Independent California Colleges and Universities

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Independent California Colleges and Universities Independent California Colleges and Universities Alliant International Assoc. of independent University (system wide Alliant International California colleges and office) University - SAN DIEGO universities 2728 Hyde Street, Suite 100 6160 Cornerstone Court East 1100 11th St., Ste 10 San Francisco, CA 94109- San Diego, CA 92121-3710 Sacramento, CA 95814 1251 (858) 632-2777 (916) 446-7626 (858) 635-4772 (415) 346-4500 Alliant International University American Academy of Aet Center College of - SAN FRANCISCO BAY Dramatic Arts Design 1005 Atlantic Avenue 1336 N. La Brea Avenue 1700 Lida Street Alameda, CA 94501-1148 Hollywood, CA 90028-7504 Pasadena, CA 91103-1999 (510) 523-2300 (323) 464-2777 (626) 396-2200 Azusa Pacific University Biola University california Baptist Univ. 901 E. Alosta Avenue 13800 Biola Avenue 8432 Magnolia Avenue Azusa, CA 91702-7000 La Mirada, CA 90639-0001 Riverside, CA 92504-3297 (626) 969-3434 (562) 903-6000 (909) 689-5771 California Institute of California Institute of the California college of the Arts Technology Arts 1111 Eighth Street 1200 E. California Blvd. 24700 McBean Parkway San Francisco, CA 94107-2247 Pasadena, CA 91125 Valencia, CA 91355-2397 (415) 703-9500 (626) 395-6811 (661) 255-1050 California Lutheran University Charles R. Drew University Chapman University 60 West Olsen Road 1731 E. 120th Street One University Drive Thousand Oaks, CA 91360- Los Angeles, CA 90059- Orange, CA 92866-1005 2787 3051 (714) 997-6815 (805) 492-2411 (213) 563-4000 Claremont Graduate Claremont Graduate Christian Heritage College University University 2100 Greenfield Drive 160 E. 10th Street 150 E. 10th Street El Cajon, CA 92019-1157 Claremont, CA 91711-6160 Claremont, CA 91711-6160 (619) 441-2200 (909) 621-8069 (909) 621-8000 Claremont McKenna College Cogswell Polytechnical Concordia University 500 E. 9th Street College 1530 Concordia West Claremont, CA 91711-6400 1175 Bordeaux Drive Irvine, CA 92612-3299 (909) 621-8111 Sunnyvale, CA 94089-1210 (949) 854-8002 (408) 541-0100 Dominican University OF Fielding Graduate Institute D-Q University California 2112 Santa Barbara Street P.O. Box 409 50 Acacia Avenue Santa Barbara, CA 93105- Davis, CA 95617-0409 San Rafael, CA 94901-2298 3538 (530) 758-0470 (415) 457-5533 (805) 687-1099 Golden Gate University Fresno Pacific University Harvey Mudd College 536 Mission Street 1717 S. Chestnut Avenue 301 East 12th Street San Francisco, CA 94105- Fresno, CA 93702-4798 Claremont, CA 91711-5901 2968 (559) 453-2000 (909) 621-8000 (415) 442-7000 Hope International Holy Names College Humphreys College University 3500 Mountain Blvd. 6650 Inglewood Avenue 2500 East Nutwood Avenue Oakland, CA 94619-1699 Stockton, CA 95207-3896 Fullerton, CA 92831-3104 (510) 436-1000 (209) 478-0800 (714) 879-3901 John F. Kennedy University Keck Graduate Institute La Sierra University 100 Ellinwood Way 535 Watson Drive 4700 Pierce Street Pleasant Hill, CA 94523-4817 Claremont, CA 91711-4817 Riverside, CA 92505-3332 (925) 969-3300 (909) 607-7855 (909) 785-2000 Loyola Marymount Laguna College of art and Loma Linda University University design 11139 Anderson Street 1 LMU Drive 2222 Laguna Canyon Road Loma Linda, CA 92350- Los Angeles, CA 90045- Laguna Beach, CA 92651-1136 2741 2659 (949) 376-6000 (909) 558-1000 (310) 338-2700 Marymount College Master's College, THE Menlo College 30800 Palos Verdes Drive East 21726 Placerita Canyon Rd. 1000 El Camino Real Rancho Palos Verdes, CA Santa Clarita, CA 91321- Atherton, CA 94027-4185 90275-6299 1200 (650) 543-3746 (310) 377-5501 (661) 259-3540 Mount ST. Mary's College Mills College National University 12001 Chalon Road 5000 MacArthur Blvd. 11355 N. Torrey Pines Rd. Los Angeles, CA 90049- Oakland, CA 94613-1000 La Jolla, CA 92037-1011 1599 (510) 