of curricula. Each is growing in terms of faculty members, faculty quality, and student enrollment. At the same time, our plans for campus development-needs created by average annual enrollment increases of 9%-are only a few months away from initial actualization, and we expect in the very near future to see construction begin on the new School of Business Administration building, the executive conference center, the expanded library, and the student center. Regional and national recognition of the University's growing stature come in many forms . We see, for example, the growing number of significant grants coming to our campus from such sources as the National Endowments, the National Institutes of Mental Health, the W. K. Kellogg, Weingart, Ahmanson, Irvine, Kresge, and Scaife foundations. We see the cachet of prestigious accrediting agencies such as the American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Business, and I am fully confident that the National League for Nursing will grant accreditation to the graduate program in the School of Nursing, as it already has to the baccalaureate program of that school. Our faculty members are serving in offices of critical importance not only to the region and the nation but to the world at large . But in the final analysis, the University's finest achievement is what it has always been and, I trust, always shall be: the ongoing creation of an academic community where young men and women may grow, not just intellectually but spiritually, culturally, physically, and socially-to become fully human in the most profound sense of that word. "Whole" and "holy" come from the same etymological root. The implications of that fact inform the University's approach to what we call holistic education and our grounding in the traditions of the Roman Catholic faith.~

Secretary of the Board Mr. J. Philip Gilligan Treasurer of the Board Manuel Barba, M.D.

Mr. Thomas C. Barger Mrs. Wilson B. Baugh Reverend Robert T. Callahan Dr. H . John Cashin Mr. James W. Colachis Mrs. Helen K. Copley Sister Frances Danz, RSC} Mr. Daniel W. Derbes Mrs . William G. Duflock Mrs . Ernest O. Ellison Mr. Kim Fletcher Mr. Charles M. Grace Mrs . Philip Y. Hahn Mr. Bruce R. Hazard Dr. Author E. Hughes Mr. Peter J. Hughes Mr. Arthur H. Kaplan Edmund L. Keeney, M.D. Mr. Tawfiq N . Khoury Mrs . Ray Kroc Sister Rita Maginn, RSCJ Mr. Douglas F. Manchester Mr. George M. Pardee, Jr. Mr. Leland S. Prussia Mr. 0 . Morris Sievert

Reverend Monsignor William D. Spain RADM Gerald E. Thomas, USN (Ret.) Mr. A. Eugene Trepte Mr. Richard P. Woltman Mr. Walter J. Zable

Author E. Hughes, Ph.D. President 3

FROM THE VICE PRESIDENTS

Catholic universities in particular," especially with regard to "the development of arts and sciences in a Christian perspective in the service of Church and soc1e .. . . ty ,, The highlights of the year's curriculum development and faculty activities are reflected in statements from the deans of the respective Schools and the College which appear in this report. I should like to add to those statements that all of us, faculty, administration, and staff alike, concluded the year with great confidence in the strengthening and maturing of the academic quality of USD. The University will be visited in GROWTH IN ENROLLMENT (He.idcounls) the F a 11 o f 198 2 by an , 500 t------- accredita tion team from the ,uoo Western Association of r------ ---,L---- Schools and Colleges, the first '"" r------+---- full visit since 1973 . We are J()(XJ r--~-=----- convinced that the findings of 2 50(, that team will bear out our r--------- reasons for confidence. ZIXltJ '-:ci,=-72___ 1':17-5 --1-•>

{JP

Major construction projects completed include a bookstore/mail center building, located adjacent to Serra Hall and the Law School, and four student dormitory buildings housing 350 students. This increased the on-campus student housing population to 1400. Financing for these projects was completed through the issuance of $8.5 million of California Educational Facilities Authority notes. Architectural design and drawings for a new School of Business Administration building and Executive Conference Center have been completed and processed through the City of San Diego Planning and Building Departments. Preliminary design of a new undergraduate library building is underway. The year also saw the updating of our campus master plan, reflecting the addition of perimeter roads on the main campus and conversion of Marian Way into a mall. The canyon fill project located at the east end of the campus will add over six acres of usable land when completed, to be used for increased parking space and additional recreation fields. Expenditures of $750,000 were made during the year for renovations and improvements to facilities, including the Serra Hall Student Union and Snack Bar, Psychology and Chemistry laboratories, a new student and faculty dining area in DeSales Hall, resurfacing and lighting of the west tennis courts, added student recreation rooms, and street and parking lot lights to improve security on campus . The bookstore/post office moved into the new quarters during the semester break. With this new facility, we were able to expand inventory and carry a wide variety of general merchandise and additional services. The volume of gross sales in the bookstore and the number of people making use of services provided by the Mail Center have increased significantly. The Personnel Department c Ro wrn 1N cuRRENT ,uNo suRrwsEs ha s p 1 ace d s i g n i fi ca n t "' 500 emphasis on recruiting, r-- - - --- employee development, and f 00 employee relations . In the ; J(\()f---------+-- employee development area, j 200 r-------+- a number of training pro- 2 grams in both personal and - 1\1(\ management development have been offered. FY 19i7 1978 1979 1980 19til

, ,,,. . Burke, M.A., Ph.D. Cand. President for Student Affairs and Dean of Students

The Student Affairs area saw many changes during the 1980-1981 school year, some of the most visible among them involving construction and renovation. The Missions Housing project continued to develop with the construction of a new residence hall for 350 students . This facility was designed along the lines of suite-type living, with fifteen students sharing common lounge and bathroom space as opposed to the traditional residence hall with double-loaded corridors. Construction brought the total student occupancy in the Valley complex to 850, with another 490 living on the campus for a total potential in residence halls of approximately 1340. In addition, the Graduate Center housed some 80 graduate and law students. The DeSales faculty dining room was converted to student use, remodeled and beautifully decorated to accommodate junior and senior students. A game room and student study lounge were added in San Antonio Hall (formerly the Bahia Loma), and the L-shaped lounge was upgraded to provide an attractive study and lounge area for resident students and commuters. The Serra Hall snack bar was also remodeled to provicle a multiple-option facility which includes a deli, hot food area, grill, and ice cream bar. ,All of these changes greatly upgraded the student housing, lounge, and dining facilities. The University intercollegiate men's program was in its second year of Division I, and our teams represented the University in outstanding fashion, with several individuals reaching the Division I play-off competition. The women's intercollegiate program saw the acquisition of Kathleen A. Marpe, M.A., former head coach at the University of New Mexico, who took over our women's basketball program. This program is developing rapidly and will be a major contender in college sports in the very near

