Volume VII, Number 6
September 21, 1999
American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers
Editor: Paul Aucoin, pgaucoin@samford.edu
Associate Editor, Scott Dittman, sdittman@wlu.edu
Subscription Manger: Erika Watts, wattse@aacrao.nche.edu
Paul Anderson, past president of AACRAO, in an apparent attempt to refute the old adage that you can't teach an old dog new tricks, is coming out of his recently announced retirement to be the Visiting Associate Registrar at the University of Central Florida in Orlando. Paul begins his new job on September 24, 1999. Paul will be available by phone at 407.823.3357 and by e-mail at phanders@mail.ucf.edu. Paul will be assisting Dennis Dulniak with the office while Dennis works on the PeopleSoft student records implementation at UCF.
Robert S. Barkley, rbrtbkl@clemson.edu, has been named Director of Admissions at Clemson University. Bob had previously served as Associate Director.
Barbara R. Blaney, barbarab@gwm.sc.edu, has been named the new University Registrar at The University of South Carolina. She had been Associate Registrar there, and previously at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.
Barbara Boothe, baboothe@yahoo.com, has a new job at Liberty University as Director of Planning, Research and Assessment, after 22 years as Registrar. Her responsibilities include coordinating the assessment of faculty, students and staff on a regular basis and some involvement in program analysis. Barbara will also ensure that Liberty follows the criteria for accreditation by SACS. She is also a consultant for TRACS, an accrediting association for Christian schools.
C. Anthony Broh, broh@Princeton.EDU, has been appointed Director of Research at the Consortium on Financing Higher Education (COFHE), effective October 1, 1999. Dr. Broh is currently the Registrar at Princeton University where he has worked since 1984. As Princeton's institutional research representative to COFHE, he has served on numerous COFHE task forces and committees; most recently, he completed a two-year term on COFHE's Research Advisory Committee. In his new capacity at COFHE, Broh will be responsible for development and oversight of the COFHE research agenda and policies, supervision of research staff, design and execution of major research projects, and oversight of the development and applications of technology. A Ph.D. recipient from the University of Wisconsin, Broh did his undergraduate work at Marshall University in Huntington WV. He did post-doctoral work in psychology and political science at Yale University and began his career teaching in political science. He has taught undergraduate and graduate courses at Duke University, Columbia University, Rutgers University and Princeton University. His professional activities include membership on the Policy Panel on Racial/Ethnic Data Collection of the National Science Foundation (NSF); co-founder and board member of the Registrar Summer Institute at Aspen (RSIA); and service as a committee member on the Higher Education Data Policy Committee for the Association for Institutional Research (AIR). He is the author of two books, as well as several articles, chapters, and reports in higher education and political science. Tony reports that "Joe Greenberg will be appointed Acting Registrar. Many of you may know Joe from his extensive AACRAO activity and work on the AACRAO Program committee for the past several years. Joe is presently the Deputy Registrar, and as such has run registration and most of the office registrar functions for many years."
Jon D. Curtis, CURTJD@mail.snc.edu, retired at the end of August as Registrar at St. Norbert College. Jon taught high school in Carthage and Troy for four years SUNY at Albany in 1966 as Assistant Director of Admissions. St. Norbert called him west in 1970 as Associate Director of Admissions and year later named him Registrar when he "decided to get off the road and adopted two children. During my time as Registrar I also taught political history (US Presidential Elections, Rise and Fall of Third Parties and Pressure Groups) and military history (World War II), plus the standard intro courses in US History and Western Civilization. My outside interests include being very active in the DePere Kiwanis, being the most avid New York Yankee baseball fan amid rabid Green Bay Packer fans, and collecting antique political campaign items from the era 1896-1996. My career spans the punched card to on-line era and at 60 I am tired of reading documentation. Therefore since I want nothing to do with Y2K, accrediting association visits, and reading documentation till my eyes are red, I decided it's time to call it a career." Jon hopes to move to Jackson TN eventually.
