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Home > For Students > Offers to Students > State Info Detail
Info Detail - California
| Offering admission to undergraduates. Can accommodate some students in graduate programs. |
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| Susan Topham, Systemwide Director of Admissions (858) 635-4885 or stopham@alliant.edu |
| Waived tuition for students who have already registered and paid tuition at their home institution for Fall 2005. Both on-campus and online courses available. If not yet paid tuition at home institution, they will be assessed the lesser of the current published tuition and fees at home institution, or Argosy University's published tuition and fees. |
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| 1.800.377.0617 |
| Waived tuition for students who have already registered and paid tuition at their home institution for Fall 2005. Both on-campus and online courses available. If not yet paid tuition at home institution, they will be assessed the lesser of the current published tuition and fees at home institution, or Argosy University's published tuition and fees. |
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| Azusa Pacific University will offer free tuition to students enrolled in colleges and universities impacted by the effects of Hurricane Katrina, announced President Jon R. Wallace, DBA, Sept. 8. APU started fall classes Sept. 6, but will work with any students interested in transitioning into available programs. The university will accommodate eligible students at all academic levels (traditional undergraduate, degree completion, master’s, and doctoral) who have registered for classes and made arrangements for payment at their home institutions that are not operational. Eligible students may enroll in APU courses on a space-available basis and transfer the credits to their home institutions when they are operational. |
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| Azusa Pacific will waive tuition for students displaced by the hurricane and is asking students to make arrangements to pay their home institutions to aid in reconstruction efforts. All other costs will be the responsibility of the student. The university will offer campus housing to all traditional undergraduate students as well as assist in finding housing for graduate and adult students. |
| The university will offer campus housing to all traditional undergraduate students as well as assist in finding housing for graduate and adult students. These costs will be the responsibility of the student. Please call for details. |
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| Those interested should contact Deana Porterfield, vice president for enrollment management, at (626) 812-3015, email dporterfield@apu.edu, or visit www.apu.edu. |
| Foothill College classes are open for enrollment until Sept. 30. Displaced students should immediately contact Penny Johnson, Dean of Counseling, at 650-949-7163. Foothill College is a nationally recognized leader in community college education, offering high-demand career programs and a strong general education curriculum to prepare students to transfer to top universities. Foothill is on the quarter system and fall classes begin Sept. 26. If you are arriving in California after this date, please contact us to discuss your academic goals. Winter Quarter begins Jan. 8. |
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| Contact the Dean for assistance. |
| No on-campus dormitories. Housing placement services are available. |
| Fall Quarter Begins Sept. 26. Enrollment continues through Sept. 30. |
| Penny Johnson, Dean of Counseling, 650-949-7163. |
| CBU is offering Fall 2005 enrollment to undergraduate and graduate students from hurricane-affected universities. Qualified students will work with CBU enrollment advisors to determine the number of transferable units if no documentation is available and placement in classes appropriate to major. Housing is guaranteed. Send e-mail to admissions@calbaptist.edu. |
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| Academic and institutional grants available |
| House is guaranteed. |
| September 21st though CBU will be flexible as possible |
| Allen Johnson, Director of Undergraduate Admissions, at (877) 228-8866 |
| The Art Institutes will make available both on-campus and online courses that might be able to permit dislocated students to progress in their academic careers during this semester of disruption. Students at a university forced to close by Hurricane Katrina may register at any of The Art Institutes 31 locations across the nation for courses, on a space-available basis, for the fall semester. The Art Institutes is a group of 31educational institutions located throughout North America. Offering a broad range of programs including: audio production, culinary arts, culinary management, fashion design, fashion marketing, graphic design, industrial design technology, interior design, media arts & animation, multimedia & Web design, photography, restaurant management and video production. Not all programs are offered at all schools. |
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| The Art Institutes will waive tuition for dislocated students who have already registered and paid tuition at their home institution for the fall 2005 semester. If dislocated students have not yet paid their tuition at their home institution, they will be assessed the lesser of the current published tuition and fees at the home institution, or The Art Institutes’ published tuition and fees for the fall semester, as determined by the school president. |
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| www.artinstitutes.edu/katrina or call the National Admissions Information Center at 1-888-328-7900 |
| Offering fall enrollment |
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| Will provide assistance. |
