document resume open doors 1973. report on ...document resume ed 091 958 he 005 461 title open doors...

75
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International Education, New York, N.Y. PUB DATE 73 NOTE 75p. AVAILABLE FROM Institute of International Education, 809 United Nations Plaza, Mew York, New York 10017 ($5.00) EDRS PRICE DESCRIPTORS MF-$0.75 HC Not Available from EDRS. PLUS POSTAGE College Faculty; College Students; *Exchange Programs; Financial Support; *Foreign Students; Geographic Distribution; *Higher Education; Statistical Data; Student Characteristics; *Student Exchange Programs; *Teacher Exchange Programs; Units of Study (Subject Fields) ABSTRACT This report on international exchange emphasizes educational exchange between the United States and other countries, statistical data concerning foreign students in the United States, foreign scholars in the United States, U.S. students abroad, U.S. faculty members abroad, and conduct of the surveys. Statistical data concerning foreign students in the U. S. covers area and country of origin, where they studied, fields of study, academic level, students holding immigrant visas, community and junior college stud9nts, length of stay, sources of support, and men-women ratio. (MJM)

Upload: others

Post on 26-May-2020

4 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

DOCUMENT RESUME

ED 091 958 HE 005 461

TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange.INSTITUTION Institute of International Education, New York,

N.Y.PUB DATE 73NOTE 75p.AVAILABLE FROM Institute of International Education, 809 United

Nations Plaza, Mew York, New York 10017 ($5.00)

EDRS PRICEDESCRIPTORS

MF-$0.75 HC Not Available from EDRS. PLUS POSTAGECollege Faculty; College Students; *ExchangePrograms; Financial Support; *Foreign Students;Geographic Distribution; *Higher Education;Statistical Data; Student Characteristics; *StudentExchange Programs; *Teacher Exchange Programs; Unitsof Study (Subject Fields)

ABSTRACTThis report on international exchange emphasizes

educational exchange between the United States and other countries,statistical data concerning foreign students in the United States,foreign scholars in the United States, U.S. students abroad, U.S.faculty members abroad, and conduct of the surveys. Statistical dataconcerning foreign students in the U. S. covers area and country oforigin, where they studied, fields of study, academic level, studentsholding immigrant visas, community and junior college stud9nts,length of stay, sources of support, and men-women ratio. (MJM)

Page 2: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

9VEZ1 0168MVEZI, 0169/.95VEZI

DO 0161000 0169/95VEZI

9VCZ10168L95VEZ10169L900

glint 0169/.99tCZ10168/9GVEZI

uoriponp] jeuoil6uialui Jo abuapx3 puogewalui uo

CL61- SE1003 N2d0

ill iii ill

.100 a.; NO .11J-03 la% "vrr104.%3S

3tla3b C. OO C 5 % 0 ; Q 1 10 5.N ,

9 MO v/ r'.D.3.3 N.C5a 3a 3... 03'.3;3?. 5r All.;v1.3

0,1.13M P311:1 S H. NO:10 >no3

10 311-11tiSNI1VNO(1r: 3aV413M I NotLv)rioa

H11V31.1.110 043,11111f 430 S n

44,4444444444e 44444444444444

v4i4444444,4411414 44444444444444

444444444M4444 44444444444444

44444444444,444i 44444444444444

95t/C310169L9DCZI WW444 4444444444

90E310162/99hE31 ,SiJcPcH4444H410(i 4444444444

90E310169194hEZ1 H4d444H4H 44444444441

90E310168/.900 4,444(44,44 44444444441

CZ10168L95teli 4/4(4(4/4/ 44 4444440

CZ10168/100 444444, 44, 444444, C

C3i0168L95ileli P04444446 4444441

CZ10168L9gteli 4/40)0(0)444Pot 4444444,1

Page 3: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

BOARD OF TRUSTEESMonroe E. Spaght

Director. Royal Dutch Pettoleum Company

Henry H. FowlerVice Cria,rinanGeneral Partner, Goldman. Sachs & Company

Mrs. Walker 0. CaMVice Cha:rminNew York

John E. LeslieVice Ch,litn)317Chairman of the Board, Bache & Co., Inc,

Joseph F. lordTreasurerVice f'resident Morgan Guaranty Trust Company

John E. LeslieChairman. Executive CommIteeChairman of the Board, Bache & Co., Inc.

Morris B. Abram-Paul. Weiss. Ritkind, Wharton and Garrison

Dinsmore AdamsPhillips. Nizer. Benjamin, Krim and Balton

Joe L. AllbrittonPresident and Chairman of the Board.Houston Citizens Bank and TrustVerne S. AtwaterPresident and Chief Executive Officer,Central Savings BankJames E. CheekPresident. Howard UniversityJohn C. Cushman HiSenior Vice President, Cushman and Wakefield, Inc.Stephen P. Cuggan, Jr.Simpson. Thacher and BartlettWilliam 8. EberleSpecial Representative for Trade Negotiations,Washington.

Wallace 8. EdgertonPresident, Institute of International EducationMrs. Charles W. EngelhardFar Hills, New JerseyMrs. Tassos FondarasNew York,

Albeit P. GagnebinChairman of the Board.The International Nickel Company of Canada, LimitedHarold V. GleasonChairman of the Board, Franklin National BankMason W. GrossPresident Emeritus, Rutgers UniversityPaul C. Harper, Jr.Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer,Needham, Harper & Steers. Inc.Mrs. Rita E. HauserStronck & Stroock & LavanRobert 0. :*erlleySecre. ' nion Oil Company of California FoundationAlexancie, ehmeyerExecutive Vice President and General Counsel,Field Enterprises, Inc.Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C.President. University of Notrc. DameJames M, HesterPresident, New York UniversityJerome H. HollandDirector, various organizationsKenneth HollandPresident Emeritus, Institute of International Education

Arthur HowellJones, Bird & HowellErode Jensen, M.D.New York

Grayson KirkPresident Emeritus, Columbia. UniversityMrs. Frank Y. LarkinPresident, Edward John Noble FoundationE. Wilson LyonPresident Emeritus, Pomona College

Jacques MaisonrougePresident, IBM World Trade CorporationAugustine R. MarusiChairman and President, Borden, Inc.Martin MeyersonPresident, University of PennsylvaniaRobert MilbrathDirector and Senior Vice President,Exxon CorporationMrs. Maurice T. MooreChairman of the Board, State University of New YoikFranklin D. MurphyChairman of the Board, The Times Mirror Companytames PartonCommunications and Publishing ConsultantSamuel R. Pierce, Jr.Battle, Fowler, Lidstone, Jaffin, Pierce & Kheel

Mrs. Edward Russell, Jr,New York

Frederick SeitzPresident,. Rockefeller UniversityStephen H. SpurrPresident, University of TexasBenjamin F, StapletonIreland, Stapleton, Pryor & HolmesWilliam C. WarrenDean Emeritus, Columbia University Law SchoolThe Viscountess WeirAyrshire, ScotlandEdwin C. WhiteheadPresident, Technicon CorporationLawrence A. WienWien, Lane & MalkinJohn D. WilsonSenior Vice President, Chase Manhattan BankStephen J. WrightVice President, College Entrance Examination Board

tEs1&con tologi.g

Page 4: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

OPEN DOORS 1973Report on International ExchangeInstitute of International Education

Page 5: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

CONTENTS

1 Educational Exchange Between the United States andOther Countries

2 Foreign Students in the United States2 Area and Country of Origin3 Where They Studied3 Fields of Study5 Acavmic Level5 Stv,lents Holding Immigrant Visas6 Community and Junior College Students8 Length of Stay8 Sources of Support9 Men-Women Ratio9 Foreign Scholars in the United States

11 U.S. Students Abroad11 Where They Studied11 Fields of Study12 U.S. Faculty Members Abroad13 Conduct of the Surveys

Statistical Report14 Table 1 Foreign Students: Home Country, Sex, Year

Began Study in U.S., Financial Support, Aca-demic Level, 1972-1973

22 Table 2 Foreign Students: Fields of Major Interest andAcademic Level, 1972-1973

30 Table 3 Foreign Students Holding Immigrant Visas:Academic Level and Fields of Major Interest,1972-1973

33 Table 4 Foreign Students at Community and JuniorColleges: Fields of Major Interest, 1972-1973

36 Table 5 Foreign Scholars, U.S. Faculty and Administra-tive Staff: Home Country or Country of Assign-ment, Professional Fields, 1972-1973

40 Table 6 U.S. Students Abroad: Fields of Major Interest,1971-1972.

44 Table 7U.S. Institutions Reporting Foreign Scholars,U.S. Faculty Members Abroad, and For0,,nStudents, 1972-1973

84 Table 8 U.S. Institutions with 10 or More Foreign Stu-dents in 1971-1972 That Did Not Respond to19;2-1973 Census

Charts and Graphs1 Fig. I Foreign Students and Scholars in the United

States1 Fig. II U.S. Students and Faculty Abroad2 Fig. III Foreign Countries with More Than 1,000 Stu-

dents in the U.S.-1972-19732 Fig. IV U.S. States and Territories with More Than

1,000 Foreign Students-1972-19734 Fig. V Foreign Students: Distribution in Regions of

U.S. by Geographic Regions of Origin, 1972-1973

5 Fig. VI U.S. Institutions with More Than 500 ForeignStudents-1972-1973

6 Fig. VII Fields of Study of Foreign Students 1972-1973

6 Fig. VIII Regions of Origin of Foreign Students HoldingImmigrant Visas-1972-1973

7 Fig. IX Fields of Study of Foreign Students HoldingImmigrant Visas-1972-1973

7 Fig. X Regions of Origin of Foreign Students in JuniorColleges-1972-1973

7 Fig. XI Fields of Study of Foreign Students in JuniorColleges-1972-1973

ill

Page 6: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

8 Fig. XII Sources of Support of Foreign Students-1972-1973

9 Fig. XIII Foreign Students in the U.S.-1954-197310 Fig, XIV Foreign Countries with More Than 100 Schol-

ars in the U.S.-1972-197310 Fig. XV Professional Fields of Foreign Scholars in the

U.S.-1972-197310 Fig. XVI U.S. Institutions Reporting 100 or More For-

eign Scholars-1972-197310 Fig. XVII Foreign Countries Reporting More Than 500

U.S. Students-1971-197210 Fig. XVIII Fields of Study of U.S. Students Abroad

1971-197211 Fig. XIX U.S. Students Abroad- 1955 -197212 Fig. XX Foreign Countries With 50 or More Visiting U.S.

Faculty Members-1972-197312 Fig. XXI U.S. Institutions Reporting 50 or More Faculty

Members Abroad 1972-197312 Fig. XXII Professional Fields of U.S. Faculty Members

Abroad-1972-197313 Fig. XXIII Reporting Form for Census of Foreign Students

BEST COPY AVAILABLE

iv

Page 7: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

ForewordIn this ifieeteentli III rivet lin educational exchange

between the United States and other countries. one trendis becoming alarmingly clearinternational education isin danger of becoming a rich rnan's game. With costs risink; and scholarship aid decreasing, there is real concernwhether American universities can continue to educate thenumber and variety of foreign students now in this country.

In the 1970's the growth rate of the number of foreignstudents in the United States has slowed to one fifth theaverage rate of the 1960's. It is apparent that this situationhas not been brought about by any new and consciouspolicies in American universities. Instead, it is the resultof economic forces operating everywhere in the educatiorial community. These forces have been working withparticular effect against the students and scholars fromabroad who are in need of substantial funding.

A number of trends began to appear early in the seventies, and these trends are seen as continuing and intensilying. One of them is the near-astronomical cost of U.S.education. For example, a full year at M.I.T. now costs$8,000. The total cost of a 'four- to five-year Ph.D. programat that institution is estimated at $40,000. Prospectiveforeign students at the University of California at Davisare informed that financial aid is very limited, and theyshould expect to have $5.000 per year if they wish toattend. Of course. there are many schools where tuitioncharges remain low, but students must meet living costs ina country with one of the highest living standards in theworld. If college costs seem staggering to an American,it is not hard to imagine how they must appear to studentsfrom countries where the average annual income for afamily of four may be $1,000 to $2,000 per year.

At the same time that costs have been rising, therehas been a trend toward major cutbacks in Federal govern-ment and private grants at the graduate level, forcing manygraduate schools to give priority to students who are al-ready enrolled and who need this support to complete theirdegree programs.

Some state legislatures, facing increased costs, havedropped preferential tuition rates for foreign students. Thetuition rate for foreign students in the California state col-lege system now equals the outof-state rate. Two bills toraise the costs of foreign students are now pending in theTexas legislature. In March, 1973, the New York StateLegislature mandated a 38 per cent !eduction in tuitionwaivers. Those most threatened by this cut are newly enter-ing foreign students.

The use of "need criteria" in granting financial aid isbecoming much more prevalent, and, understandably, pro.grants for U.S. studentsespecially minority students andwomenhave been placed ahead of the needs of foreignstudents in the allocation of available funds. Internationaleducation may enjoy broad general support on a campus,but often faculty members cannot define its specific bene-fits. Lacking defenders and promoters, many foreign stu-dent programs and services have fallen into decline.

Another factor working against the foreign student is thechange in the domestic employment situation facing theAmerican graduate student. This has affected the size andfunding of many graduate schools, particularly in the fieldsof science and technology, which formerly were very wellsupported. It is no longer safe to assume that a studentwho has secured funds for the first year of study will beassured of the same support in his second or third year.

Existing scholarship programs cover fewer students.Grants that formerly covered all of a student's expensesnow may cover only his tuition. Rising costs make theaverage Fulbright grant of $4.000 inadequate to covermany of a student's academic year expenses, and it is notunusual for OE to seek financial aid from four different

sources to fund a single student.Facing the same economic crunch, Amerrcan students

have two options open to them that are not open to foreignstudents:American students can work, and they can borrow.

Immigration regulations severely restrict foreign students from earning their way through school. In the past,the Department of Labor has often interpreted many ofthese regulations with leniency. This was especially truewhen the student encountered unforeseen increases inroom, board, and tuition after he or she had begun tostudy in the United States. Recently, with more youngAmericans seeking campus lobs to finance their studies, theLabor Department has tended to enforce foreign studentwork regulations to the letter.

Another source of income for students, both foreignand U.S., has been federally funded fellowship programs.With every one of these programs in decline, the foreignstudent faces increasing competition from Americans forteaching and research assistantships.

There are many obstacles in the way of the foreignstudent who seeks a loan, Obviously, short-term loans arer-o-t feasible for the foreign student who is prevented fromworking by government regulation. Longterm loans mayalso be extremely difficult to pay back, given the enormoussums involved as well as the differences in currency ratesand expected salaries once a student returns to his owncountry. Many loan agencies now require American cosign-ers, and when these loans have ended in default, the resulthas been and a disinclination to lend to other foreignstudents.

There are a few encouraging counter-trends beginningto enter this picture. One is "OperaciOn 50%," an imagi-native new proposal made by the Fundacion Credito Edu-cativo (FCE) of the Dominican Republic and supervised by11E. In this plan, U.S. colleges and universities extend loansto FCE-sponsored students not exceeding 50 per cent of thecost of the student's total program. The loan is guaranteedby the FCE. Discussions are currently under way with Ja-maica, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Cayman Islands, Mexico,Ecuador, and Peru which may lead to an expansion of the"Operation 50%" concept through the hemisphere.

Another encouraging sign is the establishment of newexchange foundations by foreign governments in reciprocityfor United States aid after the war. The German MarshallPlan of the United States dnd the Japan Foundation are twoexamples of this. Another hopeful development is the ap-pearance on at least one U.S. campus of increased cornmitment to international education. As a result of a numberof supportive measures, the University of Arizona has hada 55 per cent increase in foreign student enrollment in thelast five years.

The potential for another countertrend lies in thegrowing number of interdisciplinary programs developed byAmerican universities at the graduate level. So far, theyhave not succeeded in attracting as many foreign studentsas they should. This is where much of the action lies inAmerican education, and an educational effort is neededto show foreign students that there may be more oppor-tunities for them in these new programs than in some ofthe overcrowded traditional fields of study,

It is clear that many of the forces working against theforeign student in this country also work against the Ameri-can student who wishes to study abroad. U.S. colleges arereluctant to give scholarship aid to students for studyabroad when they do not have enough aid to give to stu-dents on their own campuses.

In the field of medical education, the imbalance offacilities and funding is felt on every continent. The per-centage of foreign nationals studying medicine in theUnitedStates now is substantially lower than it was when thiscensus was begun 19 years ago. Many U.S. students are

BEST COPY AVAILABLE

Page 8: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

unable either to afford or to find a place in American medi-cal schools. in the past, they have often sought a medicaleducation ur tuition free institutions abroad, but many ofthe most prestigious of these medical schools are nowclosed to all foreign nationals. Those institutions still hayin.g space to spare quite properly give preference to Third\World candidates over candidates from highly developedWestern countries. There is no indication that these trendsMI be reversed in the near future,

Again. this year. we must reluCtantly note that our exchange with two of the most populous countries of the worldremains totally unacceptable, There are at present fewerthan 60 Russians studying in the United States. There arefewer than 40 Americans studying in the U.S S.R. It maybe observed that there are twice as many students fromthe 14-mile-long island of Bermuda studying in the UnitedStates than there are from the eight million square miles ofRussia. These figures become even more indefensible whencompared to the controlled but steady progress we havemade in exchange programs with other Eastern Europeancountries.

Exchanges between the United States and the People'sRepublic of China have continued at the symbolic level andwill probably expand eventually to include certain special-ized technical fields. A few exchanges have taken place. Nonew ones are planned for the immediate future, but thesituation remains open.

We are profoundly grateful to the Bureau of Educa-tional and Cultural Affairs of the Department of State,which has again financed the cost of the census andsurveys reported in Open Doors. We are especially gratefulto the Hon. John Richardson, Assistant Secretary of State,for the farsighted policies that have made this work possi-ble. This remains a major contribution to educational ex-change. We continue to be deeply appreciative of the grantsfrom the Ford Foundation and from numerous other IIEcoMnbutors which have made it possible to publish theresults of these surveys in the form of Open Doors.

We recognize how deeply indebted we are to the thou-sands of men and women throughout the world who havetaken the time and trouble to answer our questionnairesand return them to IIE headquarters in New York for proccessing by our staff and computer services, We hope theywill take pride in the enormous contribution they have madetoward a better understanding of the forces at work in thefield of educational exchange.

We must also recognize that many institutions can nolonger afford the man-hours needed to fill out the OpenDoors questionnaires. This is a problem that will have tobe solved if Open Doors is to remain a viable resource.

Once again our co-sponsors in this undertaking havebeen NAFSA (National Association for Foreign StudentAffairs) and AACRAO (American Association of CollegiateRegistrars and Admissions Officers). Our appreciation fortheir counsel and assistance in this project continues to beprofound.

IIE's Census Division has compiled and reported thedata provided with as much care as possible. We deeplyregret any errors and omissions; we have made every effortto avoid them,

New YorkOctober, 1973

vi

Wallace B. Edgerton, PresidentInstitute of International Education

BEST COPY AVAILABLE

Page 9: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

f,c4set,s3sStu,!t,ISrd S,^a'es

60

55

SO

45

40

35

30

25

20

is

ID

5

MI

Undergraduates 73.968

Graduates 62.624

'Other students 9.505

Scholars 10.848

srxrct.tss 264undergraduates 1.22Graduates 116

'Other students 16Scholars 10

-Sptar- students and studentsto, h0,- tt,ere Cal no answerto the 4,-,eston On vedernrstatvs

Aca Europe Fa, East Latin Near 6 North Oceania COdntryArner,ca P./4d', East Amenca tjrAnown

F I FOREIGN STUDENTS AND SCHOLARS IN THE UNITED STATES

1972-1973

21

20

19

18

17

16

15

14

13

12

11

10

9

a

7

6

Students 34.218

MIFaculty . 6.589

ANTARCTICA

GENERAL ASSIGNMENTFaculty . .

COUNTRY UNKNOWN320

Faculty . 75

I I WIN

5

4

3

1 IAlrrca Europe Far East Latin Neat 6 North Oceania Country

America Saddle fast Amer.ca Unknown

Fig, I{ U.S. STUDENTS AND FACULTY ABROAD

NOTE, These figures are for students who were abroad during 1971-72 and/acuity and admin.s2rative staff members abroad during 1972-73

EDUCATIONAL EXCHANGE BETWEEN THE UNITEDSTATES AND OTHER COUNTRIES

Foreign student enrollment in U.S. colleges and uni-versities increased by about 4 per cent in the academic year1972-1973.

The number of U.S. students reported enrolled in foreigninstitutions in 1971-1972 increased 6.5 per cent over theyear before.

The number of U.S. faculty members and administrativestaff reported abroad increased 4.5 per cent in 1972-1973.

The number of foreign scholars reported teaching ordoing research at U.S. colleges and universities increased5 per cent in 1972-1973.

Except for the foreign scholars in the U.S., all of the totalsare the highest ever reported since Open Doors was firstpublished in 1955.

The total number of foreign students reported, 146,097,is 5,971 more than the number reported for 1971-1972.However, this 4 per cent increase represents a marked dropfrom the peak years of the 1960's, when annual increasesaveraged 11.3 per cent.

Every year there are some institutions which, for variousreasons, are unable to respond to the census. Table 8, page64, identifies those institutions which responded to theforeign student cer+sus for 1971-1972 but not for 1972-1973 and gives the numbers of students they reported lastyear. Adjusted totals based on these figures, compared toadjusted totals for 1971-1972, also show a 4 per cent in-crease. Reported totals for 1971-1972 showed a 4 per centdecrease over the previous year's reported totals, but ad-justed figures showed an increase of 1 per cent.

P11.)'T '30IT AVAILABLE

Page 10: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

It should be emphasized that Open Doors figures onforeign students represent only students who are fullyenrolled in U.S. culte.,,es dm/ trolversIfies which offer recog-nized academic programs at the postsecondary level. Theydo not include foreign students enrolled in secondaryschools. trade schools, private commercial English-languageschools, -or any similar schools which are not recognized asoffering college- or university-level academic instruction. Forthe specific U.S. institutions which responded to the survey,see Table 7. Many types of U.S. schools are approved forstudent visas, and many foreign students are enrolled inthem. However, the Open Doors census covers only studentsin colleges and universities.

One problem affecting the census in recent years hasbeen the ever-increasing number of returns provided in theform of lists or printouts compiled from registration data.instead of on the IIE census form (see Fig. XXIII). This year,43 per cent of census returns were provided in the form oflists or printouts. Last year, 36 per cent were. These returnsrarely provide answers to questions which are of specialinterest in international education: source of support andlength of stay.

FOREIGN STUDENTS IN THE UNITED STATESThe 146,097 foreign students reported in the United

States in 1972-1973 came from 170 countries and were en-rolled in 1,508 U.S. institutions. There were 120 institutionswhich reported 5,633 foreign students last year but did notrespond to the survey this year (see Table 8). There areprobably at least between 5,000 and 6,000 foreign studentsamong the census's customary respondents that wentunreported.

Area and Country of OriginThe foreign students who made up the 4 per cent in-

crease in 1972-1973 came almost entirely from the Far East,the Near and Middle East, and Africa. Totals from theseregions were each about 2,000 more than last year.

The number of students reported from North America(Canada, almost exclusively) was about 700 below last year'stotal. The numbers reported from Latin America, Oceania,and Europe were virtually unchanged.

This year's totals were: Far East, 53,562; Latin America,28,383; Near and Middle East, 19,202; Europe, 16,296;North America, 9,805; Africa, 11,465; and Oceania, 2,107.(See Fig. I and Tables 1 and 2.)

Last year's totals were Far East, 51,827; Latin America,28,832; Near and Middle East, 17,100; Europe, 16,219;North America, 10,5411 Africa, 9,592; and Oceania, 2,131.

Proportionally, the distribution of foreign students fromthe major regions remained virtually unchanged from lastyear's. Although there have been some long-term shifts,these proportions have remained remarkably stable since thecensus was first taken in 1954-1955, during which time thenumber of foreign students more than quadrupled.

The largest proportion came from the Far East. This hasbeen true in each of the 19 years that Open Doors has beenpublished. In 1972-1973, students from the Far East madeup 37 per cent of the total reported, as they have for the pastthree years. Other 1972-1973 proportions were: LatinAmerica, 19 per cent; Near and Middle East, 13 per cent;Europe, 11 per cent; North America, 7 per cent; Africa, 8 percent, and Oceania, 1 per cent. None of these proportionsdiffers by more than 2 per cent from last year's

Over the past 19 years, the proportions from the FarEast and Africa have increased, over all, while the propor-tions from Latin America, Europe, and North America havedecreased and the proportion from the Near and Middle Easthas remained about the same. These have been year-to-yearfluctuations. but these are general patterns.

2

FOREIGN COUNTRIES WITH MORE THAN 1.000STUDENTS IN THE U S 1972 .1913

Number WinterCountry 1922 1173 1971-1972

s

n''P

F U.S STATES AND TERRITORIES WITH MORE THAN1,000 FOREIGN STUDENTS -1972-1973

State or Terrriory

fie.. I ,,rkf

t;

EustrFct of ,Jr.r,s

YO,

BEST CONY AMIABLE

Number of PercentageForeign of TotalStudents (146,097)

12

Page 11: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

The proportion from the Far East has grown from a low of30 per cent in 1954-1955 to a high of 37 per cent in the early1960's and again, after a slight dip, in the past three years.

The proportion from Latin America has fallen, with somefluctuations, from a high point of 25 per cent in 1954 -1955.The 11 per cent reported this year from Europe is the small-est proportion ever; the high point was 16 per cent in 1957-1958.

The proportion from the Near and Middle East, 13 percent this year, has always been between 11 and 13 per cent.

The proportion froM North America (Canada) has beendropping in recent years, declining gradually from totals of11 and 12 per cent between 1958-1959 and 1968-1969 toits present 7 per cent.

The proportion from Africa, on the other hand, has beenincreasing, from 3, 4, and 5 per cent of the total between1954-1955 and 1960-1961 to an average of 7 per cent sincethen.

Oceania's proportion of the total has always been be-tween 1 and 2 per cent.

For numbers of students reported from each region andeach country, see Tables 1 and 2. Growth since 1954-1955is charted in Fig. XIII.

The largest number of foreign students, 10,656, camefrom India. India led the list last year as well. Until 1970-1971, Canada was the home of the largest number of foreignstudents. Other countries leading in numbers of studentsthis year were Hong Kong, Canada, Republic of China, andIran. ISee Fig. III.) These five countries and Cuba have ledthe list, with some variations in order, for the past five years.

There were 29 countries with 1,000 or more students,compared to 30 last year. For the first time, Ethiopia was re-ported as the home country of more than 1,000 students.Last year Italy and Trinidad and Tobago had more than1,000 students each; this year the totals from each of thesecountries dropped below 1,000.