430-2135 (858) 642-8101 (310) 954-4019 Notre Dame De Namur Occidental College New College OF California University 1600 Campus Road 777 Valencia Street 1500 Ralston Avenue Los Angeles, CA 90041- San Francisco, CA 94101-1797 Belmont, CA 94002-1997 3314 (415) 437-3460 (650) 508-3600 (323) 259-2691 Otis College OF ART AND Pacific Graduate School of Pacific Oaks College DESIGN Psychology 5 Westmoreland Place 9045 Lincoln Blvd. 935 East Meadow Drive Pasadena, CA 91103-3592 Los Angeles, CA 90045-3505 Palo Alto, CA 94303-4223 (626) 397-1300 (310) 665-6800 (650) 494-7477 Pepperdine University Pacific Union College Patten University 24255 Pacific Coast One Angwin Avenue 2433 Coolidge Avenue Highway Angwin, CA 94508-9797 Oakland, CA 94601-2699 Malibu, CA 90263-1000 (707) 965-6313 (510) 261-8500 (310) 506-4000 Point Loma Nazarene Phillips Graduate Institute Pitzer College University 5445 Balboa Blvd. 1050 N. Mills Avenue 3900 Lomaland Drive Encino, CA 91316-1509 Claremont, CA 91711-6110 San Diego, CA 92106-2899 (818) 386-5600 (909) 621-8000 (619) 849-2200 Saint Mary's College OF Pomona College Samuel Merritt College California 550 N. College Way 450 - 30th Street 1928 Saint Mary's Road Claremont, CA 91711-4434 Oakland, CA 94609-3302 Moraga, CA 94575 (909) 621-8000 (510) 869-6511 (925) 631-4000 San Francisco Conservatory San Francisco Art Institute of Music San jose Christian College 800 Chestnut Street 1201 Ortega Street 790 - South 12th Street San Francisco, CA 94133-2206 San Francisco, CA 94122- San Jose, CA 95112 (415) 771-7020 1411 (408) 278-4300 (415) 564-8086 Saybrook graduate School Santa Clara University and Research Center Scripps College 500 El Camino Real 450 Pacific Avenue 1030 N. Columbia Avenue Santa Clara, CA 95053-4345 San Francisco, CA 94133- Claremont, CA 91711-3905 (408) 554-4100 4640 (909) 621-8148 (415) 433-9200 Southern California Southern California College Simpson University University OF Health OF Optometry 2211 College View Drive Sciences 2575 Yorba Linda Blvd. Redding, CA 96003-8606 P.O. Box 1166 Fullerton, CA 92631-1615 (530) 226-4606 Whittier, CA 90609-1166 (714) 870-7226 (562) 947-8755 Thomas Aquinas College Universidad Anahuac de Stanford University 10000 North Ojai Road Xalapa Stanford, CA 94305-1927 Santa Paula, CA 93060-9621 Circuito Arco Sur s/n, (650) 723-2300 (805) 525-4417 Reserva Territorial Xalapa Veracruz, Mexico (CP 911197) 01228 8 19 15 15 Universidad Anahuac del Sur Universidad del Mayab University OF Judaism Av. De las Torres 131, Col. A.P. 96 Cordemex 15600 Mulholland Drive Olivar de los Padres 97310 Merida, Yucatan, Bel Air, CA 90077-1599 Mexico, D.F. (C.P. 01780) Mexico (310) 476-9777 011 525 628-8800 011 529 922-0001 University OF La Verne University OF Redlands University of San Diego 1950 Third Street 1200 E. Colton Avenue 5998 Alcala Park La Verne, CA 91750-4401 Redlands, CA 92373-0999 San Diego, CA 92110-2492 (909) 593-3511 (909) 793-2121 (619) 260-4600 University OF Southern University OF San Francisco California University of the Pacific 2130 Fulton Street University Park 3601 Pacific Avenue San Francisco, CA 94117-1080 Los Angeles, CA 90089- Stockton, CA 95211-0197 (415) 422-6886 0001 (209) 946-2011 (213) 740-2311 Western University of Health University of West Los Angeles Vanguard University Sciences 1155 W. Arbor Vitae Street 55 Fair Drive 309 E. 2nd Street, College Inglewood, CA 90301-2902 Costa Mesa, CA 92626-6520 Plaza (310) 342-5200 (714) 556-3610 Pomona, CA 91766-1854 (909) 623-6116 Westmont College Whittier College Woodbury University 955 La Paz Road 13406 E. Philadelphia St. 7500 Glenoaks Blvd. Santa Barbara, CA 93108-1023 Whittier, CA 90608 Burbank, CA 91510-7846 (805) 565-6000 (562) 907-4200 (818) 767-0888 Info from: certicc.org 2003, and "California Colleges and Universities: The complete Pocket Guide" 2004. Note: phone numbers and addresses might have change since the publishing of these sources. .
