News Scrapbook 1986

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454) JAN 2 7 l

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San Diego, Monday, January 27, 1986 Perspective-33 ilding surge, new satellite campus expected TIIES1RIBUNE

ture and governor) for construction money in the 1986-87 budget," he

ing will have classrooms, faculty of- fices and labs, he said. "We'll be asking (the stl!te Legisla-

The school has planning money for a $20.8 million Instructional and Re- search Building that Kennedy said is badly needed on campus. The build-

under construction sometime this winter. It will cost $43.7 million and will be the biggest building ever for UCSD

elude a multipurpose sports com- plex, a conference center and an art gallery. Under construction at USIU is an addition to McDonald Hall, which will add cla room and food laboratory space for the school's hotel and restaurant management program. UCSD Chancellor Richard Atkin- son said enrollment at the La Jolla campu has soared 10 the past five years - a 40 percent increase in both undergraduate and graduate enroll- ment. "Thi is an mcredibly rapid growth," Atkinson said. ''We can't possibly accommodate that kind of growth m the next five years (with- out expanding the campus). Right now our total enrollment is 14,500, and f the present rate continues, we could have a student population of 21,000 by the year 2000." Atkinson aid a planmog commit- tee is in place for a fifth college, whirh could admit its first students by the fall of 1988. The college would mitially be placed at t e old Warren College campu site. "And, if the enrollment projection 1s accurate, we'll pro bly have to have a sixth college somewhere down the line," he said. Wayne Kennedy, UCSD vice chan- cellor for resource management, predicted that there ill be about $250 million in capita e penditures on construction and updating of ex- istmg buildings in the next five years. ''These include a number of proj- ects under way, others in the plan- ning stages, and a number of projects we anticipate we'll have in the next six or seven years," he said. "One of the key projects will be Engineering Unit l, which will be

Trlbwro Edu 1111on Writer G ROW1'11 I San D1 go' ver ilt over the n xt five years will cause a building J><,om on one campu and th likely creation of a satellite camp ·for the other. It's estimated that University of C liforma at an Diego will be pcndmg up to $250 million though 1990 on constru tioo of buildm and updating of older on . n Di go tat Univ • ity's plans for a full-fl dged c mpu m the bur- geoning North County arc proceed- ing, with indications that it will be financed by the state Legislature and pproved by th governor. onstruction of m jor bu1lding.s also is h dul d among S n Diego's nrollm ot m two public um- pnvate institution commg years, but officials expect enroll- ment to rematn at a fairly teady st te At the Univ rslty of San Du:go, the $9 m11lion URiver Tty C nter for tu- -dent ct1V1ties is expected to be com- pleted next fall. It is the fifth build· mg to r on th Alcala Park cam- pus in th p t five years, mcluding the $4.5 million Olin School of Bu i- nl!l , the $2.4 milhon Manchester Ex- ecutive Conference Center and the $3.7 million Copley Library. Point Loma Nazarene College, in the mid ·t of re-evaluating its loog- r nge campus ma ·tcr plan, recently r eived a $5.7 million gift to con- struct a fine art.< building. The gift. from the estate of the late Gladys I.. Cooper of Tipton, Calif., ·' the largest In the school's history A $5 m1llion aoctuary and chapel is nearing a pring 1986 completion date. Construction plans at the United States International University in- in th San Diego State University University of California at San Diego National University Univer•,ity of San Diego U.S International University Point Loma College Five area community colleges 0,:5~ *~hools Continued From p.33 aid. The University Center, which will be paid for from a $25-a-quarter stu- dent fee increase, and an adjoining bookstore are in the planning stage and will cost about $18.6 million, Kennedy said Other major projects outlined by Kennedy, either under way or in the planning stages, include: • Supercomputer Center, to be federally funded with $100 million over the next five years, already is housed in a new building on campus. An adjacent office building is under construction. GA Technologies Inc., of La Jolla, will operate it. • Research Biology Unit l, to be completed next summer, $6 million. • Installation of a new $10 million telecommunicat10ns system on cam- pus. • Expansion of the Central Li- brary to more than double its size, $36 million. Several buildings will be added to the present library. • Graduate School of Pacific Re- lation . $8.8 million. • Institute for Research on Aging, $6 million. SDSU Presidl'nt Thoma Day pre- dicted that in easing enrollment ive-36

Please see SCHOOLS,

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San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454)