The year just concluded saw continuing and substantive growth in the academic quality of the University. . USO was successful in recruiting seventeen highly competent new full-time faculty members, seven in Arts and Sciences, four in Busine~s Administration, and two each in Nursing, Edu~ahon, and Law, bringing our full-time faculty co~tmg~nt to 164, the largest in the history of the Umvers1ty. A marked development in productive research and professional visibility characterized both new and returning faculty. Fall semester enrollment increased by 7.5% compared to 1979-1980, from 4,123 to 4,428 (headcount), even though admissions standards were somewhat tightened . A significant concomitant of enrollment growth was the expansion in the number of credit hours earned: an increase of 6.5% over the previous fall, compared to the national average mcrease of 3.2%. As recently noted in The Chronicle of Higher Education, this is the "kind of solid increase" that favorably impacts an institution's fiscal position, and is not "just an illusion created by an influx of part-time students ." The instructional student/faculty ratio rose slightly to an average just over 18 to 1 campus-wide . Nonetheless, the opportunity remains for close rapport between faculty and the individual student, a funda1:1ental aspect of the University's philosophy of education. One of the gratifications of the year was the University's admission to membership in the International Federation of Catholic Universities joining some twenty-five other Catholic universitie; from the United States and nearly two hundred from around the world. The IFCU is concerned with "the specific goals of the universities in general and of 4

5

~l FROM THE DEANS In 1980-1981, the College offered more than 800 courses and employed 150 full- and part-time faculty members-both figures the highest in the University's history. Twenty-three majors are now offered in the humanities and the social and natural sciences, and quality Master' s degree programs are available in English, history, international relations, religious education, and Spanish. New programs undertaken during the year included: an Organizational Skills Certification program, an interdisciplinary package of selected skill courses designed to enhance the immediate employability of liberal arts graduates while complementing their chosen majors; and a series of team-taught, interdisciplinary ethics courses funded by a $50,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities . Also announced in 1980-1981 were National Science Foundation and NEH grants for individual faculty projects in biology, history, and mathematics.

fut_ure . Additionally, the women's intercollegiate swun team had several students qualify for play-offs . and the tennis team was ranked throughout much of the season. The tennis team consisted mainly of freshmen and sophomores, so the future looks bright. The crew program continued to grow, with more than 100 men and women students participating. A fourth shell and three sets of oars were donated to the program and a pledge was made for an eight-oared women's shell to be added in 1981-1982. Two varsity rowers were selected for the National Training Camp in Syracuse, New York. In s_umm~ry, the intercollegiate program now consists of fifteen intercollegiate sports (eight for men and seven for women), which provides a well-balanced design and involves more than 10% of the undergraduates. Well over 300 athletes participate in our sports programs. The growth in intramurals and recreation has been phenomenal over the past several years. More than 3,000 students play on various teams in the course of a year, and some 1,400 participate in the recreation programs of the University. Student activities continued to expand . The Student/Faculty Forum program enjoyed continued s~ccess, and club activity showed a marked increase, with student events experiencing record turn-outs .

The priorities of the College for the decade ahead still center on: encouraging the continuing professional growth of the faculty while enhancing further their talents as teachers; enriching the student population with more outstanding students, who will in turn attract others and stimulate the entire academic community; continued progress in the exploration and development of innovative programs, especially those with an interdisciplinary nature and those which operationalize the University's value commitment; and modernizing the teaching and research facilities essential to the most dynamic sectors of the College curriculum.

showed an increase of 39%, from 1,346 in fiscal 1980 to 1,891 in _ fiscal 1981. Alumni gifts jumped from 325 to 600 during the same period, an increase of 85% . T~e Discovery Campaign total during the report penod reached $8 .7 million in gifts and pledges toward the $15 million goal. The success of the campaign is largely the result of the work of many volunteers und~r the leadership of Helen K. Copley, trustee and chairman of the campaign. . One of the significant events in fund raising efforts m 1980-1981 was the affiliation of the University with the Independent Colleges of Southern California a "bl_u~ ribbon" group of independent colleges which sohe1ts annu_al sul?port from business and industry on a_ group basis . Pnor ~o the University's entry as the first ICSC member since 1972, the organization was active only in the Los Angeles/Santa Barbara area. Our membership opens the door for substantial GROWT!-1 IN G IFT INCOME "On Campus" telev ision :,,, ,_______ _ broadcasts. \111. t-------..,,,-:_ The University of San Diego , h a d a n e x t r a o r d i n a r i 1 y "" successful year as San Diego' s , 00 1100 ,___ __,,_____ major independent university "'"· 000 r.<------- support from that area, and allows USO !o participate in

The rapid development of the School of Business Administration continued in 1980-1981. The academic year was marked by an outstanding event: the accreditation .of the graduate (MBA) program by the American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Business. (Accreditation at the undergraduate level was announced in June 1980.) Of the 696 institutions belonging to the AACSB, only 136 have the distinction of accreditation at both the undergraduate and graduate levels . Enrollment in the undergraduate division of the School reached 858, twice what it was five years ago; and the graduate enrollment reached 150. Full-time faculty members reached twenty-three, nearly 90% of them terminally qualified in their teaching and research areas.

The University Relations division conducted fund raising programs during 1980-1981 which realized contributions totalling $2.3 million. This represents a dramatic increase over the years-compare $99,257 in 1969-1970 and $715,000 in fiscal 1976-an increase which ~e~ects the dedication and support of the Umversity s many benefactors . The President's Club and Alcala Society recognized 91 new members in 1980-1981. Members of the President's Club contribute $1,000 or more annually, and collectively committed well over $200,000 in fiscal 1981 . Alcala Society members contribute from $100 to $99~ each ye~r. Their generosity was recognized last April at the first annual Alcala Society reception . The total number of gifts from all sources-friends parents, corporations, foundations, and alumni_:_

A special committee on general education was established under my chairmanship as part of the ongoing review of undergraduate general education requirements. The committee's first task was to draft an important statement of principles concerning the curriculum; it is now overseeing the remaining steps in a review process scheduled for completion in 1982. Further key improvements in the physical facilities of the College were also made last year. Our first dedicated psychology laboratory is now in use, new animal holding and testing areas have been built for biology and psychology, and the chemistry laboratories are at last centralized in Camino Hall. Thanks to a most generous gift from the A. Eugene Trepte family, a magnificent pipe organ has been installed in Founders Chapel. 7

because of the commitment and support of all its benefactors .

