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UCSC General Catalog
Welcome
Introducing UCSC
Fields of Study
Academic Calendar
Undergraduate Admission
Undergraduate Expenses and Financial Resources
Undergraduate Academic Programs
Graduate Studies
Resources for Learning and Research
The Colleges
Student Life
Programs and Courses
Teaching and Administrative Staff
Appendixes
Nondiscrimination Statement

The Colleges


Cowell College | Stevenson College | Crown College | Merrill College | Porter College | Kresge College | Oakes College | College Eight | College Nine | College Ten


The University of California, Santa Cruz, is a collegiate university. All undergraduate students and most faculty are affiliated with one of the colleges, their home within the larger university. All the colleges are committed to fostering a nurturing and academically thriving environment for students of all backgrounds. Each college strives to promote the attributes of a diverse and multicultural community in its own unique way. In order of founding, the colleges are Cowell, Stevenson, Crown, Merrill, Porter, Kresge, Oakes, College Eight, College Nine, and College Ten.

Self-contained and architecturally distinct, each college is a relatively small community of 20 to 90 faculty members and between 750 and 1,550 students, about half of whom live on campus. Each college has its own housing, academic, and recreational facilities, and each is an integral part of the larger campus. The colleges have their own academic emphases and cultural traditions, although each seeks faculty and students from a variety of disciplines to foster broad intellectual interests. The colleges play a primary role in academic advising and are the center of student life. Students graduate from their college. At the same time, all university academic programs, resources, and student services are open to students of every college.

The information students need to rank their college preferences can come from a variety of sources—personal acquaintance, a campus visit, literature available from the colleges, and the descriptions in this section of the catalog. Entering students are asked to list several colleges in order of preference; whenever possible, students are assigned to the college of their choice.

Similarities and Differences
Each college is residential and able to house close to half of its students. Most freshmen choose to live on campus, as do a number of sophomores, juniors, and seniors. The particular style of housing varies among the colleges, ranging from fairly traditional residence halls, with a mix of single, double, and triple rooms, to apartment-style housing, where students live together in small groups and may do some of their own cooking. Faculty, staff, or graduate students, along with undergraduate resident assistants, reside in college housing units.

The faculty, or fellows, of each college come from a variety of academic disciplines. Some of the colleges have faculty from nearly all the liberal arts and sciences, while the faculty in other colleges are more concentrated in particular disciplinary interests. Many faculty have their offices in the colleges.

Each college offers its own distinctive academic program for entering freshmen. Taught in the college during the fall quarter, the required course or seminar provides a significant bridge between academic and residential life, since all freshmen, regardless of major, will be in the course, and most will be in residence as well. Stevenson’s core course extends over three quarters, while the other colleges offer one-quarter courses. College core course requirements for transfer students vary (see the College Requirements section for more information). The colleges also offer selected courses in their area of interdisciplinary emphasis and host events and speakers that enhance this focus.

All the colleges provide academic advising and academic and general campus orientations to help you plan your academic program. In addition, each college has academic preceptors who can provide advice on academic matters. (See Advising: From Course Selection to Careers for further information on academic advising.) Psychological and personal counseling is also available in each college, and many colleges have well-developed peer advising and tutoring.

The colleges differ in architecture; each was planned by a different architect, who was encouraged to convey the distinct personality of that college through the design of its buildings and their placement in the natural environment. Above all, the colleges differ in subtle ways having to do with their intellectual and social traditions, the different designs of their student governments, and the predominant interests of their students and faculty.

Changing Colleges
Most students, having affiliated with a particular college, develop friendships and intellectual attachments there, and they remain members of that college throughout their undergraduate years. Some students find that changing academic interests draw them to a different college. During the specified filing period, students may request a change of college with the approval of both college administrations.

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Cowell College

Cowell College inaugurated the Santa Cruz campus when it opened with a pioneer class of 600 students in 1965. The founding faculty shaped an educational program that challenged and enriched students through wide-ranging inquiry and disciplined study. Today, Cowell has nearly 1,500 affiliated students and 80 faculty fellows. Its motto—The Pursuit of Truth in the Company of Friends— expresses a continuing commitment to create a serious academic environment within a humane and broadly inclusive community. The college is named for the S. H. Cowell Foundation, which endowed the college at its founding.

Academic Emphases

The academic theme of the college encourages students to pursue their general and disciplinary study with attention to the values of liberal arts education: understanding one’s individual perspective by exploration of its historical background and world context. Students affiliated with the college pursue majors from all departments on campus.