Where They StudiedOnce again, there were more foreign students reported in

California than there were in any other state. There were22,643 foreign students reported in California, 2,000 morethan last yearand representing 15.5 per cent of all the foreignstudents reported. New York, Florida, Illinois, and Texas hadthe next largest totals. (See Fig. IV.) Except for Florida, thesestates, Michigan, and Massachusetts have led in the numberof foreign students since Open Doors was first published in1955. California has led the list every year since 1961-62,when New York held that honor. Florida first rose to the topfive in 1968-1969 and has been one of the leading statesever since. Most foreign students in Florida are of Cubanorigin.

The regional distribution of foreign students reported inthe United States is shown in Fig. V. The proportions of thetotal are Northeast, 23 per cent; South, 20 per cent; Mid-west, 23, per cent; Southwest, 8 per cent; Mountain, 4 percent; Pacific, 21 per cent, and Guam, Puerto Rico, and theVirgin Islands, 1 per cent. All of these figures are the same as,or no more than 1 per cent different from, those of last year,and no more than 2 per cent different from those of the yearbefore.

There were 1,508 institutions reporting foreign students,142 fewer than last year and representing 93 per cent of theinstitutions which responded to the survey (see page 13).Table 8 identifies schools which reported 10 or more stu-dents in 1971- 72 but which did not respond in the 1972-1973 survey.

The University of California reported the largest numberof foreign students, 6,279 of them. Miami-Dade Junior Col-lege reported the second-largest number, 5,870. Last yearand the year before Miami-Dade led in the number of foreign

students. New York University, the University of Wisconsin,and Columbia University were third, fourth, and fifth. (SeeFig. VI.)

Woodbury College, Los Angeles, reported the highestproportion of foreign students within its student body: 46.5per cent of the total. Woodbury College has led U.S. insti-tutions in this respect since 1968-1969. The second highestproportion was reported by Central YMCA Community Col-lege, Chicago, where 25 per cent of the student body wasmade up of foreign students. Howard University, where 21per cent of the student body is made up of foreign,students,was third; Massachusetts Institute of Technology, with 19per cent, was fourth, and Miami-Dade Junior College, with 16per cent, was fifth. (See Fig. VI.) Howard and MIT have re-ported large proportions of foreign student enrollment everyyear since the inception of the surveys.

Fields of StudyThe proportions of foreign students in the major fields

of study continued to show their usual stability. These pro-portions were: engineering, 22 per cent; humanities, 16 percent; physical and life sciences, 14 per cent; social sciences,

`3 12 per cent; business administration, 13 per cent; medicalsciences, 6 per cent; education, 5 per cent, and agriculture,2 per cent. (See Fig. VII.) None of these proportions differsby more than 2 per cent from last year's. There was no re-sponse to the question on field of study for 10 per cent of thestudents repotted: this is the highest nonresponse ever tothis question.

While proportions of students in various fields havechanged little from one year to the next, some long-termtrends are discernible. The proportion of foreign students inthe humanities has dropped, with some fluctuations, from 22per cent in 1954-1955 to a low point of 16 per cent for 1972-1973. The proportion in the physical and life sciences peakedin the mid-1960's at 18 per cent, then dropped gradually toits present 14 per cent,

The proportion in business administration rose from alow of 8 per cent in the late 1950's to highs of 14 per centlast year and 13 per cent this year. The proportion in medicalsciences dropped steadily from highs of 9 per cent in the late1950's to lows of 4 per cent in the late 1960's, then beganclimbing upward to the 6 per cent reported for 1972-1973.

The proportion of students in engineering has alwaysbeen between 21 and 23 per cent of the total. The proportionin the social sciences has always been between 12 and 15per cent of the total; in education between 4 and 6 per centof the total, and in agriculture between 2 and 4 per cent ofthe total.

The numbers of students reported in each major field,broken down by region and country of origin, can be found inTable 2.Preference by Region of Origin

As always, students from different regions showedcharacteristic patterns of preference for fields of study. ForAfrican students, one of the most striking changes from pastpatterns has been the growth of enrollment in business ad-ministration. Seventeen per cent of all African students werein the field, reflecting gradual but steady growth from 5 percent in 1955-1956. Eighteen per cent of African studentswere in the social sciences, reflecting a gradual drop fromhigh points of 25 and 26 per cent in early 1960's. Other pro-portions for African students were: engineering, 15 per cent;physical and life sciences, 14 per cent; humanities, 11 percent (down from high points of 15 and 16 per cent in the late1950's); medicine, 9 per cent (down from a high point of 15per cent in 1954-1955); education, 5 per cent, and agricul-ture, 4 per cent (down from a high point of 9 per cent in1964-1965).

The largest proportion of students from Europe 26 per

BEST COPY AVAILABLE

3

Page 12: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Fig. V FOREIGN STUDENTS: DISTRIBUTION IN REGIONS CF U.S. BY GEOGRAPHIC REGIONS OF ORIGIN, 1972-1973

a.ta.

Y7 I- ORegion of U.S Total

Total 146,097 11,465 16,296 53,562 28,383 19,202 9,805 2,107 254 5,023

Northeast 34,484 3,042 5,918 12,233 6,126 3,454 2,803 333 120 455South 28,586 2,787 2,026 /,227 10,872 3,367 802 159 15 1,331Southwest 12,099 686 744 4,530 2,555 2,847 397 84 14 242Midwest 34,340 3,196 3,969 14,390 3,818 4,669 2,902 390 49 957Mountain 5,212 304 562 1,670 602 845 1,070 126 10 23Pacific 30,341 1,450 3 128 13,508 3,590 4,015 1,830 861 46 2,013Guam 155 1 - 154Puerto Rico 880 49 3 820 5 1 - - 2

NOTES: States included in these regions are the following:

Northeast SouthConnecticut AlabamaMaine ArkansasMassachusetts DelawareNew Hampshire 0 strict of ColumbiaNew Jersey FloridaNew York GeorgiaPennsylvania KentuckyRhode Island LouisianaVermont Maryland

MississippiNorth CarolinaSouth CarolinaTennesseeVirginiaWest Virginia

For a list of the countries included in these regions, see Tables 1, 2. or 3.

SouthwestArizonaNew MexicoOklahomaTexas

Midwest MountainIllinois ColoradoIndiana IdahoIowa MontanaKansas NevadaMichigan UtahMinnesota WyomingMissouriNebraskaNorth DakotaOhioSouth DakotaWisconsin

PacificAlaskaCaliforniaHawaiiOregonWashington

cent-was in the humanities. This has always been the lead-ing choice of European students. Other fields, and the pro-portions of European students enrolled in them, were:engineering, 15 per cent; physical and lite sciences, 12 percent; social sciences, 15 per cent; medical sciences, 4 percent; education, 4 per cent, and agriculture, 1 per cent. Overthe years, the proportion in business administration has risenfrom 8 per cent in the late 1950's to 12 and 13 per cent thisyear and last. The proportion in medicine has declined from8 per cent in the late 1950's to 4 per cent for each of the lastthree years. The proportions in other fields have remainedstable.

Students from the Far East continued to show a strongpreference for engineering, Twenty-six per cent were in thefield, down 2 per cent from last year but up from 20 per centin the late 1950's. Other proportions for Far Eastern studentswere: physical ano life sciences, 19 per cent (up from 14 percent in 1954-1955); humanities, 12 per cent (down from 19per cent in 1954-1955); social sciences, 10 per cent (alsodown from 19 per cent in 1954-1955); business administra-tion, 15 per cent (up from 8 per cent in 1954-1955); medi-cine, 6 per cent; education, 4 per cent, and agriculture, 2per cent.

The humanities and engineering were, as usual, thechoice of the largest proportions of students from LatinAmerica. Eighteen per cent were in the humanities, downfrom peaks of 27 per cent in the late 1960's. Seventeen percent were in engineering, down from peaks of 27 per cent inthe late 1950's. Other proportions for Latin American stu-dents were: physical and life sciences, 10 per cent; socialsciences, 12 per cent; business administration, 14 per cent(up from low points of 9 per cant in the late 1950's); medi-cine, 7 per cent; education, 5 per cent, and agriculture, 3per cent.

4

Students from the Near and Middle East showed theoverwhelming preference for engineering that they have al-ways shown. Forty-one per cent of students from the regionwere in the field, the same proportion as last year and thehighest ever. Other proportions for this region were: physicaland life sciences, 11 per cent; humanities, 11 per cent;social sciences, 10 per cent; business administration, 11 percent (up from low points of 6 per cent between 1957 and1961); medicine, 4 per cent; education, 3 per cent; and agri-culture, 2 per cent.

The humanities were the choice of the largest proportionof students from North America (Canada), as they have al-ways been. Twenty-three per cent were in the field, Only 7per cent ...ere in engineering, the same proportion as lastyear but down from peaks of 17 and 18 per cent in the late1950's. Other proportions were: physical and life sciences,11 per cent; social sciences, 17 per cent (this proportion hasbeen stable for the past five years but represents growthfrom a low point of 10 per cent in 1954-1955); business ad-ministration, 9 per cent; education, 15 per cent (one per centless than last year but representing fairly steady growthfrom 7 per cent in 1954-1955); medicine, 6 per cent (downfrom 13 per cent in 1954-1955); and agriculture, 3 percent.

The humanities, the social sciences, and education werethe dominant choices of students from Oceania: 17 per centof the total were in each of these three fields. The number ineducation shows a striking increase, up from a low point of4 per cent in 1957-1958. The proportion in the humanitiesis down from a high point of 27 per cent in 1957-1958.Other proportions are: engineering, 6 per cent; physical andlife sciences, 14 per cent; medicine, 5 per cent (down frompeaks of 18 per cent in the late 1950's!; and agriculture, 3per cent.

BEST COPY AVAILABLE

Page 13: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Frg VI U.S. INSTITUTIONS WITH MORE THAN 500 FOREIGNSTUDENTS-1972-I973

Per-Numt '.;r centageof Total of TotalForeign Enroll. Enroll.

tnstitution Students ment' meet

Umversity of California 6,279 113,266 5.5M,:icor Dade .A.:31,..r(o[f,:.we 5 870 36,359 16 1New York 1,..n,,,,,ers,ty 3.568 38.5/7 9 21.1n.ers.ty of W.s,:onsw .3.129 133.303 2 3Cotombla ijoiversti 2.871 22.624 12 7University of il5re,-,.is 2.749 56.915 4.8Umversity of 7e *as 2,160 68.534 3 2Howard University 2.085 10.110 206Ltr5,..ersly of MR:t5gar. 1.795 41.178 4.4Uho,erity of Hawae 1,588 38,506 4.4Ori.,,ersity of 'A ash:noon 162') 34.000 4.8Harvard air5vers,t7 1.007 15,736 9.6LoteSana State ain,vers tistate (11'.,,-,clf of

1,4)9 39,542 3 8

New Yor.. at Buffalo 1.472 23.152 6.4Indiana .1J,...ersIty 1,443 63.816 2.3MasSa015.7..tIti tnstitute ofTechno''4y 1411 7,500 18.8Un6vers,ty of Mom' 1.354 17,016 8 0Cahfor45a State 11,15,ers,ti.1.:Jni.e., 8ear 5 1.349 29.513 4.6

Stanford Unp.eers.ty 1 297 12,326 10 5Un.versIty Of Scuttrncat.forrea 1.281 19,896 6.4Unr.iersity Of 1lot,,,t,.,0 1.746 26,473 4 7Wayne State lin,,f,,r,,,,,, 1.240 33,837 3 7Cornell 14n;,,ersqy 1,213 15 545 7 3Brq.trial5 Young 1.15.,,,c,,,,,,t,i 1,207 24,555 4,3Ohio State un..vers,tf 1,173 50.040 2 3P.-laden.a t,,,t., C.,..Ilew,e 1.168 15,240 7 2ijn.vers.ty of Florida 1,154 23.570 4 9Une.ers,ty of Pennsylvana 1.123 13,442 5.8M.ch,gan State 1.4-5%,eri,ti 1,070 41,424 2 6Amen:7,3n 1.ine.ers.t,y 1.031 13.513 7.61.1114ers;ty of Var./land 1.023 70,403 1.5t.15,:er,t, of "rliSSOUri 1,003 47.427 2.1iwarv,_rsity of North Cankr,-1

tCentral YMC:A 00r,r,I;un,ti. 997 19J)12 2.0

Ceilege 985 3,995 25 2Wrio<lbur, College 929 1,9'33 466Sr2c.;se Uneiersiti 516 23001 3 7Unt.ers,ty of SanFrancisco 839 6,100 138

Uno.,ersly of PttsburA5lioros Institute Of

825 33.051 2 5

Technology 822 5.315 12.9Borg Island Uni,,er,,ty. 822 18,9.30 4.3tirevers.ty of Puerto Rico 796 47.533 1.7Unlvers4y of Oregonperrrsylvarea State

tjr-uve5s,t,lin...:es.ty of Kansasc,a5forma State 1.1,e,.erslt,..

789

784773

17.227

5236020.0/5

4.6

1.53.')

San losef Cahfc:rn,a State Un.-

vers,t7. Saar Fr.1,1,7iiiro

772

751

27._5155

20.683

2.8

3.6tjr1IVP,$[t Of Ar410r1,3 742 26.785 2 8f-edera! c.:.1 ty '-c1:01.,?. 7 35 7.519 '1.7Tecas A & V. 1.ir,.,e55,fy

1Forlflam 1.151,..5rs1)7287x17

i.-3 41 213.898

3 15.1

Oreg-.' ) State ..!..ers,f,. 584 15.200 4 5Southern I)..!0.', 12,,

',ers,ty. Cartauco,.1.t 578 20.349 3.3Boston LI,64ers,ti f,15 21.31)3 20Nort5Aesferr Ur..,er4-, 560 14.410 1.5Uno...ers,Y, ,-_,1 Ci..1,.,:rt,j 620 23.41) 2 /Northeaster,: lin!.,.9rst 579 15.237 4 11,0.A.A state ur,er-7,,,t; 015 10.528 3.1Gec,ge Wrasfilen

un0e.,0t7 512 21.416 2'iCathot,c. 955...es-t,,, of

4;er,, a 608 6.654 9 1State Un.ver.s,t,, of Net,

York at St5ny B'oe6, 601 13.500 4 5Ger,-...5zetc.w,-1ur,.,,,,rsrty 600 9.747 6 2Yale IIni4e5,,Jty 5011 9.219 6.4Oklaherra Stat" air-,:erzo,i 554 7). 775 2 7

I Rutgers U. n,./ersity 553 38.368 1 4Ca',f5rn,a State Uo...er.:,..ty.

Los 4r-,ele5 552 25.515tUtan State 14r,....-,,,ti 5.15 .8.745 5 2tun..06:!, -:,,f Lt-o. 914

Case 1,.e,.5rn 0-5,.--..,ureversqy 529 .1.;65 58

lan,.,er,,t7 pf 'Jetya,.1i 527 35,545 1 5I Kansas State er.,er0,y 51 3 15.108 3 4llo.,e,s.ty .-1 f7' iw,o

t un.er$..ty of -,,,,,517511

,3,8328.91:

'.:.. e,

; .6

4;n4ersty of t, e,Y...,ee 41.7.12 1 2

t -.,1 )5. 5 "..t,

1.4 5, ". r Fc.:'gr,

Academic LevelFifty-one per cent of the foreign students reported were

undergraduates, 43 per cent were graduate students, 3 percent were "special" students, and no answer to the questionon academic level was provided for 3 per cent. This repre-sents no significant change from last year's figures.

Undergraduates predominated in engineering, the hu-manities, business administration, and medical sciences.Graduates predominated in the physical and life sciences,social sciences, education, and agriculture. None of thesefindings represents any significant break with the patterns ofthe past. For undergraduate-graduate breakdowns by field,see Fig. VII. For breakdowns by country of origin, see Table 2.

Students Holding Immigrant VisasNineteen per cent of all foreign students reported held

immigrant visas, the same proportion as last year and repre-senting about 500 more students. Proportional breakdownsby region of origin are shown in Fig, VIII. These proportionsare either the same as, or no more than two per cent differentfrom, last year's, except for the category "Stateless andCountry Unknown," which rose from 4 to 8 per cent.

Of all students, 69,498 were reported holding F, or stu-dent, visas; 9,390 holding J, or exchange visitor, visas;5,527 hording other types of visa. There was no answer tothe question on type of visa for 34,066 students.

Students holding immigrant visas are included in thecensus because many of them require the same kinds ofEnglish-language training. orientation, and guidance thatnonimmigrant foreign students do. Since data for the OpenDoors census are provided, for the most part, by ForeignStudent Advisers, it is likely that the immigrant-visa holdersreported in the census are those who do need such services.Many students with immigrant-visa status who may havecome to the United States as children, who speak English aswell as their native-born fellow students and who bearstandard U.S. academic credentials, may not come to theattention of Foreign Student Advisers and thus may not becounted in the census.

The largest proportion of students holding immigrantvisas, 35 per cent, came from Latin America. Other propor-tions were: Africa, 4 per cent; Europe, 17 per cent; the FarEast, 23 per cent; the Near and Middle East, 6 per cent;North America (Canada), 6 per cent; and Oceania, 1 per cent.(See Fig. VIII.) All of these proportions are the same as, orno more than 2 per cent different from, last year's.

Europe and Latin America showed the highest ratio ofimmigrant-visa holders to nonimmigrants. One out of threeof students from each of these regions was reported holdingan immigrant visa. The immigrant-nonimmigrant ratio fromother areas was: Africa, one out of 10; Far East, one out ofnine; Near and Middle East, 1 out of 12; North America(Canada) one out of six; Oceania, one out of 10. None ofthese proportions differs significantly from last year's.

Only 19 per cent of immigrant-visa holders were reportedin the humanities, compared to 25 per cent in 1971-1972.None of the other proportions showed any significant devia-tion from last year's, except that the "no-answer" categoryon field of study rose from 10 to 20 per cent. The proportionswere: engineering, 16 per cent; physical and life sciences,10 per cent; social sciences, 10 per cent; business admini-stration, 11 per cent; medical sciences, 7 per cent; educa-tion, 6 per cent, and agriculture, 1 per cent. (See Fig. IX.)

Forty-seven per cent of immigrant-visa holders reportedwere undergraduates, compared to 54 per cent last year.Thirty per cent were graduate students, compared to 34 percent last year. This decline in both classes is traceable to thefact that the proportion of "special" students-and studentsfor whom no answer was provided to the question on aca-demic status rose from 12 per cent to 23 per cent.

BEST COPY AVAILABLE

5

Page 14: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Fig VII FIELDS OF STUDY OF FOREIGN STUDENTS-1972.1973

Engineering32.14722.0%

Humanities22.87215.7'

16,903aamaiwavanammummamasamaft14,130

1,114 IIIIMPOIS

12.4307.8892.553 mestemiiimaramoses

Physical andlife Sciences 7,392

20.233 12388138% 453 sir

Business Administration 12,20419.597 6,84613.4% 547 am

Social Sciences 7,36117.646 9,803121'0 482 ma

Medical Sciences8.2795.7%

Education7,1524.94.

Agriculture.3.362

5,643!2,415 A

221 as

2,901mmamarmara4,055ammimmeamm

196a

1.049amor2,206 immoratrum

107a

All Other 447sua608 880.4% 73r

No Answer 7,63814.201 2,804 smItoalmommi9.7%, 3,759 veremasurrisimmarearroor

I-- Stateess 137).1

Far East 6.473423)1

Latin America 9.100(35,)

Afnca 114514'.)

Europe 4,58441 )

'Near 'C.Ilrolu,nnct*ryl

; M'cl<Ve 2.160(8t \/ East

626I6=1;

REGION Or ORIGIN or FOREIGN STUDENTS NOIDINI;fA,fir,RANT iISAS 1172-1q73

6

Total 146,097siamma Undergraduates 73.968 50.6',

Graduates 62,624 42.9%'Other 9.505 6.5%

'Specie' students and noanswer to questl'ons onacademic status.

Community and Junior College StudentsEleven per cent of all foreign students reported were en-

rolle in junior colleges. This represents a total of 16,160students, about 500 fewer than last year, when junior col-lege students made up about 12 per cent of the foreign-student population.

Table 4 gives figures on community and junior-collegestudents broken down by country of origin, sex, and field ofstudy. In compiling the tabulation, lIE included studentsenrolled in recognized postsecondary institutions whoseonly courses of study are undergraduate programs of lessthan four ycars. The table does not include students en-rolled in two-year degree programs at four-year institutions.It does include students enrolled in junior colleges, technicalinstitutes, and community colleges who plan to finish theireducation at four-year schools. The junicr colleges listed inTable 4 are identified by asterisks in Table 7. Three hundredand seventy-nine community or junior colleges are includedin the table, compared to 452 last year.

Once again, the largest proportion of junior and com-munity college students came from Latin America, 44 percent, compared to only 19 per cent of all foreign students.(See Fig. X.) This figure is affected by the large number ofstudents of Cuban nationality included in the total for LatinAmerica. Of the 28,000 students reported from Latin Amer.Ica, nearly 7,000 about one out of four are Cubans. Of allthe Cuban students reported, about two out of three are en-rolled in junior or community colleges.

Seventeen per cent of foreign students in communityand junior colleges came from the Far East, compared to 37per cent of all foreign students. Eighteen per cent came fromthe Near and Middle East, compared to 13 per cent of allforeign students. Only 4 per cent came from Europe, corn-

BEST COvY AV;T,I,BLE

Page 15: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Fig. IX FIELDS OF STUDY OF FOREIGN STUDENTS HOLDING IMMIGRANT VISAS 1972-1973Engineering 2,044

4,451 2,29016% 117 am

10111111111111.1"

Humanities 3,1895,224 1.41619 %. 619 simmimmirms

Physic,V & 1.383 aramnamearrageLife Sciences 1,446 Rommh, 4MMEmillm

2,882 53 to10%

Business Administration 2,1613.152 932 MommIIIIIIIIRMIMIMIRMLI% 59

Social Sciences2,10%

736

Medical Sciences2.0037%

1,538 smisommsomimummome1,155 imasiaar43

1,549406 lour48 to

Education 861 arammaresormaas1,524 642 ImmunimmImml6% 21 I

Agriculture1831%

Al Other1500,1%

8496 fa

3

140 ago61.4,

Latin America 7,038144';1

far East 2.161117%1

/ CountryUnknown1,437(9%1

Near & Middle at2.988(18%)

Africa\ i.\7951.5% l

Stateless131.8 %) 1

NorthAmerica36312%!

Oceania1.7413%1

riq ( REGION OF ORIGIN or FOREIGN STLIOENIS IN JUNIORCOLLEGES '972-1173

Total: 27,616

immmoMI Undergraduates 12.949 47%mimmIR Graduates 8,389 30%t 'tither 6,278 23%

No Answer 5,311 20%

StJdetS and r10a r,s, ,1 on

Humanities3,176120%) Engineering

3,626124%)

Education566L4%1

Social MedicalSciences sciences

612(4%1 1,371(811

Agriculture

20511%1All Other31512%1

PhysicalLite Sc.

139(3%)

Fy xi FIELDS OF STUDY OF FOREIGN STUDENTS IN JUNIORCOLLEGES - 191/- 19 73

7

Page 16: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Fig XII SOURCES OF SUPPORT OF FOREIGN STUDENTS-1972-1973

Self Supporting49,35833 8

32,13015 344

1,88,4 mom

U S Institution 5,37017.779 12,11812.2 , 291

Private Organization5.2513 6%

U.S. Government3,2242.2%

Foreign Government4,6973 2

U.S Institution andPrivate Organization

499

U.S Government andU.S. Institution

7030 5',

Foreign Government andU.S. Institution

512

U.S. Government andPrivate Organization

1820.1%

Foreign Government andPrivate Organization

2280.2'c

Support Not Known63,66443.6%

1,8413,123

287

MIIIMM111111111111MEI

IMO1111161.100

863 no2,241

120

2,153 MINNS2,375 MINNS

169 o

181 I30612,

311376161

217285

10

60 I117

5

63 t157

8

30.77926.1826,703

UNDERGRADUATES minutTotal 73,968 (50.6%)

GRADUATES moorTotal 62,624 (42.9 %)

"OTHERS momTotal 9,505 (6.5 %1

TOTAL 146,097

Special" stLdents and noanswer to oueston on academ,c. status

pared to 11 per cent of all foreign students. Proportions ofjunior and community college students from other areaswere: Africa, 5 per cent (all foreign students 8 per cent);North America (Canada) 2 per cent (all foreign students 7per cent); Oceania, 1 per cent (all foreign students 1 percent).

Except for the proportion from the Far East, whichdropped from 21 per cent last year to 17 per cent this yearall of the proportional figures for junior and community col-lege students are the same as, or no more than 1 per centdifferent from, last year's.

The largest proportion of junior college students were inengineering: 24 per cent of the total, 4 per cent more thanlast year, were in the field. The humanities and business ad-ministration were the next most favored fields, with 20 percent of junior colleges reported in each. Other proportionswere physical and life sciences, 3 per cent; social sciences,4 per cent; medical sciences, 8 per cent; education, 4 percent; and agriculture, 1 per cent. All of these proportions areeither the same as, or no more than 2 per cent different from,last year's. (See Fig. XI.)

Length of StayTwenty-seven per cent of the students surveyed were re-

ported in their first year of study in the United States, and 9per cent in their second year. Each of these proportions is2 per cent more than last year's. Only 14 per cont were re-ported in their third or later year of lj,S. study, compared to29 per cent last year. However, the proportion of "no answer"

8

to this question rose from 39 per cent to 51 per cent, whichprobably accounts for the discrepancy. The nonresponse tothis question has been increasing by leaps and bounds. Onereason is that more and more schools are responding to thesurvey with information available from registration data,which does not ordinarily include information on length ofstay. Another is that foreign studentsparticularly thosewho have been in the country for several years .are often re-luctant to answer the question.

Sources of SupportAs always, the largest proportion of foreign students

were self-supporting, that is, dependent upon their own ortheir families' resources. Thirty-four per cent were in thiscategory, three per cent less than fast year. U.S. collegesand universities provided whole or partial support for 13 percent of all foreign students reported, four per cent less thanlast year. Private organizations provided whole or partialsupport for 4 per cent, 2 per cent less than last year. The U.S.Government provided whole or partial support for 3 per cent,compared to 4 per cent last year, and foreign governments(almost invariably of the students' own countries) providedwhole or partial support for 4 per cent, the same as last year.

There was no answer to the question on source of sup-port for 44 per cent of the students, 10 per cent more thanlast year. The reason is, again, that more schools (43 per centthis year, 36 per cent last year) provided census data pre-pared from registration information, which does not ordi-narily include information on source of support.

