Class of '68 Biggest Ever at St. John's As Enrollident Soars to High of 13,500

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Class of '68 Biggest Ever at St. John's As Enrollident Soars to High of 13,500 ST. JOHN'S UNIVERSITYALUMNI NEWS Volume VII OCTOBER 1964 Number 2 Class of '68 Biggest Ever at St. John's As EnrolliDent Soars to High of 13,500 St. John's University enrollment is expected to zoom past the 13,500 mark, as nearly 3,000 freshmen donned the traditional red and white beanies for Orientation Week, September 14-18. Magazines throughout the country proclaimed last month: "the Class of '68 is the biggest ever." And St. John's University can echo that proclamation two fold. The freshman class is the largest in the University's 95-year educational history, keeping St. John's at the top of the class as the nation's largest Catholic university. Among its assets, the University has 8,200 men and 5,300 women­ attending classes during the regular academic year. It has 8,850 full-time students and 4,650 part-time students. The Brooklyn sky­ scraper affords learning for 4,425 students, while the Jamaica campus sees 9,075 men and women walk through its halls each day. More than 640 faculty members instill in these "youths of the City" that which the founding fathers of SJU deemed important­ "a solid education." Enrollment Up 1,000 Over '63 During the past summer, more than 6,689 students-a rise of 500 from last year's enrollment-attended summer session classes. Freshmen enrollment is nearly 500 above last year's, while total enrollment is up 1,000 over 1963-'64. To progress with these rising enrollment figures-which inci­ dentally are reported throughout the nation-buildings m_!.lst be constructed, faculties must be increased and newer, more modern methods of instruction must be installed. In all three phases, St. John's has made its move. The many new faces, as well as the old, will scan the campus skyline and will see three jutting roof tops-the multi-million dollar library, St. Augustine Hall; Marillac Hall, the 46-classroom building, and Perboyre Hall, which for the first time in SJU history houses all the administrative offices under one roof. The pictures on this page depict the changing face of the Jamaica Campus and of St. John's. The most impressive of the new buildings-and well it should be -is St. Augustine's Hall (below right). As of this printing, only reference books, desks and some departmental office equipment have moved into the spacious quarters. Soon, book racks, study desks and many extras will also find their places along the walls of the stately four-story. library. On each floor are display cases, thousands of square footage for rows upon rows of books, classrooms-more than 20 of them­ seminar rooms, office space for both library and departmental personnel, private reading rooms and microfilm rooms, but most important, space. A walk through its empty, cavernous four floors and basement left a feeling of wonderment of what's to be done with all that space. Chapel Beneath the Ground Enclosed in glass and sitting beneath the connecting passage between St. Augustine and Perboyre Halls, is the chapel, where the Mass of the Holy Spirit was celebrated September 17. The plate glass, picture windows of the chapel look out onto a patio-type entranceway and toward Marillac Hall (top left), prob­ ably the most modern classroom building to be found anywhere. Besides its 46 classrooms, four of which have movable paneled walls, it contains a 750-seat lecture hall, thousands of lockers for both men and women, a snack bar capable of handling more than 1,000 hungry students, many offices, including the School of Edu­ cation's main office, and on the fourth floor, the instructional television studio, which will beam lectures to more than 20 class­ rooms on the third and fourth floor (the entire building is wired for television and intercom) nearly 30 hours each week during the academic year. Under the administration building roof, can be found the new bookstore, three floors of offices, including the President's, his staff, the vice-presidential suites, conference rooms, the registrar's office, the treasurer's office, placement, purchasing, personnel, student personnel, the telephone control center, and public and alumni relations. In the basement, there is an up-to-date data pro­ cessing room, store rooms and the · St. John's University Press. 