Recommended publications
  • San Diego Memorabilia Collection MS-0217
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt1x0nd8md No online items San Diego Memorabilia Collection MS-0217 Special Collections & University Archives 5500 Campanile Dr. MC 8050 San Diego, CA 92182-8050 [email protected] URL: http://library.sdsu.edu/scua San Diego Memorabilia Collection MS-0217 1 MS-0217 Contributing Institution: Special Collections & University Archives Title: San Diego Memorabilia Collection Identifier/Call Number: MS-0217 Physical Description: 2.61 Linear Feet Date (inclusive): 1868-1976 Date (bulk): 1890-1930 Language of Material: English . Scope and Contents The San Diego Memorabilia Collection contains historic ephemera related to San Diego. Brochures, tickets, programs, labels, flyers, photographs, stereoscopic views, pamphlets, and postcards are all part of the collection. Most materials do not have dates, although a date is noted where discernible, and most date from the very late nineteenth century or the first half of the twentieth century. Items are arranged by relevant place or topic. Series 15, General San Diego, includes miscellaneous items that do not relate to any of the other major series. Arrangement Note 1. 1915-1916 Panama-California Exposition 2. 1935-1936 California-Pacific Exposition 3. Coronado and the Hotel del Coronado 4. Point Loma and Lomaland 5. La Jolla 6. Hotels, Resorts, and Sanitariums 7. Missions 8. Theatres and Entertainment 9. Churches 10. Schools and Colleges 11. Railways and Trolleys 12. Ships and Boats 13. Local Businesses 14. Military 15. General San Diego 16. Maps and Oversize Conditions Governing Access This collection is open for research. Conditions Governing Use Some of these materials are in the public domain.
    [Show full text]
  • Rebecca Bass-Ching, LMFT 3160 Camino Del Rio S #304, San Diego, CA 92108 Phone 619.819.0283 Ext 9 Fax 619.819.0284 Cell 619.726.2052
    Rebecca Bass-Ching, LMFT 3160 Camino del Rio S #304, San Diego, CA 92108 Phone 619.819.0283 ext 9 Fax 619.819.0284 cell 619.726.2052 Clinical Professional Experience Founder + CEO, Potentia Family Therapy, Inc. 2011 - Present Developed the creative and clinical vision for thriving integrative, multidisciplinary mental health practice offering individual, couples, family and child therapy and providing specialized care in the treatment of trauma/anxiety; disordered eating spectrum and shame+perfection struggles; manage and supervise Registered Marriage and Family Therapist Interns + Independent Contractors; develop and maintain budget for training, operations and marketing of practice and team; speak, write and train on various aspects of family systems, disordered eating, EMDR/trauma, shame + perfection, parenting to promote practice, standards of care in field and community resource offerings; coordinate care for clients with various treatment providers; lead workshops, groups and community events; manage weekly client caseload; connect and collaborate with other professionals + treatment centers; development of online resources and offerings; manage website, blog and email list along with other marketing and resource materials. Adjunct Professor, Practicum, Bethel Seminary San Diego, 2013-present Work with cohort of trainees as they meet their AAMFT requirements for clinical hours and video presentations; support students in their chosen theory as they develop their clinical, legal and ethical skills; advise students on matters of integration,
    [Show full text]
  • Anthony Mann, Geoffrey Shurlock, and the Cult of Theosophy John Wranovics