BEST C0i.4 AVAILABLE

Page 17: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Fig XIII FOREIGN STUDENTS IN THE U.S.-1954-1973

55,000

50.000

45,000

4( ,000

35.000

30,000

25,000

20,000

15,000

10.000

5,000

Africa

Europe

Ear

Latin

NearMiddle

North

Ocea

.

.East ..........

America

andEast

America

1113

""^' ""'

"..........,

II

I..°II

0

................

sae.'

.....

....

es. 1

..

. . ....... ::"1:.1,..

..... ........... ... ..

...........

...... ...wow ram ,_q ...rte

Lr.

rn

42Cr,

rn

00a. rn

MenWomen RatioSeventy-one per cent of the foreign students reported

were men, 24 per cent were women, and no answer to thequestion on sex was provided for 5 per cent. This approximate 3-to-1 ratio has remained the same since the surveyswere first taken in 1954-1955.

FOREIGN SCHOLARS IN THE UNITED STATESThere were 10,848 foreign scholars reported in the

United States in 1972-1973, 500 more than v,ere reportedlast year (when several major institutions failed to respondto the survey) but about 1,200 fewer than the year before.

The largest proportion came from Europe. This has beenthe case since Open Doors was first published in 1955. Forty-two per cent were from Europe, 30 per cent from the FarEast, 7 per cent from Latin 'America; 7 per cent from theNear and Middle East; 6 per cent from North America(Canada); 4 per cent from Oceania; and 4 per cent fromAfrica. These figures are the same as, or no more than 1 percent different from, last year's.

40

tfl

rn0

0 0

0

r.

Or. N.

rV

For the purposes of the survey, a foreign scholar was de-fined as a man or woman who served, or was expected toserve, in a teaching or research capacity on a U.S. campusfor one month or more during the academic year. Foreignscholars who came to the United States as enrolled studentswere counted among the students.

More scholars came from the United Kingdom than fromany other country. This has been true for most of the past 19years. There were 1,354 scholars from the United Kingdom,or 12.5 per cent of the total. Other countries which led innumbers of scholars were Japan, India, the Federal Republicof Germany, and Canada in that order. These countries haveled all the rest in numbers of scholars for most of the last 19years. Twenty-two countries had more than 100 scholars,the same as last year. (See Fig, XIV.)

The physical and life sciences were again the fieldsrepresented by the largest proportion of foreign scholars,33 per cent of the total, the same as last year. These havealways been the predominant fields of foreign scholars.Twenty-six per cent were in the medical sciences, 3 per cent

BEST CM' AVAILABLE;

9

Page 18: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Fig. XIV FOREIGN COUNTRIESU.S.-1972-1973

Country

United Kingdom

Japan

India

Germany.

WITH MORE THAN 100 SCHOLARS IN THE

Number of Scholars in U.S.

1,354

Fig XVI U.S INSTITUTIONS REPORTING 100 OR MOREFOREIGN SCHOLARS -1972-1973

Number of Number ofForeign Foreign

5', Scholars ScholarsInstitution 1972-1973 1971-1972

(irliserS,(y.,)! r.4i /1(Joi,,(,rs,t'y 400 140MiSS,I.:116Sett.r. 1,1.titoto

40

12

1135

920 orrimisrimmilsirl8.5'i..

722Fed. Rep. of 1-1,irA,tr(i .11,0siMMIImisssumers 6.7'0

600 5.50Univer,iity of 350 '3/')

Canada University of H.10,31 319 293SIIIMMENNINIMINS

439 sosinuNir 4.0%Stanford Urviersity 2/4 352

France Ve35hington University 251 160University of ilvakti:ne,ton 250 203

China, Rep, of 403 MMIramm 3.7% Cornell University 242

386Vole University 24: 221

Israel University' of HKnots 238 145sommorm3.60

341University of Puerto Rico 222 247

Australia Unri.ersity of f/cichigail 218 94ismoss 3.10Johns Hopkins University 217 231

Italy Columbia 182 212264 Ilress1 2.40

210Indiana University 181

Switzerland State University of Now Yorkmom 1.90at Buffalo 181 141

Korea. Rep. of 203 err 1.9'0 University of Florida 17? 129

172University of Chicago 167

Spain Cairtomia Institute df Ter:lino:06y 166 182MIMI 1.6%IJniveisity of Texas 165 258

Philippines 160 air 1.5% MiC}I.W,,ill State University 141 150

152University of North CarolinJ 133 136

Poland Purdue University 129 116Os 1.40University of Pittsburgh 129 127

Netherlands 144 sms 1.30 University of Arizona 103 111

Argentina 143 min 1.30Baylor UniversityGeorgetpAn University

102100

4.7

'China. Unspecified 138 ors 1.30NorthAestern lJaivercity 100

Sweden 137 MI 1.30

Belgium 114 um 1.10

Brazil 108 ma 1.00

Egypt 107 my 1.0%

This category consists of those whose country of citizenship was given as"China." in many oases, these scholars are residents of countries other than theRepublic of China. There was no evchange between the United States and thePeople's Republic of China at the time the survey was taken.

Fig. XV PROFESSIONAL FIELDS OF FOREIGN SCHOLARS IN THE U.S.1972-1973

Field Number of Foreign Scholars

Physical andLife Sciences 3.603 rozmass.

Medical Sciences 2.832 IMINIMINIIIIMIssrarismars

Humanities 1.459 smassmoutun 13.4',26.1°

Social Sciences 1.073 rommisis 9.9':

Engineering 747 Irmo 6.9'_

Agriculture 288 an 2.7',

BusinessAdministration 2081s 1.9'-

Education 184 a 1.7.,

Other & No Answer 454 ars 4.2',

10

411111111111111111

33.2%

Fig. XVII FOREIGN COUNTRIES REPORTING MORE THAN 500U.S. STUDENTS-1971-1972

CountryCW1:IdFr MC:,rviix1(Unit t..,JGerman,. Fed. 1?;t,ItalySpainI ,,ritel

Jali.in

S:oltlf.r

ebanon

U.S. Students U.S. StudentsReported ReporteJ1971-1972 1970-1971

6,5 I 7 5,2556291 6.0124.373 4,1092.20 2.4162,175 2.1331.1178 1,6711 735 ',6511.307 1.4051, 1.0211.17-n 115

877'3

S ill 58052'1 310

Fig. XVIII FIELDS OF STUDY OF U.S. STUDENTS ABROAD-1971-1972

Field Number of U.S. Students

Humanities 15,162 miniummosismarressmivirmas44'o

Social Sciences 4.948 wrirsornis 14',

Medical Sciences 3,715 wassrms 11'.

Physical and LifeSciences 1.530 ma 5 -

BusinessAdministration 514r 2

Education 4761E1

Engineering 4151.

Agriculture 761 2'.

Other 7.382 somegusimPoiner 22

BEST COrY AVAILABLE

Page 19: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Fig XIX U.S. STUDENTS ABROAD 1954-1972

18,000

11,000

It) OW

14.000

13 000

1 .000

11.000

10.000

9 00(3

8, OL0

7.000

6.000

5,000

4.000

3.000

2.000

1,000

A/NC.]

I mope

{as

1 at«1

N.s..rMiddle

North,.

Octy,ro

m... rm.

tart

Imam

,

-.\-.

---1/

------- -- --

_Iii\/

MmilArreNCtl

Indf a st

America

.

,

}\.. .

of%/ \/ 10/ %%4/

.0/A. ....:7_,..

.. .....

. "

...'

.

7..' .

0 0. %I

.' 4

..

....... ........-.....

T---""

......

. SIa

.0 a . .... : ..............--- .44111

... ...... .... ' .**#

m.o. ,..., ..... =ma,ollyk.,

ammo

mosmi

...rrn

UUi

cr,

00, 0

more than last year and the highest proportion ever. Otherproportions were: humanities, 13 per cent; social sciences,10 per cent; agriculture, 3 per cent; education, 2 per cent,and business administration, 2 per cent. None of thesefigures is more than 2 per cent different from last year's.(See Fig. XV.)

The University of California reported by far the largestnumber of foreign scholars, 940 of them. This year a collec-tive total was provided for all the University of Californiacampuses: last year, the California campuses were tabulatedindividually. The University of Pennsylvania reported thesecond highest number, 490, more than three timesas manyas that university reported for last year. MassachusettsInstitute of Technology, Harvard University, and the Uni-versity of Wisconsin reported the next largest numbers offoreign scholars: all three were among the five leading insti-tutions last year. Thirty institutions reported 100 or moreforeign scholars, one more than last year. (See Fig. nilTotals for all institutions reporting are given in Table 7,

U.S. STUDENTS ABROADThere were 34.218 U.S. students reported enrolled as

full-time students in institutions of higher learning abroad in1971-72; over 2,000 more than the year before. (Figuresfor U.S. students are always one year older than the rest of

Ui

rn,13

CO

0,

000'

the figures in Open Doors, because of the difficulty of gather-ing information from all over the world,)

These ligutas are minimal. Because of difficulties in datagathering by means of questionnaires, it is safe to assumethat there are more U.S. students abroad than are reported.

Where They StudiedEurope again attracted the largest number of students

reported, 52 per cent of the total. This is 3 per cent less thanthe previous year's figure. North America (almost exclusivelyCanada, since Mexico is grouped with the Latin Americancountries) drew 19 per cent of the total U.S. students abroad.This is 3 per cent more than reported last year. The actualnumber of U.S. students reported in Canada increased byabout 1,300. This increase brings Canada back to first placewith the largest number of U.S. students reported. Canada,France, and Mexico have always attracted the largest num-bers of U.S. students; each has led the list over the years.

Some proportions of U.S. students remained the sameas last year Latin America, 15 per cent; the Far East, 7 percent; Africa, 1 per cent. The proportion in the Near andMiddle East went from 5 per cent in 1970-71 to 6 per cent in1971-72.

Fields of StudyTraditionally the humanities have attracted by far the

largest proportion of U.S. students abroad, and they did so

11

Page 20: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

fORFIGN COoktRiES WITH NO OR MORE VISITINGu s TY hit&INNS 1912 1V.1

Country

Nmuber 01 Number ofFaculty U.S Faculty

Members Members1972.1513 1971-1911

1

1 I 1

1 U S 1N5tIIUTIONS REPORIING 50 OR MOREFACULTY MEMBERS ABROAD- 1972 -1973

Number of Number ofU -S. Faculty U.S. FacultyAbroad Abroad

lostitut<on 1971-1973

.11 C,1',!.,rrr '1'4 I,

r. ,Y17.2

trli I",!,,,rt, !I

1571-1972

1

1;11

',J110,1'1`21

is:1

t`r ,!, ..1.1 ll

I V

,1

1 '

again in 1971-72. Forty-four per cent of U.S. studentsabroad were studying the humanities, up from 39 per cent inthe two previous years. The social sciences were the nextmost popular, increasing from 12 per cent to 14 per cent.The proportions in all the other fields remained basicallythe same as in 1970-71 or within one per cent of thosefigures: medical sciences, 11 per cent; physical and hiesciences, five per cent; business administration, two percent; education, one per cent; engineering, one per cent, andagrinulture. .2 per cent.

12

U.S. FACULTY MEMBERS ABROADThere were 6,589 U.S. faculty members and admini-

strative staff reported abroad in 1972-1973, nearly 600 morethan last year and the highest figure ever reported.

The survey of U S. faculty members and administrativestaff takes in those who are currently affiliated with U.S.institutions and who are, or are expected to be, carrying outacademic or administrative work abroad for one month ormore during the year,

By far the largest proportion of them -- 60 per centwere in Europe. Open Doors surveys have always found mostU.S. faculty reported in Europe, but this year's 60 per centfigure was the highest ever. Last year the figure was 57 percent. Other proportions were Latin Arnerii-a, 11 per cent;Far East, 10 per cent; Near and Middle Ent, 5 per cent;Africa, 6 per cent; Oceania. 3 per cent, and North America(Canada), 1 per cent. These figures are either the same as,or no more than 2 per cent different from, last year's.

The proportions in the various professional fields differedlittle from last year's. They were humanities, 30 per cent;social sciences, 21 per cent; physical and life sciences, 17per cent; education, 6 per cent; engineering, 4 per cent;medical sciences, 7 rr cent; agriculture, 6 per cent; andbusiness administration, 3 per cent. These figures are eitherthe same as, or no more than 1 per cent different from, lastyear's. They have not varied significantly since the first OpenDoors survey of U.S. faculty abroad in 1955-1956.

There were 22 countries reported as hosts to 50 or moreU.S. faculty members, one fewer than last year. As usual, theUnited Kingdom attracted the largest number, 1,133. TheFederal Republic of Germany, France, Italy, and Israelattracted the next largest numbers ;See Fig. XX.) Thirty-one institutions reported 50 or more faculty members abroad,compared to 26 last year. (See Fig. XXI.)

Social Sciences

1.411 111.47.}Humanities

2.001 1.30.41

Physical aridl.i'e Sciences

1.111 (169::1Medical Sc ienc es --

491 (7 50

Eck,: aton421 (6 4 t.:1

BusinessAdministration

lt199 (30'1,1

375 7'1 276 1,4 2i.1 303 146'x.1Answer

NOot hAerr tAgriculture Engineerin

Fi, xril PROFESSIONAL FILIOS OF U.S FACULTY MEMOIRS ABROAD1172 -1973

BEST COY P MORE

Page 21: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

CONDUCT OF THE SURVEYSThe census and survey forms are mailed to participating

institutions in the late summer of each year, and tabulationbegins after they are returned in October and November.Thus, foreign students who begin their studies in the springterm will not be tabulated for that year. Figures for U.S. andforeign scholars cover those scholars who will be serving oncampuses for one month or more during the course of theyear. Thus a scholar may not be included if the campusofficial filling out the form does not know of his or her plansto teach abroad during the year. For these and many otherreasons, not the feast of which is the sheer size of the re-porting iob. Open Doors figures may be considered minimal,They are never inflated,

Foreign Students in the United States. This year 2,289institutions were polled in the foreign student census, 401fewer than last year. Schools were removed from the list ifthey had closed or if they had either failed to respond to thesurvey or reported no foreign students in the past three tofive years.

The list of institutions polled was obtained initially from:Comparative Guide to Two-Year Colleges and FourYearSpecialized Schools and Programs, Cass and Birnbaum,1969, and from the Education Directory 1971-72, HigherEducation, Office of Education, U.S. Department of Health,Education, and Welfare. Additional sources used for cornpiling the list of the two-year institutions were AAJC Di-rectory. American Association of Junior Colleges, 1969;American Junior Colleges. Seventh Edition, 1967, AmericanCouncil on Education; Barron's Guide to the Two-Year Colleges. 1966; Lovejoy's Career and Vocational Guide, 1967;and Lovejoy's College Guide, Tenth Edition, 1968. All of thelistings have been updated annually through the continuingIIE surveys.

Of the 2,289 institutions surveyed, 1,619 responded,196 fewer than last year and representing 71 per cent of thetotal polled. Foreign students were reported by 1,508 of theinstitutions responding, 142 fewer than last year and repre-senting 93 per cent of the respondents. Seven per cent ofthe institutions responding, or 111 of them, reported noforeign students in attendance. This is 54 fewer than lastyear.

Of the 2,289 institutions polled, 670, or 29 per cent, didnot reply. Last year 33 per cent of the 2,690 institutionspolled did not reply,

Foreign Scholars in the United States. IIE polled 1.406U.S. institutions, 964 fewer than last year. Institutions wereremoved from the lists on the basis described in the sectionon foreign students above. This list was compiled initiallyfrom the Education Directory 1971-72. Higher Education.Office of Education, U.S. Department of Health, Education,and Welfare, and has been updated in the course of the con-tinuing surveys. Of the 1.406 institutions polled, 971, or 69per cent, responded; last year 58 per cent of 2,372 institu-tions polled responded. Of the respondents, 429 reportedforeign scholars, 151 fewer than last year; 540 reported nofore!gn scholars, 315 fewer than last year. There was noresponse from 437 institutions, 566 fewer than last year.

U.S. Students Abroad. IIE surveyed U.S. students whowere abroad during 1971-72 through a questionnaire sentto 1,674 foreign institutions. Of this number, 1,067, or 64per cent, replied. Last year 1,720 institutions were polled,and 59 per cent replied. Of the 1,067 institutions replyingthis year, 545, or 51 per cent, reported U.S. students, com-pared to 52 per cent of those replying last year. This repre-sents 46 more institutions responding (eight of which re-ported U.S. students) than last year. The list of foreigninstitutions polled was compiled from the World of Learning,1971-72, Europa Publications Limited; the InternationalHandbook of Universities, 1970 edition, edited by H. R. Keyes

2Vir C,t;r4" AVAILABLE

& D. J. Aitken and published by International Association ofUniversities; the Commonwealth Universities Yearbook, 1970edition, edited by J. F. Foster, Association of Universities ofBritish Commonwealth; and the Handbook on InternationalStudy for U.S. Nationals, 1970 edition, Institute of Inter-national Education,

U.S. Faculty Members and Administrative Staff Abroad.The same 1.406 U.S. institutions polled in the survey offoreign scholars were polled in this survey. Of these, 971 re-sponded, or 69 per cent of the total; last year 60 per cent ofthe 2,372 institutions polled responded, There were 522 in-stitutions reporting U.S. scholars abroad, 86 fewer than lastyear; 444 reported no U.S. scholars abroad, 383 fewer thanlast year. There was no response from 437 institutions, 500fewer than last year.

Fig. XXIII REPORTING FORM FOR CENSUS OF FOREIGN STUDENTS

li

O

U

14z

0

U

E

0

a

WIt

11)1

tti

Vt

to

e

I 04 Ilfkl I yplt1101 110 10111113111100110e. "On VIM

k0,1,01101112,41Norpar olv.on ttt1100.1, ..... JO 11/1071Hr

72

gt

!1,1: 1

7 fi

io 2i';

;.

°

P:ii

;

s ao18 3

fai f

13

Page 22: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

14

Table 1 -FOREIGN 'STUDENTS: HOME COUNTRY, SEX, YEAR BEGAN STUDY IN U.S., FINANCIAL SUPPORT,

HOMECOUNTRY TOTAL

SEX'

7a

YEAR BEGAN 611JDY IN U.S.

w0o.

iv

.11

N "r: rran an

vi

TOTAL 146,097 103,793 35,530 39,814 12,610 19,762 7 3,911 3,224

AFRICA 11,465 9,298 1,650 3,584 961 1,420 5,500 404'AfricaAlgeria

1568

1264

32

1

2426 -4

1234 3

Angola 14 13 1 3 - 6 5 3Botswana 14 9 4 2 3 5 4

Burundi 2 2 1 1

Cameroon 138 120 i4 41 15 23 59 3Central African Republic 6 6 1 - 1 4 1

Chad 8 8 4 2 2 1

Congo 12 9 2 3 2 6 3

Dahomey. 13 11 2 4 1 6 IEgypt 1,148 943 167 214 88 191 655 13Ethiopia 1,046 729 204 377 107 92 470 83Gabon 3 2 1

-8Gambia 75 61 9 25 13 29 _

Ghana 871 775 78 276 71 102 422 36Guinea 10 9 - 3 7Ivory Coast 45 39 3 17 5 23 5Kenya 540 429 94 181 55 80 224 19Lesotho 10 7 3 3 - 3 4 2

Liberia 431 299 124 129 60 59 183 15Libya 573 530 16 164 47 58 304 6Malagasy Republic 7 4 2 1 - 2 4Malawi 57 36 19 32 8 7 10 1

Mari 8 5 3 - 1 4 1

Mauritania 2 2 - - 2Mauritius 27 17 8 14 2 6 5 2Morocco 93 80 10 19 4 13 57 7Mozambique 16 16

-21 - 7 8 -

Namibia 15 13 2 - 3 10 1

Niger 8 3 1 - - - 8Nigeria 4,092 3,397 533 1,408 311 416 1,957 83Portuguese Guinea 1 1 1 - -Rhodesia 188 154 29 58 19 34 77Rwanda 8 8 1 1 - 6

Senegal 26 20 4 6 3 5 12 3Seychelles 2 1 1 - - 1 1

Sierra Leone 463 361 93 168 39 54 202 7Somalia 53 47 3 15 3 IC 25South Africa 418 329 74 105 26 51 236 5

Sudan 157 135 12 43 6 17 91 6Swaziland 26 18 6 13 5 8 1Tanzania 256 191 42 83 22 52 99 29Togo 16 15 2 2 4 8 1

Tun,sla 60 50 3 13 3 13 31 17

Uganda 262 181 64 78 19 44 121 21Upper Volta 3 3 1 2Zaire 101 82 15 28 15 22 36 1-9Zambia 58 52 5 22 3 9 24 4

EUROPE 16,296 11,020 4,913 4,564 1,272 2,050 8,410 276tFianop 3 3 - - 1 2Albania 3 3 1 1 - 1

Andorra 1 1 1 - - -Austria 215', 133 81 66 7 36 106 5

Belgium 350 264 84 94 21 43 192 6Bulgaria 35 22 13 8 2 3 22Czechoslovakia 251 151 88 48 21 33 149 2Denrrark 220 126 84 82 16 13 109 3'Estonia 1 1 _ - 1

4,697 49,358

594 3,3452

2 1 64

-1 5

2 28

-31

- 614 44012 314

1

24

512

51230

7

I

25

14

3 917

1 3_

123 1,441_3 3

1

12

4

43114

1

2

1

16'

1

101

1

4

-14 1

329 4,59

1

51

3

5

98

6363

'Answers to the question on sev ...ere not provided for a total of 6.774 students. In some cases. students did not respond to the question. In othercases, information supplied on lists prepared by institutions did not include sex.

t A "special- student 'sal undergraduate who is not enrolled for a degree.'Region or country was not specified'Although Estonia, Laty,a, and Lithuania have been incorporated into the Union of Soviet Social.st Republics, these students identfied these coun-tries as their countries of citizenship.

BEST COvY AVAILABLE

Page 23: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

'OHMIC LEVEL, 1 9 7 2-1 97 3

FINANCIAL SUPPORT

a, i ,.,a a E 0

m 5 = La8 cl- ,is 5m

_. od -. . -ir,0 : 8u 60 o

La m C.) .7,1

N '; to .3 cf; u2S . 1'm = > 87.

ACADEMIC LEVEL

au

ro4.)a.)

,779 499 703 512 5,251 228 182 63,664

,630 98 78 58 702 29 12 4,515- - _ 13- - - 1 7 - - 302 1 - - 1

-1- 3

3 - - - 4

_ - _ 1

36 4 6 1 I0 1 1 461 - 1 - 3- - - 1 1 - 2

- 2 - - 6

- - - - - - - 6185 - 4 5 30 2 1 454167 14 9 1 66 3 2 375- - - - 1 - - 1

36 2 - - 4 - - 16

120 4 8 7 64 4 1' 349- - - - 1 - 64 2 4 - 4 - 15

119 6 5 11 43 - 2 1782 - 1 - - 1 4

38 8 3 5 26 2 1 1537 - - 1 50 5 - 2381 - - - 1 - - 2

13 3 2 1 13 1 - - 82 - 1 - 1 - - 2

1 - - - - - 1

6 - 1 - 1 - - 519 1 - 1 3 - 45

2 - - 3 - 7- 9 - - 5

_ 8533 14 12 14 165 4 - 1.703

35 13 1 - 42 - - 60- - - - 1 - - 6

5 - 1 2 1 - 9- - - - 1

80 2 2 - 16 2 1 17715 - - I 2 - - 2268 7 2 4 27 - 2 198

6 2 - 1 10 - - 741 - 1 1 2 - - 7

48 7 3 - 33 - - 882 - - - - - 83 - 1 - 3 - - 30

51 3 6 2 32 - - 102

-31 - - - -1

15 3 - 12 2 1 264 2 1 - 13 - - 17

634 76 138 73 823 53 45 7,259- - - - - - 3

-_-

- --

-1

-- - 1

35 6 - 15 1 2 88

51 i 5 1 25 4 1 1534 - - - 1 - - 21

39 3-1

5 1 13821 2 4 30 1 2 90- - 1

73,968 26,536 22,012 14,076 4,621 4,884

6,312 1,974 1,670 917 236 35610 2 - - - 335 10 8 2 12 1

8 1 3 2 - -10 2 1 1

1 1 - -64 29 26 13 4 2

2 1 1 1 - 1

8 - - - -3 5 2 1 1

10 1 - 1 - 1

161 324 359 236 41 27707

1

127- 1241

541

5- 29-59 5 5 1 2 3

529 134 105 57 11 355 2 2 1 - -

16 6 15 3 2 3312 99 77 27 11 14

1 5 2 2 - -283 51 55 17 8 17219 116 162 38 21 17

4 - 2 1 - -36 6 9 5 - 1

4 - 2 - 2

- - - 2 -18 3 3 2 1 -38 23 20 4 4 4

4 5 3 4 - -2 4 7 2 - -2 2 1

2.778 538 360 22-4 64 1281 _

-2111 34 18 17 64 4 - - -

11 4 7 2 1 1

- 2 -325 51 42 23 13 9

36 6 5 5 1

140 133 76 51 13 5,

19 76 27 22 4 919 3 2 - 1 I

125 39 43 32 4 139 2 3 1 - I

15 16 10 15 3 1,....,-

101 66 51 28 5 111 - 2 - -

40 23 17 14 - 7

25 14 13 4 - 2

6,689 4,013 2,419 1,853 881 4412 - - 1 - -2 - - I -- 1

80 59 37 25 10 4

92 112 67 58 15 622 4 1 4 4

-8129 56 15 28 1584 61 24 15 28 8

1 - - - - -

BEST Cje'i AVAILABLE 15

Page 24: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Table 1 FOREIGN STUDENTS: HOME COUNTRY, SEX, YEAR BEGAN STUDY IN U.S., FINANCIAL SUPPORT,

HOMECOUNTRY- _

TOTAL

SEX'

a,

U-

YEAR BEGAN

Ncn

Finland 256 126 115 92 20France 1,849 1.146 649 504 90Germany, Federal Republic of 1,927 1.154 719 582 140Geece 2,003 1,571 388 485 221Hungary 120 79 39 26 7

Iceland 43 14 22 8Ireland 439 331 102 125 34Italy 968 713 241 233 73'Latvia 12 7 4Liechtenstein I 1

It ithuania 5 5 1

Luxembourg 20 14 6 9 3Malta 15 14 5 1

Munaco 4 4 -- 1

Netherlands 753 543 196 195 50

Norway 513 382 103 181 54Poland 402 211 185 126 33Portugal 169 119 50 52 14Romania 173 117 4) 60 9San Marino 2

Spain 612 458 151 201 55Sweden 416 244 156 136 26Switzerland 402 279 114 123 30U.S.S.R. 59 32 26 20 3

United Kingdom ITotal? 3.624 2,475 1,118 977 283United Kingdom 1.852 1,275 558 307 116

tiEST COeY AVAILABLE Channel IslandsEngland

1

1.612-

1,092 5111

596 147Isle of Man 2 1

Northern Ireland 29 20 17 5Scotland 104 69 32 48 8Wales 24 18 6 7 7

Vatican City State 1 1

Yugoslavia 406 250 134 109 48

FAR EAST 53,562 36,826 13,136 16,034 5,4551 Far East 4 2 2 1

Bhutan 2 1 1 1

Brunei 1 1 1

8:rry,-) 71 39 726 13 3

1.)1-10. Republic u' 9.633 6,326 2,691 2,763 870China, Unspeolicil 2,019 1,286 554 356 14/Hong Kong 10,298 6,985 3.039 2,893 1,124Ind:a 10,656 8,763 1,018 2,877 1.284Indonesia 695 524 145 248 64

Japan 4,653 3,052 1.168 1.704 400Khmer Republic 61 39 9 22 1KOferi, iv.?epubic of 3.130 7,564 802 1.033 314I.3c s 88 65 20 46 11Macao 35 28 25 7

Malaysia 950 665 224 317 128Nepal 77 65 5 27 7

Philipp nes 2.586 1,301 1,250 897 231PortuguNeIiinc,r 1 1

Ryukyu Islards 14 6 4 1

Si$kkirn 3 1 1

Singapore 347 231 95 87 30Sri Lanka 201 157 35 61 25Thailand 5.759 3,650 1,584 2,070 636Titnet 13 11 1 4 -Vietnair. RcJUbIi.7 n! 1.621 1,916 420 584 169

16

STUDY 18 U S.

