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This profile was automatically generated using 2 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 2 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
Web References
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1. On the Move
www.pressdemo.com/business/new - [Cached]Published on: 9/14/2001 Last Visited: 9/14/2001
Louis T. Levy has joined Sonoma State University as the senior director of enrollments services. Levy is an experienced college administrator and educator , having served in a variety of institutions including General Motors Institute , the Florida Institute of Technology and the Milwaukee School of Engineering. At Milwaukee he served as vice president of enrollment management , dean of admissions and records , and as a faculty member. He joins Sonoma State from Austin Community College , where he was director of admissions and records.
Submit On the Move items to Press Democrat Staff Writer Rayne Wolfe at rwolfe@pressdemocrat.com , fax to 521-5418 or mail to P.O. Box 910 , Santa Rosa 95402.
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2. SSU's diversity declines
www.pressdemo.com/local/news/2 - [Cached]Published on: 5/25/2002 Last Visited: 5/25/2002
"When I go places and talk to people, they know about Sonoma County," said Director of Enrollment Services Louis Levy, who recruits high school students at college fairs throughout the West. "It's hard not to sell Sonoma State."
But that's not so with California's blacks, many of whom live in predominantly black neighborhoods in the Bay Area and Los Angeles County.
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Sonoma State participates in less than a dozen such events every year, at a total cost of roughly $10,000, said Levy, the enrollment director.
And with its solid academic programs, a new library and a music center under development, Levy said, "people look at us as a college on the move."
Still, that's not proved to be a draw for many college-bound blacks.
At Sonoma State's freshman orientation last Friday, Lakeyssia Brown was the only black student among 96 participants.
"Of course I noticed," said the 18-year-old high school senior from Richmond. In her high school, she said, whites make up less than 1 percent of all students.