In August, Teresa Dahlke was named Assistant Director of Student Records and Registration at the University of Nebraska at Kearney after having served as the Interim Assistant Director since October 1998. Teresa and had previously worked in UNK's Offices of Enrollment Services and Residential and Greek Life.
Tim Drueke has been named Registrar at Winthrop University in Rock Hill, SC, beginning September 27, 1999. Tim previously was Associate Director of Student Records and Registration at the University of Nebraska at Kearney, Tim went to UNK as Assistant Director in 1995 and was named Interim Associate Director in September 1998 after the retirement of Lila Williams. Tim worked previously at Southeast Community College-Lincoln (NE) as the Registration and Records Specialist and at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.
Dr. Hansford Epes, Jr. will be Interim Registrar at Davidson beginning immediately. He is Director of Davidson's Humanities program and has been chair of the German department for many years. The latter he relinquishes this year to add Interim Registrar to his job titles. While he is new to our work formally, he has deep experience with many of our issues, having served on our Curriculum Requirements Committee and on practically every faculty committee at Davidson. Former Registrar Polly Griffin, in transit to her new position as Registrar at Dartmouth recommends Hansford as "a wonderful colleague and a sophisticated resource early on. I have introduced him to the network of support he will have with SACRAO and AACRAO. He has been on Regist-L for a month or so to listen to our questions and comments."
Allison Foster, afoster@mariacollege.org, is the new Assistant Director of Student Records (who "does the registrar stuff") at Maria College in Albany N.Y. Allison, with degrees in psychology and college student personnel, was the Assistant Registrar at Herkimer County Community College (NY).
Ken Gilson has moved to the University of Western Oregon in Monmouth to take on the responsibilities of University Registrar. Ken had been at Oberlin since January 1998 as Associate Registrar. Prior to his stint at Oberlin, Ken served his alma mater, Wheaton College [IL] for seven year, five in admissions and two in development.
Joe F. Head, Dean of Enrollment Services and Director of Admissions at Kennesaw State University (Georgia) "won" a Chancellor's Faculty Development Seminar appointment to study in Ireland this past summer for 20 days. While there, he encouraged student/faculty exchange and the study of Celtic history, particularly, calligraphy. Joe visited with counterparts in Ireland to discuss enrollment services and learn something of their ways. Joe has a 20-year history of teaching the scribble arts in Continuing Education classes and has lectured on the subject in several graduate media classes.
James T. Mansfield, JimMans@uwyo.edu, wrote that he has retired as Director of Admission & Enrollment Services at the University of Wyoming, effective September 1, 1999, after 38 years. Jim's successor as the new Associate Vice President for Enrollment Management/Director of Admissions is Sara Axelson, formerly admission director at Western Colorado in Gunnison.
Glenn Parker, who joined West Chester University last December, left WCU to join ABT, a higher education software firm. Glenn will be training new software users.
The conference is intended for admissions, registrar, and data management professionals in student systems and enrollment management who want to join over 500 higher education institutions around the country in moving away from paper systems to support transcripts, enrollment certification, course catalog, admissions, financial aid and perspective students.
Mentoring is an important part of every EDI Workshop. This year, along with the informal mentoring that naturally occurs, attendees will be grouped with one of the experienced EDI users for more deliberate discussion of EDI issues for their campus.
The Local Arrangements group is providing a great venue for the workshop. Downtown Indianapolis has scores of restaurants and other attractions. In November, the weather is usually cooperative.
The conference room rate at the Radisson is just $82 plus tax. Call 1-800-333-333 for reservations.
Early bird registration is just $195. After October 1, it goes up to $225. The registration form and program is on the website at http://web.srr.lsu.edu/edi.
More information may be obtained by contacting Jeanenne Rothenberger at jeanenne@purdue.edu or Robert Doolos at rdoolos@lsu.edu.