26 118162 1,093236 939322 975

13 74

8 2859 221

138 5243 8

2 21 72 71 2

105 403

53 22563 18018 8511 93

2

69 28735 21954 1958 28

448 1,916182 1,247

247 6221

3 410 38

6 41

54 195

8,360 23,7131 2

1

11

1,621 4,379338 1,178

1,794 4.4871,655 4,840

102 281

537 2.0123 35

620 1.76312 1912 25

143 36210 33

310 1,1481

1 17

1

88 14230 85

880 2,1735 4

186 682

111

7 11 726 61 4243 47 422 15 73

1 1 3

4 1

8 5 721 5 31

1

1

13 6 22

7 75 1014 16

6 5 45 7 4

11 9 177 5 116 11 111 1

49 48 9916 6 52

30 39 43

1 1

12 3 13

1,247 850 21,29

111 185 2.912 13 631 24 4,8

143 75 3,799 4 2

82 100 1,914 2 1

120 33 1,332 1

36 112 21583 7 1,1

1

5 2 1'14 1

260 272 3,01

187 19 6

Ans.sers to the clue -,bon ors ,ei.sere not pre,,ded for tntal of 6,774 students 111 some Cases, studeritsd,d .1,M respond to the question. In ochecase,, '<form 3t,on supp, led re, Ilsts prepared by inst,tutnos d.d not inc Iud e

1A student is an undergraduate who as not enr.DIted tc,f. a degree,I R,1/..o,r em cot. 615 not spec telA:1..7,14gh Estonia, I ,thriafml L thuarna race beer, incorporated into 1'.e Uulon of Soviet So,;:alist PepublIcs, these students identified these coonti es as their count, es of cif,zenstopCountry In the United K ngdo-n was not f-pee.l,edrho, categcry ccrlsists of those '.hose country o' citaeusb p was given simply as "China." In many cases, these slu,lents are residents of countrieother than the Rept,GIc of China. There vaa no exchange between the United Stiles and the People's Republic of China of the time the tensusW3taken_

Page 25: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

ADEMIC LEVEL, 1972-1973 (continued)

FINANCIAL SUPPORT

3431233733315

1191118-

-531

96

78471926-

8772658

662196-

415-

93210

63

,611

-1

9

,570198.431,22870

5442

64398

17814

2542-

1

4839205

1

156

7.5 1 E g.. 6 ....: 6 cm

8a... 8 'a a...,4 _.: ,r,8y 3y 38 CLI

.C.3 = C.3 w-C go

cii 7 ui .3 vi6 6 6 8:

2 2 3 17

11 11 5 7512 10 9 1356 7 4 43- 2 I

1 3 8 3

2 3 2 435 I2 - 36- - -

-

- - 1

- I 2 1

- - I

- - -4 13 5 34

1 2 15 27- 6 9- 3 1 52 4 - 4- - - -

1 7 6 61

4 2 - 334 - 4 261 2 - 3

14 25 6 1692 10 3 35- - - -1 1 1 3 2 120_ - - -

1 - - 6- 2 - 8- - 1 -

- 5 1 14

119 136 33 1,590- _ -- -

-I_- 2

9 17 3 1461 6 - 22

17 11 2 11131 29 4 303

1 2 - 52

17 13 3 3011 6

9 11 3 139

-1

_ - 5

- - -6 11 4 85- 2 1 5

14 16 4 124- - -- - 2

-.. - - 1

1 1 1 194 4 - 236 9 6 198- - - 4

2 4 1 41

O

0Z

ACADEMIC LEVEL

0.;0,r,-..: if r0 00 2E a 0

1 t:cc"

m cl ari -ci e . 117 if. 2,

g .2 :24- g.

... ..., z 2,'0 0 -70' 440 .....4' .,"

0: .7 ;0'6 E-.6,..z = .700s 17g V O .c''S cs c.3 4.1

2 . 2 98.5 7 9112 2 842- 4 835

1 67

1 - 223 3 2031 5 455- - 9- - 1

- - 2- 8- 5

- 2I 2 348

9 1 1981 163-- 82

1 - 79- - 2

1 4 2533 - 1803 - 166- - 29

14 . 6 L6336 1 1,052

- - -.

7 3 542- - -

- 1 31 1 34- - 2

1 171

25 29 19,624- - 2- - 1_- - 3-7

4 1 3,6292 1,093

-I 2 3.7873 5 4,0561 4 225

1 2 1,609

- 241 2 1,376

- - 13

- - 21

4 1 29024

-5 4 931

15- - 5

- -- - 115- - 675 6 1,742- - 4

563

119480731

1,02568

33136450

71

4972

357

24322981612

20418912421

1,503795'

1

6491

123961

190

20,99322I

42

1,575734

7,3212,052319

2,02717

9448155

51118

1.063212

216872

2,8726

1,095

6161154438326

3341624325611

20216216206

6

1988134836

11 9 7 698 78 71 21

186 125 93 602 1 1 7- - - -- 1 - -6 3 1 1

- 4 3 1

1 1 - -160 122 77 21

119 67 p 37 3568 26 33 3539 24 16 645 32 23 10- - -

139 121 98 32107 59 27 25106 69 56 368 6 5 13

918 515 454 156571 247 169 43

- -328 236 254 109- 1 - -

2 8 6 -14 22 18 3

3 7 7 I

- - - -83 53 55 20

11,325 11,496 7,031 1,275- 2 -- - -- - -19 4 3 3

2,716 2.781 2,191 130571 354 233 30

1,257 961 559 852,800 3,132 2,107 193130 113 76 18

971 781 377 3895 22 3 13

927 967 678 1382 2 2

-37 2 1

167 149 93 1321 22 13 2

661 477 225 89- - -

-36 - 1

- 1 -73 70 31 347 39 37 3

772 1,41 4 314 1421 3 2 -

172 201 84 18

43859503

3554

1

-

-

16

1211

32-

I89116

7827

42-

1

8--5

1,442

2409711537239

1081

761

1

171

71

1

-23

2451

51

BEST COPY AVAILABLE

17

Page 26: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Table 1 -FOREIGN STUDENTS: HOME COUNTRY, SEX, YEAR BEGAN STUDY IN U.S., FINANCIAL SUPPORT,

HOMECOUNTRY

LATIN AMERICA1 Latin America

Caribbean(CaribbeanBahamasBarbadosCayman, Turks

TOTAL

SEX'

28,3836

11,757116393174

19,1364

6,92885

265123

8,4252

4,20630

12250

& Caicos Islands 26 19 7

Cuba 6,859 3,612 2,673Dominican Republic 598 472 1 24Guadeloupe 2 2Haiti 506 336 164I...ma ica 1,624 1,004 507

Leeward Islands 187 135 50Martinique 3 2 1

Netherlands Antilles 97 66 31Trinidad & Tobago. 981 661 303Windward Islands 191 146 44

Central America 2,846 1,976 839

BEST con AVAILABLEBritish HondurasCosta Rica

9034 5

50259

4085

El Salvador 437 312 121Guatemala 315 234 71

Honduras 367 246 117Nicaragua 497 376 115Panama 785 494 286Panama Canal Zone 10 5 4

Mexico 3,054 2,251 774

South America 10,720 7,977 2,604!South America 14 11Argentina 702 411 283Bolivia 467 373 90Brazil 1,560 1,105 435

Chile 870 644 220Colombia 2,006 1,512 465Ecuador 599 478 117French Guiana 2 1 1

Guyana 837 614 202

Paraguay 98 72 25Peru 1.437 1.075 348Surinam 14 11 3Uruguay 149 106 42Venezuela 1,965 1.564 370

NEAR AND MIDDLE EAST 19,202 16,091 2,080(Near & Middle East 8 8Afghanistan 234 204 23Bahrain 9 8 1

Cyprus 187 149 31

Iran 7.838 6,494 876Iraq 361 289 53Israel 2.113 1,606 430Jordan 978 894 51Kuwa.t. 561 493 48

Lebanon 1,340 1,160 101Muscat & Oman 7 6 1

Pakistan 2,690 2.440 136Qatar 54 54Saudi Arabia 943 862

18

YEAR BEGAN STUDY IN ti,S.

N1.

6,329 1,867 2,939 17,2481 1 4

1,388 461 782 9,1264 2 3 107

142 41 42 16861 13 12 88

6 4 4 12

295 115 244 6,20594 24 57 423

- - 2110 29 41 326368 131 205 920

41 19 30 971 - 2

31 12 14 40187 55 112 627

48 16 18 109

910 271 440 1,22527 7 17 39

102 32 59 152170 43 48 176

91 27 55 142

118 29 56 164152 43 80 222248 90 125 322

2 8

1,019 254 374 1,407

3,012 880 1,342 5,4862 2 1 9

154 54 126 368149 42 62 214491 125 159 785

217 85 113 455566 14i 228 1,071164 49 106 280

1 1

129 73 104 531

30 11 16 41476 158 198 605

6 2 1 540 16 27 66

587 122 201 1,055

5,514 1,793 2,843 8,9922 ... 1 5

92 22 29 916 2 1

58 17 37 15

2,236 811 1,174 3,61785 17 79 180

479 202 247 1,185280 103 216 379234 30 67 236

401 137 194 6051 5

887 246 264 1,29332 4 18

261 59 232 391

746 642642 7,8

186 102 1,8

3 22 1

2

1

133 812 12

8 119 28

3 1

68 17

4

74 65 1,31

9 6 1

19 9 216 2 1

10 76 18

14 22

73 100 1,1

413 375 3,4- -19 3 1

16 4 1

139 73 3

28 10 253 51 627 7 2

16 5

10 256 12

1

1830 208 6

343 1,266 8,11

1

48 3

7 1

25 229 4,13 51 1

15 33 627 14

6 282

7 17 6

57 31 1,143

5 434 1

'Answers to the question an Sex .sere not provided for a total of 6,774 students. In some cases. students d d not respond to the Question. !non')casei, information supplied on bsts prepared by institutions dr) not irclude sea.

IA "special" student is an undergradu ,',ho is not enrolled for a dI RNion or cm, nary /vas not spec dred

Page 27: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

kCADEMIC LEVEL, 1972-1973 (continued)

FINANCIAL SUPPORT

O

0

CE a- t.....

.4 =..2:8 ck 8 3 8 C,

5 ,. -214A t 12 cuC

_ N3

0 U D U 1270.

1.01 D VI .8 LA 4 ZD D = fr

243 65 1,110 541,742 140

503 18 87 11 234 10 138

2416

2

3 26 35

63 2 49 1 25 2 622- 3 8 1 66 4

-38 3 6 9 -

176 5 13 5 56 3 2

26 1 1 9 -

7 1 1 1 12 1 -92 4 18 1

29 1 2 5 1

165 22 11 4 131 6 810 1 -- 833 4 3 2 21 1 1

14 4 1 17 1 1

20 2 2 21 1

21 3 1 23 - 225 1 1/ 2 1

42 1 4 2 24 2 2-

240 19 39 11 140 6 9

834 81 106 39 605 32 411 1

108 5 11 2 37 3 241 5 3 2 20 _ 1

130 14 18 11 143 9 11

96 8 7 5 62 4 3

123 19 79 2 121 7 1057 & 8 : 32 1 1

68 1 2 2 14

4 1 1 16138 18 24 4 70 3 2

1 1

22 645 4 2 10 83 5 3

1,469 25 44 21 412 14 11_

30 1 3 18- I

39 12 l 11 1 2

321 2 6 113 632 1 1 10 2

301 1 3 2 52 1

80 3 2 2 34 1 1

3 1 11

110 2 2 ! 29 7 1

1 1

269 1 3 67 1 I

12 1 51 1

40

a,0

.,3A

:!Nv.D

ACADEMIC LEVEL

al -tt+.:O: ,,,. CZ C,C a, bc

E a 4.1 . 11., a

'. 7,1 .0 0 ? 4..7 ",, PO' ":.3 0 7 4o. c', .F. 4.1 o. 0 o. 4,

1; tz Iv" . r, a, 02 s 51' z

-c 4 'a °.0 ,. c , ,o a .c,a O. D 0 f2 ''T. f2 a.'U U U

,33L.,a.,aIn

'EO"

!c<oZ

15,765 18.434 3,501 2,463 1,168 1,350 1,4674 4 2

8,716 9.095 770 434 177 367 914104 59 30 5 4 9 9161 337 27 12 3 3 1.1

80 109 28 12 7 10 8

12 19 6 1

6,148 5,815 173 95 53 97 626376 353 83 65 6 49 42

2 2 - - -277 323 41 22 14 70 30803 1.099 186 124 50 71 94

85 118 32 12 8 " 4 131 2 1 _

29 71 7 4 5 2 8540 654 132 72 26 40 57

95 134 25 10 1 6 15

1,047 2,005 295 250 74 139 8336 64 9 4 - 10 3

134 239 29 32 19 14 12131 324 34 43 4 21 11

119 195 45 45 10 13 7

152 270 27 24 6 33 7

188279

8

341565

7

6487

4556

1

1421

2325

1031

2BEST COPY AVAILABLE

1,221 1,916 449 314 146 122 107

4,777 5,414 1,987 1,465 771 722 3619 8 1 1 1 3

320 293 149 91 109 41 19176 311 52 56 13 22 13674 433 523 287 210 17 30

389 358 241 122 104 27 18943 972 324 303 118 214 75243 362 59 69 22 69 18

1 1 1

489 601 116 3; 21 33 2'3

35 40 19 30 5 4

503 844 160 215 78 106 345 10 2 2

56 75 24 24 15 5 6934 1,106 317 228 76 127 111

7,490 11,635 2,606 2,289 1,640 503 5294 7 1

69 85 41 69 29 7 39

61 108 29 22 21 4 3

2,959 5,658 723 666 377 170 244143 104 87 70 79 12 9

1.002 915 542 240 300 60 56314 596 109 138 74 30 31199 443 35 31 16 27 15

492 904 161 116 112 22 254 2 2 1 1 1

1.159 1,674 174 399 217 46 60)3 3S Is 1

327 488 129 176 78 43 29

19

Page 28: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Table I -FOREIGN STUDENTS, HOME COUNTRY, SEX, YEAR BEGAN STUDY IN U.S., FINANCIAL SUPPORT,

SEX' YEAR BEGAN STUDY IN U.S.

t..oIc0 cu

,... 0

0 in

Cf"z

HOMECOUNTRY MAL 2 u-

e'rrs01.

r-cn

cor--cn

etoz

Southern Yemen 4 4 2 2 1

Syria 407 343 37 102 42 72 191 5 6 186Trucial States 14 12 2 2 12Turkey 1.427 1.048 245 406 103 223 695 136 121 285Yemen 21 17 3 5 2 2 12 1 3

NORTH AMERICA 9,805 6.667 3,017 2,837 978 1,686 4,304 98 825 3,0531North America 10 8 2 3 1 6 1 1

muda 116 69 44 30 13 10 63 8 46Canada 9,679 5.590 3,031 2,804 965 1,675 4.235 98 816 3,006

OCEANIA 2,107 1,497 586 661 200 267 979 76 178 77410ceania 2 1 1 -. 1 1

Australia 904 679 217 268 68 107 461 18 15 221Cook IsIards 2 2 - 1 1 1

Fiji 102 72 25 21 6 16 59 3

French Polynesia 30 11 19 9 1 6 1.4 26Nauru 1 1 1 --

New Guinea 7 7 2 2 3 1

New Zealand 349 251 95 77 29 51 192 6 4 117Pacific Islands,

Trust Territory of the 469 328 134 240 78 66 85 38 157 141

Tonga 142 77 65 29 10 7 96 2 120Western Samoa 99 68 30 14 5 11 68 5 1 79

BEST COPY AVAILABLE STATELESS 254 182 66 48 33 57 116 7 2 94

COUNTRY UNKNOWN 5,023 3,076 1,597 183 51 140 4,649 27 11 352

'An., ers to the question on sex were not wooded for a total of 5, 774 ,tlidents some cases, students did not respond to the queticn In otherInforiwtion supplied on bats prepared by i.r..stitutoss did inclurIc.ti --,;,irleht is an uti,!2(gr3duate Alm is not cern red for a degree

I Rek,,,n or coL nary .105 not ,perified

20

Page 29: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

CADEMIC LEVEL, 1972-1973 (continued)

FINANCIAL SUPPORT

V

O

dS

i=66

=0

C.)

C''

.Ycl)

-28 CL_.0.3O.Vl7

.:

0- 0

O N .C. =C/i ..1

.

?....: o

m LI

0" a-...Ef3

C.) LL

vi.a

35

2315

1- - 14- - 2

8 18 .6 55- - - 3

1,286 24 29 2261 1

3 21,282 24 29 223

295 .14 24 34

177 4 10 11

5 1

1

1 1

71 3 2 4

30 3 12. 19

6 1

4 1

54. 2 6

58 1 5 2

385

3382

135

701

7

20 1

30 1

34

8

ACADEMIC LEVEL

CtO

2w -gOd OD w a,co % CO C

-al -a 2 . u., u., ,u0

1.- i,''o - .9. '!.:.7. C., CL ..17. NO ., ti, cu a

01 L 0 Ca * g c! 7,?.2 "6- z C ',,3m ..= c.).. ... c ,... =

a.,ca 2 o o_(a Cs. = o,...: ... 0.

L2 LI CC Lel

22 159- - 123 564- - 9.

49 8 3,822- - 6- - 5449 8 3,762

3 4 570- - 1

1 2 375

16

26

3

1 3121

38

1

94

81

1 . 2 4,538

1

24211

3958

5,4549

885,357

1,180

2971

87

28

2133

409

13291

122

3,149

1 1 1

52 47 . 35 18- - 3364 309 279 42

7 4 2 -1,803 1,150 1,027 210

1

-5. 10 7 31,793 1443 1,023 205

398 203 247 511 1

264.

1311

179 19

6 7 2

21

4 1

101 40 53 10

13 17 3 17

3 3 1 24 2 1

38 42 36 9

878 280 157 106

13

.38-161

3158

28

14

2

10

1

1

7

453

BEST Coil AVAILABLE

21

Page 30: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Table 2 FOREIGN STUDENTS: FIELDS OF MAJOR INTEREST AND ACADEMIC LEVEL, 1972-1973

HOMECOUNTRY

TOTAL

TOTAL

146,097 1,049

AFRICA 11.465f r1frico 15A1ger la 68Angola 14tiots'nx)a 14

BllrUndl 2138

central Atrcon 14,putlk:C5ail 8Congo 12

Dahomey 13Egypt 1.148Ethop,1 1,046Gabon 3Gambia 75

GhortoGuineaIvory CoastKenyaLesotho

8711045

54010

Llteno .131Libya 5..73Malagasy RepublicMaij Ni 57Moli 8

Maartanio 2Mauritius 27

e Morocco 93Motombiqt.e 16Namibia 15

AGRICULTURE

t 71

107 3,362

130 289 11 430

4 6

1 30 1 3215 30 45

1 4

11 18 29

1 2 36 8 14

1 6 1 81 29 30

1

1 1

1 2

2 21 1

tiger 8Nigeha 4,092 54 83 5 142PoitugiJese Guinea 1

Rhodesia 188 1 2 3R.vonda 8

Ser.egilSeycileosSierra LeerieSoni,viaSouth Africa

Sudan

ntarmtTogoTil,11$1,1

Upper Volt1a 3e

lantio

EUROPE/Europe

Alban lokorfcrraAustria

26 1 1

:63 3 9 1253 2 2

418 1 9

15/26

25616

.023

10153

1 35 2 392 2

17 t. 23

1 5

1 b 1 8

1 1 21

16,236 56 161 11 22833

1

215

Belgiupi 350RU4-;tirlaCtectios1o4a1.4a 251DerrmarN. 220

1

2

2 3 5

2 1

BUSINESSADMINISTRATION

1 2,204

1,318

1

21

9

424

172

4

152

560

7026

1

1

6191

41

759

21

31

141

1

16

81

722

1

10

152

108

EDUCATION ENGINEERING

0.,

7aCI

:.5

1..-,L6

216.

ro

1:3

C.3 C70.

61

It-o

ri2atci,13CM

a,irr,

13

3 s .P.l

_

6,846 547 19,597 2,901 4,055 196 7,152 16,903 14,130 1,114 32,117

556 56 1,932 198 358 181

5141

974I

662-

711

1,7072

3 4 1 - 1 13 5 2 202 1 1

-1

1 1

1 1 2 3 1

3 12 2 6 8 10 13 2 251 1

2 - 21 - I

4 3 3196 5 225 3 23 26 38 291 6 335,

29 7 208 25 24 49 63 25 2 901 1 1 I I

1 5 5 1 6 2 1 3

26 4 182 10 18 1 29 72 48 7 1272 2 - 4

15 20 1 5 2 714 4 78 15 32 1 48 25 15 2 42

2 2 - 1 - 1

11 5 92 11 21 1 33 38 5 3 4632 4 62 3 33 36 140 40 7 187

1 2-45 6 1 _ 5

1 1 2 3 311

1

1

201

2

21

1

1 31

1

6 721

1321

1 1 1 1

1 / 5 17 751 74 93 5 172 440 117 23 5801

-6- - -

1 1 5 5 10 3 91 1 1 - 1 1

1 1 1 1 1 2 31 _ - -

3 4 82 12 23 2 37 28 6 5 392 Ii 3 2 5 2 - 2

42 64 9 14 2 25 13 28 2 43

6 9 6 3 9 2 5 2 9I 2 5 1 68 2 24 4 10 14 20 17 37

1 1 1 2 211 1 13 2 4 1 1 6

8 2 26 10 15 25 11 11 1 23

6 11 7 7 4 8 1 131 4 1 5 5 6 11

1,213 47 1,982 332 368 27 727 1,105 1299 86 2,490

1

18 28 3 II 14 8 15 23

59 3 2 5 3 44 476 4 1 11

10 6 2 8 22 20 3 4512 1 21 5 5 11 5 20 25

1 1

Note:

Engineering . . = {HE', )11,1 ,r .11 ,,ed met.I: rid 11..,Uit.Jre. ilbEr31

Medical Sciences to, r Irrnacy, and ore rredce.ePhysical and life Sciences ti:i! is nr t ir, cheei.sI.v. earthSoc4ar Sciences ,1,, estern,31,011.11 1)010117,11.screnc e, Csyr ho'og.g.pl,b111-

!! `-, r .1

22

PVT.COPY AVAILABLE

Page 31: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

12,430

729322

22486

43

361

4014

1

32

611

1

285

23

5

355

38

22

111.1.

19

1

4

1,930_

34

325

2433

HUMANITIES

L a

a

7,889 2,553 22,872 5,643

484 91 1,3043

7411

1 9 121 3

11 6

31

63 19 104, 1914 5 10'i 33

8 2

29 5 77 63

2 2 423 4 63 28

14 54 2939 11 67 8

1 2 22 5 31

3 1 1011 4 26

1 21

1 3139 12 436 436

11 2 36 11

2 I

8 13 361 6

-17 2 87 12

9 11 42 4 3

14 2 27 123 -1 1

1 2 7 2

19 1 39 ro

84

9 98 5

1,895 473 4,298 333I

1

1

1

1

32 10 76 2

28 11 71 32 3 10

20 H 55 820 19 72 E,

MEDICALSCIENCES

11

PHYSICAL ANDLIFE SCIENCES

SOCIAL SCIENCES

r92 fr:

`6z

2 ID Z5 5",..'

zCI

U 5 o-

2,415 221 8,279 7,392 12,388 453 20,233 7,361

238 20 9991 2

1

5 1 l2

32

32 i 5221 55

18

17

4

81

46

816 724 54 1,594

18 3 I 222 1 31

14 13 1 281 1

1 1

28 163 7 19864 35 102

12 1 2 15

47 5 1162 1 31 1

45 23 1 69

9 1 39 26 12 1 393 11 6 62 4 72

2 1 1

3 6 6 2 1 91 1

82 9 527

5

1 1

3 1 42 2

1 25 5

378 119 23 580

17 31 11 1 43

1 I

9 I 461 1

10 5 27

2 63

6 L81

2

1 16.