:JAN 2 1986

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USD's focus on peace starts tomorrow By foi~ken low. Dennis Rohatyn. Tribune Education Writer "A lot of our students are caring • "International Politics," by po- A campuswide peace movement people," Anderson said, "but they litical-science professor Lee Ann will begin at the Universi~ of San come from sheltered backgrounds Otto and law professor Steve Qi.ego tom-0rrow, the day t e sprmg and are not aware of what's going on Hartwell. semester opens. the Third World." • "Images of Peace," by political- Students, faculty members, ad- Courses to be team-taught this se- science professor Pat Drinan and the mioistrators and the campus minis- mester include: Rev. Ron Pacheoce, a religious-stud- try will take part in the movement to • "War: Myth and Reality," taught ies professor. . instill a commitment to peace in the by Jim Rocha, an art professor and Faculty forums will deal with a hearts and minds of students, said Vietnam War veteran; and Cynthia variety of topics, including "When It USD Provost Sister Sally Furay. Caywood, an English professor. Comes to Nuclear War, Can We Be Undergraduate courses with peace • "Games, Weapons, Morals," by Moral and Survive?" and "Can We themes and evening faculty forums mathematics professor Lukasz Economically Afford the Arms open to the public are scheduled. Pruski a~ philosophy professor Race?" Furay originated the idea of the peace curriculum. Last year, she established the

'We cnn't po. sibly accommo ate th t wd of rowth in the ne t five ye rs (without panding the c mpus).'

cial Issues Committee at USO to pro- vide students with "a basis for reflec- tion and critical judgment on con- temporary social and moral issues." "As a Catholic institution, we have the obligation to pay attention to the plight of individuals who need assist- ance," she said. Joan Anderson, a USD business professor who heads the committee, surveyed the students and found that their knowledge of world subjects, such as poverty and foreign aid, was

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THE~1RIBUNE - ------------

San Diego, Monday, January 27, 1986

"It would take that long to get ev- erything in place. That puts us up to 1990. In the meantime, enrollment is continuing to grow on the main cam- pus." Day said he is hopeful that the North County campus funds will be given the green light in Sacramento. "Sen. (William) Craven (R-Ocean- side) has taken the lead for a long time to bring such a campus to the North County," he said. "The people who live in that area are very excited about getting it, and all the communities in North County want it." Day said a proposed major build- ing on campus, which was scratched at the last minute by the governor in his 1985-86 budget, appears to have a good chance of making it in the 1986- 87 state budget. The building, which will house stu- dent services, faculty offices and classrooms, is very high on the prior- ity list of the CSU trustees, and is supported by the Legislature and the governor, he said. "We have every indication it will go in the new (state) budget," Day added. "I don't see any problem at the moment. "The first thing we'll look at is the governor's budget, which comes out in January, to see if it is included. "We already have planning money, so this proposed funding would be for construction." UCSD Extension, which offers a wide range of programs, 1s concen- trating on courses dealing with the economic development of the San Diego region, said extension dean Dr. Mary Walshok. "I believe that knowledge and the innovations of it are what will fuel the economy," she said. "We are taking a lot of initiative to get information out to the people

who can use it in developing their enterprises. "An example is a program on tech- nology and entrepreneurship, which will help small high-tech companies learn from people in the field, from lawyers, accountants and bankers,

not just from textbooks. This will give them hands-on experience." Walshok said UC Extension also is going in for more s~ientific and t~h- nical courses updatmg the San Diego professional community. /

College enrollment

Fall '84 33,611 14,303 10,200 5,264 3,556 1,917 108,700

Fall '85 34,000 14.425 10,339 4,972 2,500 1,930 90,990

Encinitas, CA (San Diego Co.) Coast Dispatch (Cir. 2xW. 46,492)

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Mira Mesa Scripps Ranch

pressure will make the creation of a North County satellite campus im- perative in the next few years. Pressure comes from traditional- age students, those 18 to 25, and from non-traditional ~rsons who already have their college degree but are in high-tech fields and want to improve their skills or take on a second ca- reer, Day said. "There is no way we can satisfy the current enrollment pressure, much less the increased anticipated pressure on this campus," he said. "We have to have relief, particu- larly in the North County." He said there is a California State University system committee studying the dem- ographics of the area and possible sites. "Through a survey we conducted, we've found that at least 3,000 of our current students come from the North County, and probably more. "I feel absolutely confident that even if we push as fast as we possibly could (to open the campus), if we get money for the land from the (state) Legislature, buy the land, draw up the plans and begin building, if ev- erything went clickety-click, we probably wouldn't be able to admit students for five years.

Star News (Cir. 2xW.)

JAN 29 386

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JAN 29 1986

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speaker assesses preslde~t;,.~~o power "The ~s Veto Power: An Important Instrument of Con- flict in Our Constitutional System" is the title of a speech that will be given Thursday, Jan. 30, at 8 p.m., at the Uni~ San Diego School of Law. Thelali7°'wruch will be delivered by Judge Carl McGowen, U.S. Court of Appeal, will be offered in the Grace Courtroom. The lecture is free and open to the public. For further information, call Elizabeth Stroube at 260-4600, ex- tension 4349.

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