    UNCOMMON GROUND ANTHONY MANN, GEOFFREY SHURLOCK, AND THE CULT OF THEOSOPHY John Wranovics hroughout his career, Anthony Mann pushed the envelope regarding what could be shown on Caldwell’s God’s Little Acre (1958), stories that for years had been stalled by censors and branded as unfilmable. screen. With unprecedented acts of violence, such as Raymond Burr throwing molten Cherries As he moved from Poverty Row to major studios, Mann routinely battled the Production Code Administration (PCA), the Jubilee in Chili Williams’ face in Raw Deal (1948), George Murphy slashed to pieces by a motor- industry’s self-policing censorship office, headed by Irish-Catholic Joseph I. Breen. From its inception in 1932 until 1954, ized harrow in Border Incident (1949), or Alex Nicol firing a bullet through Jimmy Stewart’s hand in Geoffrey Manwaring Shurlock served as Breen’s right-hand man. Shurlock even ran the PCA during Breen’s brief stint as general The Man from Laramie (1955), Mann constantly tested the limits. He didn’t shy away from contro- manager of RKO from 1941-1942. He formally took the reins when Breen retired in ’54, serving as America’s chief film censor T versial sexual subjects either, filming adaptations of James M. Cain’s Serenade (1956) and Erskine until his own retirement in January 1968, when introduction of the ratings system made the PCA superfluous. 26 NOIR CITY I NUMBER 21 I filmnoirfoundation.org filmnoirfoundation.org I NUMBER 21 I NOIR CITY 27 In 1900, Katherine Tingley founded the International Theosophical Headquarters, aka “Lomaland,” in Point Loma, a seaside community in San Diego, California “The code is a set of self-regulations based on sound morals pool, England.
    [Show full text]
  • Lomalandfor Cleaner the THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY THAT SETTLED in POINT LOMA SEE STORYOB on PAGE Streets 10
    20192019 Five Five Star Star Professional Professional Award Award forfor the the Fifth Fifth Year Year PointPoint Loma Loma Branch Branch 4980 4980 North North Harbor Harbor Drive, Drive, Suite Suite 203 203 San San Diego, Diego, CA CA 92106 92106 SanSan Diego Diego Community Community Newspaper Newspaper Group Group FRIDAY, AUGUST NOV. 8, 201916, 2019 INSIDEINSIDE EMOTIONAL MEMORIAL Movement WELCOME TO LOMALANDfor cleaner THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY THAT SETTLED IN POINT LOMA SEE STORYOB ON PAGE streets 10 BY DAVE SCHWAB | THE BEACON esidents are being asked to sign a peti- Rtion on Ocean Beach’s Neighborhood Watch Facebook page to take action to “help to keep our sidewalks PointersPoint Loma miss CIFPointers playoffs prep clean ensuring a healthier forSEE season PAGE 13 opener environment for everyone.” “One complaint that is often SEE PAGE 11 heard about the downtown area of Ocean Beach is how dirty, stained, and smelly the sidewalks are,” the online peti- tion reads. “The OB Clean & Safe Pro- gram, a project of the Ocean Beach MainStreet Association, is looking to change that by applying for funding to provide The circular Temple of Peace and diamond-shaped Raja Yoga Academy (with colorful glass domes) are centered in this 1910 aerial view of bi-monthlyLomaland estate. cleanings At lower of right New- are dormitories called group homes. Note some 45,000 trees planted through the school’s Forestry Department. port Avenue sidewalks, in additionPOSTCARD to COURTESY installing OF KATHY addition- BLAVATT Melinda White (left) embraces an emotional Eva King during the memorial at Sunset Cliffs for Mike White, a well-known angler and surfboard al trash bins along the street.