1976

FY lY7ll

1981

6

The School of Law has continued to build its strong national reputation for quality. Our faculty now numbers 50 full-time members. Additionally, 65 part-time faculty assist in specialized areas and practice-oriented courses. Some of the most distinguished scholars in the nation serve on the School's faculty, including Kenneth Culp Davis, Homer Kripke, Nathaniel Nathanson, Herbert Peterfreund, and Bernard Siegan. Enrollment in 1980-1981 was approximately 1,000 students . The Master of Laws (LL.M) degree in Criminal Law and Taxation (at both San Diego and Los Angeles) and a Master of Comparative Law for graduates of foreign law schools are offered in addition to the Juris Doctor. The Law Library now has over 182,800 volumes and recently acquired "Lexis," a legal research computer. The curriculum numbers 75 elective courses, including several interdisciplinary courses such as Law and Medicine and Psychological Aspects of Criminal Law Practice . In addition, students can choose to take a substantial portion of their program in the clinic while learning excellent practical skills and providing useful public service .

students. In 1980-1981 a program in Russia-Poland was added to the existing programs in Paris, Guadalajara, Oxford, and London. In summary, 1980-1981 was another year of accomplishment and growth for an ever-strengthening School of Law.

Faculty and students continued to engage in a significant number of research projects and internships. In structured classes, there are typically more than 25 projects each semester, with one out of every four students involved, working with various business organizations in the community and producing results of pragmatic value to the cooperating firm as well as accruing academic value for the student. The School continued to sponsor the UPDATE breakfast seminars, which provide San Diego business people an opportunity to interact with faculty. The corporate community is also becoming increasingly familiar with the School through the recruitment of MBA students by private industry and through the placement of BBA and MBA alumni. A growing partnership between the School and the business community has resulted in contributions of funds which are enabling the School's growth, e.g., the development of a computer science instruction center and the expansion of library holdings. Plans for construction of a new facility for the School, in conjunction with the creation of an executive conference center, were advanced significantly in 1980-1981 as a result of corporate and foundation gifts, and groundbreaking for the projects is expected to take place in 1981-1982. A major achievement of the School of Education in 1980-1981 was the decision to implement a minor in physical education and a group of special courses. The physical education minor is for undergraduates interested in a scientifically-based curriculum that enables students to learn the principles, theories, and practices of physical activity and education. The special subject courses are designed to meet the developmental needs of undergraduate students . They include career life planning, leadership, learning, and reading development. The School was funded for a second year through a Federal program for a grant of $48,000. The purpose of the grant is to provide training to increase competencies of faculty and administrators in the undergraduate and graduate programs concerning the education of handicapped children. In addition, the grant is designed to facilitate and assess changes in attitudes and behavior of USD faculty and administrators toward the handicapped.

Although no new programs were initiated in 1980-1981, several significant developments occurred. Plans were operationalized for the extensive preparation involved in seeking continued national accreditation of the baccalaureate program and initial accreditation of the Master's program. Concurrent with these efforts, the curricula in both programs were thoroughly reviewed for internal consistency with the school's philosophy of nursing and educational standards. The course in pathophysiology was eliminated, with the provision for content to be integrated into the second Nursing Science course, which was also broadened to include psycho-social as well as physical assessment . A course in theory and process of communication replaced the patho-physiology course; this selection was made because of the great need for professionals to exemplify the abilities and skills of the processes of communication, not only with colleagues but with clients, individuals, and groups. At the graduate level, more stringent standards were implemented

The doctoral program in educational leadership continued its strong growth pattern, with faculty increased to eleven members and an increasing number of applications coming from a variety of professional positions ranging from leaders in community colleges to nurses and university administrators . The program has also grown conceptually to become more generic in nature . From an original emphasis on educational leadership and administration from the kindergarten through secondary levels, the program has expanded to include community college and college and university leadership. School of Education faculty continued their community service. Drs . Joseph Rost and Edward DeRoche serve as members of University High School's board of advisors. Dr. Robert Infantino heads the San Diego Writing Project, which enrolled more than 200 San Diego teachers in 1980-1981. Dr. Philip Hwang is a member of the San Diego City College's Citizen's Committee . Dr. DeForest Strunk is chairperson of the Professional Students Committee of the California Federation, Council for Exceptional Children. These are but a few examples of the faculty's professional activities and the list does not include an ever-growing number of research projects and publications. Faculty and administration are in the process of evaluating existing programs, reviewing the ten-year goals of the School, examining ways of increasing enrollment, and planning means for obtaining funds to meet current and future needs .

The specialized centers at the School are flourishing. The Public Interest Law Center received a substantial grant from the Weingart Foundation to oversee State regulatory administrative agencies. The Labor-Management Relations Center gives one- or two-day institutes as well as longer certificate courses for lawyers and non-lawyers on a continuing education basis . It also recently sponsored an extremely successful sports law program. Our summer programs continue to develop. The Institute on International and Comparative Law offers foreign study opportunities for American law

8

9

Graduate students accounted for 12 .5% of the total University enrollment in Fall 1980, compared to 10.8% in Fall 1979; excluding figures for the School of Law from the overall campus population, the School accounted for 17% of enrollment in 1980-1981, compared to 15% in 1979-1980. Enrollment growth in Graduate Career Programs (law office administration, the LSAT, and the lawyer's assistant program) evidenced the need for these programs in the San Diego area. Particularly dramatic was the 77% increase in registrations for the lawyer' s assistant program. Fall 1980 also saw the establishment of the Master of Religious Education program in the diocese of Orange County, a program which attracted good initial response and for which we envision a sound future . The Continuing Education unit of the School continued to build bridges to the broader community, extending the University' s academic resources to

for the thesis requirement, so that those students who elect this option will be more reflective of the high degree of critical inquiry and independent scholarship implied in research ability . The National Institute of Mental Health continued funding of the Graduate Psychiatric Nursing program. The faculty have proposed a professional core component in nursing for the Ed.D. offered by the School of Education in an effort to provide doctoral education for professional nurses, since there is no opportunity for this level of higher education south of San Francisco or west of Tucson. The School was evaluated by Sigma Theta Tau, National Honor Society in Nursing, for charter as a chapter in that organization, and it is expected that approval will be given in Fall 1981, with installation of the chapter in the winter or spring of the 1981-1982 academic year. An international conference on baccalaureate education was held at the School in June, 1981. Speakers from Great Britain and Australia described their national efforts and faculty presented papers . Miss Barbara Lee, program director for the W. K. Kellogg Foundation, gave the keynote address . Dr. Evelyn Anderson and Mrs. Patricia Pierson completed their investigation of the incidence and problems of faculty practice, research which will be published by the Western Journal of Nursing Research. I returned from a sabbatical funded in part by a post-doctoral fellowship from the U.S. Public Health Service . I also completed two chapters in textbooks being published by McGraw Hill and by Faber (Great Britain), and authored a paper on the first organization of nursing services, presented before the Council of Nurse Researchers of the American Nurses Association.