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| Offering conditional admittance to students. Will suspend certain California State University requirements. Preference given to California residents, students offered previous admission to CSU, and students who can document fall 2005 admission or recent attendance to college impacted by Hurricane Katrina. |
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| Residents of Katrina-affected areas of Louisiana, Mississippi, or Alabama will be exempt from non-resident tuition. Fees will be charged. |
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| California State University's Chancellor's Office, Academic Affairs, (562) 951-4727 |
| Free room and board for 100 students at the International House residence hall. No transcripts required with application, no up-front fees, no English or math placement tests. Quarter begins Sept. 22. Hayward campus is located on eastern side of San Francisco Bay. Free shuttle links dorm with campus, bus lines and light rail. |
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| $972 for full time students; $620 for 6 units or less |
| 100 beds in the International House dorm. No charge for Katrina-affected students. |
| Fall quarter begins Sept. 22 |
| (510) 885-3000 |
| Conditional enrollment for fall 2005, not dependant upon the institutions' ability to provide transcripts. Temporarily suspended policies regarding documentation of A-G requirements for first-time freshmen and transfer students; Waive English and mathematics placement test requirements. Waive payment of non-resident fees. Those students will be billed for the CSU State University Fee and other fees, as appropriate. CSU campuses will provide flexible deferred payment plans and account receivables as appropriate. CSUSB will provide access to housing for those students affected by Katrina. |
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| The university will waive payment of non-resident fees for students who are residents of the Katrina-affected areas of Louisiana, Mississippi or Alabama. Those students will be billed for the CSU State University Fee and other fees as appropriate. However, CSU campuses will provide flexible deferred payment plans and account receivables as appropriate. Cal State San Bernardino will also provide access to housing for those students from the three states affected by Katrina with either on-campus housing or assist students in securing housing off-campus. |
| On-campus housing is available, and the university will assist students in securing housing off-campus. Call (909) 537-5246 |
| Cal State San Bernardino is on a quarter system; classes start Sept. 22, |
| All applicants are encouraged to apply electronically by logging onto www.csumentor.edu. CSUMentor is a Web-based system that helps students plan and apply to the CSU online. Students in need of assistance with their electronic applications may call for technical support at 1-800-GO-TO-XAP (1-800-468-6927). The service is open Monday through Friday from 6:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. PDT. Students with additional questions about applying to CSUSB can contact the university’s office of admissions and student recruitment at (909) 537-5188. |
| Tuition fellowships for up to ten students from the affected areas until the home campus reopens. The fellowships are available in all areas of study that the institution offers. |
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| Tuition and fees are waived |
| CGU will assist students to find affordable housing in the local area. |
| September 16th |
| Jim Whitaker, Dean of Students (909) 621-8965 or james.whitaker@cgu.edu |
| Offering tuition-free admission to five visiting students from Tulane or Xavier for the fall semester. Prefers students from Southern California since residence hall space is near capacity. |
| Spaces for 5 students from Tulane or Xavier |
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| Digital arts and engineering are specialty areas. |
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| Will add 30 beds to residence halls; also arranging temporary accommodations for students arriving from Gulf Coast |
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| Freshman and Sophomore college classes in all subjects, Fall Quarter beginning September 26. De Anza begins its Fall Quarter term later than many colleges and universities, and students can complete a full quarter by enrolling for the Fall term. De Anza is among California's premier two-year public community colleges, and credits earned are fully transferable to other institutions. |
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| No out-of-state charges; fee waivers available |
| No campus housing; local home stays available |
| September 26th |
| Office of the President: 408-864-8705 |
| Tuition & Fees for the Fall until Monday, September 12th, 2005 |
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| Yes. Costs (with meal plan) are approximately $10,000 |
| By September 12, 2005 |
| Office of Admissions |
| We will work with doctoral students in clinical and media psychology, human and organization development, and educational leadership and change, as well as master's students in organizational management, organization development, and collaborative educational leadership opportunities to create individualized learning programs of study (doctoral) or online learning seminars (master's). Because of the nature of our doctoral learning model, it is critical for us to talk with interested students individually. |
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| Depending on the demand, we will offer as many students as possible tuition waivers for this term. |
| None. We are a distributed and distance learning community. |
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| Anna DiStefano, Ed.D.,Provost Ronald Giannetti, Ph.D., Dean of Psychology Charles McClintock, Ph.D, Dean of HOD Judy Witt, Ph.D., Dean of ELC 800-340-1099 |
