News Scrapbook 1970-1972

EVENING TRIBUNE

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S<111 Diego, Monday, Augu~t 14, 1972

Thursday, August 17, 1972

La Jolla, California

BOOST IN FEES EXPECTED, TOO Area colleges brace for biggest nrollment • ,n

said Byrnes Fagerburg, admissio rector for USJU. "But nearly every other campus and individual program i showmg an in- crease" · ister Annette Bourret. of admissions or undergraduate tudies at"ilieCjjivers1ty of San Diego, reports a 13% increa e m Ire. hman applica- tions !or this rail. She said overall en- rollment is expected to be up about 10% over last year, with a total of about l ,650 students - not counting the law ·chooL ''We're expectmg about 350 entering freshmen this year," he said. "That doesn't •ound like very much com- pared with (San Diego) State, but we're really proud of it." USD student will be faced with a new tuition schedule this fall which Sisler Bourret said is designed to be "more equitable for everyone." Tuition will now be $55 a unit instead of a flat S750 a semester. Thi· will give a financial break to students with a light study load-und r 14 units-but will be more costly to hose with full- lime schedules. For example, a student carrying 15 (Continued on page B-3, col. 3) Colleges brace for biggest year

only a slight increase this year over la. t year's student population, but tui- tion is climbing from $630 a quarter to $730. The California Western campas - which was . old to Pasadena College two month· ago - will continue operation for one more year under USIU with about l ,300 students - down nearly 1,000 from last fall. Auniversity spokesman said the tui- tion increase is necessary to offset ris- ing c o s I s in operation and planned growth at the Elliott campus when Cal Western facilities and ,taff are moved there after the 1972-73 school year. Pasadena College, a small liberal arts school a liated with the Church of the Nazarene, will move to the scenic Point Loma ite in time for classes to begin in September 1973 Total enrollment at USIU, mcluding graduate programs, the law school and overseas campuses, i3 expected to reach 4,650. USIU has campuses in England, fexico City, Hawaii, A!rir.:a and Colorado. "There probably won ·1 be any overa II increase In enrollment t h i s year be- cause of the Cal Western I uation,"

Temmer said UCSD will begin a pro- gram in the fall to encourage more ju- nior college students to consider trans- f errtng lo the umv rsity. The UC Board of Regents la t month eased the adrn1 10n requirement for Jumo ollcge transfers who will now quahfy for any campus or the statewide system lf they complete at least 56 se- mestPr units wih a 2.0 ( traight C) grade average. According to the regents, about 80% of Junior college students who move on to a four-year college choo.;e either a small private school or one of the 19 campuses m the ·tate university and colleges ·y tern. "But we·d also ltke to share in the upper d1v1,1on load " Temmer said. No fee increa:es are planned at UCSD since the regents imposed ''educational fees'' on the system two year· ago. It will cost undergraduates $212 a quarter and graduate students $226. For non-residents, tack on 500 to those figure ·. Private universities m lhe area aren't being hit as hard by the rush of stu- dents - but enrollment, keep growing. And . o do costs. U. Internatlonal university expects

those who aren't California :es1cients must pay $37 a unit. A student mu,t live in Ca!Jforma at least 12 months tie- lore he can qualify a a re 1dent. Across town at UCSD. the atlmmis- lration i:; expecting about a 2~, overall mcrea e in enrollment from last year•~ 5.591 rtudcnts, according to Harold Temmer, admission orf1cer. ' We're tretChing our capabilit} :o meet community ne d ," Temmer aid. ' We had to redirect about 500 ap- plicahons to other campu es because v.e Jut ('ou1dnl handle any more here nght now." Temmer said he was disappoir-•cd tha few or the incoming students this fall v.ould be Junior colle e transfer,. ' :\1o t of our transfers are from oth- er four-year college·," he aid. "We re not getting as man Junior college tr n fe .as we hould. and we·re try- mg to orrert that. W re a 1ous to pick up mora ju• nior college transfers because there's a I ore room·in upper div1s10n classes than at the Ire hman and sophomore level. "The tate colle~es are getting most of the Jumor college transfers right nov., and that has tn,ditionally been the ca e."

Anti- b cen1ty easure Fough (Continued)

USD LIBRARIAN'S ARGUMENT

?-/V-7~

ill Oppo ed

ti-0 scenity

ln- C'om-

Toda), chulzk J!d o ob tatn a conviction n pro cci;•or must prove that the offending material ' taken as a whole

inter- mpo-

o pr

a pealed

ests, went be,onc co rary standard re- deemmg social importance." The ini iative would elimi• nate the ··redeemmg social 11llportance" test from the general standard and addi- tionally would re-defme "con- temporar) standards of mor- ality." I LI\IITJ 'G BCTORS Uncer present law, contem- porazy tandards refer to what is atceptable throughout th" t a I e The llll iativc would lirrut lhP test 10 what 1s ace ;itable wllhm the com- mumty. Spec.tf1call> defined a, ob- scene,' per se, under the m- 1t1ative would be -L1ve nudity 1n com- mercial stage product! n . -The showing of mo or of morality and is utterly v.1thout

of publ!cat

111E RE\. CH RLE DOLLE · d1stnbution

I

(Continued on B-3, col. 7)

••• que lion measure

Augu!t 16, 1972 T reros' AD Wool pert leaves post

is featured by Spanish architecture

The USO callpus

University of San Diego is 'the one on the hill'

The University of San Diego is usually referred to as " the one on the hill" Situaled on 200 acres overlooking San Diego Bay Mission Bay and the Pacifi~ Ocean, the campus, featuring Spanish Renaissance ar- chitecture, comes into view as you drive south on Highway 5 from La Jolla. Chartered in 1949 the university was formerly the San Diego College for Women, owned and operated by the 'Religious of the Sacred Heart, and the College for Men, owned by the Catholic Diocese of San Diego. On May 18, the two colleges were officially merged into one university. Coed classes meet in a friendly, open atmosphere of dialogue possible because of the small classes and close student. faculty relationships, school officials say.

USD students have the op- portunity to actively participate in their university by serving on committees with faculty members and contributing their ideas on the academic program and the future development of USD. On a campus where the student-faculty ratio is 13 to 1, the exchange of ideas goes beyond the classroom.. Throughout the year, the • University of San Diego offers cultural as well as intellectual opportunities for the public to come to the campus. The University Symphony Orchestra is comprised of students and professional players, many with the San Diego Symphony and the La Jolla Civic Orchestra. The opera workshops are the only ones produced in the county. The art galleries open to thc,public daily.

special education upon the basis of USD's elementary and secondary programs, as well as programs in guidance and counseling. The graduate division offers masters degrees in eight disciplines aswell as amaster of education, master of arts in teaching and credential programs in elementary, secondary and special education. These programs are built around a strong value-oriented undergraduate program. The enrollment is 2,600 in- cluding 1,600 undergraduates, 800 law students and 200 graduate students. There are day and evening classes as well as exchange programs available in Mexico and France. Some 65 per cent of the faculty hold Ph.D.'s. Doctorate holders teach lower classmen as well as upperclassmen.

Though a Catholic institution, USD is open to persons of all races and creeds. Resident students from 30 different states and 21 foreign countries create a multifaceted community. The University of San Diego is comprised of three professional schools and a liberal arts college. The College of Arts and Sciences is a continuation and enrichment of the liberal arts tradition of the university. The School of Law is nationally recognized. A J. D. may be earned in three years in the day program or in four years through the evening division. The School of Business Ad- ministration combines a liberal arts program with professional training for management. The School of Education puts special emphasis on the area of

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