and Georgetown in offering six one-week summer seminars . Speakers and participants involved in Continuing Education came from 48 states and from Canada, Mexico, Japan, and several European countries . Enrollment and programs both showed dramatic growth: in 1980-1981, 108 programs attracted 6,646 participants, compared to 61 programs and 3, 796 participants in 1979-1980. Continuing Education is supported by course fees and does not impact the University budget.

and personal and academic counseling in the Educational Development Center. Career Counseling and Placement not only assisted students with vocational decisions , resumes, and interview techniques, but also hosted 65 representatives of business, government, and industry who interviewed our graduating students for job placement.

Academic Services is comprised of Admissions, Financial Aid, the Registrar, and the various counseling services of the Educational Development Center, the Educational Opportunity Program, and Career Counseling and Placement. As the title of the division implies, this is a service area. Each office exists to serve a different need in the University community. Whatever unity the area has comes not from the services offered, which vary from office to office, but from the student clientele. All students need to be admitted and registered in an academic program. Many also need financial aid, counseling, and other supportive assistance. For example, our Admissions Office enrolled 1,261 new undergraduate freshmen and transfers in 1980-1981 , while the Registrar handled 3,331 new and continuing students in Fall and 3,233 in Spring. Financial Aid provided assistance for 62 % of those registered in the amount of $7.5 million dollars. The Counseling Services provided tutorial assistance in the Educational Opportunity Program

Patricia Watson, Ed.D. Dean of Academic Services

Thus it can be seen that all students benefit from some academic services and many benefit from most of them. Our purpose is therefore to enrich and enhance the student's experience with the academic community.

local, regional, and national audiences. In addition to the programs sponsored by Continuing Education independently, all five academic units co-sponsored one or more institutes or workshops, such as the Lyle L. Jones Antitrust National Conference and the Project Management Workshop for the aerospace industry. The division also cooperated with the diocese s of San Diego and Orange County in developing professional and enrichment programs for clergy, religious, and teachers. USD became the Western arm of the Catholic Committee for Urban Ministry, joining with the Universities of Notre Dame

The steady grow~h of the School of Graduate and Continuing Education was evidenced once again in 1980-1981. Programs in the areas of business administration and international relations saw the greatest growth, but the entire spectrum of graduate offerings showed an enrollment jump of 27.8%, with a headcount of 552 (Fall semester) compared to 448 in the previous year. In addition, applications to the School increased 54%. In the past decade, the School has more than doubled in graduate student population.

GROWTH IN NUMBER OF RESIDENT STUDENTS

'KIO

NUMBER OF DEGREES AWARDED

GROWTH IN STUDENT FINANCIAL AID (Exclusi\·e of Law School)

NUM BER OF FULL•TIME FACULTY

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HONOR ROLL

W FINANCIAL STATEMENT

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The University of San Diego ·is pleased to have this opportunity to acknowledge its many bene- factors. The roster below reflects gifts received during the Univer- sity's fiscal year September 1, 1980 through August 31, 1981. Contributions received after Au- gust 31, 1981 will appear in the 1981-1982 Annual Report. Numbers following the names represent the number of years of giving; an italicized number in- dicates an increase in the size of the 1980-1981 gift. President's Club and Alcala Society members whose names are followed by (L) will be awarded charter membership in the More Hall Advocates. This annual support group was formed in May 1981 at the School of Law. Gifts of $100 to $499 qualify the donor for member- ship as an Advocate; gifts of $500 to $999 as a member of t he Dean's Council; and of $1,000 or more as a Ronald Maudsley Fel- low. An (L) following names of alumni in the alumni portion of the Honor Roll indicate persons who attended the School of Law. PRESIDENT'S CLUB The President's Club, formed in 1973, is an annual support group comprised of alumni, parents, and friends who contribute $1,000 or more each year to the University and its programs. Ors. B. W./Ethel Aginsky 2 Dr. Harold M. Agnew General Atomic Co. 4 Ahmanson Foundation 8 Mr. Robert Ahmanson Ahmanson Fdn. 8 Mr. Frank Alessio Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co., S.D. Allstate Foundation Alumnae of the Sacred Heart of Colorado 10 Anthony's Fish Grotto 8 Atlas Hotels 3 Avco Community Dev., Inc. Avis Scott Porterfield Fund

BankAmerica Foundation 13 Dr./Mrs. Manuel Barba Mr./Mrs. Thomas C. Barger 9 Mr. Norman T. Barker, Jr. First Interstate Bank 5 Dr./Mrs. Wilson B. Baugh 8

Mr./Mrs. W. G . Duflock Mr./Mrs. Ernest 0. Ellison Dr. Anita V. Figueredo 11 First Interstate Bank 5 First Federal Savings & Loan 8