    [Show full text]
  • National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet
    NFS Form 10-900a OMB No. 1024-0018 (8-86) United States Department of the Interior National Park Service NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES CONTINUATION SHEET Section ___ Page __ SUPPLEMENTARY LISTING RECORD NRIS Reference Number: 03000472 Date Listed: 9/22/2003 Rosecroft San Diego CA Property Name County State N/A Multiple Name This property is listed in the National Register of Historic Places in accordance with the attached nomination documentation subject to the following exceptions, exclusions, or amendments, notwithstanding the National Park Service certification included in the nomination documentation. /^ Signatured off the Keeper Date of Action Amended ^Ctems in Nomination: Level of Significance: The level of significance was not provided on the original nomination. The appropriate level based on the documentation provided is: State. [While A. D. Robinson may have had national influence, the current documentation does not provide an adequate national context for the field of horticulture during the period in question. The documentation clearly establishes and supports significance at the local and state levels.] U. T. M. Coordinates: The correct U. T. M. Coordinates are: 11 476990 3619580. These revisions were confirmed with the California SHPO office DISTRIBUTION: National Register property file Nominating Authority (without nomination attachment) NPS Form 10-900 '" i ™.——————— —9*iQfr , No. 1024-0018 (Oct. 1990) "RECEIVED 2280 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service APR I- 5 ?no3 National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NAl IjEGISTER OF HISTORIC PLA Ctt NATIONAL PARK SERVICE This form is for use in nominating or requesting determinations for individual properties and disl IBlff"l5? ! 1*fl9tR3GIKlT1srkrfie)ifioill9mipf te the National Register of Historic Places Registration Form (National Register Bulletin 16A).
    [Show full text]
  • The Theosophical Society Began Its Settlement on the Barren and Windswept Slopes of Point Loma in 1896
    The Theosophical Society began its settlement on the barren and windswept slopes of Point Loma in 1896. Led by Katherine Tingley, the group came to Point Loma to establish a community that would model the philosophical and humanitarian goals of Theosophy. The "White City" envisioned by Tingley was to be located on the extreme western edge of the North American continent but oriented toward India, the spiritual center of Theosophical beliefs. Lomaland was the Theosophical commune located in Point Loma from 1900 to 1942. Theosophical Society leader Katherine Tingley founded it in 1900 as a school, cultural center, and residential facility for her followers. The American headquarters of the Theosophical Society Pasadena was also situated there. The facility was important to the growing city of San Diego for its cultural offerings, and it left a lasting legacy in its campus (now Point Loma Nazarene University) which still retains many of the unique architectural features of the original Lomaland. The residents of Lomaland also transformed their Point Loma neighborhood by planting so many trees, orchards and shrubs that the neighborhood is now known as the "Wooded Area". The blend of new world confidence, Victorian morality, a love of antiquity, and Indian spirituality created a unique community that found its expression in architecture that is still visible on the campus of Point Loma Nazarene University. By 1900, the campus was dominated by the imposing Academy Building and the adjoining Temple of Peace. Both buildings were constructed in the Theosophical vernacular that included the flattened arch motif and whimsical references to antiquity. The buildings were topped by amethyst domes, which were lighted at night and could be seen offshore.
    [Show full text]
  • California Colleges & Universities
    California Colleges & Universities California Community Colleges California State University University of California Independent Colleges & Universities Produced by: and ICC The California GEAR UP Program and the California Education Round Table Intersegmental Coordinating Committee (ICC) are pleased to provide you with this guide to California colleges and universities. We encourage you to Table of Contents use it with students, families, and your California middle school colleagues 113 Community in developing a college- Colleges going culture. For ad- ditional copies or further California information, please 23 State contact California GEAR University UP at 916-681-6933 or www.castategearup.org University or ICC at 916-324-8593 of or www.certicc.org. 10 California We hope that you will share this resource with Independent middle school colleagues 81 Colleges and and friends. Universities C A L I F O R N I A C O M M U N I T Y C O L L E G E S California Community Butte College Colleges Chancellor’s Office 3536 Butte Campus Drive 1102 Q Street Oroville, CA 95965-8399 Sacramento, CA 95814 (530) 895-2511 (916) 445-8752 www.butte.edu www.cccco.edu Cabrillo College College of Alameda 6500 Soquel Drive 555 Atlantic Avenue Aptos, CA 95003-3119 Alameda, CA 94501-2109 (831) 479-6100 (510) 522-7221 www.cabrillo.edu www.alameda.peralta.edu Canada College Allan Hancock College 4200 Farm Hill Boulevard 800 South College Drive Redwood City, CA 94061-1099 Santa Maria, CA 93454-6368 (650) 306-3100 (805) 922-6966 www.canadacollege.edu www.hancockcollege.edu College of the Canyons American River College 26455 North Rockwell Canyon Rd.