| FPU is waiving tuition and housing fees and setting up a special fund to help with other needs. Pioneer Catering, FPU’s food service provider, will donate meal plans, and Founders Bookstores, a division of College Bookstores of America, has agreed to give these students books at cost. The university also established a relief fund to cover books, clothing and other needs. Any contributions not used by displaced students at FPU will be sent to help other students affected by the hurricane. Any student enrolled at a regionally accredited college or university who was displaced by Hurricane Katrina will be considered, but due to limited space, students from California will get first priority. |
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| Tuition waived. |
| Some dorm rooms. Faculty and staff may also open their homes. No cost. |
| September 13 is the beginning of the third week of classes. Students arriving after that may find their program closed, or have a more difficult time catching up with class work. This program will be offered throughout the 2005-2006 school year, so students can also come on board in the spring. |
| 1-800-660-6089 |
| Offering fall enrollment; able to provide a scholarship for all or part of tuition, fees, books, living expenses and other expenses. |
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| Classes began on Aug. 31. |
| David Mack, Associate Dean of Curriculum Mgt. (818) 240-1000 or dmack@glendale.edu |
| Visitor or provisional status to students enrolled at a two-year college whose studies have been interrupted by Hurricane Katrina. Heald College includes eleven campuses - nine in Northern California, one in Portland, Oregon, and one in Honolulu, Hawaii. Heald offers Business, Healthcare, and Technology programs. |
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| October 2005 Quarter tuition and books free-of-charge to students who previously paid tuition or arranged financial aid at an institution affected by Hurricane Katrina. |
| None through the College |
| Enroll by October 11, 2005;Quarter starts on October 18, 2005 |
| Jocelyn Vasquez, Corporate Director of Admissions;888-891-1131 |
| Graduate students in sciences, engineering, business, and management. |
| Graduate students in sciences, engineering, business, and management. |
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| Fall semester admission with non-matriculated status for undergraduate women in San Francisco Bay area who are enrolled in affected Gulf Coast colleges; also non-matriculated admission status to undergraduate women who are residents of Gulf Coast communities. |
| Undergraduate women |
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| Housing is available. |
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| Julie Richardson, Vice President for Enrollment Management (510) 430-2135 or admission@mills.edu |
| Offering fall enrollment; has housing available. |
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| Fall enrollment. |
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| Admissions Office: (650) 766-7394 |
| Otis College of Art and Design will assist up to 2 students in each of the following majors: 1. Architecture/ Landscape/Interiors (Sophomore and/or Junior level) 2. Communication Arts (Advertising Design, Graphic Design and Illustration) (Sophomore and/or Junior level) 3. Digital Media (Sophomore and/or Junior Level) 4. Fine Arts (Painting, Photography, and Sculpture/New Genres) (Sophomore and/or Junior Level) 5. Foundation (Freshmen level) 6. MFA Writing (Graduate level) Otis College will accept students who were matriculated at one of the impacted colleges for the Fall ’05. Students should check our website or catalog to see if our curriculum in the above departments fits into the program of study at your home institution. The College has limited housing and cannot offer financial assistance for housing. |
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| Students will be responsible for books and supplies, living expenses and some fees. The College will provide scholarships for tuition. |
| The College has limited housing and cannot offer financial assistance for housing. Our Student Affairs office will provide resource assistance to find housing |
| Deadline to begin studies is October 3rd |
| Marc D. Meredith- Dean of Admissions 800-527-6847 or 310-665-6820 or marcm@otis.edu |
| Can accept 10 students as visiting or non-degree students with assumption they will return to original university at the next semester. Has created a special Student Assistance Program for fall 2005 term. |
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| Hung V. Le, Associate Vice President, University Registrar (310) 506-4307 or Hung.le@pepperdine.edu |
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| Can accommodate as many as 16 students. |
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| Can take at least 10 and up to 16 visiting undergraduate students; Restrictions None, however preference will be given to Southern California residents and students from Tulane and Xavier. Preference will also be given first to seniors, then juniors, followed by sophomores. |
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| Pomona will not charge tuition if the student has already paid tuition to the home institution. If the student has not paid the home institution, Pomona will charge the home institution's rate of tuition and remit that amount to the home institution. Pomona has a long tradition of meeting the full demonstrated financial need of every accepted student, and this will apply to those with visiting student status as well. Pomona's financial aid covers need-based room and board as well as tuition. |
| Housing available on campus, though limited. Pomona's financial aid covers need-based room and board as well as tuition |
| Application by September 8, Enrollment by September 13, 2005 |