The faculty fellows affiliated with the college represent all academic divisions (arts, engineering, humanities, physical and biological sciences, and social sciences). The faculty fellows guide the college academic programs and serve as academic mentors to the students, supplementing the advising provided by the college academic advisers and departmental advising.

In satisfying their general education requirements, first-year Cowell students are required to take the Cowell Core Course in the fall term. The core course (Cowell 80), taught in small seminar sections, seeks to develop critical reading, analytical writing, and seminar discussion skills by reading a selection of classic and contemporary texts. In addition, Cowell students are required to raise their level of proficiency in information technology during their UCSC career.

The college academic buildings house humanities faculty, with notable concentrations in philosophy, classics (study of ancient Greek and Latin language and civilization), and modern foreign languages, especially Chinese, French, Italian, and Japanese. The interdisciplinary faculty group in pre- and early modern studies is centered at Cowell College.

Students who develop ideas for research, creative projects, community service, or internship experiences may apply to the college provost for financial support. The college sponsors prizes for outstanding academic work and acknowledges students who graduate with overall academic excellence in a breadth of study with College Honors.

The college enriches the intellectual and cultural life of the campus by sponsoring events of various kinds: lectures and presentations by local faculty and visiting scholars, theatrical and musical performances, and forums and debates on topics of current interest.

College Community and Facilities

Cowell’s seven residence halls and three apartment buildings are arranged in three quadrangles on a hillside overlooking the city of Santa Cruz and Monterey Bay. About 650 students are housed in the college. Each residence hall houses from 40 to 60 students and is divided into two wings, with seven to 11 residents on each floor. Most floors are coed, with men and women sharing common lounges and other facilities, but single-gender floors are provided for those who prefer this arrangement. Apartments house 185 continuing students in six-person units. The residential staff facilitate diverse educational, social, and recreational programming to enhance the living and learning environment.

Arranged around the college’s central plaza are the dining hall, Page Smith study library, the fireside lounge, the coffee shop, and conference rooms and classrooms. Unique to Cowell College are the Eloise Pickard Smith Gallery, which regularly mounts exhibits, and the Cowell Press, where students can learn the fine techniques of hand printing. The college is also home to a French-speaking living-learning community, Maison Francophone, which studies French-speaking communities around the world and plans events for the college.

Since the college’s founding, regularly scheduled College Nights in the dining hall have offered students, staff, and faculty a special meal and a rich mix of after-dinner programs presented by students and professional artists. Community life is enlivened by many other scheduled and impromptu intellectual, cultural, and social events.

The Student Senate meets weekly to discuss campus issues and student government. The Senate advises the college on the allocation of funds for student activities and programs. Members of the Senate are selected each year by lot, but any student may become a voting member by steady attendance at meetings. The college’s multicultural advisory board works with staff to create a supportive community for students of color affiliated with the college and to increase awareness of the many dimensions of diversity in the community.

For more information on the college, see www2.ucsc.edu/cowell or call (831) 459-2253.

Cowell Faculty and Staff
Provost
STANLEY M. WILLIAMSON Chemistry and Biochemistry, Emeritus (through 12/04)
TYRUS H. MILLER Literature (beginning 1/05)
DEANNA SHEMEK Italian Literature (beginning 1/05)
Fellows