It's not too soon to start thinking about New Orleans, and the wonderful time the AACRAO Local Arrangements Committee is planning for us there in April. To get your taste buds stimulated a bit, check out http://www.neworleans.com/foodfest/restaurants.html for links to pages about some of the best cuisine that the Big Easy has to offer. And if your visits to those pages gets you to hankering for some authentic New Orleans food, you can find the recipes and then cook it up yourself by going to http://www.neworleans.com/foodfest/recipes.html where cajun cooks exchange recipes. Try this one for red beans and rice, which was traditionally cooked on Monday while the washing was being done:
4 Slices bacon, chopped
1 onion, chopped
l large bay leaf
l lb dried red kidney beans
1 lb hot sausage (Kielbasa works well)
1 lb ham, cut in small chunks or a ham bone cut in 2"
pieces
2 quarts water
6-8 cups hot, cooked long-grain rice
1 cut green onion, finely chopped
1 tsp garlic, minced
your favorite hot pepper sauce to taste (careful!)
salt & pepper to taste
Wash kidney beans and rinse well. Soak beans in 2 qts water for at least 4 hours or overnight in refrigerator. Drain & reserve liquid.
In a 4 qt pot, saute bacon pieces until transparent. Drain some of the fat. Add sausage to the remaining fat & brown. Add ham. Add both kinds of onion & garlic. Cook 5 min or until onion is translucent.
Stir in beans & reserved liquid. Add pepper & bay leaf. Add ham-bone pieces. Bring mixture to a boil, then simmer over low heat for at least 4 hrs, stirring often. If beans seem dry, add water a cup at a time. (probably about 2 cups)
Beans are done when some split, forming a thick liquid for rest of beans. Some people mash some beans against side of pot. Remove ham-bone pieces, trim away meat & return it to pot. Discard bones. Add salt, pepper & tabasco.
Serves 6 over hot rice with a tossed green salad & french bread.
Remember, you have just over seven months to get in the mood for New Orleans, and you can start today by pronouncing it the way the natives do - "Nawlins." See ya dere, chere.
And Paul Saffo of the Institute for the Future says, "We're not going to need more HTML coders five years from now. We're going to need biotechnologists. Everyone wants to start an Internet business today, because they don't realize that the science moguls of a decade down the road will be the biotechnologists. And that means a good chance that the biotechnology moguls a decade from now will be foreign-born."
But not everyone is worried; management consultant and author Michael Hammer, a creator of the "reengineering" movement, argues: "Computer science gives you the intellectual grounding to deal with enormous complexity. The liberal arts teach critical thinking, the basic sciences teach the scientific method, but computer science gives you systems thinking skills. It teaches the value of precision, and it gives you the ability to deal with tradeoffs and with huge issues of design."
For more information see: http://www.sjmercury.com/svtech/news/breaking/merc/docs/014380.htm
ShoutMail: If you're looking for an alternative to lugging around a laptop or a PDA to get your e-mail, then take a look at the ShoutMail service. This telephone-based e-mail solution allows you to check e-mail, send e-mail, and even send voice mail over the Internet from any telephone. The service is free, and only requires a toll-call. You can even set up an account and have the service read your messages to you. Check it out at http://www.shoutmail.com.
IPEDS: The final IPEDS Redesign Taskforce Report is available online at http://nces.ed.gov/ipeds/ncestfredesign.html.
International Baccalaureate recognition policies of 800 North American Colleges and Universities are available online through the IBO web site (under http://www.ibo.org/ibo/english/diploma.htm#university). Anyone with access to the Internet can view the policies of US and Canadian universities in regard to the way they treat IB Diploma credentials for admission, credit, and placement. IB will be constantly updating the policies, so the information will be more accurate. Also, IB has assembled all the minor research studies done on the effectiveness of the IB (by colleges, universities, and secondary schools) and prepared a Power Point presentation.
Legal information: The Office of the University Counsel for Catholic University has developed what looks like a great web site for independent higher education institutions. It's at http://www.cua.edu/admin/counsel. From there, you go to Legal Information, and then click on Legal Information by Topic.