| Pomona College Admissions Office, (909) 621-8134 or admissions@pomona.edu |
| SAN DIEGO (Updated for Friday, Sept. 2, 2005) -- San Diego State University is opening enrollment to students who are unable to attend colleges and universities closed due to Hurricane Katrina’s devastation. Both undergraduates and graduate students who are in good standing at Gulf Coast universities that are no longer able to accommodate them due to Hurricane Katrina are being enrolled. Priority will be given to residents of the San Diego area or other parts of California, but SDSU also is working to accommodate displaced students who are out-of-state residents. SDSU is making special arrangements to expedite the enrollment process, including waiving application fees. SDSU also is waiving out-of-state tuition fees for any students accepted from outside California. |
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| SDSU is making special arrangements to expedite the enrollment process, including waiving application fees. SDSU also is waiving out-of-state tuition fees for any students accepted from outside California. For more info visit: www.sdsu.edu or www.calstate.edu |
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| Classes began on Aug. 31. |
| Students should contact Natha Kraft, manager of the Office of Admissions’ Prospective Student Center at (619) 594-1570, nkraft@mail.sdsu.edu. |
| Offering undergraduate and graduate students fall admission; may enrollment without transcripts and pay only in-state fees. Housing assistance is available. |
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| Pay only in-state fees. |
| Housing assistance is available. |
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| Undergraduates: (415) 338-2037 or outreach@sfsu.edu; Graduate students: (415) 405-3506 or gradstudy@sfsu.edu |
| Waive fees for displaced students who would like to attend college in California. Do not have dorms, but can find local housing for students. |
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| Offering conditional admission to 100 undergraduate and 30 graduate students. |
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| On-campus housing is available. |
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| Katharyn Crabbe, Vice President for Student Affairs and Enrollment; (707) 664-2846 or katharyn.crabbe@sonoma.edu |
| 1-4 spaces in the nursing program-rn(adn)-as advanced placement students; Please bring unofficial transcripts if available |
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| out of state is $175 per unit |
| Ann Taylor has secured home to accommodate 11 people |
| as soon as possible for matriculating into the program |
| Sandy Comstock, Director of Nursing or Ann Taylor , relief coordinator |
| Offering fall enrollment (non-matriculated status) to undergraduate and graduate students; semester begins on September 26th. Preference will be given to students from the San Francisco Bay area. Housing is available. |
| Preference given to students from San Francisco Bay area |
| Will not charge; students should continue to pay their home institution |
| Housing is available; room and board will be charged. |
| Semester begins September 26h |
| http://hurricanekatrina.stanford.edu/studentinfo/ |
| The Art Institutes will make available both on-campus and online courses that might be able to permit dislocated students to progress in their academic careers during this semester of disruption. Students at a university forced to close by Hurricane Katrina may register at any of The Art Institutes 31 locations across the nation for courses, on a space-available basis, for the fall semester. The Art Institutes is a group of 31educational institutions located throughout North America. Offering a broad range of programs including: audio production, culinary arts, culinary management, fashion design, fashion marketing, graphic design, industrial design technology, interior design, media arts & animation, multimedia & Web design, photography, restaurant management and video production. Not all programs are offered at all schools. |
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| The Art Institutes will waive tuition for dislocated students who have already registered and paid tuition at their home institution for the fall 2005 semester. If dislocated students have not yet paid their tuition at their home institution, they will be assessed the lesser of the current published tuition and fees at the home institution, or The Art Institutes’ published tuition and fees for the fall semester, as determined by the school president. |
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| www.artinstitutes.edu/katrina or call the National Admissions Information Center at 1-888-328-7900 |
| The Art Institutes will make available both on-campus and online courses that might be able to permit dislocated students to progress in their academic careers during this semester of disruption. Students at a university forced to close by Hurricane Katrina may register at any of The Art Institutes 31 locations across the nation for courses, on a space-available basis, for the fall semester. The Art Institutes is a group of 31educational institutions located throughout North America. Offering a broad range of programs including: audio production, culinary arts, culinary management, fashion design, fashion marketing, graphic design, industrial design technology, interior design, media arts & animation, multimedia & Web design, photography, restaurant management and video production. Not all programs are offered at all schools. |
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| The Art Institutes will waive tuition for dislocated students who have already registered and paid tuition at their home institution for the fall 2005 semester. If dislocated students have not yet paid their tuition at their home institution, they will be assessed the lesser of the current published tuition and fees at the home institution, or The Art Institutes’ published tuition and fees for the fall semester, as determined by the school president. |