MARGARITA AZMITIA Psychology
KAREN BASSI Classics
JAMES H. BIERMAN Theater Arts (Drama)
DONALD BRENNEIS Anthropology
JEAN P. BRODIE Astronomy and Astrophysics
MARGARET R. BROSE Italian and Comparative Literature
GIULIA CENTINEO Italian Language
SANDRA CHUNG Linguistics
PHILLIP CREWS Chemistry
MARIA (TONIA) DE CHICCHIO Italian Language
JOHN M. DORIS Philosophy
CAROL M. FREEMAN Writing
MARY-KAY GAMEL Classics and Comparative Literature
RAYMOND W. GIBBS JR. Psychology
ROBERT A. GOFF Philosophy
M. VICTORIA GONZÁLEZ-PAGANI Spanish Language
DANIEL GUEVARA Philosophy
GILDAS HAMEL French Language and Classical Studies
ELLEN LOUISE HART Writing
CHARLES W. HEDRICK JR. History
MARGO HENDRICKS Literature
THEODORE HOLMAN Chemistry and Biochemistry
DAVID C. HOY Philosophy
JOCELYN HOY Philosophy
MICHAEL M. HUTCHISON Economics
CHIYOKO ISHIBASHI Japanese Language
VIRGINIA JANSEN History of Art and Visual Culture
GEORGE KANE, Art Cowell Press
KEVIN KARPLUS Computer Engineering
JACQUELINE KU Chinese Language
WILLIAM A. LADUSAW Linguistics
BRUCE D. LARKIN Politics
CAMPBELL LEAPER Psychology
GARY L. LEASE History of Consciousness
THOMAS A. LEHRER American Studies and Mathematics
H. M. LEICESTER JR. English Literature
HERVÉ LE MANSEC French Language
JOHN P. LYNCH Classics
PATRICE L. MAGINNIS Music
GLENN L. MILLHAUSER Chemistry and Biochemistry
JEROME NEU Philosophy
CHARLES L. (LEO) ORTIZ Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
RICHARD E. OTTE Philosophy
DANIEL PALLEROS Chemistry and Biochemistry
GEOFFREY K. PULLUM Linguistics S.
RAVI RAJAN Environmental Studies
FRANK A. RAMÍREZ Spanish Language
BETH REMAK-HONNEF Librarian
ZACK SCHLESINGER Physics
SUSAN Y. SCHWARTZ Earth Sciences
CATHERINE M. SOUSSLOFF History of Art and Visual Culture
ELLEN KAPPY SUCKIEL Philosophy
ANTHONY J. TROMBA Mathematics
PAUL WHITWORTH Theater Arts
JOHN WILKES Science Communication
JAMES WILSON Writing; College Academic Preceptor
Emeriti Fellows

W. EMMANUEL ABRAHAM Philosophy, Emeritus
GEORGE T. AMIS English Literature, Emeritus
HARRY BERGER JR. English Literature and Art History, Emeritus
RALPH J. BERGER Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Emeritus
GABRIEL BERNS Spanish Literature, Emeritus
CHARLES W. DANIEL Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology, Emeritus
JOHN DIZIKES American Studies, Emeritus
ROBERT M. DURLING Italian and English Literature, Emeritus
MIRIAM ELLIS French Language, Emerita
PATRICIA FITCHEN French Language, Emerita
THEODORE FOSTER Marine Sciences, Emeritus
BERT KAPLAN Psychology, Emeritus
S. PAUL KASHAP Philosophy, Emeritus
RICHARD MATHER History, Emeritus
MELANIE J. MAYER Psychology, Emerita
GARY B. MILES History, Emeritus
PEGGY MILES Writing, Emerita
ANDREW TODD NEWBERRY Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Emeritus
DAVID A. ORLANDO French Language, Emeritus
RICHARD R. RANDOLPH Anthropology, Emeritus
AUDREY E. STANLEY Theater Arts, Emerita
THOMAS A. VOGLER English and American Literature, Emeritus
MICHAEL J. WARREN English Literature, Emeritus
College Administrative Officer

JAMES CARTER  
Staff

LISA BIRNEY College Assistant
ANGIE CHRISTMANN College Programs Coordinator
ELIZABETH COWAN Financial/Budget Specialist
DEBRA ELLIS Residential Life Coordinator
OSCAR GUILLEN Senior Building Maintenance Worker
JODI HARVEY Coordinator for Residential Education
KAREN HILKER Programs Assistant
JAY MINERT Coordinator for Residential Education
DAN MONKO Maintenance Supervisor
MARY JAN MURPHY Counseling Psychologist
LINDA POPE Gallery Director
CATHY SHENDER Assistant to Provost and College Administrative Officer/Records Coordinator
STACEY SKETO-ROSENER Academic Preceptor
KARA SNIDER College Programs Coordinator
CAROL SNYDER Coffee Shop Manager
PHIL SPENCER Community Safety Officer
DARIA TROXELL Housing Coordinator
ADRIANNE WAITE Associate College Administrative Officer
LYNNE WOLCOTT Academic Preceptor

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Stevenson College

We are Stevensonians; we are free agents of history and masters of our own destinies. Every one of us is important, and we cherish our differences as much as we cherish our shared values of love, chivalry, honesty, hard work, and responsibility.
   — Seung Kyun Joseph Mok, Stevenson Alumnus/Regents Scholar

Stevenson College is named after former statesman and U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Adlai E. Stevenson. Our faculty, students, and staff take pride in intellectual critical inquiry, academic and civic leadership, and respect for students’ concerns about shared student governance, human rights, and social justice.