Mr./Mrs. W. R. Hilligoss 6 Home Federal Savings & Loan 9 Mr./Mrs. Frank L. Hope, Sr. Mr. Frank B. Homer Sears Roebuck Foundation 11 Dr./Mrs. Author E. Hughes 9 Mr./Mrs. Peter Hughes 2 Mr./Mrs. Robert M. Hughes 8 International Harvester 6 James Irvine Fdn. 4 Mr./Mrs. John J. Jachym 4 Mr. Gordon T. Jeffers Carnation Company Fdn. 9 Mr. Samuel J. Kahn 5 Mr./Mrs. Arthur H . Kaplan 8 Dr./Mrs. Edmund L. Keeney 4 W. K. Kellogg Foundation Mr./Mrs. Thomas E. Kem Mr./Mrs. James R. Kerr 8 Mr./Mrs. William A. King 9 Mr./Mrs. Fredrick Kleinbub U Mrs. Julia C. Krafft Mrs. Joan B. Kroc 2 Mr. W. J. La Clair J. C. Penney Company Mr. Richard M. Larry Scaife Family Charitable Trust 5 Mr. Larry Lawrence Hotel Del Coronado Mr. Lester A. Levy R. Barry McComic, Avco Community Dev., Inc. Mr./Mrs. Edward J. McCrink Dr./Mrs. Harry E. Maas 4 (L) Most Rev. Leo T. Maher, D.D. 7 Mr./Mrs. Douglas F. Manchester 6 Manufacturers' Bank Dr. Russell G . Mawby W. K. Kellogg Foundation 5 Mrs. Beula T. Maxwell Mr./Mrs. Anthony Moumian 6 (L) Dan Murphy Foundation Mr./Mrs. Josiah L. Neeper 8 (L) Mr./Mrs. S. Falck Nielsen 6 Ninteman Const. Co. Ninteman Construction Co. Pacific Telephone & Telegraph 11 Mr. Chester C. Pagni, C. C. Pagni Co. ML/Mrs. George M. Pardee, Jr. 4 Elizabeth Ann Parkman Trust 9 Mrs. Timothy D . Parkman Elizabeth Ann Parkman Trust 9 Mr./Mrs. Michael D. Pearlman Peat, Marwick, Mitchell Fdn. 4 919 Corporation 10 Dean N . Ninteman,

STATEMENTS OF CURRENT UNRESTRICTED FUND REVENUES, EXPENDITURES, AND TRANSFERS

Mr. David Fleet

Year Ended

Mr. Hewes A. Bell

Fleet Foundation 7

Pacific Telephone & Telegraph 11

Fleet Foundation 7

August 31, 1981

August 31 , 1980

Mr. Legler Benbough 2 Mrs. Robert A. Berger 4 919 Corporation 10 Capt/Mrs. Wm. R. Boehm, USN (Ret) Mr. Kim Fletcher Mr./Mrs. John D. Boyce 3

Mr. Thomas J. Fleming, Jr.

REVENUES

$14,375,222

$17,057,388

Tuition and fees Federal grants Private gifts, grants, & other contracts Athletics, recreation, other

Home Federal Savings & Loan 8 Foodmaker Corporation 6

Mr. C. Terry Brown Atlas Hotels 3

576,640

506,669

Mr. Robert Forsey

Mr./Mrs. Edward Brown, Jr. Hon./Mrs. Gerald Brown (L) Mr. Jeffrey M. Bucher Manufacturers' Bank Mrs. Helen Anne Bunn 8 Mr./Mrs. Robert Campion 6 Carnation Co. Foundation 7 Dr./Mrs. John H. Cashin Coca-Cola Bottling Company 2 Mr./Mrs. James W. Colachis Coldwell Banker 3 Mrs. Harry A. Collins 8 Dr./Mrs. John N. Comito 3 Mr. Shazad Contractor Mrs. Helen K. Copley 7 James S. Copley Foundation 14 Mr. Lawrence Cox Security Pacific Char. Fdn. 11 Dr./Mrs. Earl R. Crane 8 Mr./Mrs. Philip R. Crippen, Jr. 7 Crocker National Bank 2 Mr. John M. Crowley Ticor Foundation 6 Cubic Corporation 7 Mr./Mrs. Stephen P. Cushman Mr. Justin Dart Dart Industries, Inc. 3 Dart Industries, Inc. 3 J. David & Co. Mr. Lowell Davies Ina & Ray Harris Fund 3 Mr./Mrs. Kenneth Culp Davis 4 Mr./Mrs. Alex DeBakcsy 9 Mrs. Charles Deloy 4 Diocese of San Diego Mr./Mrs. J. David Dominelli 3 , J. David & Co. Mr. Daniel J. Donohue Dan Murphy Foundation 2 Mr./Mrs. John L. Doyle 6 Dr. William J. Doyle Mrs. M. L. Castle Mr. Murli T. Chellaram

Teledyne Charitable Trust Foundation 7

Mr./Mrs. John D . Frager 2 M N" h l L F r. ic o as . razee Frazee Industries 2 Frazee Industries 2 Mr. Herman Friedberg L Mr. C. Hugh Friedman 8 (L) Mr./Mrs. C. E. Fruin ( )

536,202 38,542

391,988 69,976

15,526,606

18,026,021

Sales & services of

Mr. Gene Gamble, Top 'O the Cove Mr./Mrs. Charles Garrett (L) General Atomic Company 4 Mr. Anthony Ghio Anthony's Fish Grotto 8 Mr. James Gibson, Wells Fargo Bank 5 Mr. Winston C. Gifford Ralston Purina Company 6 (L) Mr. J. Philip Gilligan M. H. Golden Co. Mr./Mrs. Robert M. Golden The Robert Golden Foundation 5 Robert Golden Foundation 5 Mr./Mrs. Charles M. Grace 8 Mr. Peter Grace, Grace Fdn., Inc. Grace Foundation, Inc. RADM/Mrs. Edward E. Grimm Gulf and Western Oil Corp. (L) Mrs. Philip Y. Hahn 8 Philip Y. Hahn Foundation 6 Mr. Ronald Hahn Hahn Property Management Dr. Mary Hall Weyerhaeuser Company Fdn. 4 Mr./Mrs. C. R. Harmon 2 Mr./Mrs. Emmett S. Harrington 4 Ina/Ray Harris Fund 3 Mr. Joseph Hauber Mr./Mrs. Bruce R. Hazard 8

3,519,107

4,500,276

auxiliary enterprises

328,830

646,249

Other sources Total Revenues

$23,172,546

$19,374,543

EXPENDITURES & TRANSFERS Educational and general Auxiliary enterprises Mandatory transfers for debt service & matching grants Nonmandatory transfers for plant expenditures & loan grants