Data Warehousing: John Porter has provided some web references on data warehousing, including Arizona tate's data warehousing project at http://www.asu.edu/Data_Admin/. John's CAUSE/EFFECT article can be found at http://www.educause.edu/pub/ce/cem95/cem954.html. If you are interested in learning more about data warehouses and becoming more comfortable with some of the jargon, you may wish to check out http://www.datawarehouse.com. Another site is http://www.sunworld.com/swol-05-1997/swol-05-datawarehouse.html. John also recommends some non-Web resources: Bill Inmon's Building the Data Warehouse; Ralph Kimball's The Data Warehouse Toolkit; Barry Devlin's Data Warehouse: From Architecture to Implementation. I like Anahory and Murray's Data Warehousing in the Real World but it is for a written for technical types (has lots of good project management info for building a warehouse).
National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) has just released it's new web page. This newly designed page has incorporated several new functionalities along with easier navigation to help make your visit as informative and enjoyable as possible. To visit the site please go to http://nces.ed.gov.
"Strivers" discussion: A story in a recent issue of The Chronicle of Higher Education explores over the debate over an idea -- under consideration by the Eductional Testing Service -- to devise ways for colleges to give extra preferences to students who are "strivers." These are students who score better than would be expected, on average, for members of their particular racial, ethnic or socioeconomic group on the SAT and other standardized tests. Proponents of this concept see it as a way for colleges to preserve racial and ethnic diversity in their classes -- even if affirmative action is barred. But critics see this as nothing more than affirmative action under a different name. Scott Jaschik, editor of The Chronicle, invited participation in an on-line discussion on the concept at http://www.chronicle.com/colloquy/99/sat/sat.htm.
Links in Academe: The Chronicle of Higher Education has completely redone the section of links to on-line resources for people in academe. You'll find links to major sites in each academic discipline, as well as links to sites that deal with higher-education administration. And it's all been reorganized to make it easy to use. You'll find it at http://chronicle.com/free/resources/index.php3.
Degrees listed: Dan Vilenski <DPV9670@RIT.EDU> and Mike McDermott <mmcdermo@gmu.edu> recently shared a link to New York State's specifications use http://www.higher.nysed.gov/ohpe/ocue/regenrul.htm. As Mike pointed out, "it is a convenient listing of every degree 'registered' in New York, including honorary degrees, with the approved abbreviation. Note that this is A standard, not THE standard." Mike also offered to share more detail of degree nomenclature usage world-wide via e-mail.
NB: If you know of a web site that you think may be useful to your colleagues, please send the URL to Scott Dittman at sdittman@wlu.edu so that it may be considered for inclusion in a future issue of NetNews. Tell a little about why you like it, and be credited with the catch.
The Thursday virus is being taken more seriously now after PCs at eight financial institutions were infected and has appeared in a total of about 5,000 systems in the U.S., the United Kingdom, Ireland, France, Poland, Switzerland, Austria, Germany, and Latvia. The virus is capable of erasing all files on a computer's C: drive. Symantec researchers say the virus will not spread widely as it has no way of distributing itself other than Word 97 files. In addition, anti-virus updates that are currently available should be able to detect and eliminate the virus. However, Network Associates did change its warning on the Thursday virus from medium to high risk after the financial institutions were infected. The high-risk warning places Thursday in the same category as Melissa, Chernobyl, and ExplorerZip.
Several anti-virus companies are offering free programs to detect and remove the "Thursday" virus that could attach itself to Microsoft Word 97 documents and spread by e-mail or network. Experts believe there is plenty of time to prevent most damage from the virus, which is intended to wipe out computer hard drives on December 13th.
For more information see http://www.sjmercury.com/svtech/news/breaking/merc/docs/018037.htm
and
http://www.infoworld.com/cgi-bin/displayStory.pl?99092.enthursday.htm
Computer Associates has found Cholera posted to a hacker site in Germany, and due to the potential danger inherent in the worm/virus, is warning users not to accept suspicious e-mail attachments. The worm/virus is currently listed as a medium threat, as it has not been found "in the wild" and infecting user systems, but will automatically be upgraded to a high threat as soon as it is, according to the company.