Stevenson College has a long-standing reputation for excellence in liberal education. The college strives to provide an academically, culturally, and socially supportive environment for all its members, emphasizing accessibility and fostering social responsibility and academic achievement. Students who seek an interdisciplinary learning environment will appreciate the college’s emphasis on intellectual rigor. As part of the college’s academic and cultural life, the Stevenson Fellows-in-Residence Program has brought to the campus distinguished individuals such as Senator George McGovern, Congresswoman Bella Abzug, Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel, Chief of the Miwok Tribe Greg Sarris, Producer Lourdes Portillo, the Reverend Jesse Jackson, and Associate Director-Counsel Theodore M. Shaw of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund.

The college’s faculty and academic and administrative staff offer professional and personal service for the diverse needs of students. These individuals, among the most accessible, friendly, and diverse staff at the university, assist students in all areas of their academic and social experience at Stevenson College. Most important, these individuals are committed to instilling respect for the college’s diverse ethnic, racial, religious, and sexual backgrounds.

Academic Emphases

  • Faculty drawn from social sciences, humanities, natural sciences
  • Yearlong frosh writing seminar
  • Tutors and Advisers Program
  • Academic Support Center
  • Junior Fellows Program

Stevenson College distinguishes itself as the only college with a two-quarter frosh seminar intended to provide all first-year students with a common academic experience. The seminar allows for more rigorous development of students’ critical, written, and analytical skills, the fostering of a unique learning environment, and a supportive intellectual community. It is not unusual to find Stevenson alumni in the legal, political, engineering, medical, computer and information sciences, business, and public administration fields.

The faculty at Stevenson, drawn from a variety of disciplines in the social sciences, humanities, and physical and biological sciences, share a common concern for the study of social processes that shape modern society and determine the quality of our individual lives throughout various global regions and periods of world history. Linguistics, sociology, history, politics, psychology, biology, chemistry, and computer science are strongly represented in the college.

Self and Society is intended to provide intellectual and research preparation for students’ future academic endeavors. The seminar addresses the college’s intellectual and pedagogical aims through a holistic inquiry into academic research that explores the question: What is the relationship between “self and society?” In addition, the course fosters an intellectual commitment to the general philosophy which has helped to define Stevenson College since its inception (articulated in the idea of the preservation of human dignity, the social cultivation of individual creativity and citizenship, and a belief in ethical responsibility). The seminar reflects the college’s long-standing commitment to interdisciplinary and culturally diverse readings, while at the same time it affords students an opportunity to develop research interests, to acquire greater understanding of the role of research universities in contemporary societies, and to acquire the requisite skills to engage in increasingly more sophisticated intellectual work while at UCSC.

Because of a conviction on the part of both faculty and students that such a sequence is fundamental to any university education, both quarters are required of all beginning Stevenson students. Students transferring to UCSC with the equivalent of nine courses (45 quarter credits) or more are exempt from the core course.

The Stevenson College Junior Fellows Program offers juniors and seniors an opportunity to serve as teaching and research assistants for Self and Society. Junior fellows, who must have completed outstanding work in Self and Society during their freshman year, undergo a rigorous application and selection process. Junior fellows (enrolled in Stevenson 120, Teaching Practicum) earn 5 course credits.

Stevenson provides writing and math tutoring for all of its students. Stevenson academic tutors are paid student positions open to juniors and seniors with excellent academic records.

College Community

  • College Nights
  • Stevenson Student Council
  • Multicultural Advisory Council
  • Fellows-in-Residence Program
  • Multicultural Programs/Activities

Stevenson holds regular College Nights, when a served dinner presents an opportunity for Stevenson fellows and students to get together in a purely social situation. College Nights—Cinco de Mayo, Chinese New Year, Vietnamese College Night—provide the opportunity to celebrate many different cultures. Dinner is followed by entertainment.

The Stevenson Student Council meets on Thursday evenings. This group of 16 elected representatives (eight resident students, eight living off campus) is responsible for allocating college membership fees to student activities. The council also serves as a forum for the discussion of college and campuswide issues and appoints student representatives to college and campuswide committees.