$17,140,362 3,869,248

$14,615,131 2,979,785

887,902

889,534

759,552

909,219

$22,808,363

$19,242,370

Total Expenditures & Transfers

NET INCREASE IN FUND BALANCES

$ 132,173

$ 364,183

Dr. Gerald L. Head Mr. Joseph Hibben

Hibben Foundation 2 Hibben Foundation 2 Mr./Mrs. L. Boyd Higgins 2

GROWTH IN ANNUAL OPERATING BUDGET , ~o 1----------

GROWTH IN ASSETS

{'11---------- / 301-------~,-C--

4(11-------r----

Jtlf---=-""""-- - ---

1')71,

l•JXI

FY

l'-.177

1':17X

1"179

\9Hll

IWH

15

14

Mr./Mrs. William T. Huston Dr./Mrs. Philip Hwang Mr./Mrs. Fon C. Johnson 9 Johnson & Higgins of Calif. 3 Mr./Mrs. Walter Johnston Mr. Carl Karcher Carl Karcher Enterprises, Inc. Carl Karcher Enterprises, Inc. Dr. Nobuyuki Kawata (L) The Hon. Judith N . Keep (L) Mr. John Kelleher (L) Kenbil Engineering Mr./Mrs. H. Stephen King Mr./Mrs. Louis H . Knoop Mrs. John M. Kohlmeier, III 3 Mr./Mrs. Marvin Kratter (L) Mr. Marvin Krieger (L) Mr. Herbert I. Lazerow (L) Mr./Mrs. Robert E. Lee Mr./Mrs. Stanley Legro 12 (L) Mr. Richard C. Levi (L) Mr. Harvey Levine (L) Dr./Mrs. Harvey Levine 5 Mr./Mrs. David J. Lincoln Dr. Patricia Lowry 6 Mr./Mrs. Timothy D. Lowrey Mr. Timothy E. Luberski 5 Capt/Mrs. Robert P. Lucas Mr./Mrs. Robert L. Lyons Mrs. Justin M . McCarthy 2 Mr. George R. McClenahan 2 Mr. John M. McCord The Hon. Harry McCue (L) Mr. Mike R. McDonnell (L) Mr./Mrs. John L. McLaughlin 9 Mr. Gerald McMahon (L) Mr. John Mabee Big Bear Supermarkets Mr./Mrs. Richard MacKnight Ms. Rosalie F. MacRory Mr./Mrs. John J. Malkind (4) Mr. Edwin Meese, III (L) Mr. Bernard W. Mehren 2 Mr. Barry A. Menes (L) Ms. Carol Ann Micken (L) Mr./Mrs. J. F. Miller 5 Dr./Mrs. Kenneth E. Miller 6 Mr. Ralph G. Miller (L) Mr./Mrs. James Mitchell Mr. Thomas E. Mullen 2 Mr. Lewis C. Muller (L) Mr./Mrs. Archie Murakami Mr./Mrs. John A. Murphy Mr. Frederick J. Nameth (L) Dr. Nathaniel Nathanson (L) Mr. Michael Navin (L) Mr./Mrs. Luis G . Nogales 7 Ms. Linda Bithell Oliver (L) Mr./Mrs. John O'Neil Mr./Mrs. Robert F. O'Neil 5 Mr. Gerald J. O'Neill (L) Mr./Mrs. Michel J. Orradre 3 Mr./Mrs. Nova Overman Dr./Mrs. F. J. Morlino Mr. Grant Morris (L)

ALUMNI 1953 Therese Whitcomb 9 1954 Anthony J. Daniels 7 1955 Barbara L. Kellerby 5 CDR/Mrs. Wm. Jimenez MacEnzie 3 Constance Jimenez Salemo 13 1956 Donna A. Boyd Ronald F. Cady Mr./Mrs. Lawrence A. Hoh Mary Ann Kennedy 1957 John F. Cihak 7 Valmere Dessert Frager 2 Mercedes S. Gleason 8 Lilia A. Gonzalez 3 Mr./Mrs. Edwin R. Jordan 9 Darby Kramer 9 Margo Aly Lester 2 Marion J. Rogers Schmidt 9 Dr./Mrs. F. J. Morlino Reuben B. Town 13 Patricia Sheehan 6 1958 Beverly O'Connor Bennett.11 Janice W. C!)rfman Mr./Mrs. John Girolami John Kohlmeier III 3 Ethel L. Lavorini 9 M . T. Meloy 4 Ralph G . Miller (L) Rosalie M. Parkman Mr./Mrs. Gregory Pearson 2 Gael Keene Ralph 7 Grant A. Taylor Noelle C. Torre 1959 Marjorie V. Arce Katherine Seabrook Berger 4 Richard Bregante (L) 3 Honore Farrell Brown Louis R. Cappello Mary Louise Spalding Cashin 7 Amelia L. Edwards 2 Donald M. Giualtney Mr./Mrs. Frederick Kleinbub 12 Mr./Mrs. Patrick Lannan, Jr. Mr./Mrs. Kenneth B. Miller 6 Rowena Naid! 13

1960 Marguarita Keirnan Antoniak 12 Rosemary Malan~a Campbell 2 Mr./Mrs. Paul M. Callaghan Mr./Mrs. John S. Evenson Mr./Mrs. Jerald F. Farrell Mr./Mrs. Edward A. Gutierrez Mr./Mrs. Stanley W. Legro 12 (L) John H . Markley 2 Mr./Mrs. Henry T. Mayo Dr. Janet N . Siler 9 Mr./Mrs. Edward J. Smrt J. T. Trily 4 1961 Francis B. Bennett 12 (L) Elizabeth Betts 2 Alberta Seabold Casey 9 Jan L. Chapman 2 David E. Cox Eugene Defalco 3 Mr./Mrs. Jerald F. Farrell 4 Laura Ferlazzo Houle 6 Mr./Mrs. Robert M. Hughes 8 Mary Ellen Tsau Kjos 11 Mary George King Mr./Mrs. Stephen King Mary Eleanor O'Donnell Lorch 15 Lilia Nogot Nale 8 Claire Fok-Tung Shell 7 1962 Mr./Mrs. Joseph W. L. Albert Mr./Mrs. John M. Callahan 3 LtCol James H. Delaney Brian D . Ford 7 Richard C. Gray 2 Curtis A. Hart 5 Mr./Mrs. Raymond R. Heins Mary R. Keppler Mr./Mrs. Timothy K. Leyden Mary Bahan McCarthy Mr./Mrs. Michel J. Orradre 3 Richard C. Papp Mr./Mrs. Kevin R. Quinn 8 Mr./Mrs. Laurence W. Shea 6 Jean-Marie Brody Skinner 4 Ronald M. Smith Jan Trily 4 Francis E. Wilson, Jr. 8 LtCol Rufus Young (L) 1963 Robert F. Adelizzi (L) Mr./Mrs. Charles E. Antoniak 2 Mr./Mrs. John A. Coseo, Jr. Mr./Mrs. Russell J. Cravens Leonard J. Dalton 9 Mr./Mrs. William C. Dolan Margaret Rosenberg Duflock 5 Sheila Anderson Giacomini 3 Thomas E. Goddard Judy Failing Cole 7 Colleen Conway 4