91 6

221 26 580

I

2

1

4 1

6 3

42 22 1 656 1 7

11 47 3 61

2 31 1 342 2

18 23 411

1 3 4

12 19 2 331 1 2

10 7 173 3

668 1,288 55 2,011

6 13 1 20

9 9 38 472 4 2 6

13 30 27 l 5815 7 18 1 26

L

9103 482 17,646

961 1,075 36 2,0721 1

1 3 1 51 1 25 1 6

1 1

6 152

22

5 5

2 28 95 1 104

182 103 6 2911 1

20 6 26

ALL OTHER

447 88 73 608

19 4 2 25

232

72 79 2 153 1 1

1 1 23 3 6

66 62 4 132 26 6

53 33 1 87 1 1 213 69 2 84 1 1

13 10 23I 1

1 1

218

55

28 91 41 4

309 276 12 597

24 26 1 511 2 3

4 7 11

74 30 3 1079 6 15

20 56 .76

2 30 1 333 3

23 28 513 2 51 18 19

19 52 711

7 13 204 11 15

861 1,457 106 2,424

12 27 39

12 45 572 2

12 21 339 17 2 28

9 10

2

25 8 4 37

14,201

828641

1

81

6799

4

761

346

3123

1

37

2297

132

324

24

7

320

2

21

105

1,5192

9

302

2622

Includes s;,,rc, 31 ;fulerits ind t,.ose hfr d1.1 :P 'YRegjor, clr co,nt,/ nas notAllhough Es, Lat 19, 1,3 hAVC ,!ed 13 ti-e So. Pt RepubIrc,. thPse t:. theseas the r crauol.f,cs of co.zeoshp

EST AVA:LABLE

dues

23

Page 32: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Table 2 FOREIGN MIMES: FIELDS OF MAJOR INTEREST AND ACADEMIC LEVEL, 1972-1973 icontIntled)

HOMECOUNTRY TOTAL

AGRICULTURE

ti3

4O

F11'141,4 256 3 4irance 1.849 9 16Germany, Fed Rep. of 1.9? 2 8Greece 2.003 3 25 28Hungary 120 1

Iceland 66 1 5 6(eland 439 10 10Italy 968 2 5 7

(1 atila 121.1p4. ,,tc 1

11 5auxenibour*,. 20Malta 15Monaco 4Netherland-, /53 8 10 18

Norway 513 8 1 9Poland 402 1 1

Portugal 169 2 2Rotralia 113 1 1 2San Marino 2

Spain 612 2 9 I 12Sweden 415 4 4Switzerland 02 2 11 13U.S.S.R. 59

United Kirdorn (Total) 3.624 21 44 1 66[Wilted KIngdorn 1,852 8 20 28Char nel Isa rids 1

England 1,612 11 23Isle of Man 2

Northern Ireland 29 2 2Scotland 104 1 2Wales 24

Vatican City State 1

Yugoslavia 406 1

FAR EAST 53,562 203 934 45 1,182tFar East 2

Bhutan 2Brunei 1

Burma 71 1

C6ma, RepubLc of 9.633 10 258 5 273China, Unspecified 2.019 8 27 40Hong Kong, 10.298 38 24 1 63India 10.656 15 233 10 258Indonesia 695 1 33 2 35

Japan 4,653 25 30 3 58Khmer Republic 61 2 2Korea. Republic of 3.130 12 /0 4 86Laos 88MdC30 69 1 1

Malaysia 950 59 44 103Nepal 77 2 1 3Phil.ppmei 2.586 4 51 2 5/Portuguese Timor 2Ryukyi.. Islands 23

Slkkkln 3 1 1

Singapore 347 1 2 3Sri lawk..) 201 2 5 7

Tha.land 5759 13 129 11 15.3Tibet 1 3Vietnam, Republic of 1,621 13 21 1 35

BUSINESSADMINISTRATION

O

19 14 386? 360 4 42667 90 9 16689 81 6 176

6 1 - 7

1 1 1 329 23 2 5440 47 2 89

1 1 21 1

1 1

2 21

72 77 2 151

62 45 5 11219 5 2415 3 18

3 8 - 11

22 37 2 6120 29 3 5212 41 53

120 248 5 37364 188 1 253

53 53 4 110

12 7 1

4,658 3,245 214 8.117

8 1 9

268 453 17 738155 78 6 241

1,539 276 15 1 830290 1,042 31 1,363

54 11 4 69

487 340 26 8625 6 1 12

157 225 15 39713 13

3 9

69 42 1 1188 8 16

318 253 12 5831 1

5 5

1 1

63 28 9111 12 23

1,000 410 72 1 4824 4

200 44 6 250

9114,27

1

1

1618

27

981

1

14152

10025

68

34

1

6

386

3010/03910

471

122

82

34

1

51

83

29

Nate:

EDUCATION

.1:1ran

-13 .111

el aca a

w:,

044-4

C1J

Cs,

is

10 19 4 815 1 27 46 19842 8 97 75 12619 2 48 348 255

4 5 9 7

1 3 627 2 45 12 1812 30 95 51

2-

31

1

11 39 36 ptr

5 2 16 78 594 12 59 184 5 13 244 5 20 38

23 1 38 38 5916 31 1 21)10 12 7 34

3 1

133 9 242 171 16659 2 86 118 82

67 7 142 51 801

34 8 1 1

3 - 3 1 21

6 14 32 48

1,518 53 1,957 4,982 8,6131 1

1

4 9

258 7 295 342 2.27134 3 47 176 37691 I 162 1,681 757

219 9 267 949 3,44728 38 84 43

125 5 177 153 3991 I 14

118 8 138 162 5732 19 1

15 1

35 4.3 83 311 9 2 6

236 2 272 121 1181

- 1 2 2

9 14 24 3911 14 IR 15

10/ 18 408 /15 4211

38 67 429 90

Engineering h dnt Is o.cd 11r,d4d chern ca!, 1,11, tt trK ai. n,tnstrl,t 4 irlu .4 11444 hino-al driIrn,cr.r* and E, 4,14prirk to, to,ologyHurrandies rs nut .14,1 t, cue r?ot,..,f, art,. ,arn;eragos rnd idcr,d.re, rd,41 au 14, and thecre,,v,yMedical Sciences 411,-iudes did rs r 444Itel lo. dehl stry medirme, nors ne. pharmacy, and ;ire fner11,nePhysical and life Sciences iric-111,1+1,, to. r not 1r-dod to. astronomy, sclnliCPS, rhennstry, earth sof. nccs, rnathr ru,d, ,4r1Social Sc rent es o,lalos rs nrt Lrrdtd }J on._er,r s h. story, hone ecovonn(s, urto rrradona stations. laws, puld17.,al,ciel, piadn-o,,tr ,hon, and Sri

24 BEST CONY AVAILABLE

ENGINEERING

122 2465 206

20 6231 17

1 102 328 154

2_

31

21 93

3 1406 831 381 59

1 981 284 454 8

18 3559 209

8 1391

1

3

3 83

508 14,103

13

63 2,67625 57729 2,467

219 4.61524 151

29 5811 16

22 75720

1 17

4 1188

16 2551

4

6333

47 1,183 i

28 547

Page 33: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

HUMANITIES

3ii

1::,

2f...4

itL.'

12

U

i i i

gi

73

'8

42 16 6 64199 351 56 607257 316 65 638174 93 61 328

17 11 6 34

7 4 1 1231 64 2 97

147 112 36 2951 1

1 1 83 5

1 1

89 62 9 160

49 27 8 8479 39 31 14916 15 3 3416 21

2 2

65 108 24 19760 37 9 10649 53 21 12311 11 9 31

423 404 52 879208 188 12 408

1 1

192 184 36 4121 1

4 10 1415 19 3 37

2 3 1 6

59 38 13 110

2,858 2,700 658 6.216

6 3 1 10

244 519 80 843113 94 16 223733 205 42 980164 449 23 63640 39 6 85

598 453 30.1 1.3554 2 12 18

. 2,-5 447 80 75216 2614 3 17

49 33 4 86- 5 5

140 160 7 307

4 2 7

1 1

24 11 3 3815 17 32

370 200 68 6383 3

85 61 8 154

7

MEDICALSCIENCES

4.,,

,.J

si ,t, 732 cLI 5 CI

p-

PHYSICAL ANDLIFE SCIENCES

a,

V '4;

2 f. OE., o F-

8 15 8 24.. -- 3216 25 29 112 3 144

36 21 4 61 59 42 8 20944 18 3 65 141 172 10 323

7 1 8 4 0 1 14

1 5 6 7 4 1 123 5 1 9 5 33 1 39

13 6 1 20 36 54 2 921 1 2 1 1 2

16 II 2 29

8 10 3 2113 2 15

1 1 25 3 8

7 5 1210 10 1 219 8 174 4

103 67 7 17760 39 4 103

41 27 3 71

14 4 18

1,940

5

966 76 2,9821 1

1

5

158 170 12 34054 29 10 93

927 190 17 1,134186 151 12 34941 37 2 80

i,4 41 3 108

86 61 1 1543 3

10 I 11

41 25 I 671 2 3

180 116 9 305

11 144 2

89 108

79 18

2 2

36 52 88

9 36 2 4721 24 45

8 16 247 18 3 28

15 37 3 5515 23 3 4110 34 44

1 3 1 5

180 347 11 538108 164 3 275

66 166 8 240

SOCIAL SCIENCES

8

15 19 4 3866 134 13 213

107 221 18 346104 127 5 236

15 7 22

7 2 924 53 4 8155 101 7 163

2 2

1 21 2

49 64

33

114

16 26 6 4816 26 429 10 1 202 3 1 6

22 68 4 9437 45 6 8825 31 2 58

2 2 1 5

221 376 31 628125 183 22 330

89 177 4 270

2 2 1 3 1 54 13 17 5 10 4 192 2 4 1 3 4

20 47 3 70 20 26 46

2,724 7,249 163 10,136 1,761 3,497 150 5,408

1 1

5 5 1 11 3 4 7

271 2352 29 3,158135 366 22 523

1,312 882 19 2,213174 1.637 36 1,84753 48 3 104

197 279 11 4872 2 4

132 487 16 6355 1 63 3 6

97 96 2 1954 12 16

72 179 9 260

3 3

25 136 8

198 1161

7 118

29 4227 35

268 11 3951

73 4 195

104 631 11 74639 115 15 169

572 252 9 833115 540 16 671

15 65 2 82

276 366 41 6833 4 7

79 520 15 6148 4 123 3

74 94 4 17213 13

99 181 7 287

20 31 1 525 33 1 39

275 555 25 8551 1 2

69 88 3 160

ALL OTHER

V

7 rj ,12 0 7,2 = 0( 0

4 1 52 1 1 43 - 3

3 1 4

2 2

2 21 1

1

21

2 3 1 61 2 1 4

1 1 2

3

103 44 26 173

3 14 2 192 2

14 1 5 2012 9 2 23

2 - 1 3

8 3 2 13

3 4 1 8

1

2 2

5 2 1 8

2 21 1

48 8 11 67

3 1

24140192173

12

372

1161

1

60

34302612

444336

6

360156

192

39

41

3,288

15

545104596627

47

3291

18964

464

252

1711

3802

112

loclodea 'spec4a1 ,ct those 0,1,1 not arr,Nef Ih Goest,ca on acadenoc levet.Region a, ,:ca,,otry hai flat ,,peolfadAlthough Estoo,a L31,oa. a rolL tro: trot 113,c-11,17e, t:f SX1.104 these students alenther1thec,e cot,as their 000r,tr.es of otPar.,h,pCountry in the 1.1rote1 cot .,,pc,,olaAThis category r,1,15 of tro,e hilSE c..--ntry of c ,tre,stort haS g,en 5ir-1,W/ HS Chola In many cases, these students are resrclents of col,other than the RPo,dbhc o' Cc..hr'.1 There a 1, ran e,.:h INC` bet a,(E'ra tho to oted States ard the Peoples Repot-A,- of China at the tane thetaken

BEST CW'Y A':11LABLE25

Page 34: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Table 2- FOREIGN STUDENTS: FIELDS OF MAJOR INTEREST AND ACADEMIC LEVEL, 1 97 2-1 97 3 (continued)

HOMECOUNTRY TOTAL

.'.','ERICA 28,383II dtirl A11111:11,0 6

Caribbean 11,757'Caribbean 116

Bahamas 393Barbados 174Caynrari, Turks

& Caicos Islands 26

Cuba 6.859Dominican Republic 598Guadeloupe 2Haiti 506Jamaica 1,624

LeeNard Islands 187Martinique 3Netherlands Antilles (17

Trinidad & Tobago 981Windward Islands 191

Central America 2,1346British Honduras 00Costa Rica 345El Salvador 437Guaterna'a 315

Honduras 367Nicaragua 497Panama 785Panama Canal Zcne 10

Mexico 3,054

South America 10,720tSouth America 14Argcctina 702

467Brazil 1 560

Chile 870Colombia 2.006Ecuador . 599French Guiana 2

Guyana 837

Paraguay 98Peru 1,437Surinam 14Uruguay 149Venezuela 1.965

NEAR AND MIDDLE EAST 19,202!Near & Middle East BAfghanistan 234Bahraiq 9Cyprus 187

Iran 7.838Iraq 361Israel 2,113Jordan 978Kuwait 557

Lebanon 1.340Muscat & Oman 7

Pakistan 2.690QatarSaudi Ara5A 943

Note:

358

82

1

2

32

313

81

12139

24149

44

151

28

11

433

8

11

313

4

54

85

2

2

24

94

16

8

13

3

AGRICULTURE BUSINESSADMINISTRATION

a20o Neua rC A

8a

EDUCATION

a,

F.

CD 0-,1-3

393 29 780 3,216 654 135 4,01, 810 559 44 1,4131 1 2

26 3 111 1,618 105 47 1,770 503 145 13 6611 1 8 3 1 12 6 4 -- 102 3 86 7 93 19 1 1 21

2 18 3 1 22 4 5 9

6 - 6

2 2 28 1,063 19 8 1,090 365 21 3 3897 39 37 4 10 51 11 16 27

- -3 47 5 4 56 3 5 1 9

11 24 184 34 10 228 57 57 5 119

1 1 11 6 2 19 4 2 1 71 1 2

16 2 18 1 _ _ 1

10 120 17 9 146 30 30 2 6221 4 2 27 3 4 7

44 1 126 397 66 19 482 59 46 5 1102 2 15 1 16 6 4 103 15 40 9 49 7 1 173 16 82 8 90 3 5 3 11

16 26 31 5 2 38 7 5 12

8 32 54 2 3 59 3 146 - 20 68 23 3 94 8 6 146 15 106 18 11 135 14 16 1 31

1 1 1

48 3 95 285 130 21 436 98 53 7 158

275 22 448 925 353 47 1,325 159 315 19 4841 1

6 1 9 42 22 1 65 10 12 2 247 15 42 9 4 55 6 8 14

65 1 77 66 87 3 156 20 93 1 114

47 1 52 67 32 4 103 16 22 1 3949 4 86 176 54 8 238 23 59 2 8410 18 51 18 1 73 9 5 1 15

1 1

8 5 24 106 17 6 129 21 23 1 45

8 11 4 4 8 3 - 327 6 46 171 65 6 242 19 34 1 54

3 310 8 2 20 1 2 3

44 4 102 183 37 11 231 25 54 10 89

200 8 293 1,332 711 60 2,103 117 423 12 5524 4 -

14 16 4 3 1 8 4 29 333 3

2 4 8 4 17 1 10 11

43 1 68 521 187 19 727 39 87 2 12826 1 27 11 19 30 1 16 1 18

9 18 100 117 6 223 35 89 3 1275 9 104 36 6 146 10 16 2 28

16 31 14 45 1 1 2

4 1 13 129 40 8 177 8 16 241 1

43 57 25? 131 11 399 4 45 1 506 6

11 14 101 44 4 149 2 80 1 83

ENGINEERING

a,

'Al7

V17 Z-41

:2=LS a ,-..

3,463 1,263 164 4,8902 2

1,425 139 45 1,6097 6 - 13

24 2 2623 2 4 29

5 3 _ 8

799 36 6 841168 23 191

2 - - 284 10 4 98

178 27 14 219

12 1 13- -

14 5 1 2190 25 9 12419 2 4 25

425 95 14 5345 1 6

58 11 4 7374 22 9637 10 1 48

44 8 5271 19 2 92

134 24 6 1642 1 3

257 205 16 478

1,354 824 89 2,267

45 30 2 7797 13 2 11262 194 10 266

54 97 3 154237 178 17 432118 47 8 173

89 12 4 105

5 4 - 9225 84 14 323

a - 415 11 1 27

403 154 28 585

5,685 1,851 250 7,786

19 31 1 51

2 - 223 16 - 39

3:026 595 123 3,74436 60 7 103

254 226 6 486245 74 22 341272 16 12 300

374 108 9 4911 1

965 283 4.3 1,29115 15

201 57 9 267

Eng.neecal, h,1a's `). d (0 0, a 'II, (144 lrot11-,/,,i 0 me, 11.),,r- ;nor nel,. 11 1,11-111,1,^1.,y

Hamanil,es I, t ,° ncd 11 ed 1.< I H.,: pr.I iiter,iLue. I.ber II.vrs. iii Pil y

Medical sciences n, I ,tes 1,1 is Pat I 0 ,,E I 1'0, dflat,try, alada,,,,, 1, J.,,,;1,, h.irm,fay, ,i-d pr) P

Physical and tile Sciences Inn I, la,. b,.t 1,, rs0r, ilm,tai to nSt(0, y, nr es, cnErt,,tra and C1yS sSacral Sciences las. tqf a ac,t !al! 5. 0, story. lorr.e ecoom r s Irdernd'tGraa re4-otgl,s, la, 13 ps,,h01,4,,,,. p/,1))/r

.1'

26BEST CM AVAILABLE

Page 35: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

3,335

1,6367

7222

3

1,116

58174

261

9

9721

32712484336

535579

1

453

9192

8054

116

88172

53

53

9140

14138

1,3262

132

15

63015

5739

961

1295

35

HUMANITIES

.3.,

,,,1

7CI tC'..0 0

701

00

1.;

01.

7

MEDIC ALSCIENCES

7.5

11 5 73

p-

940 889 5,164 1,533 463 51 2,0471 1 1 1

241 208 2,085 1,018 182 23 1,2231

tJ

1

71280 (1

1 634

9 ' 33 17 1 1 19

1 4 3 3

97 78 1,291 6,24 51 4 6824 :) 81.) 18 .14 1 63

13 58 129 12 6 1 4947 7 228 140 41 7 197

11 2 23 6 29

I 10 2 1 1040 7 144 81 14 7 1076 1 28 21 7 1 29

75 104 506 150 51 5 2062 7 12 1 139 11 68 16 4 206 19 68 23 6 1 30

17 6 59 10 11 2 23

5 27 18 10 2 3310 19 84 17 12 2926 15 120 54 7 61

1

99 84 636 92 53 8 153

525 492 1.936 272 177 15 4641 3

92 20 201 18 8 1 2722 15 91 14 8 22

106 44 766 16 24 2 42

67 19 174 24 15 1 4083 162 417 12 30 3 7525 53 131 19 8 27

24 3 80 79 18 3 100

10 .3 2? 1 1 538 70 248 37 13 1 51

1 1 3 411 3 28 1 3 446 90 274 20 43 4 67

566 272 2,164 598 166 19 7832

12 6 31 6 3 9

1 1 11 7 7

117 92 839 211 60 5 27619 5 39 13 11 2 26

113 -11 382 51 23 1 7535 3 95 45 4 4 5311 16 1.6 18 1 19

37 11 141 100 22 3 1252 3

62 5 190 80 19 10019 24 7 2

25 33 03 9 2 3 14

.c4,3 ' ;.eglOr, Of A -I; I,

1,487

6166

2512

25016

27141

21

9120

1546

182122

162346

2

190

527

291441

276237

1

128

664

8109

1,013

1.1

24

51614957120

82

48

42

PHt S1CAL ANDLIFE SCIENCES

ti

O OJ

8701-

0

SOCIAL SCIENCES I

r..,

-7A

2 a,ot At 11 t 70-V 2 t

t,..1 5c -

All OTHER

n

a,or li

.0 Iliv: 2 .cn (2 5

ii"8

1,149 101 2,737 1,861 1,425 112 3,398 199 6 13 218

158 41 815 685 313 33 1,031 131 1 . 4 1366 12 5 7 2 14 -- -5 30 49 11 60 6 68 20 10 13 23

1 I I

22 9 281 308 58 4 370 111 11121 10 47 25 27 5 57

5 7 39 31 28 3 62 1

51 2 194 124 72 3 199 6 1 2 9

3 30 12 14 2 28 1 1

2 1 10 II 5 2 18 1

25 9 125 88 71 10 169 4 2 63 3 26 21 7 2 30 1

92 6 252 253 127 20 400 16 - 3 191 7 4 1 5 1

18 2 38 18 13 3 3412 2 35 45 16 3 64 3 3

8 1 31 22 23 1 46 3 3

8 24 27 12 1 40 1

16 39 53 28 5 86 4 429 1 76 84 34 7 125 4 2

2

148 18 356 255 145 12 412 15 1 2 18

751 36, 1,314 668 840 47 1,555 37 4 4 451 2 1 1 1 3

74 3 106 41 91 3 135 1

17 2 33 41 35 1 77 5 6172 2 215 74 233 9 316 1 1 2

95 2 124 49 79 4 132 2 2129 11 207 132 132 6 270 7 I 1 920 57 43 16 3 62 I 1 2

1

27 1 156 71 37 2 110 1 2

7 13 4 13 1781 4 149 107 101 6 214 12 - 12

2 28 16 15 14 1 1

120 11 210 88 88 12 188 6 2 8

1,076 54 2,143 717 1,243 44 2,004 58 16 19 93I - 1

12 26 10 31 41 5 51 1

19 1 44 22 17 39

301 23 840 308 308 14 630 20 4 6 .3048 1 63 7 25 32

150 245 97 247 10 354 2 5 768 4 143 30 77 5 112 3 2 51 5 1 36 22 18 40 I 1 2

78 3 163 57 63 1 121 8 1 1 101 1

176 '3 233 50 162 5 217 14 1 4 191 4 4

58 4 104 50 92 5 14/ 7 5

BEST CO:"( AVAILABLE

3,721

2,316364017

3

1,77637

60207

20

99318

2119

302429

303552

2

312

8825

5742

106

50193

41

86

1098

13181

1,2811

14

14

55623

1964641

72

1282

67

27

Page 36: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Table 2 fOREIGN STUDENTS- FIELDS OF MAJOR INTEREST AND ACADEMIC LEVEL, 1 97 2-1 9 7 3 (continued)

HOMECOUNTRY TOTAL

Southern Yemen 4Syria 407fftic(a! States 14Turkey 1.427Yemen 21

NORTH AMERICA 9,305I M10 WI America 10Bermuda 116Canada 9,679

OCEANIA 2,107lOceania 2Australia 904Cook Islands 2Fiji 102

French Polynesia 30NauruNew Guinea 7

New Zealand 340Pacific Islands,

Trust Territory of the 469

Tonga 142Western Samoa 99

STATELESS 254

COUNTRY UNKNOWN 5,023

Note:

AGRICULTURE

t2ca 0

3 1 4

3 38 3 441 1 2

179 93 2 274

179 93 2 274

17 39 1 57

7 28 351 1

2

24

11 12

2

1 34

1 -21 96 - 117

BUSINESSADMINISTRATION

21 7 1

1

30 109 41

588 213 162

13 1

573 273 15

221 85 5

31 66 21

15 1

9 1

1

18 14

94 2 3

3716

6 4

133 105 12

EDUCATION

7,,i

tio-

Tzl

2L.,.,..D

1...,

`gT.V.

u

IL0 2

29 3 7 2 121 1 1

143 7 27 341 1 1

877 766 647 26 1,4392

14 12 4 16861 754 643 26 1,423

311 237 107 11 355

99 41 69 1 1111

16 13 2 15

10 4 1 5

1 1

32 15 19 34

99 92 8 9 109

37 39 4 1 4416 33 3 36

10 1 4 1 6

250 54 71 4 129

ENGINEERING

0

1 - 1

103 50 4 1573 3

145 335 14 494

418 235 14 6672 2

12 12434 235 14 653

44 67 5 116

12 48 1 61

7 7

3 - - 3- -4 18 3 25

14 L 15

2 1 - 32, - 2

30 29 3 62

202 111 13 326

Engineering includes, but is rot limited to, cherica electrical. industrial, and mechanical engineering, and engineering technology,Humanities Includes, but is nut limited to. architecture, creative arts. languages and literature. I beral as. and theology.Medical Sciences includes, but s not limited to, dentistry, medicine, nursmg, pharmacy, and prernedicine.Physical and tole Sciences includes. but is not united to, astronomy, biological sciences. chemistry, earth sciences, mathematics, and physicsSocial Sciences includes. but is not tented to. economics, tustory, home economics, international relations, law, political science. psychology, publicadministration, cold sociology.

BEST COPY AVAILABLE

28

Page 37: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

aiTi-.2a°iz

HUMANITIES

4.1

, . I':2 .=0 a

.

T.'.o.-

aiTo.

,,,'

2F.2

I 'a00

MEDICALSCIENCES

I.,

'71' .= . .= 3 1m .ca 0

7376.

a,ti,,9

2of

.1., ;

0

PHYSICAL ANDLIFE SCIENCES

a,73 .=

47

2 =,., 0

73o.-

SOCIAL SCIENCES

iliT-1

C2 a,

2.: 74 .t 1 : I: i; 73:

00. . a i

ALL OTHER

a,7,,

LT. cu0 Z 71i 11. .i i i

a a 07 T 3.

1

=W

2Zz

22-73

2

1,2762

161,258

193

83-5

3-

43

35

159

26

757

I14.-

811

882

5877

1461

97-2

-.-2

34

7

1

2

22

254

1

53

29-

109-3

106

15-7-2

1

-1

3

1

4

42

1

413

1833

2,2672

242.241

3541

187

9

31

278

45

1612

52

1,053

371

17

33723

332

70

20-t,

--2

36

24

9

82

7-14-

216--216

37

23-

1

---5

7

-1

8

100

----

23--

23

1

------

1

----5

441

31-

57623

571

108-

43-7

--8

43

25

17

187

301

55

4341

9424

124

25-27

2

-18

25

1710

20

106

16-

1331

5961

3592

1651

108-4

--

51

1

--28

113

3-5-

16-16

3-2------

1--7

49

1931

1,0462

121.032

2921

135-31

2--69

26

1810

48

226

12

403

859-10

849

185

49-11

3-

1

22

80

811

21

135

222

16810

797

2795

167

112-3

--1

44

5

1

1

15

127

2

2-

24_-

24

6

1-----2

3

--1

3

36

210

1,680-1.668

358

162-

3-

88

9

37

265

1

1

27-27

12

1-

2-

8

1

3

1

-1

9-9

1

1-

--

--

--

5

1

5-5

1

-

--

1

-

1

2

6

3

41-41

14

2-

2-

9

1

4

3

29-

92-

938-

23915

142

69

3

2

1

23

33

92

17

2,467

'Includes "special' students and those whodid not answer the question on academic level.f Region or country was not specified.

