The Megaphone (Georgetown, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 30, 1980 Page: 1 of 8
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42MMEGAPHONE
Southwestern University, Georgetown, Texas 78626 ISSN 0025-8709
Volume 74, Number 10, Thursday, October 30, 1980
(
Goddard to speak
to Heritage Society
(UNS)
SU to raise tuition
Cosmoplitanism on a Global Scale
■ -
--N-c*u - 4a.
1
1981-1982 Academic Year
Description
Tuition and Fees
$200.00
Part-time Tuition, Per Hour
15.00
*
Chorale presents Church Music
)
30.00
30.00
60.00
70.00
Tuition, Fees, Room 6 Board/Resident Student-21 Meal Plan
1
4
b
(
(
K
$1,300.00
100.00
20.00
40.00
85.00
60.00.
375.00
405.00
305.00
345.00
430.00
455.00
455.00
375.00
375.00
430.00
$313.25
333.25
218.25
333.25
per semester
per semester _
per semester
per semester
$ 2,422.25
2,592.25
2,497.25
2,592.25
417.00
20.85
437.85
85.00
60.00
$2,109.00
2,259.00
2,179.00
2,259.00
0
0
0
0
Compare the 1980 - 81 tuition costs of these colleges to SU 1981-82
tuition of $1,500 per semester.
165.00
330.00
Men
Minimum
Maximum
Women
Minimum
Maximum
475.00
23,75
498.75
1980-81 TUITION FEES
Southern Methodist University
University of Dallas
Trinity University
Rice University
$2,200
$1,501
$1,811
* $1,450
480.00
24.00
504.00
454.00
22.70
VT6.76
58.00
2.90
68.90
0
10.00
425.00
460.00
350.00
395.00
490.00
520.00
520.00
425.00
425.00
490.00
185.00
370.00
50.00
55.00
45.00
50.00
60.00
65.00
65.00
50.00
50.00
60.00
60.00
85.00
60.00
85.00
65.00
• 3.25
68.25
’ 61.00
3.05
64.05 ■
SOIrMVWSTERN IINIVERSITY
Hate Schedule for Students - Per Semester
Additional Fine Arts Fees
Art and Theatre/Speech Majors
Music Majors
Non-music Major in applied music
Private, per hour
Group, per hour
Non-art Major taking courses listed
- under "Studio Art" and "Art
Education" per course
Summer School Tuition, Per Hour
Sumner School Room and Board
3-week session
6-week session
Plan II (14 meals per week)
. Sales Tax (5%)
545.00
27.25
572.25
515.00
25.75
540.75
Residence Halls, including Telephone
Laura Kuykendall Hall - Low
- High
Martin Ruter Hall - Low
- High
Ernest L. Kurth Hall
Herman Brown Hall
Moody-Shearn HaTl
International House
Sneed Suite
McCullough Hall
Meals
Plan I (21 meals per week)
Sales Tax (5%) .
U
—4
Ruth Goddard, an
0
The Southwestern University
Chorale, conducted by Kenny
Sheppard, will present a concert
entitled Great Music of the Church
on November 6, 1980 in the Lois
Perkins Chapel at Southwestern
University. Admission is-free. The
Chorale will be assisted by a
chambers orchestra of South-
western University students.
The format of the first half of the
concert is based on the develop-
ment of the English anthem
following the establishment of the
“2
. / 5
works of the main speaker, William
McNeill, a well-known historian
from Oxford University. On Nov. 5,
Dr. Giesecke will introduce the
theories of Kenneth Boulding, an
economist from the University of
Colorado, and on Thursday, Nov. 6,
Dr. Neville will discuss Garrett
Hardin's ideas about human
ecology. All interested students
and faculty are urged to bring their
dinners upstairs for any or all of
the presentations. No advance
preparation is necessary.
Faculty approves excellence policies
be increasing to the point that
Trieble believes: "We can assure
returning students that no. one
should have to stop attending SU
because of lack of funding." He
estimated that daily cost for
salaries alone at Southwestern.-is
$20,000.
Some of the reasons for in-,
creasing costs are to bring the
resident halls and the commons to
a break even level of operation, to
increase faculty pay in proportion
to the rising cost of living and to
encourage donors to increase their
contributions by increasing student
contributions.
substantially more funds for
academically gifted students. The
University will seek to commit an
increasing percentage of en-
dowment income to scholarships
for academically gifted students.
E. In order to encourage the
continued professional develop-
ment of Southwestern University's
faculty, making it possible for
them both to assume active roles as
scholars within their academic
$1,500.00
• 115.00
Plan III (9 meals per week, off-
campus students only)
Sales Tax (5%)
yc
" b,g
-0-289
(1500-1572) and his con-
temporaries. Following are in-
creasingly mature full anthems
and verse anthems by successive
generations of composers, ending
with Henry Purcell 41659-1695) and
G. F. Handel (1685-1759).
The second half of the concert
consists of arrangements of early
American hymn tunes such as Poor
Wayfarin' Stranger and What
Wonfrous Londrous Love is This.
Solosits are Michael Houston,
David Emrich, David Hill, Debbie
The title of this year's Brown
Symposium, scheduled for Jan. 14-
16, is "Macrohistory: Cosmo-
politanism on 3 Global Scale." For
anyone who is curious about the
meaning of the symposium, there
will be three informal meetings
during dinner (5:00-6:00 p.m.) on
Nov. 4, 5, and 6 in the board room
upstairs In the Commons. Dr.