Peninsula Bank of San Diego Mr./Mrs. Peter N . Patman ADM Ray Peet (L) Mr. Leroy Pendray 2 Mr./Mrs. George A. Pflaum 7 Mrs. Leonard W. Pritchett 3 Prudential Foundation Mr./Mrs. Kevin R. Quinn 8 Mr./Mrs. Abraham Ratner 9 (L) The Hon. Sheridan & T. Michael Reed (L) Mr./Mrs. Gabor Reh Mr./Mrs. Eugene A. Reidy Mr./Mrs. Walter M. Riegelhuth 2 Mr./Mrs. James I. Robinson 4 Mr./Mrs. Anthony N. Rocha Mr. John Roche 6 (L) Mr. Larry D. Rosenstein (L) Dr./Mrs. Alvin L. Russo 6 Mr. John L. Rust Dr. Samuel H. Sandweiss Mr. Frederick Schenk (L) Mrs. Marion M. Schmidt 9 Dr./Mrs. Delwin Schneider 6 Mr./Mrs. Dennis V. Schraeder 2 The Hon. David Schwartz (L) Seltzer, Kaplan, Wilkins & McMahon Mr. Gary Semaker Mr./Mrs. Lawrence W. Shea 6 Mr. Jack P. Shoemaker (L) Ms. Virginia V. Shue 6 (L) Dr. Janet N. Siler9 Mr. Robert Simmons (L) Mr./Mrs. George Sisco Mrs. Walter T. Slavey, Sr. 10 Mr. James T. Sotiros Mr. Allan Spivack (L) Mr./Mrs. George A. Stanton, Jr. Mr. Jack W. Thornton, Jr. 3 Prof./Mrs. B. R. VanVleck Dr. Thomas R. Vecchione 3 Mr./Mrs. E. F. Vernon 3 Mr. Charles A. Viviano Mr. Bruce Wallace, Jr. (L) Mr./Mrs. Stephen Walther Mr. William Wang 2 (L) Mr. James Ware Mr./Mrs. John C. Watts Mr. Donald Weckstein (L) Mr. Peter Weinstein 7 (L) Mr. Quintin Whelan 3 Mrs. Therese Whitcomb 9 Mr./Mrs. Daniel J. Wilhelm Mr./Mrs. Timothy J. Willard Mr. Jerry Williams (L) Mr. John Winters (L) Mr. Paul Wohlmuth (L) Mr. Stephen Wojdowski 2 Mr. Eugene P. Yale (L) Mr./Mrs. E. Yoder

Mr./Mrs. Michael W. Heminger Mr./Mrs. Robert M. Hughes 8 Mr./Mrs. John J. Lepore Martha S. Lepore Mr./Mrs. David L. Lind Mr./Mrs. Timothy D. Lowrey Margaret J. McCarthy 7 Joan Marie Mazely Leroy Pendray 2 Eloisa Sanchez Thompson 4 Mr./Mrs. Robert F. Thompson Mr./Mrs. C. S. Wical 2 Mr./Mrs. Richard W. Wilbur Jr. 1964 John P. Baumgarten 5 Clarence H. Campbell, III 2 Patricia Murphy Christopherson 9 Vivienne Magnus Deutsch 8 Mr./Mrs. Edward A. Gutierrez Colette Paderewski Mccanna 7 Mr./Mrs. Anthony F. Moumian 6 Mr./Mrs. Luis G. Nogales 7 Richard A. Patrick Mr./Mrs. Gary R. Reming Mr./Mrs. Dennis V. Schraeder 2 George W. Stone Mr./Mrs. Edward Tynen (Kathy) 1965 Edna P. Barber (L) Marianne Rego Beyer 4 Mary Virginia Brooke 9 Mr./Mrs. Louis M . Castruccio 5 J. M. Connolly 7 LCDR and Mrs. Richard W. Dawson Nicholas M. DeTuri 3 Drs. A. Brent/Sarita Eastman 4 Mary McMullan Egan• 7 Mr./Mrs. T. Ferrara Mr./Mrs. Richard Gomez Franklin Johnson 2 Yvonne Salamy Johnson 2 Mr./Mrs. John M. Kelly Mike R. McDonnell Martha M. Roan 8 Patricia Sheehan• 6 Susan Ann Stammer Patricia Buckley Teaff 5 Colin D. Fort 2 Peter Gontang 9

The Hon. Herbert Y. C. Choy (L) Mr. Joseph Ciesielski (L) Mr. A. J. Cigliano 2 Mr./Mrs. Frederick Circo 5 Mr./Mrs. E. T. Clancy Mr. Michael A. Clark Dr. William R. Coleman Mr. Harry A. Collins 2 Mr./Mrs. Robert R. Corbeil 4 Mr. Richard D. Corona (L) Mr. Steven Daitch (L) Mr./Mrs. Leonard J. Dalton 9 Mr. M . L. Dalton Mr. Joseph C. Daly, Jr. (L) Mr./Mrs. Steven Denton (L) Mr./Mrs. Nicholas Deprizio 2 Dr./Mrs. Edward DeRoche 2 Mr./Mrs. Donald W. Diones Mr./ Mrs. William C. Dolan Mr./Mrs. J. V. Dooley Dr./Mrs. Nevin H. Downs 12 Mr./Mrs. Duane E. Dunwoodie Mr. Walter Drazba Kenbil Engineering Ors. A. Brent & Sarita D. Eastman 4 Ms. Amelia L. Edwards 2 Mr./Mrs. Louis R. Emme 2 Mr./Mrs. Melvyn A. Estey, Jr. Mr./Mrs. John Evenson 7 Mr./Mrs. Willis T. Evenson Mr./Mrs. Jerald F. Farrett 4 Mr. Robert Fellmeth (L) Mr./Mrs. Richard M . Ferry 3 Mr. Colin D. Fort 2 Mr./Mrs. Oscar Fowlkes 2 Mr./Mrs. Michael E. Fox 2 Mr. Milton Freeman (L) Mr. Paul Freeman (L) Mr./Mrs. Jos. L. Fritzenkotter Mr. William D. Fuhrman (L) Mr./Mrs. John C. Galvin Dr./Mrs. Joseph Gaster (L) Mr./Mrs. John T. Geldermann 2 The Hon. Mary Gell (L) Mr. Ernest George 2 Mr./Mrs. Arthur V. Gibson Ms. Ruth A. Gilbert (L) Dr./Mrs. Richard A. Gilman 3 Mr. Phillip L. Ginsburg (L) Mr./Mrs. Richard Gomez Mr./Mrs. David R. Gonzalez 6 Mr. John B. Gotfredson 2 Mr./Mrs. Gerald Green 3 Mr. Thomas Green (L) Mr./Mrs. Clemson Griggs 9 Mr./Mrs. Timothy James Groff 2 Mr./Mrs. Donald W. Hanscom Mr./Mrs. Paul C. Hebner Ms. Mary Ann Hester 8 Mr. Marshall Y. Hockett (L) Mrs. Marian Holleman 19 Dr. Charles F. Holt Mr./Mrs. Paul Horton (L) Mr./Mrs. Burton Huhem