Facilities

  • Eight small residence halls
  • Three apartment buildings
  • Theme floors: Substance Free, Multicultural
  • Coffee house
  • Wagstaff Fireside Lounge
  • Writers’ Center
  • Stevenson Library
  • Art gallery
  • Silverman Conference Room
  • The Knoll
  • Recreation room

Stevenson College has a wide variety of facilities and activities to appeal to many tastes. The college, designed by San Francisco architect Joseph Esherick, has won many architectural awards. The buildings are situated amid redwood trees and sprawling lawns, and the main quad overlooks Monterey Bay. There are eight small residence houses at the college providing a choice of single-sex or coed floors; each house accommodates about 60 undergraduates. The apartments provide space for 132 continuing students. Nearby are a picnic area, playing fields, and a garden.

The Stevenson Coffee House, which has become the gathering place in the college, is a friendly and inviting spot to enjoy lunch or an espresso and pastry—indoors or out on the patio. It is the scene of lively conversation, occasional musical entertainment, and chess matches. Adjoining the coffee house is a recreational wing, with Ping-Pong, foosball, pool tables, and color television. This area is also the site of much socializing and spontaneous group activity.

In contrast, the Stevenson Library is a striking building designed for quiet reading and study. The Wagstaff Fireside Lounge, a retreat for relaxed discussion, is also used for recitals, special lectures, meetings, and residence house activities. Art exhibits (both student and professional) are on display throughout the year in the lounge, library, and coffee house.

For more information, call (831) 459-4930 or visit the web site: stevenson.ucsc.edu/.

Stevenson Faculty and Staff
Provost
ELLEN KAPPY SUCKIEL Philosophy
Fellows

JUDITH AISSEN Linguistics
ROBERT S. ANDERSON Earth Sciences
DANE ARCHER Sociology
ELLIOT ARONSON Psychology, Emeritus
JONATHAN F. BEECHER History
ILAN BENJAMIN Chemistry and Biochemistry
PETER H. BODENHEIMER Astronomy and Astrophysics
REBECCA BRASLAU Chemistry and Biochemistry
FRANK G. BRIDGES Physics
MONICA CASPER Sociology
MARK CIOC History
CATHERINE R. COOPER Psychology and Education
W. JACKSON DAVIS Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
MICHAEL DINE Physics
G. WILLIAM DOMHOFF Psychology, Emeritus
DONKA FARKAS Linguistics
HIROSHI FUKURAI Sociology
ROBERT E. GARRISON Earth Sciences, Emeritus
MARVIN J. GREENBERG Mathematics, Emeritus
ISEBILL V. GRUHN Politics, Emerita
HOWARD E. HABER Physics
CRAIG W. HANEY Psychology
JORGE HANKAMER Linguistics
DAVID M. HARRINGTON Psychology
AIDA HURTADO Psychology
JUNKO ITÔ Linguistics
MICHAEL KAHN Psychology, Emeritus
GEORGE KANE Art
AL KELLEY Mathematics, Emeritus
PETER KENEZ History
JOHN I. KITSUSE Sociology, Emeritus
KENNETH KLETZER Economics
JOSEPH P. KONOPELSKI Chemistry and Biochemistry
ROBERT P. KRAFT Astronomy and Astrophysics, Emeritus
JEAN H. LANGENHEIM Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Emerita
ROBERT A. LEVINSON Computer Science
DANIEL T. LINGER Anthropology
RONNIE D. LIPSCHUTZ Politics
MARC S. MANGEL Environmental Studies
JAMES MCCLOSKEY Linguistics
DENNIS C. MCELRATH Sociology, Emeritus
R. ARMIN MESTER Linguistics
CARLOS G. NOREÑA Philosophy, Emeritus
JAYE PADGETT Linguistics
THOMAS F. PETTIGREW Psychology, Emeritus
IRA POHL Computer Science
CYNTHIA POLECRITTI History
ANTHONY R. PRATKANIS Psychology
GEOFFREY K. PULLUM Linguistics
RALPH H. QUINN Psychology
DONALD T. SAPOSNEK Psychology
THEODORE R. SARBIN Psychology and Criminology, Emeritus
PETER L. SCOTT Physics, Emeritus
BUCHANAN SHARP History
PRISCILLA W. SHAW English and Comparative Literature, Emerita
WILLIAM F. SHIPLEY Linguistics, Emeritus
GRETA SLOBIN Russian Literature
M. BREWSTER SMITH Psychology, Emeritus
MARSHALL SYLVAN Mathematics, Emeritus
HIROTAKA TAMANOI Mathematics
KIP TÉLLEZ Education
DAVID J. THOMAS Politics Emeritus
BRUCE THOMPSON History
JOHN N. THOMPSON Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
AVRIL THORNE Psychology
MARK TRAUGOTT History
MICHAEL E. URBAN Politics
HOWARD H. WANG Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology
MANFRED K. WARMUTH Computer Science
RICHARD A. WASSERSTROM Philosophy, Emeritus
MARY SUSAN WELDON Psychology
HAROLD WIDOM Mathematics, Emeritus
ZHIWU ZHU Environmental Toxicology
Honorary Fellows