BEET COPY AVAILABLE

29

Page 38: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

30

Table 3-FOREIGN STUDENTS HOLDING IMMIGRANT VISAS:" ACADEMIC LEVEL AND FIELDS 0

HOMECOUNTRY TOTAL-- . -

ACADEMIC STATUS

o3

4.1

ca

3 N i3U t

'A'",,.TOTAL 27,616 12,949 8,389 6,278 183 3,152

AFRICA 1,145 260 741 138 15 246I Af rica 1 1Algeria 4 2 2601;111,a 1 1

C aitii-itoon 4 2 1 1

Chad 2 2Congo 1

Egypt 600 60 487 53 12 177Eliiiopia 23GApt..., 3

7

1

8 8 7

Ghana 56 26 17 13 8Guale.a 3 - 3Ivory Coast 2 - 2 1Kenya 22 6 14 2Lesotho 1 1

Liberia 37 13 15 1 bLibya 5 1 4Malagasy Republic 3 2Malawi 2Mali 1 1

Mauritius I 1 1

Morocco 14 4 6Mozambique 2 2Namibia 1 1

Nigeria 229 95 107 27 2 35

Rhodesia 17 5 8 4Senegal 1 _ _ 1

Sierra Leone 21 8 10 3Somalia 1 1 -South Africa 56 20 29 7 4

Sudan 3 1 2 1

Tanzania 15 3. 12Togo 2 - 2Tunisia 1 1

Uganda 9 2 1 1

Zaire 1

Zambia 2

EUROPE 4,584t Europe 1

2,435 1.383 766 31 336

Albania 2 2 -Austria 73 36 33 4 1

Belgium 58 27 22 9 1 8

Bulgaria 13 9 3Czechoslovakia 140 75 38 27 8Denmark 56 30 15 11 6Uinta nd 46 23 14 9 5Franc* 289 123 129 37 18

Germany, FederalRepublic ut 661 337 195 93 1 67

Greece 480 273 127 80 2 33Hungary 14 44 19 11 4Iceland a 3 3 2 2Ireland 144 56 44 44 15

Rai), 384 199 98 87Latira 9 5 3 1

Lithuania 3 2 1

I. t.enibourg 4 2 2Ma Ita 7 3 3 1

WW1-A:v.];N.:Irh ii

725

p od nil58

240

13220

156

56 3720 1244 40

4

1

16

11Portugal 42 25 5na, I

Roma 3 92 38 401214 1

55

c014u..lAJ

FIELDS OF MAiOR INTEREST

C

va

.1 viC o a,S2 v "e.) oc

N U CS2 52

r.,92 (i5 U 0 , 3a 1,1 TOO 0 a, vi

a, .A. z 7).6'c c

g.

1:3S2 a,

1 a ino

TC z1, i24 4,451 5,224 2,003 1 2,882 2,736 150

54 207 119 88 156 162 2

1

1

1

10 152 57 28 91 391 3 1 2 4

3

4 k 4 8 5 162 _ 1

fffff _ 1

71

5 1 i 2 3 4 82 3

1 1 1 _-- 1

2 2 7 - --- _ 2- - - - 1

20 28 17 33 30 43

1 2 1 2 3 4

2 1 2 5 1 61 _

2 4 14 1 7 18

1 1

1 6 2 3 31 1

1 _1 3 2 2

1

1

248 637 1,450 230 472 598 4- - - -4 11 24 2 9 102 1 24 1 7 7

3 3 5 1

3 30 32 6 29 134 5 24 2 1 64 3 9 2 8 6

11 16 138 8 25 41

35 73 233 33 58 8721 140 128 30 42 42

3 12 21 5 7 161 1 2 1

10 12 37 1 4 21

11 64 125 12 26 461 1 2 2 1

1 1

1

1 4 -21 20 66 14 27 31

6 8 15 4 3 79 60 83 13 21 25

10 14 1 43 27 28 6 11 2

5,311

96

1

335

20

4

3

1

578

4

1889

29

7442

6

43

591

' pc;r:7,inct, residence stilos Prey are aro Tables I. ?, and 1 arid. 0, if or I rtde 4,t ;rci stt.4,---,ts and Bose nho dcl 110 anseer the question on icalg!rtlic fey°I R'ercrc ccl,ntri h 15 nut ;per,' ed.Aitrnughrl at.la and t ethdan,a haae been incvp(aated 1,,to the limo,. of S.) out sc.., Republics these students Identof'cNd li,ese countries as t4er countries of citizen-shp

BEST COPY AVA;LAB1E

1

319

1789

Page 39: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

MAJOR INTEREST, 1972-1973

HOMECOUNTRY TOTAL

ACADEMIC STATUS

a,TO

= .

a, r.= -

CUID 1=RI

15

'CE Z.E. 5

FIELDS OF MAJOR INTEREST

NC <1.,

.2 ucI"! ts: .2y7, E

54

0,1

s :i., E 17, CUp z. ,,, , CE

CaCZ VI ,3 . 1cx an t., 1J X i"

cal 0a, a)u uc- ,i, cu2z. . a,

ta to fn :11 t. N 2 7, ..F. ....., LI0 =1:3 Zf. id .2 Z

San Marino 1 1 -- - - - - - 1 - - - - --Spain 126 52 51 23 - 5 10 15 56 - 7 16 - . -,

Sweden 91 44 .33 14 - 5 7 4 30 4 10 18 1 12Switzerland 84 33 34 17 1 8 4 6 26 4 5 14 - 16U.S.SiR. 33. 17 6 10 - - - 5 20 4 1 1 - 2

United Kingdom (Total)" 1.010 550 306 154 14 61 73 84 266 64 143 167 2 136:United Kingdom 533 317 159 57 7 35 26 56 140 36 86 97 2 48England 442 215 135 92 7 23 44 27 114 27 51 65 - 84Isle of Man 1 1 - - - - - - 1 - - - -

-1Northern Ireland 4 - 2 2 - - -51 - 2Scotland. 25 15 7 3 - 1 2

-110 1 3 - 3

Wales 5 2 3 - - 2 I - - 1 - - -Yugoslavia 130 76 39 15 - 8 7 25 40 9 14 13 I 8

FAR EAST 6;473 1.920 3,826 727 73 762 303 1,848 758 482 1,217 519 9 502Burma . 29 19 7 3 4 2 7 2 8 4

-12

China. Republic of 1,376 251 992 133 21 54 39 484 117 83 404 92 81'China. Unspecified 495 228 224 43 7 56 17 137 59 25 125 36 1 32Hong Kong 634 381 174 79 6 93 22 121 90. 75 141 30 1 55

India 1.708 203 1,356 149 17 214 68 768 102 86 218 128 I 106Indonesia 58 25 26 7 - 2 3 11 II 8 14 4 - 5Japan 281 139 98 44 - 25 13 23 93 13 49 35 - 30Khmer Republic 3 - 2 1 - - - 1 - - 1 - 1

Korea, Republic of 836 239 495 102 11 94 28 168 170 62 157 94 1 51

Laos ,. 1 - - 1 - .-1

--1

- - - - - 1Macao 8 5 1 2

-1- 3 1 2 - _ -

Malaysia 37 14 18 5 2 4 6 7 6 3 4 - 4Nepal 6 3 2 1 - 1 1 1 - 1 1 - 1

Philippines 721 294 311 116 8 155 95. 72 60 102 60 61 3 105

Ryukyu Islands 3 2 - 1 - 2 - - I - - - - -Singapore 13 7 5 1 - 4 - - 1 2 2 3 - 1Sri Lanka 29 12 13 4 - 7 2 6 3 - 4 3 - 4Thailand 159 58 79 22 1 32 7 37 22 12 18 18 1 11Vietnam. Republic of 76 40 23 13 1 16 4 11. . 11 4 12 5 - 12

LATIN AMERICA 9,700 6,192 819 2,689 33 1,393 591 1,057 2,006 884 518 808 120 2,290

Caribbean 7,148 4,708 350 2,090 19 1,146 436 755 1,293 721 312 424 114 1,928iCaribbean 31 14 7 10 - 4 5 3 2 1 1 5

-110.

Bahamas 10 4 5 1

-14 -

-31 1 2 - 1

Barbados 36 18 6 12 3 1 8 4 1 5 - 10Cayman, Turks &

Caicos Islands 1 1 - - - - - - - 1 - - - -Cuba -: 6.119 4.196 156 1,767 16 1.032 370 654 1.107 604 214 299 111 1,712Dominican Republic 99 33 22 44 - 8 10 8 29 13 4 10 - 17Guadeloupe 1 1 - - -

-61 - - - -

Haiti 214 108 37 69 1 22 31 61 26 14 25 - 28Jamaica 421 222 77 122 1 50 32 35 49 . 42 57 53 2 iou

Leeward Islands 16 11 - 5 - - 1 - 6 1 2 2 - 4Netherlands Antilles 9 7 2 - - - 1 5 - 3 -Trinidad A Tobago 172 84 34 54 - 21 11 18 27 18 16 21 - 40Windward Islands 19 9 4 6 - 2 - 2 2 5 1 1 - 6

Central America 349 225 52 72 2 44 31 29 80 32 33 55 - 43British Honduras 11 5 2 4 1. 1 2

-42 1 - 1 3

Costa Rica 55 40 3 12 1 8 4 15 6 7 3 7El Salvador 45 33 4 8 - 10 2 5 5 3 5 10 - 5

Guatemala 52 30 10 12 - 4 3 2 16 4 5 10 - 8Honduras 41 27 5 9 - 3 4 4 14 4 3 6 - 3Nicaragua 56 39 7 10 - 12 5 7 9 2 5 10 - 6

1 Panama 89 51 21 17 - 6 11 7 19 12 8 15 - 11

Mexico 824 584 81 159 6 66 69 65 218 52 61 141 5 141

South America 1,379 675 336 368 6 137 55 208 415 70 112 188 1 178South America 2 1 1 - -

-62 -

Argentina 225 116 69 40 - 16 33 84 15 18 33-1

20Bolivia 48 28 12 8

-1

7 2 9 11 4 5 4 5Brazil 138 72 40 26 9 11 21 39 6 13 19 - 19

Country in the United Kingdom was no specified.This category consists of those whose country of cit'renship was given simply as' China." In many cases, these students are residents of countries other than the Republicof China. There was no exchange between the United States and the People's Republic of China at the time the census was taken.

31

BEST C./1 LA1LABLE

Page 40: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Table 3 FOREIGN STUDENTS HOLDING IMMIGRANT VISAS:' ACADEMIC LEVEL AND FIELDS OFMAJOR INTEREST, 1972-1973 (continued)

HOMECOUNTRY TOTAL

ACADEMIC STATUS

as

oe

iu

2-=1,

O

ea

E c>

cO

FIELDS OF MA/OR INTEREST

,h6.,

(13

cui 12 ev, 0373..? o

C7...i

7 ii ce9i

--,-;.:-'i .oS i" =a

oLac

.

uv 1

.."i".3ov)

Ci,lie 51 3iT 18 1 7 11 3 11 30 7 11 16 11rolombia 358 155 76 127 1 37 9 65 109 19 21 43 54Ecuador 164 80 24 60 1 16 6 27 63 9 13 16 16French Guiana 1 1 1Guyana 92 49 20 23 15 6 9 12 5 10 18 17Paraguay 12 5 5 2 1 1 1 5 2 2Peru 143 64 38 41 18 5 20 36 10 8 26 19Uruguay 14 4 7 3 1 9 1 1 2Venezuela 81 50 12 19 1 9 5 13 17 2 10 9 15NEAR 010 M1OOLE EAST 1,626 679 760 187 15 176 83 469 250 94 206 195 5 133INear & Middle,. East 1

Afghanis lan 121

6 4 21

2 2 3

-2 1Cyprus 16 9 6 1 1 5 3 1 3Iran 450 196 202 52 1 45 17 152 59 25 63 51 2 35

Iraq 73 27 39 7 2 8 6 20 5 12 8 4Israel 362 131 177 54 2 38 31 71 79 7 40 47 1 46Jordan 152 82 59 11 2 21 1 52 22 12 21 18 3Kuwait 10 7 3 7 1 -- 2Lebanon 122 67 38 17 13 2 34 18 12 13 19 11

Pallkkan 187 43 128 16 3 26 13 58 17 12 27 19 1 11Saudi Arabia 13Syria 78Turkey 149

43274

93757

918

1

3

1

78

37

22547

36

3688

21012

31015

813Yemen 1

NORTH AMERICA 1,574 926 425 223 10 166 168 91 357 148 137 295 7 195Bermuda 9 3 3 3 3 1 2 3Ca nada 1,565 923 422 220 10 166 168 91 357 148 136 293 7 192OCEANIA 208 112 68 28 2 15 32 10 53 20 30 23 22Australia 128 68 41 19 2 6 10 6 42 13 17 16 15Fiji 9 6 2 1 1 1 3 1 1French Polynesia 3 2 1 3New Zealand 42 18 18 6 1 9 3 8 6 5

Pacific Islands, TrustTerritory of the 2 2 1 1

Tonga 12 6 3 1 7 3 1 1Western Samoa 12 8 3 1 2 4 1 1 2

STATELESS 131 63 60 14 5 5 32 26 12 27 20 10COUNTRY UNKNOWN 7.164 362 301 1,506 4 53 40 100 205 45 119 116 2 1,485

These students hold immigrant Os.15 o permanent residence status. r-iey are also included in Tables 1, 2, and 7 arid, alien zppropr ate, in *raisin 4,tr,ciudes "special" students and thorn -hho did not m(sher the question on academic teve

I Regicn or (-pantry has not specified

BEST COPY AVAILABLE

32

Page 41: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Table 4-FOREIGN STUDENTS AT COMMUNITY AND JUNIOR COLLEGES: FIELDS OF MAJOR INTEREST, 1972-1973

HOMECOUNTRY

TOTAL

AFRICAAfricaAlgeriaBotswanaCameroon

DahomeyEgyptEthiopiaGambiaGhana

Ivory CoastKenyaLiberiaLibyaMalawi

MauritiusMoroccoNigeriaRhodesiaRwanda

Sierra LeoneSomaliaSouth AfricaSudan

wazi/and

Tanzania0130unisiagandawire

UROPEustriaelg urirtulgariazechosloyakia

en ma rkinlandranceermany. Federal

Rapublic ofreece

ungarycetand:elandtalyuxembourg

etherla ad sorwayOlandortugalomania

painwedenwitzerland.S.S.R.

nited Kingdom (Total;'United KingdomEnglandNorthern IrelandScotland

TOTAL

S Ex

-r

03

C0io

FIELDS

co.'2

'13- d C CC ~ ,a

W

Of MAJOR INURES!

ry

16,160 10.622 5,133 205 3 244 566 I 3,826 612 315 2,4063,176 1,371 j 4301-

795 612 156 17 213 18 1 201 142 61 i 52 1 57 8 204 3 1

6 6 2 3I

4 3 1 2

2 2 27 7 3 j

131 76 40 / 17 25 5 7 I 20 2 414 12 2 4 5 1 1 3

/0 9 2 30 23 12 4 4 2 1

1 1

-36 29 8 61 7 431 29 13 11 i 5 I10 10 8 1 1i

1

2 1

2350

2285 56 4 71

1

116 1

1

56 37 27 18 88 3 5 1 2 1 21 I 1

,

45 33 11 18 Il 8 21 1

12 9 2 1 2 2 4 2I 1

8 6 1

16 9 1 5 1 3 1 3 1

3 3 1 1

1 1 1

11 8 5 1 1

1 1 1

591 318 265 89 21 137 201 45 24 30 15 208 2 6 4 l 3

8 5 3 1 3 1 1

7 2 5 1 3 26 3 2 1 2 2 1

6 1 1 3 1

13 2 10 12 6 1 240 22 18 2 5 2 5 16 4 1

4/ 14 31 7 9 18 3 2111 84 27 21 44 22 4 6 5 7

1 1 1

5 4 28 5 3 2 1

53 38 15 6 13 27 2 2 1

1 1

24 12 12 2 31

1 10 41 1 2 1

8 1 1 1 1 I 4 1

42 9 33 5 20 14 2 1

/ 2 5 4 33 2 2 1

34 18 16 6 2 5 12 4 318 11 7 5 1 1 I 7 2 215 6 8 2 1 7 2 1 1

4 3 3 1

85 51 2 it 2 11 26 10 11 5 1 646 30 1 4 1 8 15 4 I 5 337 19 18 1 I 3 1 10 6 j 6 I 1 1

1 1 1

1 1I 1

Anseers to the rit,P.SI KM on c.ex Aerenol fx a t,'.110 4C5lion supplied an ilsts prepared ty nsht.ilBoas d,(1 not se,Region or country Has rot :peof,edCountry in the UnIted KIrg icn refs rot spec tel

some

BEST C.:t

arts .!uli Nra spar r1 to tie lonstoi In Ott iq 30PS, i:"C:IM,3

33

Page 42: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

JY

Ta4le FOREIGN STUDENTS AT COMMUNITY AND JUNIOR COLLEGES: FIELDS OF

SEX(

HOMECOUNTRY TOTAL

a,.E4)

c0

i'c

j,I: E 9C C j g ',:i. L,, ,c,

cTc ra]m

Yugoslavia 36 19 15 2 1

FAR EAST 2,761 1,681 924 36 847 42Bhutan 1 1

Burma 6 4 2 3China, Republic of 118 53 55 44 2-Chirm, Unspecitted 51 30 25 19 I

Hong Kong 630 374 238 9 192 5India 283 239 40 4 54 4Indonesia 43 29 11 7 2Japan 470 262 1/1 16 166 12Khmer Republic 3 2

Korea, Republic of 86 33 44 2 24Laos 8 5 2 3Macao 12 3 6Malaysia 40 24 13 1 9 1

Nepal 1 1

Philippines 241 96 144 2 82Ryukyu Islands 4 1 2 3Singapore 8 3 3 2Sri Lanka 10 5 3 1

Thailand 588 412 125 2 206 11Vietnam, Republic of 152 105 38 32

LATIN AMERICA 7,038 4,188 2,847 59 1,531 379

Caribbean 5,336 3,021 2,314 18 1,019 332(Caribbean 2 1 1 1

Bahamas 84 62 22 32 2Barbados 39 26 12 1 8 1

Cayman, Turks& Caicos Islands 5 5 1

Cuba 4.807 2,634 2.173 12 963 326Dominican Republic, 37 25 12Haiti 56 39 17 1

Jamaica 158 114 44 1 27 2Leeward Islands 1/ 16 1 3

Netherlands Antilles 8 4 4Trinidad & Tobago 91 69 22 19Windward Islands 32 26 6 4 1

Central America 369 228 140 10 120 8British Honduras 15 10 5 8Costa Rica 33 22 II 10 1

El Salvador 95 58 37 37 1

Guatemala 37 23 14 9 2

Honduras 44 22 22 2 16 2Nicaragua 71 50 21 2 19Panama 74 43 30 1 21 2

Mexico 277 173 104 3 64 19

South America 1,056 I 766 289 28 268 20I South America 3 2 1 _

Argentina 32 18 14 11Bolivia 81 64 17 3 17 1

Brazil 54 33 21 2 11

Chile 64 41 23 17 3Colombia 271 193 78 3 71 4Ecuador 56 45 11 2 16 1

Guyana 77 I 56 21 1 20Paraguay 3 2 1 2

Peru 223 159 64 3 56Surinam 3 2 1 1

Uruguay 10 1 3 1

Venezuela 179 144 34 14 45

FIELDS OF MAJOR INTEREST

11 ' 11

652 516

iii 1

16 l 3010 9

109 J 95140 j 23

17 1 938 1 166

1 1 2

1532

12

25245

44 281

1

1

10014

315486

1,155

751

13I 20

3

5548

1670

9

1,407

9971

235

1

889111429

2

2 240 1316 7

75 762 38 10

18 139 8

4 1415 12

1 19 16

53 83

: 276 251, 3

8 932 12

7 20

9651523

17741411

1

64 481

3 449 38

VI0.1

U U UCV

`7`;ou 0cvl

4

279

128

2

83

61

1

119

4

3

67

1

2

l 104 43 35 830 6 5 11

6 1

1 9 10 23 5

10 2 3 2

56 4

53 6 2 4

33 1 1

22 2 36 329 5 3

739 180 283 166

614 137 200 122

6 1 1 43 1

562 124 188 1114 1 1

11 1 1 1

12 6 6 31 2

1 -- 1 1

11 2 1 1

3 1

35 6 17 91

3 1

13 2 33 3 1

3 3 ..

10 2 4 22 1 4 3

23 5 14 9

67 32 52 26_ _

1 1 1

4 1 3 43 3 4 1

9 1 5 214 7 16 5

3 2 213 4 2

13 4 12 91

1 -- 1

6 9 9 1

1

120

7

3

3061

25

3

16

233

1,139

1,086

2

1,0781

22

1

131

2

554

36

1

42

1

121

3

8

4

IAnsaers tn the cuiestic,n on sex wore not prilyidnd for a total of 605 students. In some cases, students did not respond to the question, in other cases informa-t or en lists prepared by institutions did not include see

tRegicio or coi,ntry xis not specified.This category consists of those whose country of citizenship was gi,ev simply as "China hi many CAWS, these stiiitents 'Ir.' residents of countries otherthan the Republic of China. There Aas nr; exchange betn yen the United States and the People's Republic of Chilit at the time the reosus nastakto

BEST COPY AVAILABLE

Page 43: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

MAJOR INTEREST, 1972 1973 icontintiedl

SEA1

401ME:',OUNTRY TOTAL

NEAR AND MIDDLE EAST 2,988 2,729Near & Middle Lost 4 .1

Afghanistan 21 21Bahrain 1 1*1;ypros ta 4

Iran 1,325 1,182Iraq 8Israel 113 91Jordan 140 132Kuwait 124 110

1.ebarion

1/atorSaudi Arabia

SyriaTrucial StatesTurkeyremen

NORTH AMERICA 363orth America 5

3ermuda 16anada 342

232808 /86

7 776 1 72

/9 682 1

41 341 1

CEANIA 174ustralia 18iji 13rend) Polynesia 12ew 'Zealand 8

acific Islands,Trust Territory of the 91

onga 27destem Samoa 5

TATELESS

1785

10163

10814955

6312

I3 11

FIELDS OF MAJOR INTEREST

.0f....,

, ,g

2,2 ...-.,'.7;

g 9

..... :';, .:''_- ,Z.',:: i.. 2 f, f-,-,.c E-c .... ot

t-'u, / C~̀' % t-ot . -t,

ct ao 14 14

193

2

1152

184

11

7

17

7

185

6179

654373

2815

5

2

33

1

12

3

7

49

2

410221

136

19259

37143

416

10

6

591

949

5561

52

2316

2

OUNTRY UNKNOWN 1.437 797 496 40

16 1,027

5

1

8 2525

5 321 63

76

61

61

2B3

102513

26

341

17

11245

9

1 1

2 1

20 52 1

5

407

6

1 ,

2042

271310

3581

1

8

11

7

103

2101

3161

21

14

2

3

23 366

VI .6 lo,CU ,l, AP V

_ -..-; 1.. tj7,, E

J -../ C C V S

,';' 72E`i.0

-2,.7.,'2' ` CV) Cy 0

2 a vi ;7,-t-

195 85 -'77 37 1011

2 4

1 1

77 44 39 13 461

10 3 6 1 919 6 5 2 6

2 9 2 1 3

36 6 4 4 526 6 3 9 20

1

4 15 2 4

12 4 2 51

6 2

28 5 30 9 82

1

26 4 30 9 8

13 10 14 9 32 1

4 4 21 2

2

8 3 12 51

1 3

10 1 1 9951

nswe's to the clu,stnc. on ct'Y 1.1,r not Dra,ded f total of 495 In some cases students ..4,d not respond to the question. In ether cases, allormaoil supoiiedonl,sts pn pared b/ irshtut or,s did not include scxeon or country no, .01 spec ,hod

BEST COil A',IAILABLE

35

Page 44: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Table 5 FOREIGN SCHOLARS, U.S. FACULTY AND ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF: HOME COUNTRY OR COUNTRY OF ASSIGNMENT, PROFESSIONAL

COUNTRY

TotalTO FromUs u s.

Agr coitoreTo tramU.S US

BusinessAdniinistrot on

To FromU S. U.S.

EducationTo FromU S. U S.

EngineeringToU.S.

FrarU S.

HumanitiesToU S

From11 S.

MedicalSciences

To FromU.S S

Physicalaid lifesciences

To FrontU.S. U.S.

SociarSciences

To FromU.S. U.S.

Other andNa AnswerTo FromU.S. U.S.

TOTAL 10.848 6.589 288 375 208 199 184 421 747 276 1,459 2,001 2,832 491 3,603 1,112 1,073 1,411 454 303

AFRICA 412 364 22 51 20 14 7 31 18 10 65 35 95 54 65 49 98 107 22 13l'Africa 13 96 1 1 12 3 18 3 10 5 33 6:Algeria 1

Octs,tiana 1

Carrier eon 2 2 1

Central Arric.in Republic 7 4 32 2

Congo 2 2EgyptEthiopia

1071 /

2816

01

14 34 5

14 94

363

11 98

92

5 2

GambiaCoa n 3 23

1

14 2 8 1 2 1 3 51

8 5 2Kery,1 14 33 1 2 1 2 3 6 1 5 8 10

2 2t Iberia 3 5 1 1 2 2 1

Libya 3 2 3 1

Malagasy Republic 1 1

Mala.%i 2 2Mauritius 3 1 1

Morocco 7 20 3 1 4 10 5

NigerNigeria 85

1

54 17 3 2 5 2 17 3 12 10 15 7 251

8 6Rhodesia 8 4Senegal 1 3 1 1 2Sierra Leone 11 2 4 1 - 1 2

Somalia 1

South Africa 71 18 I 1 2 3 6 3 25 4 22 9 4 4 1

Sudan 3 1 2 1 1

Tan zania 12 11 2 3 1 2 6 7

rut-115,3 5 10 3 1 2 1 3 2

Ug: tda 9 22 1 9 1 2 3 1 2 1 2 6 - 1

Zaire 4 5 1 1 1 4 1

Zambia 2 7 2 1 3

ANTARCTICA 1

EUROPE 4,540 3,929 102 75 57 116 67 195 327 154 780 1,553 981 238 1,634 659 419 758 173 181'Europe 8 785 20 23 52 25 318 6 51 2 84 155 57Albania 2 - 2Austria 84 97 2 1 4 3 20 60 17 3 33 9 7 13 88elgiulr. 114 40 2 2 11 2 14 1 10 8 29 1 41 5 8 8 2 4

Bulgaria 9 5 3 3 2 1 1 2 1 1

Czec hoslovaScia 60 9 2 1 6 7 12 1 24 4 4 3 4 --

Denmark 71 59 2 I 3 14 Ft 7 14 14 3 22 19 7 11 4 2Finland 6 3 18 2 1 2 2 10 6 28 2 14 4 4 2 1 1

France 439 394 3 3 6 8 4 7 24 13 151 213 63 14 144 64 21 61 23 11

Germany. Fed Rep. of 722 432 15 5 12 27 6 16 41 21 121 174 133 12 306 91 r3 65 25 20GreeceHungaryIcerand

9779

3

6384

4

1

21

2 2 1

1

118

2 611

1

292

3424

1

61

2'323

822

It 152

24

1Ireland 60 28 6 2 2 3 1 9 11 15 3 17 6 7 3 2

Italy 261 241 5 1 3 1 1 9 21 8 47 149 46 5 110 24 17 38 I1 6IL atvia 2 1 2 1

Lu .c.lit,otirg 3 4 1 2 I 1 1 1

Malta 3 1 2Monaco 2 1 1

Netherlands 144 90 12 9 2 3 6 7 3 12 16 55 23 9 20 7Norv.a/ 80 32 3 5 1 12 4 6

1';(/

26 12 5 4Poland 152 20 7 - 3 4 I 2 11 14 5 37 _ 47 4 25 ,, 7Portugal 21 10 1 3 1 1 3 5 11 4 2Romania 50 13 1 1 , 12 3 8 3 6 1 I5 1 4 4 1

a

f 1,,,se f,-.,,,,gn ',..- h:.13r s' c(ntinnenrni or red.non 3Iongl,Is ware nportid, 0,1 n it Inc-21r home r owlfrles U S fd,iltry merrit..=, vsolcrl more than one rr.o.,,,on nr c c:).2!yy in tin6gEni.: raphic

f .41')",,,,,V1 Lat, la h.,--, h.e.e- ,n, nronr ttel +i-lit tie im,c,it ti.:l 5( v.et Scoalst Republics. tilui 'here reported as (hr.'" S, 1.A.ir-,',,,IIIIIry of ,11,/tilsh.p

UE:11 6OrY AVAILABLE

36

Page 45: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

r1ELDS, 1972 -1913

:OUNTRY

;painniseth_triieritzerland1.5.5 R.