Like the earlier Worm.ExploreZip virus, Cholera is able to transmit itself through e-mail, targeting all e-mail addresses found on a system. For this reason, the virus could overload e-mail servers, causing them to fail. Cholera is also able to work with any e-mail platform. Although experts have learned that Cholera leaves a virus file on the systems it attacks, they are still trying to determine the virus' payload, if any. Users that receive the virus see a smiley face in the text and an attachment called setup.exe that appears to be a self-extracting setup program. When the user reboots, Cholera infects the system, inserting keys into the win.ini file and the Win9x registry.
For the full story see: http://www.infoworld.com/cgi-bin/displayStory.pl?99098.encholera.htm
Another virus appearing last week, called W32/Fix2001, arrives as a note from the "system administrator" and claims to provide software for fixing a Y2K Internet problem. If launched, the virus will attach itself to all future e-mail transmissions. Although experts say both viruses are not considered major threats, future viruses could be.
Signs to look for:
1) Misspellings and/or grammatical mistakes in the catalogues.
2) Overemphasis on degree titles following a professor's name (for example, Dr. John Smith, Ph.D., Ed.D., etc.).
3) Students are asked to send application forms, other documents, checks, etc., to rented post- office boxes.
4) Tuition charged by the degree instead of by the credit hour, course or semester.
5) Discounts offered for enrolling in two or more programs at once.
6) Credits given for activities such as model shipbuilding, yoga, watching TV, etc.
7) Degree programs that can be completed in a very short time. A court order recently shut down Columbia State University for offering phony bachelor's degrees that could be earned in only 27 days.
8) Little or no interaction between students and professors.
9) A long list of accrediting agencies not recognized by the U.S. Department of Education.
10) Overemphasis on the program's accessibility and the long-term benefits of having a degree in today's competitive job market.
For more information see: http://www.usnews.com/usnews/nycu/28dipbox.htm
According to the Department of Education report "Highlights from the Baby Boom Echo: No End in Sight": Between 1989 and 2009: * Elementary school enrollment will rise by 4.7 million, secondary enrollment by 3.6 million and college enrollment by 2.8 million. * Public high school enrollment is expected to increase by 29%, while elementary enrollment is projected to increase by 15%. * The number of public high school graduates will increase by 18 percent. * Seventeen states will have at least a 15% increase in the number of public high school graduates, with a 146% increase projected for Nevada, 85% for Arizona, 56% for California, and 51% for Florida. * Full-time college enrollment is projected to rise by 26%.
Between 1999 and 2009:
* Public high school enrollment is expected to increase by nearly 9%, while elementary enrollment is projected to decrease by less than one percent. The number of public high school graduates will increase by 16%.
* Fifteen states will have at least a 15% increase in the number of public high school graduates, with a 77% increase projected for Nevada, 56% for Arizona, and 40% for North Carolina.
* The total number of public and private high school teachers is expected to rise by 75,000 --a 6% increase; a total of 2.2 million public elementary and secondary school teachers will be needed over the period to accommodate the new students and replace those teachers who retire or leave the profession for other reasons.
* Full-time college enrollment is projected to rise by 14%.
Beyond 2009:
* Unlike the decline after the previous baby boom, where births dropped down to 3.1 million in the early 1970s, the number of births is not projected to fall off, but to increase slowly for the next 10 years. Long-range projections by the U.S. Bureau of the Census indicate that the number of births will continue to rise thereafter, from to 4.2 million in 2009 to 4.8 million in 2028.
The full report is on ED's web site at: http://www.ed.gov/pubs/bbecho99/highlights.html.