JACK BASKIN  
BORIS KEYSER  
NORMAN LEZIN  
ELEANOR MCGOVERN  
CHARLES NEIDER  
CHARLES H. PAGE  
WILLIAM M. ROTH  
ALMA SIFUENTES  
F. M. GLENN WILLSON

 
Stevenson Fellows-in-Residence

GEORGE MCGOVERN (1982)  
BELLA ABZUG (1983)  
PAUL SARBANES (1983)  
ARTHUR S. FLEMMING (1984)  
CAROLE KING (1985)  
CLARK KERR (1987)  
PETER SHAFFER (1987)  
DONALD MCHENRY (1988)  
PAT CONROY (1990)  
MOCTESUMA ESPARZA (1992)  
LOURDES PORTILLO (1992)  
GREG SARRIS (1997)  
JESSE JACKSON (1998)  
AMIRI BARAKA (1999)  
RON DELLUMS (1999)  
THEODORE M. SHAW (2002)  
College Administrative Officer

JAMES CARTER  
Staff

MARY ALVAREZ Academic Adviser
MARTA ELENA CORONA Counseling Psychologist
ELIZABETH COWAN Financial/Budget Specialist
GREG FLORES Coordinator for Residential Educaction
CANDACE FREIWALD Academic Services Supervisor
JOHN HADLEY Coffee House Manager
RACHEL JABLON Associate College Administrative Officer for Student Life
DAVE LAJOIE Maintenance Officer
KRISTHA LIMA College Programs Coordinator
GUSTAVO NOLAZCO College Assistant/Records Coordinator/Mail Services Supervisor
GABRIEL PEREZ Groundskeeper
JUANITA REYES Housing Coordinator
RALPH RIVERA Assistant College Administrative Officer for Facilities
IMANI RUPERT Assistant College Programs Coordinator
TCHAD SANGER Chief Academic Preceptor
AVA SNYDER Police Sargeant/Liaison
GREGORY SPEED Senior Proctor
MICHELLE TAYLOR Academic Programs Coordinator/Academic Advisor
AMY WEAVER Writing Program Coordinator
SARMA WILLIAMS Coordinator for Residential Education



Crown College

Crown College faculty (the college fellows) and students represent a wide variety of academic disciplines. The majority of fellows are in the physical and biological sciences and the social sciences. There are more science and engineering students at Crown than at any other college. However, the majority of Crown students major in the social sciences, humanities, and arts. This diversity of interests and thinking enriches our intellectual environment.

An important goal of the college is to foster an appreciation for the contributions of diverse cultural groups and to provide an atmosphere in which issues of both diversity and common social purpose are integrated into a wide range of programs and discussions.

From the time of its founding in 1967, issues pertaining to the role of science and technology in society have been a focus of special interest at Crown College. Recently, we have approached these issues from an interdisciplinary perspective that recognizes the influence of social and cultural factors on scientific enterprise, as well as the ways in which science and technology influence society.

Crown is located on a hilltop surrounded by a redwood forest. The core buildings consist of an administration office, dining commons, lounge spaces, recreation facilities, study spaces, faculty offices, and classrooms built around a large patio and central fountain. The award-winning architecture with its white walls and high-pitched tiled roofs suggests a hillside Mediterranean village. The college’s residential facilities are made up of eight traditional residence hall buildings and eight apartment buildings housing approximately 700 students. The facilities at Crown College were built through a partnership of public funds and a gift from the Crown Zellerbach Foundation.

Academic Emphases

Ethical Issues in Emerging Technologies: Transgenics, Clones, Cyborgs, and Artificial Intelligence is an interdisciplinary seminar concerning the effects of these world-changing technologies and encourages students to develop decision-making strategies to ethically steer these technologies. The course examines these debates using a variety of disciplinary approaches that engage the perspectives of both humanists and scientists. The fall-quarter core course is required of all first-year students with fewer than 45 transferable quarter credits. (see the Crown College Course Descriptions section for a full description.)