Tct.0To FromU s us

I12 150137210 1215/

lnited KIngdoin itetaii 1354 I.! 13t United Kingdom 126 109

England 5)7 974Northern treland 1

Scotland 38 43Wales 9 /

fatican ty State'ugoslasia

1

83 3t,

AR EAST 3,205 626ar East 663urrna 1

hina, 1t7I 62hind. Wive; ll ed 138

long Kong 1.1 9ndia 910 126ndonesia 92 26apart 1.135 144;hiller Republic 1 I

;orea, Republic of 203 44aos 11talaysia 27 26longolian People'sRepublic 1

tlepal 1 12

'hilippineslyukyu Islandsiingaporelri Lank.;'ha Land'ietnarn, Republic_ c,f

ATM AMERICAat in America

160 221

71758 3814 23

812 716

aribbean 161 49'anbbean 6aharnas 3arbados I 1

uba

ominican Republic 10 9aiti 14 3mama 27 12

eeward Is4rnds 1

artinique 1

ethertands Antilles 2rintdad & Tobago 12indoitard Islands 1 2

kg ric uihreTo fromU S U S

1 2

708 4

19 14

1 2

2

94 644

183

34 173 5

19 3

9 9

1

2

5 4

1 1

2 8

13 12714

5

3

entral America 56 78 1 26entral America 7 2ritish Honduras 1

osta Rica 12 25lalvador 13 1 1 7

uaternalaondurasicaraguanamanarna Canal Zone

8 132 42

18 105

eine° 79 152

51

42

1 5

sii511Adorlmstroton

To FromU S U.S

Ethrcabcnto FrOrr

S US.

SnToU S

itOrlUS.

}LT illarlitT esTo TrolnU S U S

12 10 1 1 60 10512 4 lb 14

1 4 3 11 7 21 152 5 19 2 8 16

7 21 25 10 /5 44 220 3675 2 14 10 36 3 105 372 19 9 58 39 37 107 318

2 3 6 112 1

1

3 1 1 9 4 IC 13

63 21 33 58 261 44 261 926 8 2 3

1

4 4 44 8 27 113 29 14 --

1 1 1 i 3 15 228 4 4 90 L4 57 24

4 1 8 218 5 3 8 78 10 100 32

3 2 8 10 4 22 311

3 1 111

1 2 1 1 21 1 2

2 1 1 8I 2 1 21 4 2 1

18 18 25 591 20 24 149 1282 8

8 4 16 41 2 39 77 14 1 1 23 2

2 1

3 1 21 4

1 4

3 2

3 5 1 7 8

1 1 1 3 4

3 1

4 1

I 3 - 15 2 2 I 15 65

MedicalSciences

To fromU.S. U.S.

33 1

36 1453 19

2

311 90192 8107 75

10 7

17 3

951 6012

1

106 24

12245 8

7 2372 7

57

7 11

3

98 3

26

38 42 8

286 54

29 510

1

25

10

3D

.3 212

5 22 -1 1

7 1

19 5

Physcaland LifeScrences

To FromU S. U.S

40 1045 19

100 4317 13

480 201246 13214 179

16 83 1

29

1,136

15066

6

898

14

27 1

346 227 5

438 221

4

14

3

20 2

32 28 35 2

168 11610

22 8S 2

2

23 1

6 3

2

8 172

SocialScreices

Ter rf1).11

US. us

10 1613 1215 2210 13

161 26791 2665 229

22 91 3

11 18

273 16010

25 1314

3 482 3117 1167 48

36 6

1 9

1

1 3

17 13

25 1

1 73 1

91 16720

24 1512 1

3

5

2

Other andFlo AnswerTO FromU.S. U 5,

8 27 1

8 61

46 5329 6) 5 45

1 I

I 1

127 38_ _ 7

20 65

230

540 9

15 10

2 -

42

1

2 21

42 237

21 1

151 1

2 8 2

1 2

3 22

16 22 12 32 3 3

hese Toreg, olars' regono orgns A r reported. tmt th.e.r home countrles 115 faculty r er,bens sTte6mopeIhanunernk icerurccuntryrn0115P,eographocrea.ountry in the Un.ted K.ngi m +.1; red spec edhese Chinese 5.1.t,O;T115. courlrw .11re :hip AAS ljTTTen smpt; as CIra In rrani rases they ore esIdents of countries other than the Republ c Of China. There was onohange betneen the Unte.:j States and the Pc-1,1.2's Horpit, e of r,, IrT/I at the line the SLUT/P./5 were 'Dade

rri

37

Page 46: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

T ibIe 5 FOREIGN SCHOLARS, U.S. FACULTY AND ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF: HOME COUNTRY OR COUNTRY Of ASSIGNMENT, PROFESSIONAL

COUNTRY

Totalo FromT

S U S

AgrrcudoreTo f (OM

S U S

8,1 sakess

tr

To .oniU S U.S.

Educ atoutTo FromU.S. U S

Engii, eerilyto FromU S

Human tiesto FromUS. U S

MedlcalSciences

To FrontU S U S

rib's caland LifeSciences

to TramU S U S

ScciaiSciences

To FromU S U5.

Other andFio AnswerTo FromU S. U.S.

South America 516 364 II 71 6 8 9 31 15 22 88 40 198 30 122 59 51 87 16 10'Sulitin Aiiwrica b It, 1 4 5 :3 1 6 1

Argent,u.1 143 45 2 1 / 5 24 8 50 4 44 13 9 4 1

Bol.w laBrant

4108

1199 a 3z 1 2 4 8

1

151 1

30 11 37 12 154

191

1

1

2

Chile 76 34 3 2 2 4 1 1 14 4 28 3 18 1? 5 8 2Colombia 50 58 1 3 1 2 9 2 13 8 21 4 7 10 4 18 2 3E i. aador 10 11 1 6 3 1 5 3 1 3 3 1

French GutarlA 1 1

Guy,tri.3 10 3 1 2 1 3

Pa raguay 4 3 3 2Peril 46 29 1 7 5 22 6 4 7 12 2 1

Surinam 1 2 1 1

Uruguay 5 4 3 3 2 1

Vetheruc4.1 52 20 1 3 1 4 10 4 33 2 7 2 3 7 2

NEAR AND MIDDLE EAST 750 300 33 8 25 9 12 2; 56 22 F.". 75 203 34 249 50 72 73 34'Near & Midd'e East 25 1 1 10 1 5 7Afghanistan 7 14 5 2 1 3 2 4 1 1

Bahrain 1

Cyprus 4 2 3

irarl 36 26 5 3 1 1 2 3 2 8 5 39 2 18 3 8 8IraqIsrael

16386

4

1641

19 8 82

241

101

262

453

871

18 168 321

35 402

14Jordan 18 2 2 5 5 -- 4 1 2KLJA al 2 2

' Fbe <e tore*ri cont,T:erital or re,;.on31 'gins core reported. but not their i.ome coon:r TS U S fiCulty members visited mare than one region or Cou,ltry in this geor dphicarea

BEST COI Y

38

Page 47: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

-1ELOS, 1972-1973 (cordinue0)

:OUNTRY

ebanur

TotalFru rira

S U S

43 10

ciaitereto From

S U.S

Busi,essiteministration

To t011US US

EdnicationTo FromUS U.S.

Engineeringto fromUS U.S

1

Hamand.esTo tromU S as.

MedicalSciences

To fromU S U.S

21 2

Physicaland LifeSciences

To FromU.S U S

SOCialSC ent es

To FromU.S

1 4

Other andNo answerto From

U.S

'alf,sst,ih '31 ..,3 1 b 1 5 3 19 6 22 4 8 5 7IaLrdr Arabia 1 3 1 1 2iyria 11 2 1 3 2urkey 95 21 5 1 3 13 2 12 7 27 1 18, 4 11 3 6

IORTH AMERICA 604 92 11 2 17 3 24 3 34 2 84 16 154 4 1/9 31 78 26 23 5north Arheric,1 3 1 2terrh odd 1 2 1 1

'anada 600 89 11 17 3 23 3 34 82 16 153 4 179 29 78 26 23ircethaPid 1 1

CEANIA 442 166 13 17 7 10 14 .14 29 10 37 12 135 17 159 51 33 33 15 2.cea Piaustraha

1

34116

113

10 7

1

9 827 20 8 28

1

1111

101

1263

27 224

19-8

1

iji1

few Gu net 4 2 2

lew lealyndacitic Ishyliis. Trust

3') 2 4 6 2 9 2 9 3 24 1 32 19 11 7 5 1

Territory of the 8 5 2 1

oliga 1 1

restern Saino3 1 1 1

ENERAL ASSIGNMENT 320 26 8 28 62 28 64 73 22

'MMUS 10 1 2 3 2 1

OUNTRY UNKNOWN 73 75 S 2 12 1 1 17 28 19 2 10 2 7 14 17 11

tlese tweigp s rfloi3ry. 0,.3 orlp, ni v.ere reported. but oat their home c Oatilf, ion, U S faculty mernt ers,,$,ted More Char

lese visaed in re than t',":e centIrwrtil are

err 1 f fs, r

one region orcoun ry III ItInngeograp riC

er

39

Page 48: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

40

Table 6 U.S. STUDENTS ABROAD: FIELDS OF MAJOR INTEREST, 1971-1972

z0

z

HOSTCOUNTRY TOTAL ex,

TOTAL 34,218 78 514

AFRICA 308 3 5

Ethiopia 5 -Ghana 72Malagasy Republic 4Nigeria 28

Senegal 7Sierra Leone 32South Africa 80Tanzania 2 -Uganda 5

United Arab Republic 66Zambia 6

a4U0

HUMANITIES

;91

r >,O td)

a2 15 ir,a .cZ0. FL- 0 O

1-

476 415

3

3 2

EUROPE 17,813Austria 296Belgium 852Denmark 97Finland 107

France 6,291Germany, Fed. Rep. of 2,176Greece 123Ireland 111Italy 1,758

Malta 7Monaco 2Netherlands 157Norway 239Poland 56

Portugal 7

Romania 11Spa n 1,738Sweden 367Switzer arici 723

U.S.S.R. 36United Kingdom 2,267Vatican clty 382Yugoslavia 10

FAR EAST 2.363China, Republic of 62Hong Kong 39India 34Indonesia 9

Japan 1.085Korea, Republic et 42Malaysia 4Prulippines 1.086Singapore 1

Thailand 1

LATIN AMERICA 5,145Argentina 24Bolivia 2Brazil 17Chile 37

Colombia 590Costa Rica 27Ecuador 29Guatemala 15Jamaica 13

Me ico 4.373Nicaragua 2Peru 14VE-nezuela 2

21

70 81

2

627 1

29

5

21 812

3 14

16 67

16 229

79

56

2

112

36

1482 1 1 3

5 7

22C

39

I 31

9

9

145

2

1336

6

2

10

5

40

4

27

711

63

1 39

72

2

2111

2

10

2

?3

4

4

65 112

7

2

10

32

41

98 3 8,300 493 1,030 1,073 144 15,1b2

2 30 4 44 812 2

4 2

10 3 1'

2 1 412

1 5 8

9 13

355 6,255 368 704 894 1,945 10,5916 85 74 7 33 9 2232 28 10 38 98 92 29l

4 39 3 3 5 5,6 3 1 2 1

176 4,519 15 17 81 573 5,4039 759 137 461 112 65 1,58

2 7 1 11 17 432 3 5 2) 6

38 102 28 19 12 20

7

26 13 11 5 3 10

57 1 183

32

11 18 6 17 711 7673 4 3 51 13

3 67 70 52 86 39 31

9 228 428 12 67 102 312 97

19 321 20 363

8 378 20 19 113 5427 4 5

3 3 21 2 1 1 3

2

2 317 15 8117 3

1

4 231

210 1,051 54 27 304 1,63 1 2

1 1

1

17

273 11 2 115 31

201 762 39 7Y,7

dent,stry prP el, .,,e. and ,ettrirwy e-r.WL; re Ohl iloE'd frc,111r,tc,rnot,)r and E.,hange=, Pn.ird

L

Page 49: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

MEDICAL SCIENCES

,I 48

9

567 3,715

3 I 12

V}I,LJ

Z 2w.../ 6

ce) ,.> 1 t'rtc.) r-- uu g .

CIA 0. F -2).-.7., o 53 44,:xX u I 4_-A. 0.1

1,530

333

6

2

5 2

193 67 2,260 50210 3 13 2

4I8 15 433 1.7

6 2 8 1353 4 51

286 11 297 679 9 21/

40 2 42 8854 12 866 4

17

3096

101

83

1

12

5836

4

572

2

313 4335

101 kN

2

9 92 71

1 3

222 234 33

27

219 226

26 609 661

1 2

2 6

1

2

21 5';.3

414 1,143 73

9 20

12

2

3 1

2

18010

6

2

52285

14

30 1117 I 138

4 3

127

92

30

27

682

6

26

932

16219 26

149 3611 1

171 I 2

115 33

5

224 3

213

SOCIAL SCIENCES

Lo

741 g 0o:4 3

.45344-.4 A. 42)

272 372 359 231 325 1,159 4,948

7 4 7 11 104 162

57 574 4

6

1 6 7

6 1 6 3 16 4622

3 8 351 3

174 192 137 40 98 582 1,95114 15 10 57

2 12 4 2 3114

9 1I

39 53 10 27 16 187 37328 33 63 19 298

1 8

12 3 15 37

4 3 2 8 407

11 2 13831 33

3 72 75

1 5 1 2327 72 30 46 269 78716 lb3 3

9 18 43 14 6 96 4012 146 313 9 2 18

8 5 42 1 63 2944 43 3

1 2 1 16 37

7 92 45 6 25 519 9892

-1 2

2 32 341 7 8

1

3

7 92 45 18 479 924

7,382

2,203

718

22

133

69

640

9156

9435162204

23/

9249

5

311

1

1,366I

611

219

26

1,103

41

Page 50: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Table 6 U.S. STUDENTS ABROAD: FIELOS OF MAJOR INTEREST, 1971-1972 (Continued)

HOSTCOUNTRY TOTAL

ILalXa...1a0z'zi

z0

1--cr,

LLIz_in*.g

zI--'ti00i,,J

I-1Z

laz5z,,u

HUMANITIES

vC

6! V to,..,

. = .00

...0 01b41.:

rsocu,- !: = 4.1 ko)

.r ,0 CO .. 1 2 li t,.. TO

cac ...,re I-

.=4 2

a..c 5 i-...,

E

NEAR AND MIDDLE EAST 1,884Israel 1.307Lebanon 529F'akrstall 12Syria 1

Turkey 35

NORTH AMERICA 6,517Canada 6,517

OCEANIA 188Australia 159New Zealand 29

2828

91

8

118118

21

1

38

2711

147147

321

-

2

118118

55

4848

44

927

397397

22

946221

-I I

462462

3023

7

3838

8787

583127

--

186186

44-

311813

--

101101

--

1397562

1

1

_

579579

2020-

369226130

1

111

1,86C1,860

6C5::

'Includes dentistry. nursing. 0 re-rnedicflie, and eterinary medicine.

BEST COPY AVM LAail

42

Page 51: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

cL-

1

C

A li

t4a

. NN

.) G

A)

CP

Med

icin

e

Oth

er'

Tot

al

yr, O Nl (")

C),

coC

C

P.)

cdrU

V

OC

aNO

x-

k.G

.)

VI

C.,

0103

CO

(.0

(P C

DP

HY

SIC

AL

AN

DLI

FE

SC

IEN

CE

S

CO

Co

OD

CO

- A

lC

C C

ME

cono

mic

s

His

tory

Inte

rnat

iona

lR

elat

ions

Law

Pol

itica

lS

cien

ce

Psy

chol

ogy

SO

cial

Wor

k

Soc

iolo

gy

Oth

er

Tot

al

CH O

,

1,1

V)

t to

P..)

O.,

G.)

WO

v

i1

NN

C,

NP.

)0,

CO

v,to

ww N

Jjr.

w 6.)

IC

.L)

CO

:1

%SD

(0

Co

C'd

Cr

v w

Cr

a,.7

;

Na

tD(.

.)

NW

iwi

GY

)

17)

G..)

01 N

a f..

.)

---

A 0

1A

C )

03 GO

G0.

O

,0t.

P.) cr, c

ocr

)

N to

Na

PO

'

- V

03

CM

01

0 0,

CO

ALL

OT

HE

R

Page 52: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Table 7 -U.S. INSTITUTIONS REPORTING FOREIGN SCHOLARS, U,S, FACULTY MEMBERS ABROAD,AND FOREIGN STUDENTS, 1972-1913

The nitOrIllatIOn given below represents the results ut three separiite sur-veys. pre figures on foreign scholars visiting U.S. colleges and unii,ersitiesand on U S faculty Plrjlr bors abroad resulted trOCI a survey of 1,406 inStaiifmrIS (see page 13), while data oci foreign students were obtainedtroll, a survey of 2,280 institutions (see page 13). Undergraduate and grad

nate students re indicated iii columns U and G. f hose indicated in colorer,0 Include "special students and those wlio did not answer Pie questionconcerning academic status. (A "special" student is an undergraduate whois rlol enrolled for a degree.) The total of these three categories is indi-cated in column 1.

.,::Aiq.

ALABAMA 55Aii+bania State Only .

MontgomeryAlabama. U mv. et

Total) 33Campus

Hontsville Cainpns 3University Campos

Auburn Limy , Auburn 13Birningharn Southern

Coll ,

*Cullman Coll C.:unman'Gadsden State Jr. Coll

GadsdenName of Jesus Hosp.

Schs, of MedicalTechnology & Cyto-technology. Gadsden

Jacksonville State lJniv..Jacksonville

*Jefferson State Jr. Coll .Birmingham

Judson Coil , MarionMobile Cod. MobileMontevallo, Univ. of,

MontevalloSt Bernard Coll,

St. BernardSacntord IAnw, Birtnii)ghtvn

'Snead State Jr. Coll, Once'Southern (Anon State Jr.

Coll., WadleySpring H111 Coll , MobileStillman Con , TuscaloosaTroy State Liner (Total,

MontgomeryTroy

I ciskegee. lebt. ru..Aegee

VY,31Ker (.15per

ALASKA 2Alaska Mettics.list 3.16u;

Anchoragetiniy. of, Fairtionis

ARIZONA 136Arizona State Unlv., TempeArizona, Univ. of, Tucson 103

'Arizona ii'Vestern Coll. YumaCO(ThISe COO Di..ligiaS'Eastern Arizona Coil .

CoilCOIL

Northern Antir13 lJir vlagsta't

Mt,/ r,(J..1

TucsonPres, Ott Coil .

!.., 1.1:;cr r

[At

47

1

26

42213

3

2

783i40

Total

i9 u

296

44132U11

43

102

24

11

3612

11

53

15

5

2

61

31

7

24

782242353

8

19

FOREIGN U.SSC.HOtARS I/WU( TY

10,840 6,589

03;39,11 SlUtiENIS

289 9 574

71 11538 5117 3716 21

127 170

102

24

2 2

3 20

3612

1 12

IS

3

5

1 3

63 6 133

15 3 49

1 1

14 2

5517 42 1,421168 11 421361 28 742

81 10

in

83

4

FOREIGN STUDENTS1.1 G 0

73,968 62,624 5.505 146,097

IORElSiS'T'HOIANS

Thunderbird Graduate Sch,of International Man-agement, Glendale

ARKANSAS 1

Arkansas Cell., ElatesvillaArkansas State Univ.,

State UniversityArkansas. Univ. of (Total) 1

FayettevilleLittle Rock 1

MonticelloPint Bluff

Harding Cold, , SearcyHenderson State Coll.,

ArkadelphiaHendrix Coll., ConwayOzarks, Coll. of the,

ClarksvilleSouthern State Coll.,

Magnolia

CALIFORNIA 1,567Ambassador Coll , PasadenaAmerican Baptist Sera of

the 'West, BerkeleyArt Center Coll. of Design,

The, Los AngelesAzusa Pacific Coll., Azusa

'Hal,,ersfietc1Co'l . BakersfieldBethany Bible Co!'..

Santa Cru,!Eliola Coll. (Total)

Biala , La MiradaTalbot Theo. Sem

la MiradaBrooks lnst , Santa BarbaraCatri' 0 Coll , Apto5California BeplistCull.,

RiversideCalifornia Coll. of Commerce.

bong BeachCalifornia Hosp. Sch. of

Nursing, Lo, AngelesCalifornia lost, of the Ails,

Valencia 11

Califernia East of Technology.Pasadena 161,

California Lutheran CollThousand CIA%

C.Iltfornta State v. &

Coils. (Total) 54

Polytechnic State limy.San k ObIC/14j

Stale . Dommp,i,ez FillState Colt., San BernardinoState cc,L; tieaarrrn

S

11(11)1$ U

25 1374

2125 5524 38

1 449

16

87

23

3

833 13,73730

523418

152525

10

7

29

147

1

20 55

I I

118 3.180

428

12/

10f/fIVI SfUniN1S6 0

57 57

118 10 2651 5

5 5 31110 5 170105 5 148

5 949

16

1 97

1 24

3

8,460 446 22,6437 1 38

2

2 544 38

1 19

1 1611 1 37

1 1 27

JO 106 3 19

29

20 6 182

3 4

116 3 234

2 13

1,311 68 4,559

1r) 4 562 101 153 10

,c1r- jr, t

F"C",10, I i« th.: I .11.

:4 BEST COPY AVAILABLE

Page 53: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

State Coll . Slams tausState Univ., ChicoState Univ., FresnoState Univ , FullertonState Univ , HumboldtState linty . one BeachState C7tr., Lc)s IIStole llniv, NorthridgeState liner. . Sacramento ItState Univ . San Diego

Frill II S 10111 GIrsrAF, it a 11

b 13

State limy Sail Francisco 8State Univ , Si o Jose

California, Limy. of ;Tote.) 930Berkeley 650DavisIrvine 10Los AngelesRivers do 4?Sill Diegotiaii i aili",5c0Santa BarbaraSanta Crut

'Canada Coil . Redii,iiiii I city' Canyons Coll. of t hr..

Valencia B 8Cerritos Coll , 'Norwalk 91 91Chabot Coll , Haoard 1 8 2 1 11Chapman Cell Orange 16 21 3 106Church Div,iiity Sri, of the

Pacific, Berkeley 1 1 I'Citrus Coll, Azusa 42 42'City Coll, of San FraricIS,Tia 328 1 329Claremont Culls. Tot,i1P I 12 56 37 93Claremont Graduate Sch.Claremont 2 37 37Claremont Men's Coa .

Claremont 2 25 25Flan, ey Mudd Coll ,Claremont I 2 1.0 10Pitzcr Coll Claremard 1 6 6Pomona Coil , CI:freewill 5 ll 11Scripps Coll , Claremont 4 4Cogswell Polytechnicat coilSan Francisco 35 3 1 40

Coliinibia Coll . Los Angel vs I 13 4 17' Compton Coll . Compton 308 308' Contra Costa Colt ,Safi Cilt)ii.) 80 80'Cuesta Coll , Sii n 1 Las 0 b sec, 15 15'Cypress Coll , Cypress 11 11'De Ann Coll , hituertino ?1 21'Desert, Coll of the.Patin Desert 19 1 23°Diablo Valley Coll,Pleasant Hal 88 1 89borrinicariColl 0.! Sari patmil 25 1 213'East Loy Angoies coilLos Angeles 3 3'El Camino Colt EI Canni10Clo.ilege 15 75'Foothill Coil, i os Altos Hills 21 1 12'Fresno City Coll , Fresno 81 1 85Fuller Theo Semi , Pasadell i 30 30'Fullerton Jr. Coll.,Fu leito6 90 11 110'Glendale Coll , Glerrjalo 114 11 25?Golden Gate Baptist Theo.Sem . Mill V31.,4 17 2 19Golden Gate Univ , SanFrancisco 13 15 1 29"Grossinnnt Col.. El Caton 1 9 30 1 31' Hartnett Colt , Sal ias 46 2 48Heald Coils. (Total) 14 7 21

Central California Cornmercial Colt , Fresno 3 3Heald Bus. Coil. 0,ilarttl I I I 12Heald Bus. Colt_Sacramento 2 2

Kelseyilenney CollSan Diego 4 4

1-1.1-.Ii N-Ir-t,.., Cat ()Win.; 11 r, 2 22

19

19

7

5381984919

16336

171 34

2 it8 35

1/ L, 1 2479 34 4 11/

250 98 6 354-69 30 99

8 12 20071 375 1,34)30() 150 0 55211.4 31 2 153171 IOU 5 277

522 216 13 /51510 235 27 772

2.464 3774 41 6.279437 1.329 14 1,180279 551 10 840

12 27 1 -101.150 1016 2 2,228

97 153 250168 247 2 417

12 146 1 159233 222 11 466

16 23 9941 41

'JciP14or riaautiorni. cad cther InNtItut.cnsth,,n four yeais. For Looter ink,mdto,..n oa studerots at these

Ins1,1A,00s, see raue

SCHOLAR)

"Humphreys Coll., Stockton'imperial Valley Coll., imperialJesuit Sc.h. of Theo. at

BerkeleyKaiser Foundation Rehabilita

tion Center. VallejoLatin American Bible inst. of

Calpfurnia. La PuenteLL F.E. Bible Coll.,

Los AngelesCornea Linda Univ. (Total)

La Sierra Campus,Riverside

Loma Linda Campus'Long Beach City Coll.,

Long Beach ,Los Angeles Baptist Coll.,

Newhall'Los Angeles City Coll.,

L -os AngelesLos Angeles Coll. of

C4thopractic, Glendale'Los Angeles Trade-Technical

Coll,, Los Angeles'Los Angeles Valley Coll.,

Van NuysLoyola Univ. of Los Angeles

& Maryrnount Coll.,Los Angeles

Marin, Coil. of, KentfieldMaryelnunt Coll., Palos

Verdes PeninsulaMenlo Coll., Menlo ParkMennonite Brethren Biblical

Sent. Fresno'Merced Coll., MercedMills Coll., Oakland 1

'Mira Costa Coll., CiceanscleMonterey Inst. of Foreign

Studies, Monterey'Monterey Peninsula Coll.,

MontereyMt. St. Mary's Coll.,

os Angeles'Mt. San Antonio Colt Walnut - 5 13'Mt. San JaciritoColl,,

Gilman Hot SpringsNaval Postgraduate Sera,

MontereyNew Clairvaux Abbey, VinaNorthrop inst. of Tech-

nology, InglewoodNotre Dame. Coll. el,

Belmont 9Occidental Coll.. los Angeles 1 1

'Orange Coast Coll. (Total) aGolden West Cell., Hunting

toll BeachOrange Coast Coll.,

Costa MesaPacific Coil., FresnoPacific Oaks Cell., PasadenaPacific Sch. of Religion.