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| The Art Institutes will make available both on-campus and online courses that might be able to permit dislocated students to progress in their academic careers during this semester of disruption. Students at a university forced to close by Hurricane Katrina may register at any of The Art Institutes 31 locations across the nation for courses, on a space-available basis, for the fall semester. The Art Institutes is a group of 31educational institutions located throughout North America. Offering a broad range of programs including: audio production, culinary arts, culinary management, fashion design, fashion marketing, graphic design, industrial design technology, interior design, media arts & animation, multimedia & Web design, photography, restaurant management and video production. Not all programs are offered at all schools. |
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| The Art Institutes will waive tuition for dislocated students who have already registered and paid tuition at their home institution for the fall 2005 semester. If dislocated students have not yet paid their tuition at their home institution, they will be assessed the lesser of the current published tuition and fees at the home institution, or The Art Institutes’ published tuition and fees for the fall semester, as determined by the school president. |
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| www.artinstitutes.edu/katrina or call the National Admissions Information Center at 1-888-328-7900 |
| The Art Institutes will make available both on-campus and online courses that might be able to permit dislocated students to progress in their academic careers during this semester of disruption. Students at a university forced to close by Hurricane Katrina may register at any of The Art Institutes 31 locations across the nation for courses, on a space-available basis, for the fall semester. The Art Institutes is a group of 31educational institutions located throughout North America. Offering a broad range of programs including: audio production, culinary arts, culinary management, fashion design, fashion marketing, graphic design, industrial design technology, interior design, media arts & animation, multimedia & Web design, photography, restaurant management and video production. Not all programs are offered at all schools. |
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| The Art Institutes will waive tuition for dislocated students who have already registered and paid tuition at their home institution for the fall 2005 semester. If dislocated students have not yet paid their tuition at their home institution, they will be assessed the lesser of the current published tuition and fees at the home institution, or The Art Institutes’ published tuition and fees for the fall semester, as determined by the school president. |
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| www.artinstitutes.edu/katrina or call the National Admissions Information Center at 1-888-328-7900 |
| Accommodations for undergraduate students, graduate students, and professional students in an array of areas. |
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| Housing opportunities include on-campus housing and volunteer housing in the community. |
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| Contact for undergraduate students is Assistant Vice Chancellor Leon Washington, vcsa@ucdavis.edu Phone: (530) 752-2416 Contact for graduate students is Cathy Jurado, cjjurado@ucdavis.edu Phone: (530) 752-9297 |
| Visiting Students Program for undergraduate students Upon faculty approval, graduate students will be provided visiting scholars status |
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| Undergraduates will be review on a case by case basis to find on and off campus options. Graduate housing available |
| Fall 2005 quarter begins |
| Associate Director of Admissions Deborah Brandon at dlbrando@uci.edu or (949) 824-4809 or Associate Director of Financial Aid Penny Harrell at pplharrel@uci.edu or (949)824-4898 |
| UCLA Extension offers concurrent enrollment in regular UCLA undergraduate and graduate courses for credit on a space-available basis. UCLA Extension also offers transferable degree-credit courses on evenings, weekends, and online. For Fall Quarter 2005, there will be no enrollment fees for students who were enrolled or admitted to an academic degree program at an institution affected by Hurricane Katrina. For students taking 12 units or more, limited campus housing is available at regular rates. |
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| No enrollment fees for students who were enrolled or admitted to an affected institution |
| Yes, limited. for students taking 12 units or more. Room & board will be charged at the regular rate. |
| Fall quarter begins Sept. 26. Special enrollment for students affected by Katrina begins Sept. 12. |
| UCLA Extension Advisory Services 10995 LeConte Ave. Rm. 114 Los Angeles, CA 90024 (310) 206-6201 advisory@uclaextension.edu Please note that if you are an international student, your first contact must be through the International Student Office at UCLA Extension: iso@uclaextension.edu, 310 825-9351. |
| Admission during fall semester for students displaced by hurricane Katrina |
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| Case-by-case analysis |
| Families in the area have offered rooms Apartments are available |
| Call by September 12, 2005 |
| Sal Cervantes Phone (209) 724-4257 e-mail scervantes@ucmerced.edu |
| Offering enrollment to undergraduate, graduate, and law students. |
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| Undergraduate admissions: undergradhelp@berkeley.edu; Graduate students: grad.help@berkeley.edu |