    [Show full text]
  • Atheri Ne Tingley on Marriage
    Katheri ne Tingley M arriag e and the Hom e An Interv iew w ith the TheOSOphical Lead er By Claire M erton Publis hed by The T e s i P h o oph cal ub lishing Co. i L Po nt oma , California h 1 2 a her ne in le Copyrig t . 9 1 , by K t i T g y CONTENTS Katherine Tingley on M arriage and the Home : An Interview By Claire Merton Katherine Tingley : Theosophist By Iverson L . Harris Jr . Lomaland The Home of Theosophy By Kenneth Morris Brief Chronology of some Important Events in the History of t he Theos phiocal Movement There s hou ld be in all thin one i d gs s ngle evotion, one motiv e one d e i re an , s d aspiration. Diff erences of natu re and mind a re inev itable; each s hou ld there ore accord to all the s ame toleration he a k or him el f s s f s f, , and then the s ingle thread of d evotion will u nite all into one Univ ers al Brotherhood . The power wou ld be i mmen e ! i thi were u t into o eration i wo d s , f s p p t u l d o a o s en t ll, al ng the inv is ible bu t real currents , a tr am o hel or mind ou l and bod u nitin a l s e f p f , s , y, g l h in er ane a d u how he wor d the r a on t e n pl , n th s s t l e l power of co- operation on all the planes of force and cons cious nes s .
    [Show full text]
  • FOIA 12‐13607 Submitted to ICE FOIA May 3, 2012
    Student and Exchange Visitor Program U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement FOIA 12‐13607 Submitted to ICE FOIA May 3, 2012 Summary List of SEVP‐Certified Schools located in California, along with flags indicating school education levels School School Local Local Local Local Private Private PrivHighLvl Public Vocation Flight Language Higher Other F M School School Address City State ZIP TrngLvl EduLvl HighLvl Code Name EdLvl ElemLvl MidLvl TechEduLvl TrngLvl LOS214F00078000 The Buckley School 3900 Stansbury Ave Sherman Oaks CA 91423 Y Y Y N N N N N N Y N LOS214F00086000 California Baptist University 8432 Magnolia Avenue Riverside CA 92504 N N N N N N Y Y N Y N LOS214F00091000 California Institute of Technology 1200 E. California Blvd., 250‐86 Pasadena CA 91125 N N N N N N N Y N Y N California Polytechnic State San Luis N N N N N N N Y N Y N LOS214F00093000 University, San Luis Obispo 1 Grand Avenue Obispo CA 93407 LOS214F00097000 Cate School 1960 Cate Mesa Road Carpinteria CA 93013 N N Y N N N N N N Y N LOS214F00101000 CERRITOS COLLEGE 11110 ALONDRA BLVD. NORWALK CA 90650 N N N N N N Y Y N Y N International Student & Scholar N N N N N N N Y N Y N Services, 11139 Anderson St., SSC‐ LOS214F00109000 Loma Linda University (LLU) 1201E Loma Linda CA 92350 LOS ANGELES UNIFIED SCHOOL N N N Y N N N N N Y N LOS214F00110000 DISTRICT 333 S. Beaudry, 29th floor Los Angeles CA 90017 LOS214F00117000 Linfield Christian School 31950 Pauba Road Temecula CA 92592 Y Y Y N N N N N N Y N LOS214F00147000 Besant Hill School of Happy Valley 8585 Ojai‐Santa Paula Road Ojai CA 93023 N N Y N N N N N N Y N Hebrew Union College‐Jewish N N N N N N N Y N Y N LOS214F00150000 Institute of Religion 3077 University Ave Los Angeles CA 90007 LOS214F00161000 Desert Sands Unified School District 47‐950 Dune Palms Rd.