2 ST. JOHN'S UNIVERSITY ALUMNI NEWS, OCTOBER 1964 Five Courses Beamed Weekly TV Offers Quality Education St. John's University's new Murr , Shonbrun and Stickley aids, camera signals, etc. And fall lineup of day-time tele­ worked out the obvious bugs the visual aids are not passed vision shows made its debut last of a newly installed control around a classroom. They are month, and despite high audi­ room, tv cameras and two stu­ seen on a close-up camera in a ence participation ratings, it dent cameramen, soon to num­ well lighted room. won't be known until examina­ ber eight. As for the instructor, Murr tion time whether or not the The shows were actually re­ and his staff heartily concur shows were hits. hearsed with each professor that the camera can bring out In charge of beaming the five expounding on his subject for the best in a man who usually instructional television shows one week. During each rehears­ is seen from the back seat in a to more than 20 classrooms on al, visual aids were discussed 750-seat auditorium. "He be­ the third and fourth floors. of prior to and after the lecture. comes more personable on that Marillac Hall is Kenneth M urr, Various television stage tech­ screen than he would in a large Director of Instructional Tele­ nics were also reviewed, such lecture hall," noted Murr. "The vision (shown on left). as the cues, cameraman signals, professor is seen close-up and "At first we expect skepti­ and the screening of visual aids his warmth and personality are cism from both teachers and during certain non-movement better portrayed." students," Murr said. "The periods of the lecture. The professor who fears he teachers because many feel this Murr explained that once the may lose his job through this is not the way to teach. The students realize the effe'ct of the new medium is soon put at ease (Photo by H erb N ewlin) students because they associate by Murr's simple and sound ·television with entertainment, rebuttal to that argument. "In thinking they can't learn from reality," he mused, "the junior CBA Conference Airs a tv set." professor or instructor who Three-Man Staff previously was forced to teach The 31-year old Korean War basic courses because of the '65 Business OutlOok veteran, and his 'two man staff volume of students wanting to of Bill Shonbrun, a New York take these courses, can now be James F. Oates, chairman of the board and Chief Executive University graduate and Chief released for research." Officer of The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the U.S., will Engineer, Joe Stickley, a for­ He also pointed out that since be the luncheon speaker at the College of Business Administra­ mer Air Force electronics tech­ one instructor can now teach tion's Seventh Annual Business Conference at the Hotel St. George, nician, have all the answers to many students, it . would in­ Brooklyn, Tuesday, November 17. substantiate this new· method crease the course offerings, Leading businessmen, gov­ of teaching and learning as the therefore increasing the value ernment and industry economic most progressive educational television on their learning they of the individual professor or policy people and leading ~1- advance ever to be initiated in will see that they remember instructor. umni are expected to attend a major Metropolitan Univer­ more and in the long run will Better Lectures the Conference, which is spon­ sity. learn more. And finally, television teach­ sored by CBA and its Alumni According to director Murr, "The student-if he or she ing can only make a better Association. this is not educational tele­ is involved in a large lecture teacher out of the person on Registration for the program vision, but instructional. hall-type class-will soon see camera. Why? Because he must begins at 11:45 a.m. in the "In instructional tv," he ex­ that tv allows him to see and prepare the lectures with more Grand Ballroom. The day's pro­ plained, "we have a fixed group hear the instructor more clear­ exactness than he has in the ceedings will conclude around of students, required to watch ly. He or she finds the instruc­ past. Ang because the eye to 4:00 p.m. with a cocktail party the beamed course. They are tor's lecture is much better eye contact on the screen is and reception. there to learn and all we have prepared than ever before be­ with every student watching, Following the luncheon, CBA to do is make it interestin for cause the instructor must ive not on_!y with the students the chairman, Stan1ey S irk .., 39- both eye and ear." the director of the program a instructor is looking at, as it is CBA, a partner in Peat, Mar­ Making it interesting took al­ synopsis of the lecture so that in face to face contact. wick, Mitchell & Co., will pre­ most a whole summer's work. the director can set up visual ( Con't. on Page 4, Col. 1) sent the panel program: "Busi­ ness Prospects-'65." James F. Oates, Jr. The panel moderator is the Honorable Matt S. Szymczak, .for the coming year. Not Up to Par? "The Teacher and Teaching Today'' consultant to C.
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