Celebrating New Beginnings the EDUCAUSE Annual Conference
October 26-29, 1999, Long Beach, California
http://www.educause.edu/conference/e99/
Strategic Enrollment Management Meeting (SEM IX)
Nov. 10-14, 1999, Lake Buena Vista, Florida
http://www.aacrao.com/me-semIX-frame.html
EDI in Education Workshop
November 14-16, 1999, Indianapolis, Indiana
http://web.srr.lsu.edu/edi
AACRAO Annual Meetings:
April 9-13, 2000, New Orleans, LA http://www.neworleans.com
April 21-25, 2001, Seattle, WA http://www.seattle.com/visiting/index.html
April 13-18, 2002, Minneapolis, MN
April 6-10, 2003, Washington, DC
President: Penny Pendleton, Director of Admission & Records, Westark
Community College, PO Box 3649. Email:ppendlet@systema.westark.edu
Carolinas ACRAO
Annual Meeting: December 5-8, 1999, Wilmington, NC
President: David Christ, Director of Admissions, Bob Jones University, Greenville, SC 29614, phone: (800) 252-6363, fax: (800) 232-9258, email: dchrist@bju.edu
President-Elect: Ken Hayes, Director of Admissions and Recruitment,
Rowan-Cabarrus Community College, PO Box 1595, Salisbury, NC 28145-1595,
phone: (704) 637-0760x 212, fax: (704) 633-6804, email: hayesk@rccc.cc.nc.us
Illinois ACRAO
Annual Meeting: October 27-29, 1999, Springfield, IL
President: Miriam Rivera, Director of Admissions and Records,Northeastern Illinois University, 5500 N. St. Louis Ave, Chicago, IL 60625, phone: (773)-794-2853, fax: (773)-794-6246; email m-rivera@neiu.edu
Florida
Annual Meeting: June 4-7, 2000, Tampa, Florida
President: Lisa Damian, Assistant Registrar, Univesity of Miami, PO Box 248026, Coral Gables, FL 33124, phone: ( 305) 284-2294, fax: (941) 284-6293, email: ldamian@miami.edu
President-Elect: Deborah Fuschetti, Registrar, South Florida Community College, 600 West College Drive, Avon Park, FL 33825-9356, phone: (941) 453-6661, fax: (941) 453-2365, email: fuscde24@sfcc.cc.fl.us
Georgia
Annual Meeting: July 25-27, 1999, Augusta, GA
President:Dee Minter, Director of Enrollment Management and Admissions,
Macon State College,
100 College Station Drive, Macon, GA 31206-5144, phone: (912) 471-2031,
fax: (912) 471-5343, e-mail: dminter@cennet.mc.peachnet.edu
President-Elect: Mike Deal, Registrar, Georgia Southern University, PO Box 8092, Statesboro, GA 30460, phone: (912) 681-5421, fax: (912) 681-5439, email: tdeal@gsvms2.cc.gasou.edu
Idaho
Annual Meeting: West Yellowstone, MT, April 8-9,1999.
President: Steve Bussolini, Director of Enrollment Management, Lewis-Clark State College, 500 8th Avenue, Lewiston, ID 83501, phone: (208) 799-2210 or 1-800-933-5272, fax: (208) 799-2063, email: sbussoli@lcsc.edu
President-Elect: Andrew Hanson, Associate Director of Admissions, Lewis-Clark State College,500 8th Ave, Office of Admissions, Lewiston, ID 83501,phone: (208) 799-2210 or 1-800-933-5272, fax: (208) 799-2063, email: ahanson@lcsc.edu
Illinois
Annual Meeting: October 27-29, 1999, Springfield, IL
President: Miriam Rivera, Director of Admissions and Records, Northeastern Illinois University, 5500 N. St. Louis Ave, Chicago, IL 60625, phone: (773)-794-2853, fax: (773)-794-6246; email m-rivera@neiu.edu
President-Elect: Judy Jobe, Vice President of Instruction, Elgin Community College, 1700 Spartan Drive, Elgin, Il 60123-7193, phone: (847) 697-1000 ext: 7226
Indiana
Annual Meeting: October 28 & 29, 1999, Holiday Inn Select North,