| Offering fall enrollment for undergraduates and some graduates; postponing undergraduate fee assessment for students at impacted gulf region institutions. |
| Undergraduate admission is limited to temporary visitor status only; students seeking to obtain an undergraduate UCR degree must go through the regular UCR admissions process to apply for the next available term. For information on applying to UCR for the next available term, please visit http://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/admissions/undergrad_adm/apply_to_uc.html to apply. |
| State and local campus fee assessment is postponed for a minimum of one quarter/semester for students from impacted gulf region institutions. |
| Limited housing is available. |
| September 29th |
| For undergraduate admission, Merlyn Campos (merlyn.campos@ucr.edu); For graduate admission, Dallas Rabenstein (dallas.rabenstein@ucr.edu) |
| For Undergraduate Students: Late Enrollment for Undergraduate students who had applied for Fall 2005 at UCSD and were offered admission but declined to attend an academic institution in either LA, MS, or AL. Students in California who were not offered admission at a UC campus can enroll in Concurrent Enrollment through UC Extension. UCSD School of Medicine offers to provide rotations for senior medical students who are affected by Hurricane Katrina. |
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| While no on-campus housing is guaranteed, there are some off-campus housing options. |
| Fall Quarter Instruction began September 22, 2005. Please contact us immediately for late enrollment information. |
| Cindy Parra, Undergraduate Admissions (858) 822-6427 or via email: caparra@ucsd.edu Tim Johnston, Graduate Studies & Research, 858.534.3871 or via email at tjohnston@ucsd.edu. School of Medicine inquires may be directed to Carolyn Kelly at 858.534.3701 or via email at ckelly@ucsd.edu |
| Enrollment for undergraduate students. The College of Arts and Science at the University of Judaism is a small non-denominational liberal arts college. Majors include business, bioethics premedical/pre-health, Literature and Communications, Jewish Studies, Psychology, Political Science and interdisciplinary majors. |
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| Some waivers possible, regular tuition is $9,240 per semester plus student fees; contact Admissions for details on waivers. |
| Yes; $2,739 per semester double occupancy, meal plan $2,425 for 12 meals/week. |
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| Bryan Pisetsky, Director of Undergraduate Admissions, bpisetsky@uj.edu, 310-476-9777 |
| The University is prepared to offer fall enrollment for up to 15 students primarily from California and the western states who were scheduled to attend private institutions in the affected areas. |
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| Housing needs will be reviewed on a case-by-case basis |
| Classes started 9/6/05. The last day to enroll is 9/20/05. |
| Admissions, Nancy Svenson (800) 455-5064, nancy_svenson@redlands.edu |
| Will conditionally accept a limited number of Loyola University, Xavier University and Tulane University students from either San Diego County or Imperial County, on a temporary basis. Students must be in good academic standing for enrollment in the fall semester, which began September 1, 2005. These students would later transfer back to their home university when the schools reopen. The School of Law intends to conditionally accept a limited number of third year law students. |
| Loyola, Xavier, and Tulane students from San Diego or Imperial County |
| Students will pay their tuition to USD, but those monies will be returned to the home institution. |
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| Leslie Oster at (619) 260-4733. |
| Offering temporary fall semester enrollment to a limited number of academically prepared undergraduate and graduate students (approximately 100) as space allows; no housing is available. |
| Preference for commuting students since housing is not available. |
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| Office of Admission (213) 740-1111 |
| University of the Pacific will accept undergraduate and graduate students displaced by Hurricane Katrina at its main campus in Stockton, California. Law students will be taken in at Pacific's McGeorge School of Law in Sacramento. Pacific will waive charges for the fall semester and help students with housing and academic needs. For more information, visit: www.pacific.edu |
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| Pacific will waive tuition, room and board for the fall semester on the Stockton Campus. The law school will waive tuition and assist students in finding suitable off-campus housing. |
| Pacific has reserved 10 spaces in Stockton campus residence halls. The law school will assist with finding off-campus housing. Waived for Stockton Campus. |
| ASAP. The semester began Aug. 22. |
| Stockton Campus: Marc McGee, director of admissions, MMcGee@pacific.edu, 209.946.2211. Sacramento Campus (law): Emily Randon, ERandon@pacific.edu, 916.739. 7105, or Mary C. McGuire, MMcGuire@pacific.edu, 916.739.7089. |
| Offering fall enrollment to a limited number of students; application fees will be waived. Whittier Law School is also offering enrollment. |
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| Will work with students individually on tuition needs |
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| Office of Admissions and Student Housing (562) 907-4238 or www.whittier.edu/admission/ |
| College students displaced from their classrooms by Hurricane Katrina can continue their studies on an interim basis at the university. |
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| Woodbury University Office of Admissions at 818.767.0888. |
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