Crowley, the coordinator of the
symposium, will present the first
informative session Nov. 4. Dr.
Crowley's talk will concern the
authority on Texas artist Por-
firio Salinas, will speak at South-
western University on Nov. 6.
• The well-known author, who
collaborated with James Frank
Dobie on some works, will speak at
a meeting of the Georgetown
Heritage Society at 7:30 p.m. in the
auditorium of the Cullen Building.
The public is invited, admission
free.
- One of Goddard's most recent
books is "Porfirio Salinas,"
published by her own Rock House
Press. She has plans to make an
educational documentary film on
the work of Salinas to show his
talents by . presenting a
representative review of his work
now hanging in homes throughout
the Southwest.
Goddard's other books include
"Live and Let Live" and "Ralph
Ogden and The Seven Mustangs,"
done in collaboration with Dobie,
By Rachel Edwards
Next September Southwestern
tuition and fees will be higher in
order to keep pace with the rising
costs of inflation. Kirk Trieble, vice
president in charge of fiscal af-
fairs, explained, "Our feeling is
that as a quality university, if we
do not increase our costs as rapidly
as inflation increases, our quality
would decrease."
The issue of increasing costs is
an annual consideration of the
Board of Trustees who review
estimated revenue as projected by
the administration. Funds
available for student aid will also
u. dui. ‘ .co wbamea ,*0ae.- ■
of students to dilute the quality of
the student body.
C. The University will seek to
develop a student body that
represents the diversity of
American- society, both
geographically and socially, in-
cluding representation from the
international community.
D. The University commits itself
to increasing the levels of financial
aid awarded through its scholar-
ship program and to providing
1980-1981 Increase 1981-1982
By Rachel Edwards
Nine policies and principles
submitted by the Educational
Excellence Committee were
modified then accepted by SU
faculty on October 14 at a meeting
directed by President Dur wood
Fleming.
Most of the faculty was present,
and the policies and principles
passed by a large voice majority
after being slightly altered by a few
amendments and the addition of
one new policy concerning student
recruitment. Other actions taken
by the faculty were the election Dr.
Robert Soulen and Dr. Ellsworth
Peterson to the Presidential Search
Committee, and the approval of a
list of graduation candidates.
When asked the. faculty's general
opinion of the adopted principles,
Dean Benjamin Oliver replied,
"Most people were pleased. Many
felt they contained some fairly
obvious points, and, therefore, saw
no reason to oppose them since
they should have been followed all
along."
Dean Oliver related a con-
versation he overheard between
two faculty , members: One
member said, "I thought those
were the same principles that had
been guiding Southwestern. all
along." The other replied, "Yes,
but at least now we are trying to
state them explicitly, and are going
on record as supporting these
principles." ′ ~o
Dr. Douglas Hooker, who chaired
the Educational Excellence
Committee during its work, stated
that he has "no objections to the
faculty's modifications or ad-
dition," and ' that he sensed a
"general approval" among the
faculty and noticed "very positive
responses" to the adopted ,
guidelines.
The next step to be taken in the
effort to promote educational
excellence at Southwestern will be
the consideration of specific steps
proposed by the EEC. The
suggestions will be given to the
University Council, who wll then
decide how they should be con-
sidered. The final work of the
Educational Excellence Com-
mittee then will come before the
entire faculty and some of the steps
should be adopted by the end of this
year. Dean Oliver expects that the
faculty will experience "honest
differences in opinions" over these
specific issues, and predicts that
the University Council will
sparate the proposed steps into
sections to be considered by in-
dividual faculty committees before
the complete report is brought
before the entire faculty.
11. THE DRIVE TOWARD EX
. CELLENCE: A STATEMENT OF
POLICIES AND PRINCIPLES
In order to promote the
achievement of Educational Ex-
cellence in the 1980's, Southwestern
University commits Itself to the
following policies and principles:
A. The University's central
mission is to be an undergraduate
educational Institution known for
the high quality of its academic
program and the superior
achievement of its graduates. The
University commits itself to the
continuous process of improving
the quality of Its academic
program.
B. The University will seek to
maintain and to enhance the
academic requisites to qualify the
entering students. It will not allow
the recruitment of larger numbers
an alumnus of Southwestern by the Georgetown Heritage
University. Society and by Southwestern's
She has also been an active radio "Art in Texas" course, taught by
script writer for several years and Claude Kennard.
Brown Symposium
has been an editor with an Austin
publishing firm.
Two recent developments have
brought focus upon Goddard's
stature — the Smithsonian In-
stitution's acquisition of the
Goddard materials on Salinas, and
Goddard's role in the authen-
tication of four recently-discovered
works by Salinas.
The lecture will be cosponsored
W0
l‛5
. 14
2-n,7
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.30
. -*7
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Church of England under King Manning, Bobbie Ann Fisher;
Henry VIII. The first group of Barry Barrios, Michael Alexander
Christopher Tye <nd ya|Tie Trevino.
is are
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The Megaphone (Georgetown, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 30, 1980, newspaper, October 30, 1980; Georgetown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1560094/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Southwestern University.