3850 De Paul Blvd.Indianapolis, IN
President: David Campbell, Director of Admission, Indiana University Southeast, Adm. Ofc, 4201 Grant Line Road, New Albany, IN 47150; email: dcampbel@iusmail.ius.indiana.edu
Kansas
Annual Meeting: September 29-Oct 1, 1999, Overland Park, Kansas
President: Joel Keller, Registrar, Hutchinson Community College,1300 N Plum, Hutchinson, KS 67501 e-mail: keller@hutchcc.edu
President-Elect: Diana Barnes - Assistant Registrar, Wichita State University, Wichita, KS 67260-0058 e-mail: barnes@twsuvm.uc.twsu.edu voice: (316) 978-3089
Kentucky
Annual Meeting: October 11-13, 1999, Lake Barkely State Park, Cadiz,
Kentucky
President: Tracy Casada, Registrar, Somerset Community College, 808 Monticello Road, Somerset, KY 42501, phone (606) 679-8501, fax: (606) 677-9658, e-mail: tlcasal@pop.uky.edu
President-Elect: Melissa Gorbandt, Assistant Director of Admissions, Northern Kentucky University, LAC 400 Nunn Dr., Highland Heights, KY 41099, phone: (606)-572-5744, fax: (606) 572-5566 email: gorbandt@nku.edu
Louisiana
Annual Meeting: October 6-8, 1999, Lake Charles, LA
President: James Robertson, Jr., Registrar, Northeast Louisiana University, Office of the Registrar, Monroe, LA 71209-1110, phone: (318) 342-5262, fax: (318) 342-5274, e-mail: rerobertson@alpha.nlu.edu
Michigan (MACRAO)
Annual Meeting: November 3-5, 1999, Bellaire, MI
President: Lisa Kujawa, Director of Admissions, Lawrence Technological University,21000 West 10 Mile Southfield, MI 48075; phone(248)-204-3180; email-kujawa@ltu.edu
President-Elect: Karen Klump, Registrar, Alma College, 614 West Superior Street, Alma, MI 48801, phone: (517) 463-7348, fax: (517) 463-7993, email: klumpp@alma.edu
Middle States (MSACROA)
Annual Meeting: November 29-Dec 2, 1999, Pittsburgh, PA
President: David R. Clawson, Associate University Registrar & University Dir., of Student Records, Thomas Jefferson University, 1015 Walnut Street, Room G-22, Philadelphia, PA 19107, phone: (215) 955-5001, e-mail: david.clawson@mail.tju.edu
President-Elect: Ira Tyszler, Dean of Institutional Research & Review, Touro College, 27-33 West 23rd Street, New York, NY 10010-4202, phone: (212) 463-0400, fax: (212) 627-9542, email: tysz@touro.edu
Mississippi (MACRAO)
Annual Meeting: April 3-4, 2000, Louisville, MS
President: Cathy R. Van Devender, Registrar, William Carey College, 498 Tuscan Avenue, Box 4, Hattiesburg, MS 39401-5499, phone: (601) 582-6195, fax: (601) 582-6196, e-mail: regoff@wmcarey.edu
President-Elect: Bettye Graves, Director of Data Management & Records, Jackson State University, PO Box 17125, Jackson, MS 39217-0125, phone (601) 968-2300, fax: (601) 968-2399, e-mail: bgraves@ccaix.jsums.edu
Missouri
Annual Meeting: November 14-16, 1999, Tan-Tar-A Resort, Lake of the
Ozarks, Missouri
President:Jay Goff, Director of Admissions, Southeast Missouri State University, One University Pla;za, Cape Girardeau, MO 63701, phone: (573) 651-2590, fax: (573) 651-5936, jwgoff@semovm.semo.edu
President-Elect: Kathy Brockgreitens, Director of Admissions and Registrars, St. Charles County Community College, 4601 Mid Rivers Mall Drive, St. Peters, MO 63376-2866, phone: (314) 922-8229 fax: (314) 922-8236, email: k-brockgreitens@chuck.stchas.edu
Montana
Annual Meeting: April 8-9, 1999 in West Yellowstone, Montana.