The Crown-Merrill Science and Technology Learning Community is an innovative program to support first-year students who are interested in pursuing a major in the sciences. Students enrolled in this program live together, forming a supportive community that promotes collaborative learning and group problem solving. To facilitate this process, students are placed in a special section of Chemistry 1A and participate in a residentially based study group. The program is designed especially for students who have a strong interest in the sciences but feel slightly underprepared for university-level course work. It often acts as a bridge to the ACE Program in the physical and biological sciences and engineering (see the Academic Excellence Program section). Participation—limited to first-year students at Crown and Merrill Colleges—requires a commitment to succeed, a willingness to work hard, and a positive attitude.

The Crown Undergraduate Seminar in Science, Technology, and Society provides highly motivated students the opportunity to work closely with ladder-rank research faculty in a small seminar environment. Topics have included California Climate Change: Past, Present, and Future; Food Matters: Science, Technology, and Society; and an honors seminar on introductory computer architecture.

Juniors and seniors can participate in the college’s new Undergraduate Research Fellowship Program, which awards $800 fellowships to student-faculty teams and encourages their interaction through undergraduate research.

College Community and Facilities

Crown sponsors a wide variety of cocurricular events spanning cultural, educational, and social areas of interest. One popular series is the Science/Public Affairs Tables, informal dinners at the Provost’s House that offer students an opportunity to socalize with a faculty member outside the classroom and hear about his or her research.

Students become involved in Crown life by both initiating and participating in a wide range of activities. Social activities vary each year according to the interests of students. At the monthly College Night in the dining commons, a special dinner is followed by entertainment, both often sharing a common cultural theme. Some major events have become traditional. For example: Karaoke College Night; Hypnotist; Crown Formal; and Regression Night. Crown activities and dances draw students from all over campus. Outdoor activities organized by the student government, College Programs Office, or residential staff range from whale watching on the Monterey Bay to atomic bowling, and from backpacking to stargazing.

The Crown Student Senate (CSS), the elected student government at Crown, holds open weekly meetings to recommend fund allocations for student activities and to discuss issues of concern to students and the college. CSS also sponsors events to enhance the college experience, including the very popular pelagic shark lecture and Casino Night.

Crown offers two types of residential facilities: residence halls and apartments. Eight traditional residence halls each house 60 students in single, double, and triple rooms in a coed environment (single-sex bedrooms with unisex bathrooms) or on all-female floors. For students particularly interested in living with and learning about a special-interest environment, Crown provides transfer floors, Substance-Free Houses, and a Science and Technology Learning Community.

In addition, the college has apartments for 230 students above the first-year level. Like the residence halls, the apartments are built on a small scale. Each three-story building has two or three apartments per floor that house four or five students in a combination of single, double, and triple rooms and include a kitchen, living room, dining room, bathroom, and outside deck.

Other facilities in the college include the Crown Library study space; a modern computer laboratory housing Sun workstations, which provides students with access to several kinds of systems and an array of applications and instructional software selected to support academic course work; the Fireside Lounge with widescreen television; the Music Practice Room; and the Crown-Merrill Community Room, which has a television, pool table, foosball, and ping-pong table, and provides an informal place to study, hold meetings, or just visit with friends. Recently renovated dining facilities boast continuous dining, late-night dining, and Banana Joe’s coffee shop.

For general information, call the college assistant at (831) 459-2665 or visit the web site: www2.ucsc.edu/crown/. For residential or college programs information, call the Student Life Office manager at (831) 459-4656.