    [Show full text]
  • California Postsecondary Education Commission -- California Colleges
    CALIFORNIA COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES, 2010 A Guide to California’s Degree-Granting Institutions and Degree, Certificate, and Credential Programs CALIFORNIA POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION COMMISSION 770 L Street Suite 1160 Sacramento, California 95814-3396 COMMISSION REPORT 10-19 PUBLISHED NOVEMBER 2010 This report, like other publications of the California Postsecondary Education Commission, is not copyrighted. It may be reproduced in the public interest, but proper attribution to Report 10-19 of the California Postsecondary Education Commission is requested. Introduction Table of Contents Introduction................................................................................................................................................................ 5 Part 1: The Institutions California Community Colleges................................................................................................................................ 9 California State University...................................................................................................................................... 47 University of California ........................................................................................................................................... 59 Other Public Institutions ......................................................................................................................................... 67 WASC-Accredited Independent Institutions........................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Historical Nomination
    Historic Nomination Report of the Ralph and Helene Benton / Ralph Hurlburt and Charles Tifal House 3312 Elliott Street Loma Portal Community ~ San Diego, California Ronald V. May, RPA Kiley Wallace Legacy 106, Inc. P.O. Box 15967 San Diego, CA 92175 (858) 459-0326 (760) 704-7373 www.legacy106.com July 2018 1 HISTORIC HOUSE RESEARCH Ronald V. May, RPA, President and Principal Investigator Kiley Wallace, Vice President and Architectural Historian P.O. Box 15967 • San Diego, CA 92175 Phone (858) 459-0326 • (760) 704-7373 http://www.legacy106.com 2 3 State of California – The Resources Agency Primary # ___________________________________ DEPARTMENT OF PARKS AND RECREATION HRI # ______________________________________ PRIMARY RECORD Trinomial __________________________________ NRHP Status Code 3S Other Listings ___________________________________________________________ Review Code _____ Reviewer ____________________________ Date __________ Page 3 of 39 *Resource Name or #: The Ralph & Helene Benton / Ralph Hurlburt and Charles Tifal House P1. Other Identifier: 3312 Elliott Street, San Diego, CA 92106 *P2. Location: Not for Publication Unrestricted *a. County: San Diego and (P2b and P2c or P2d. Attach a Location Map as necessary.) *b. USGS 7.5' Quad: Point Loma Date: 2015 T ; R ; ¼ of ¼ of Sec ; M.D. B.M. c. Address: 3312 Elliott Street City: San Diego Zip: 92106 d. UTM: Zone: 11 ; mE/ mN (G.P.S.) e. Other Locational Data: (e.g., parcel #, directions to resource, elevation, etc.) Elevation: 380 feet Legal Description: Lot Seventeen (17) in Block Nineteen (19) of Chatsworth Terrace, according to Map #1244 filed in the Office of the County Recorder of said San Diego County on June 23, 1911. It is Tax Assessor’s Parcel (APN) # 450-134-13-00.
    [Show full text]
  • Theosophy,” Forthcoming In: SAGE Encyclopedia of Sociology of Religion, Adam Possamai & Anthony Blasi (Eds.)
    Egil Asprem, “Theosophy,” forthcoming in: SAGE Encyclopedia of Sociology of Religion, Adam Possamai & Anthony Blasi (eds.) Theosophy Introduction Theosophy refers to a set of ideas and organizations originating with the activities of Russian- born occultist Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (1831–1891). Embodied in the Theosophical Society, established in New York City in 1875 by Blavatsky, the American military officer and lawyer Henry Steel Olcott (1832–1907), and the Irish-American barrister William Quan Judge (1851–1896), Theosophy attracted tens of thousands of students in the late nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries, leaving a number of splinter organizations in its wake. The leading branch of Theosophy moved its headquarters to Adyar in Chennai, India, in 1886; an independent American branch has been associated with the activities of Katherine Tingley (1847–1929), including the theosophical commune Lomaland (1900–1942) in Southern California, and is now known as the Theosophical Society Pasadena. In 1913 Rudolf Steiner (1861–1925) took most of the German membership with him when he broke out of the Theosophical Society Adyar and formed the Anthroposophical Society, which has since spread Waldorf education, biodynamic farming and anthroposophial medicine to hundreds of thousands of people across the world. Theosophically inspired groups have had a remarkable impact on contemporary religiosity, but also on a wide array of political, artistic, and social movements of the past 150 years. To sociologists of religion, Theosophy is particularly important for understanding the transnational exchanges that have transformed the modern religious field, as well as the emergence of “unchurched” religion/spirituality (primarily) among the educated middle classes under the pressures of secularization.
    [Show full text]