President: Edwin D. Johnson Registrar & Director of Summer School Montana Tech of The University of Montana 1300 West Park Street Butte, MT 59701 Phone: (406) 496-4396 Fax: (406) 496-4710 Email: EJohnson@mtech.edu
Nebraska
Annual Meeting: October 21-23, 1999, Holiday Inn, York, Nebraska
President: Wade Robinson, Assistant Vice Chancellor, Student Enrollment Services, University of Nebraska at Omaha, EAB 101 6001 Dodge Street, Omaha, NE 68182, phone: (402) 554-2988, fax: (402) 554-3472, e-mail: wrobinso@unomaha.edu
President-Elect: Nancy Penna, Registratr & Assistant Dean of the College, Dana College, Blair, NE 68008;phone (402)-426-9000; fax: (402)426-7386; e-mail: nancyp@fs1.dana.edu
New England
Annual Meeting: November 1-3,1999, Nashua, NH
President: Brian Murphy, Dean of Admissions and Enrollment, Stonehill College, 320 Washington St., Easton, MA 02357-5610,phone(508)- 565-1545, email: bmurphy@stonehill.edu
Ohio
Annual Meeting: November 3-4, 1999, Athens OH
President: Lorinda Bishop, Registrar, Owens Community College, PO Box 10,000,Toledo, OH 43699-1947, phone: (419) 661-7394, fax: (419) 661-7418,lbishop@owens.cc.oh
Oklahoma
Annual Meeting: October 6-8, 1999, Western Hills Lodge in Wagoner,
OK
President: Gordon Reese, Associate Director of Admissions, Oklahoma State University, 103 Whitehurst Hall, Stillwater, OK 74078, phone (405)-744-3087, fax: (405)-744-8426, e-mail glr6458@okstate.edu
Pacific
Annual Meeting: November 7-10, 1999, Portland, Oregon
President: Saundra Springfield, Assistant Director, Office of Admissions & Outreach, University of California, San Diego, phone: (619)-534-3945; fax: (619)-534-5723; e-mail: sspringfield@ucsd.edu
Tennessee
Annual Meeting: November 17-19, 1999, Nashville, TN
President: Robert Hodum, Admission Counselor, Tennessee Tech University, Admissions Office, PO Box 5006, Cookeville, TN 38505-0001, phone: (931) 372-3636, fax: (931) 372-6250, email: rhodum@tntech.edu
Texas
Annual Meeting: November 1-5, 1999, Lubbock, TX
President: William Morris, Assistant Vice President, Office of Academic Affairs, The University of Texas-Pan American, 1201 West University Drive, Edinburg, Texas 78539; phone: (956)-381-2112, fax: (956) 381-2114,e-mail: wlm3851@panam.edu
President-Elect: Mike Smith, Registrar, Texas Tech University Health Science Center, 3601 4th Street, room 3B310, Lubbock, TX 79430, phone: (806) 743-2300
Upper Midwest States
Annual Meeting: October 24-26, 1999, Sioux Falls, SD
President: Alice Poehls, University Registrar, University of North Dakota, Box 8382, Grand Forks, ND 58202, phone: (701)-777-2711, fax: (701)-777-2696, email: alice_poehls@mail.und.nodak.edu
Virginia
Annual Meeting: December 6-8, 1999, Hot Springs, VA
President: D. Scott Dittman, University Registrar, Reid Hall, Washington and Lee University, Lexington, VA 24450, phone: (540)463-8455, fax: (540)463-8045, email: sdittman@wlu.edu
West Virginia
Annual Meeting: October 6-7, 1999, Parkersburg, WV
President: Connie Young, Registrar/Director of Institutional Research, University of Charleston, 2300 MacCorkle Aveue SE, Charleston, WV 25304, phone: 304-357-4737, fax: (304) 357-4737, email:cyoung@uchaswv.edu
Wisconsin
Annual Meeting: November 3-5, 1999, Eau Claire, WI
President: Ellen Fehring, Registrar, Edgewood College, 855 Woodrow St., Madison, WI 53711, phone: (608) 663-2202, email: fehring@edgewood.edu
You may now view position announcements at the AACRAO website. Point your browser to the AACRAO home page at http://www.aacrao.org, then click on the Jobs On-line link in the light green box on the left side of the home page.
Contact Steve Alexander at the AACRAO Office if you wish to place a paid announcement on the site, (202) 293-9161 or by e-mail to: alexanders@aacrao.nche.edu
End of NetNews, an AACRAO Electronic Newsletter
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Erika Watts<wattse@aacrao.nche.edu>
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