Frank R. Warren Family Fdn. 3 Mr. W. K. Warren, Sr. William K. Warren Foundation 5 William K. Warren Foundation 5 Mr. William K. Warren, Jr. Mrs. Karl A. Weber 7 Mr. Robert E. Welk Santa Fe Industries Fdn. 7 Wells Fargo Bank 5 Mr./Mrs. Frank T. Weston 3 Weyerhaeuser Company Foundation 4 Mrs. Eileen Whitaker Mr./Mrs. Richard P. Woltman Mr. Ernest E. Yahnke Bank of America Foundation 13 Mr. Walter J. Zable Cubic Corporation 7 ALCALA SOCIETY Gifts of $100 to $999 qualify the donor for membership in the Alcala Society, a group of alumni, parents, and friends whose support maintains and expands the Univers i ty's ongoing educational programs. Mr. Robert F. Adelezzi (L) Mr./Mrs. Stephen Aguirre Mr./Mrs. Joseph W. L. Albert Mr. Lawrence Alexander (L) Mr. Willis M. Allen 3 Mrs. Doris Y. Alspaugh 4 (L) Mr. C. Joseph Altmanshofer Mr./Mrs. Clayton Anderson (L) Mr./Mrs. Henry J. Arnold Alumnae of the Sacred Heart of Arizona 10 Mr. Paul Augustine (L) Mr./Mrs. Emil Bavasi 4 Mr. Lance Kurt Beizer (L) Mr./Mrs. Richard P. Belaieu Big Bear Supermarkets Mr. Carl A. Blomquist Mr./Mrs. Ben Borevitz (L) Miss Donna Boyd Mr. Darrell Bratton (L) Mr. Richard Bregante (L) Mr./Mrs. Leo J. Brewster 3 Mr./Mrs. Joseph Brock 10 (L) Mr. Roy Brooks (L) Mr./Mrs. Ed Brown, Jr. 8 Dr./Mrs. Gilbert L. Brown 9 Mr. Alan K. Brubaker (L) Mr./Mrs. Paul M. Callaghan Mr./Mrs. John M. Callahan 3 Mr. David L. Camp (L) Mr./Mrs. Joseph A. Capozzi Mr. Louis R. Cappello Mr. John W. Camey (L) Mrs. Alberta S. Casey 9 Mr./Mrs. Louis M. Castruccio 5

Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co. of S.D. J. C. Penney Company Dr./Mrs. Richard P. Phillips 7 Mr. James C. Piche!, Riverside Fdn. Mr. Robert Pitts The Allstate Foundation 8 Mr. C. Wesley Poulson Coldwell Banker 3 Mr./Mrs. Jack L. Powell 4 Mr./Mrs. Leland S. Prussia 3 Ralston Purina Company 6 (L) Mrs. Dora Renison 7 Riverside Community Fdn. 5 Mr./Mrs. Donald Roon Mr./Mrs. Leo Roon, The Roon Foundation 8 Mr./Mrs. Harold Sadler Mrs. Cecile Salomon Santa Fe Industries Fdn. 7 Scaife Family Charitable Trust 5 (L) Sears Roebuck Fdn. 11 Ms. Lynn Schenk (L) Security Pacific Char. Fdn. 11 Mr./Mrs. Norman T. Seltzer 5 Seltzer, Caplan Wilkins & McMahon 5 (L) Mr./Mrs. Barry J. Shillito 4 Mr./Mrs. Bernard Siegan 3 (L) Mr./Mrs. 0. Morris Sievert 6 Society of the Sacred Heart, California Province 12 Society of the Sacred Heart, Denver 8 James E. Spain Memorial Fdn. 11 Mrs. James E. Spain 5 Msgr. William D . Spain 7 Mr./Mrs. Harold B. Starkey First Federal Savings & Loan 8 Mrs. Clarence Steber Mr. Ward B. Stevenson Crocker National Bank 2 Mr. Roger M. Stewart First Interstate Bank 5 Mr. Donald Tartre Peat, Marwick, Mitchell Fdn. 4 Mrs. Carlos Tavares 4 Mr./Mrs. Robert H . Taylor 4 Teledyne Charitable Trust Fdn. 7 (L) Mr./Mrs. John McBride Thornton 4 Ticor Foundation 6 Mr./Mrs. A. Eugene Trepte 7 Mr./Mrs. J. T. Trily 4 Tucker, Sadler & Associates 3 Union Oil Company of Calif. 9 U.S.D. Auxiliary 13 Mr. R. P. Van Zandt Union Oil Company of Calif. 9 Mr./Mrs. George Vojtko 3 Mr. Frank R. Warren, Sr. Warren Family Foundation 3

Jeraldine Rocle McLaughlin Mr./Mrs. Marvin Molacek Mr./Mrs. Laurence D. Moyer Judith Payne 5 Edward J. Philbin (L) Mr./Mrs. Shawn Quinn 9 Prof. John Roche (L) 6 Joseph Shults Sr. Mary Warner, RSCJ 1966 Mr./Mrs. Alexander Araiza Susan Chow Joe 6

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