Crown Faculty and Staff
Provost
F. JOEL FERGUSON Computer Engineering
Fellows

ROBERT F. ADAMS Economics, Emeritus
NAMEERA AKHTAR Psychology
SCOTT BRANDT Computer Science
KENNETH W. BRULAND Ocean Sciences
JOSEPH F. BUNNETT Chemistry and Biochemistry, Emeritus
MAUREEN CALLANAN Psychology
KENNETH L. CAMERON Earth Sciences
SUE A. CARTER Physics
NANCY N. CHEN Anthropology
YIN-WONG CHEUNG Economics
MENZIE CHINN Economics
EUGENE H. COTA-ROBLES Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology, Emeritus
MARGARET L. DELANEY Ocean Sciences
CHONGYING DONG Mathematics
MICHAEL P. DOOLEY Economics
WILLIAM T. DOYLE Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Emeritus
E. MELANIE DUPUIS Sociology
ROBERT S. EDGAR Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology, Emeritus
ÓLÖF EINARSDÓTTIR Chemistry and Biochemistry
JOHN M. ELLIS German Literature, Emeritus
SANDRA M. FABER Astronomy and Astrophysics
JOHN FAULKNER Astronomy and Astrophysics
JERRY F. FELDMAN Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology
ANTHONY L. FINK Chemistry and Biochemistry
ARTHUR E. FISCHER Mathematics
TIMOTHY FITZMAURICE Writing
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RUSSELL FLEGAL Environmental Toxicology
LAUREL R. FOX Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
MARIA CECILIA FREEMAN Writing
DANIEL FRIEDMAN Economics
KWOK-CHIU FUNG Economics
ALISON GALLOWAY Anthropology
J. J. GARCÍA-LUNA-ACEVES Computer Engineering
LYNDA J. GOFF Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
RONALD E. GRIESON Economics
JUDITH A. HABICHT-MAUCHE Anthropology
DAVID HAUSSLER Computer Science
RALPH T. HINEGARDNER Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Emeritus
RICHARD P. HUGHEY Computer Engineering
HAROLD A. HYDE Vice Chancellor, Emeritus
GARTH D. ILLINGWORTH Astronomy and Astrophysics
BURTON F. JONES Astronomy and Astrophysics
DAVID E. KAUN Economics
ALAN H. KAWAMOTO Psychology
PAUL L. KOCH Earth Sciences
JONATHAN M. KRUPP Biology; Coordinator, Microscopy and Imaging Laboratory
EDWARD M. LANDESMAN Mathematics, Emeritus
JEAN H. LANGENHEIM Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Emerita
LÉO F. LAPORTE Earth Sciences, Emeritus
BURNEY J. LE BOEUF Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Emeritus
MAX M. LEVIN Psychology, Emeritus
DEBRA LEWIS Mathematics
DOUGLAS N. C. LIN Astronomy and Astrophysics
DARRELL D. E. LONG Information Systems Management
ROBERT A. LUDWIG Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology
PHILLIP MCCALMAN Economics
MARGARET MCMANUS Ocean Sciences
JACOB B. MICHAELSEN Economics, Emeritus
ETHAN MILLER Computer Science
JOSEPH S. MILLER Astronomy and Astrophysics
RICHARD MONTGOMERY Mathematics
J. CASEY MOORE Earth Sciences
JUDIT N. MOSCHKOVICH Education
RICHARD MURPHY German Literature
PEGGY B. MUSGRAVE Economics, Emerita
RICHARD A. MUSGRAVE Economics, Retired
MICHAEL NAUENBERG Physics, Emeritus
HARRY F. NOLLER Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology
LOISA NYGAARD German Literature
DONALD E. OSTERBROCK Astronomy and Astrophysics, Emeritus
KAREN OTTEMANN Environmental Toxicology
TRILOKI N. PANDEY Anthropology
GRANT H. POGSON Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
DONALD C. POTTS Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
JOEL R. PRIMACK Physics JIE QING, Mathematics
TUDOR S. RATIU Mathematics, Emeritus
GERTRUD REUTTER German Language, Emerita
GERHARD RINGEL Mathematics, Emeritus
HARTMUT F.-W. SADROZINSKI Physics
THOMAS W. SCHLEICH Chemistry and Biochemistry
MARIA SCHONBEK Mathematics
JUDITH A. SCOTT Education
ABRAHAM SEIDEN Physics
ELI A. SILVER Earth Sciences
JANE SILVERTHORNE Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology, Emerita
NIRVIKAR SINGH Economics
LISA C. SLOAN Earth Sciences
DONALD R. SMITH Environmental Toxicology
WILLIAM T. SULLIVAN Molecular, Cell, and Developmental Biology
DAVID SWANGER Education and Creative Writing
EUGENE SWITKES Chemistry and Biochemistry
KIP TÉLLEZ Education  
ROLAND G. THARP Education and Psychology, Emeritus
STEPHEN E. THORSETT Astronomy and Astrophysics
JOHN F. VESECKY Electrical Engineering
STEVEN S. VOGT Astronomy and Astrophysics
CARL E. WALSH Economics
MANFRED K. WARMUTH Computer Science
GERALD E. WEBER Earth Sciences, Emeritus
W. TODD WIPKE Chemistry and Biochemistry