BerkeleyPacific, Univ. of the (Total)

Elbert Covell Coil.,Stockton

Raymond Coil_ StocktonSan Francisco CampusStockton Campus

Palomar Community Coll.,San Marcos 1 1

'Pasadena City Coll.,Pasadena

Pasadena Coll,, PasadenaPepperdine Univ.. Los

Angeles1

`Peratta Coll. District (Total)Feather River Coll.. QuincyMerritt Cot I 0 vi lent

1

SIlIDEFRS0

151 10

19 19

10 10

1 1 '2 4195 I70 13 378

150 23 9 18245 147 4 196

44 44

5 6

80 80

12 3 1 16

50 50

11 11

78 56 1 135

32 2 1 3548

111 56

3

16

1 49

1611

1 1 58

7 16 3 26

65 2 67

22

13

22

27 141 3 1711 1 2

114 12 42 168

631654

18

I 212

a 3618 1

3 1

662954

18

361 20

7 72 20 95 39 2 136

46 1

1

62 20 48 32

1,168

47

82

1,16842 16 2 60

206 61 5 27259 2 61

1

60Coa

FST Cei'Y AVAIP9a45

Page 54: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

ilNtUfi

Redlands, Wily. of. Redlands 1

'Redwoods, Cull. of the,Eureka

'Reed ley COL. Reedit!),Russell Coll., Burlingame

'Sarr City CoySacramento

St. Mary's Coll, of Clan-forma, Moraga 3

'San Bernardino Valley Coll.,San Bernardino

San Diego Coll. of togi-neering. San Diego

San Diego Mesa Cod.,San Diego 1

San Diego, Choy. or.San Diego

San Francisco Art Inst ,

San FranciscoSan Francisco Conservatory

of Music, Sari FuriciscoSari Francisco thou. Sem ,

San Anselmo 2San Francisco. Urns. ot,

San Fr3OCISCO'San Joaquin Delta CO.,

StocktonSari Jose 8 ble Coll.,

San Jose'San Jose City Coil., San Jose'Sah Mateo, Coll. of,

San Mateo'Santa Aria Call., Santa AriaSanta Clara, Univ. of,

Santa Clara'Santa Rosa Jr. Coil.,

Santa Rosa, 'Shasta Coll.. Redding

Simpson Coil., San Francisco'Skyline Coll.. San Bruno'Solaria Community Coll.,

Suisun CitySouthern Caldornia Sch. of

Theology, ClaremontSouthern California, Univ. of.

Los Angeles '39Southwestern Coll.,

Chula VistaStanford Univ.. Stanford 274

'Taft Coll., TaftJ. S. International Univ.,

San Diego'Ventura Con . Ventura'Victor Valley Coll.,

Victor-vineNest Coast Univ.,

Los Angeles'West Hills Community Coll.,

Coa'ingaWestrront Coll..

Santa BarbaraWhittier Coll.. Whittier',loodbury CoLl.. Los Angeles

'Yosemite Jr. Coll. District(Total)

Columbia Jr. Coll.,Columbia

Modesto Jr. Coii,. Modesto'Yuba Community Colt.,

Marysville

COLORADO

'Aims Coil.. Greeley'Arapahoe Commun by Coil .

LittletonC: (1s.74,3,10 C.()

Springs

IA .1 ii iv I.

8 311

1093

lc

5 24

.39

2

1

ItlREiGm U S FOPEIGN SIUDENfSSCHOLARS FACILELY U G ()

3 5 47 Colorado Sch. of Mines.Golden

10 Colorado State Univ.,9 Fort Collins3 Colorado, Univ. of (Total)

Boulder16 Colorado Springs

Denver2 1 27 'Community Coll. of Deriver,

Auraira Campus39 Conservative Baptist Theo.

Sent., Deriver2 Denver, Univ. of, Denver

Fort Lewis Coll., Durango'Mesa Coll., Grand JunctionMetropolitan State Coll.,

5 5 Denver'Northeastern Jr. Coll.,

26 SterlingNorthern Colorado, Univ. of,

6 Greeley'Otero Jr. Coll., La Junta

2 'Rangely Coil., RangelyRegis Coil., Denver

839 Southern Colorado StateColl., Pueblo

56 Temple Buell Coll., Denver`Trinidad State Jr. Coll.,

2 Trinidad25 U.S. Air Force Acad.,

USAF Academy77 Western State Coll. of40 Colorado, Gunnison

22 3 1

5 1

1 2

772 56 11

54 2

2

25

774 40

134 220 6 360

17 1710 2 12

5 522 22

13 13

1

26 483 735 63 1,281

1

141 1,131 25 1,29718 18

47 56 37 1401 10 10

3 3

73 114 3 190

5 11 111 82 5 1 88

835 80 14 929

38 5 43

7 731 5 36

55 1 56

147 92 706 782 63 1,55120

3F; 35

1 3 12 1 1

C 'tie s re' 1.o.".3r and etheroPier,nog vr:6;riois of 1,sstO.in f o., soar; Fr.,r f 4rtttor tt 'tto-,,too c i si,siHr:15 it tocse0'41(4,1(v:4,5 see rat l[.

4b

CONNECTICUTA/bertLis Magnus Cod.,

New HavenAnnhurst Coil , WoodstockBridgeport, Univ. of,

BridgeportCentral Connecticut State

Coll., New Britain 10Connecticut Cog., New

London 2Connecticut, Univ. of (Total) 7

Farrington 7'GrotonHartfordSlamlordStorrs

'Waterbury'Hartford Coll. for Women.

Hart fordHartford Sem. Foundation,

HartfordHartford, Univ. of (Total)

Hartford, Univ. of,West Hartford

S.1. Ward Technical Coll.,West Hartford

'Housatonic Corm/Amity Coll.,Bridgeport

Coll., New London'Mohegan CommOnity Coll.,

Norwich'Northwestern Connecticut

Community Coll..Winsted

Paier Sch. of Art, Hamden'Post Jr. Coll., WaterburyQuinnipiac Colt , HamdenSacred Heart Univ.,

BridgeportSt Alphonsus Sem.-Coll.,

SadlietdSt Jnisrph Cu.,ol West

Hartford

1 33 57 90

43 45 32 234 2 26866 29 197 292 22 51166 29 167 268 12 447

4 4 7 1526 20 3 49

19 19

6 625 13 ) 04 165 36 245

18 1 1912 12

22 2 2 26

24 24

- 53 83 - 136- 20 - 202 - 2

_ 5 _ 5

2 2 36 - - 36- - 12 - 12

17 - - 17

9 19 19

13 1 14

281 152 490 855 96 1,441

1 1 12 3 2 175 - 15 20

- 2 42 107 149

BESI COO NVAILAUE

6 7 1 2 1063 229 3 295

- 1 - 1_ 3 _ 3

2 -- 255 229 3 287

2 - 2

_ 5 _ 5

7 791 49 1 141

86 49 1 136

5 5

9 99 9

3 3

3 34 2 63 3

7

3 3

2 2

Page 55: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

(Intl ir,lAt

Southern Connecticut StateColl., New Haven

Trinity Coil , HartfordWesleyan Univ., MiddletownWestern Connecticut State

Coll . DanburyYale Univ New Haven 242

LI '3 l'URELiN STUDENTS141.,e1 !r 0

20 28 65 1135 3 1 9

17 IS 21 14 3 38

121 170 411 2 586

DELAWARE 21'Brandywine Coll., Wilmington`Delaware Technical &

Community Coll .Georgetown

Delaware, Univ. of. Newark*Goldey Beacon', Coll.,

Wilmington'Wesley Coll., DoverWilmington Coll New Castle 1

61 146 209 29 38410 10

6 620 61 117 209 29 355

10 103 3

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA 188 46 3,565 2.058 393 6,016American Univ. 12 20 688 295 48 1,031Calholic Univ, of America 6 14 198 405 5 608tiunbarton Coll. of

Holy Cross - 20 - 20Federal City Coil. - 533 70 132 735Gallaudet Coll 93 6 1 :COGeorge Washington Um i. 191 384 37 612Georgetown Univ. 100 o 200 241 159 600Howard Univ. 67 3 1.528 557 2.085

'Immaculata Coil ofWashington 38 - 38

Johns Hopkins Sch, ofAdvanced InternatioraStudies 78 - 78

'Marjorie Webster Coll, 12 12'Mt. Vernon Coll. 11 11Strayer Coil - 47 3 2 52Trinity Coll. 3 - -U.S. Dept of Agricultu4

Graduate Sch. 6 11 9 26Wesley Tneo. Sern. 8 8

FLORIDA 264Barry Coil.. Mom,Bethune Cook.man Coll.,

Daytona Beach'Brevard Community Coll.,

Cocoa*Central Florida Community

182 7,719 1,249 iu 5 9,7631 82 2 84

10 10

16 16

Coil, Ocala 12 12Eckerd Coll . St. Petersburg 2 11 8 2 1 11Embry-Riddle Aeronautical

Univ., Daytona BeachFlorida Atlantic Univ.,

Boca Raton'Florida Coll., Temple Terrace'Florida Keys Community

Coll . Key WestFlorida Southern Coll

LakelandFlorida State Uriry

TallahasseeFlorida, Univ. of,

Gainesville 172'Gulf Coast Community Coll.,

Panama City'Hillsborough Community

Coll., TampaJacksonville Univ.,

Jacksonville'Jones Coll., JacksonvilleLake City Community Coil.,

Lake City'Lake-Sumter Community

Coll.. Leesburg 1"Miami Dade Jr. Coil., Miami 5.869 1 5.870

22 22

5 111 1116 6

4 4

19 1 1 21

60 112 283 2 397

91 590 563 1 1,154

8 8

31 31

2 6

'.1uhh), colleges. commah.di colleges. techn,cat ,r1std,rtons, and other ostd,t.onsoffering progra.-ns of 'ess than four yea -s. Cor further ,oto,raton on students at theseinsotatqtns. see Table 4.

FOREIGN US FOREIGN STUDENTSSCHOLARS

Miami, Univ. of,Coral Gables 32 345 340 669 1,354

New Coil,, Sarasota 1 2'North Florida Jr. Coll.,

MadisonNova Univ.. Fort Lauderdale

Okaloosa Walton Jr. Coll.,Niceville

'Palm Beach Jr. Coll.,lake Worth

Palm Beach, Univ. of, WestPalm Beach

'Pensacola Jr, Coll.,Pensacola 20 20

Rollins Coll., Winter Park 9 2 11'St. John's River Jr. Coll.,

PalatkaSt, Leo Coll., St. Leo

'St. Petersburg Jr. Coll.(Total} - 27 27

Clearwater 3 3St. Petersburg 24

'Santa Fe Community Coll.,Gainesvi le 162 162

South-Eastern Bible Coil.,Lakeland

South Florida, Univ. of,Tampa 10 10 169 37 3 209

Stetson Unlv., DeLand 17 7 24'Tallahassee Community

Coll.. Tallahassee 31 31Tampa. Univ. of, Tampa 2 22 3 25University Hosp. of

jacksonyllte 2 2 4'Valencia Community Coll.,

Orlando aWebber Coll., Babson Park 7 7West Florida, Univ. of,

Pensacola 13 3 16

5 54 4

2 2

43 1 44

1 1

21 2114

4 4

GEORGIA 130Agnes Scott Coll., Decatur -

'Albany Jr. all., AlbanyAtlanta Sch, of Art, AtlantaAtlanta Univ., AtlantaAugusta Coif, AugustaBerry Coll.. Mt. BerryClark Coll., AtlantaColumbus Coll., Columbus

'DeKalb Community Coll.,Clarkston

Emory Univ., AtlantaFort Valley State Coil.,

Fort Valley'Gainesville Jr. Coll.,

GainesvilleGeorgia Coll MilledgevilleGeorgia Inst. of Technology

(Total) 32Georgia Inst,of Technology,

Atlanta 32Southern technical Inst..

MariettaGeorgia Southern Coll.,

StatesboroGeorgia State Univ..

Atlanta 12Georgia. Univ. of. Athens A0John Marshall Umv., Atlanta --Medical Coll. of Georgia,

Augusta'Middle Georgia Coll..

CochranMorehouse Coll., AtlantaMorris Brown Coll., AtlantaNorth Georgia Colt,

Dahlonega

55 605 749 347 1,7011 6 - - 6

2 22 2

41 4110 - 1 11

1 - 12 - 12- 20 - 201 5 5

26 1 2730 24 6 57 63

6 6

1 I 113 3

4 175 286 5 466

4 120 286 5 411

55 55

2

6 75 59 272 4065 92 264 65 421

3 2 5

5 19 19

39 396 1 25 1 26

8 8

1

47

Page 56: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Saiiannati State Coll .Savannah

Shot WI' COIL. Rome'South Georgia Coll , Detigias

i`iaiathern Sir or Cl' 11,11 {,Attatit t

Toccoa Tans hestf occoa Falls

'Truett McConheni CollCleveland

Valdosta State Coll, ValdostaWesleyan loll Maconwest Georgia Coll Carrollton

HAWAIICha miriade Coll of

HonoluluChurch Coll. of Hawaii, LateHawaii Loa Coil., Ka-eoheHahan C011.

tiorvoluhlHaNalt. Univ. of (fetal}

Ha .ria!, Univ. of,Honolutia 318

tiao Coll , Had 1

Kirpiolani .

Hettolilla'Kauai Community Coil..

Lihue'Leeward CDP'rnm.rvly Coll ,

Pearl City

9 6

7

B

5

143

9 16

cittUtfils

1

824

5

191 4

26

319 44 1,596 688 30 2,316

98454 6

20

4 102460

21

45 45319 44 981 681 26 1,688

IDAHOBoise State Coll., BoiseIdaho, Col/. of. CalchiveilIdaho State Univ., PocateiloIdaho. Univ ot, Moscow

'North Idaho Coll.,Coder d'Alene

Northwest Nazarene Coil.,Nampa

'Ricks Con., Rexburg'Southern Idaho, Coll. of,

Twin Falls

43 662 579 5 1,3461 45 2 1 49

189

40

44

2 36822

32 41

55

3

20 209

40

44

128 4 5006 281 4

13 1 55107 3 165

3

12 1 13222

10

222

10

1111/401S 544 318 4,142 4.288 372 8.802Aero-Space Inst . Chicago 37 37Art ins! of Chicago, Sch of

the Chicago 12 6 18Aurora Coll., Aurora 8 8Bethany The° Sem..

Oak Brook 1 1

Blackburn Coll , Carlinville 18 18'Black Hawk Con., Moline 3 3Bradley Univ, Peoria '20 12 3 35Catholic Theo Union.

Chicago 1 1

'Central YMCA CommunityCoil., Chicago 2 798 187 985

Chicago State Univ.. Chicago 19 3 26Oh cago Technical

Chicago 154 5 159Chicago Theo Sern Chicago - 6 6Chicago, Univ. of, Chicago 167City Colls of Chicago lTotaa I

City Colls, of Chicago'Loop Colt

Mayla,r COI).Olive Harkey Coil

CoiYordta Teachers COIL,River Forest

'Danville Jr Coil DanvilleCe Paul Univ. ChicagoEastern hilnois lJr

53 51325

51328 53

13 281 1

11 11

5 1519

4 42

8 2319

31 4 77

48 18 1E2

,nst;tut,or,,s, ar..1 or.er ir!st..t,,t,onsng .ri'SS than fO, vat sl.,,:fe,-.ts at hear'

rst,I.A...7.,s, see T.A.,t,'47. I,

48

FOREIGN

SCI(01ARS

Elgin Commutlity Coll., ElginElmhurst Coll.. E.IrrilturstEureka Coll., EurekaEvangelical Theo. Sent.,

Naperville'Teliciar} Coll. ChicagoGarrett Theo, Sem., EvanstonGeorge Williams Coll.,

Downers GroveHebrew Theo. Coll., SkokieHinsdale Sanitarium &

Hosp. Sch. of MedicalTechnology, Hinsdale

'Illinois Central Coll.,East Peoria

Illinois Coll.. JacksonvilleIllinois Inst. of Technology.

ChicagoIllinois Slate Univ., Normal -IIIinols, Univ. of (Total) 238

Chicago Circle Campus 15Medical Center, Chicago 26Urbana Campus 197

Illinois Wesleyan Univ.,Bloomington

Industrial EngineeringColl., Chicago

Judson Coll., Elgin'Kendall Coll.. EvanstonKnox Coll., GalesburgLake Forest Coll,,

Lake Forest 8'Lewis 8 Clark Community

Coll, GodfreyLewis Coil., LockportLoyola Univ. of Chicago

(Iota')Sch. of

Theology, North AuroraLoyola Univ. of C,ilicago

Lutheran Sch. of Theo. atChicago

MacMurrayJacksonville

"Mallinckrodt Colt., WilmetteMcCormick Theo. Sem.,

ChicagoMOtierldree Colin LebanonMi/likin Univ., DecaturMonmouth Coll., MonmouthMoody Bible inst., Chicago

'Morton Coll., CiceroMundelein Coil,. ChicagoNorth Central Coll.,

Naperville 1

Northeastern IllinoisUniv., Chicago

Northern Ill tiers iSniv..DeKalb 8

Northwestern Univ, (Total) 100Chicago 3Evanston 97

Olivet Nazarene Cola,Kankakee

Oregon Bible Coil.. Oregon'Parkland Co/t, ChampaignPrincipia Coll, ElsahRoosevelt Univ., ChicagoRosary Coll., River forestSt. Xavier Coll ChicagoShimer Coll.. mt. CarrollSouthern Illinois

CarbondaleSouthern Illinois Univ.,

EctwardsvitleSpertus Coll. of Jadalca,

Chic ago

1

BEST CCVY AVAILABLE

USIAClit l'i`

FOREIGN N'COEfif0 1

9 9

5 5

9 95 -5

4 6 6

29 15 453 1 4

2 22 2

213 609 82213 120 136 1 257

174 1,292 1,430 27 2,74929 956 207 5 1,168

39 73 112145 297 1.150 22 1.469

10 10

13 2 155 I 6

19 194

2

4 47

11 25 110 135

225 110 135

3 4 4

3 31 6 7

2 16 162 -2 -3 8 8.

48 2 1 518 8

24 2 26

2 5 1 6

2

25 93 .3 12122 63 595 5 663

10 1021 63 585 5 653

1 12 5 10 271 1

31 314 1 11 1 3 15

235 139 16 39013 19 32

4 4

345 318 15 678

69 33 3 105

3 3

Page 57: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

F,vri.1,NiSIUDttilS

JOKII;tv US_ fORIICits MINIS.1 11t 1,1111

0SailltikilS I AUL lt b C 0

"Soringhelli Colt u' Ilinwrs,IOWA 110 170 533 827 8 1,368

Springfield6 6 'American Inst. of Bus.,Thornton Community Cool(

Des Moines2 2

South Holland3

3 Aquinas Inst., Dubuque -Trinity Christian Coll.,

Palos tieigrit,4d

s '31Buena Vista Coll.,

Storm Lake1

1 2

Trinity Coil., Deertield15

Central Coll., Pella 2 10 27 1 28

`Triton Coll. River Grove13 13 Clarke Coll., Dubuque

33

Western Illinois Uir v ,

Coe Colt., Cedar Rap ids 2 7 6 1

Macomb98 87 5 190 Cornell Coll., Mt, Vernon

1 8 1 9

Wheaton Coll., 'Wheaton 3 23 25 48 'Des Moines Area CommunityColl., Ankeny

2 9

1NOIANA 357 362 1,201 1,479 112 2,792 Drake Urns., ()es Moines10 4 14

Anderson Coll., Anderson22 3 2 27 Dubuque, Univ. of (Total)

1 5Associated Mearionite

Bibi cal Sems., Elkhart - 16 16Dubuque Theo. Sem.,

Dubuque1

Ball State Univ. Muncie. Ti .29 81 2 112 Dubuque, Univ. ot,Bethel Coil , Mishawaka2

Dubuque - 5 5Butler Univ.. Indianapolis

14 6 1 21 Ellsworth Community Colt.,Christian Theo. Sem.Iowa Falls 2

Indianapolis9 9 Graceland Col.. Larnoni 2 - 34 1 35

Concordia Sr. Col ,

IOrt Wayne5 5

'Grand View Coll.,Des Moines - 20

1 21

DePauw Univ., Greencastle 6 32 13 1 14 Grinnell Colt, Grinnell1 3 9 - 9

Elkhart Inst. of TechnologyElkhart

5 5"Hawkeye Inst. of Technology,

Waterloo _1 _

1

Evansville, Limy, of,Evunsivire

3 22 6 4 32'Iowa Central C.ornmunity

Coll., Fort Dodge - 12 12

Fort Wayne bible Colt,Iowa State Univ., Ames 31 52 163 453 2 618

Fort Wayne5 5 Iowa, Univ, of, Iowa City 63 66 67 341 408

Franklin COIL FfaOkteI15

1.5 'Iowa Western CommunityGoshen Coll., Goshen t 8 45 1 2 43 Coll. (Total)3 _ 3

Grace Theo. Sem. & Coll.,Clarinda

2 - 2

Winona Lake11 11 Council Bluffs

11

Hanover Coll., Hanover9 2 1 12 'Kirkwood Community Coll.,'Holy Cross Jr. Coll.,

Cedar Rapids10 - 10

Notre Dame6 6 Locos Coll., Dubuque

1 5 - 5

Huntington Coll,, Huntington13 13 Luther Coll., Decorah

1 15 15

Inclua,ia Central Coll.,Ind,anpchs

9 10'Marshalltown Community

Coll Marshalltown14 14

Indiana inst. of Technology.

Marycrest Coll., Davenport1

1 12

Fort Wayne155 155

Morningside Call., Sioux City 10 10

Indiana Northern Univ.,Gas City

50 50Mt. Mercy Coll.,

Cedar Rapids2

Indiana State Univ..

'Mt. St. Clare Coil,. Clinton3 3

Terre Haute45 36 86 167 Northern Iowa, Univ. of,Indiana Univ., Bloomington 181 146 422 1,016 5 1,443 Cedar Falls

1 6 18 18 36

'international Jr. CollFort Wayne

4 4Northwestern Coll.,

Orange City1 10 1 11

'Lincolnland Technical

Osteopathic Medicine &inst., Esari.sylie

1 Surgery, Con, of,Manchester Colt, NorthDes Moines

4 4

Manchester 2 4 12'Ottumwa Heights CollMarian Coll., Indianapolis

15 15 Ottumwa -- 7 - _ 7

Marion Colt, Marion8 8 Parsons Coll., Fairfield

1 10 - - 10

Notre Dame. Univ. of,

St. Ambrose Coll., Davenport -- 5 _ 5

Notre Dame - 107 210 1 318 Simpson Col. , Indianola _ _

Purdue Univ., Lafayette 129 84 -'Southeastern CommunityRoseillulman Inst. of

Coll., Keokuk2 2

Technology. Terre Haute1 6 6

`Southwestern CommunitySt. Francis Coil., Fort Wayne 19 24 43 Coll., Creston

4 4

St. Joseph's Coll. (Total15 15 Upper Iowa Coll., Fayette

11

St_ Joseph's Calumet

'Waldorf Coll., Forest City8

Colt., East Chicago12 12 Wartburg Coll . Waverly 5 6 6

Rensselaer3

3 Wartburg Theo. Sem.,St. Mary-of-the-Woods Colt,Dubuque

-- 7 7

St. Mary of-the-Woods 2 2 7 3 LO Westmar Coll.. Le Mori,' - 2 6 6

St. Mary's Coil.. Notre Dame - 2William Penn Coll., Oskaloosa - - 6 - 6

Taylor Univ.. uplandTri-State Coll., Angola 56 1 57

KANSAS 69 115 819 1.128 81 2,028

Valparaiso Technical lost,

Baker Univ., Baldwin City1 2 28 2 30

Va;paraiso6 6

Benedictine Coll., Atchison11 - 11

Valparaiso tiny, Valparaiso1 3 11 3 3 17

Bethany Coll., lindsborg4

1 5

'Vincennes ticir Vince.r.res 66 66Bethel Coll., North Newton 5 11 2 13

Wabash Col' Crawfordsville 4 14 1 15 'Central Coll., McPherson - - 4 4

'Wabash Valley Technical

Colby Community Jr., Coil .

Inst., Terre Hautecof by

1 1

Jumer ,:,?lieges le; hrns.ttat,e,,isoffe,,g

'ess ma, ,ears F 1,rfra, mat.,.;f1 on students at tl'esrinst t,t=c.rs. see Table 4

rt.,49

Page 58: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

r'tlf IOMH, i

' Cowley County CommunityColl., Arkansas City

Emporia, Coil. of, EmporiaFort Hays Kansas State

Cull, Ha {sGarden l'rty COWmunkty

Jr. Coll., Garden City'Hesston Cull., HesstonHutchinson Community Jr.

Co'.. Hutchinson'independence Community

Jr. Coll., Independence*Johnson County Community

Cod,, Overland ParkKansas State Coll. of

PittsburgKansas State Teachers Loll.,

EmporiaKansas State Urnv,

Manhattan'Kansas Technical Inst.,

SalinaKansas, Univ. at (Total)

Kansas CityLawrence

abette Community Jr.CO.. Parsons

Marymotint Coll., Sa inaMcPherson Coll.. McPhersonMid America Nazarene Coll.,

Olathe' Neosho County Community

Jr. Coll., Chanute'Pratt Community Jr. Col,..

PrattSacred Heart Coll., WichitaSt. Mary Coll , LeavenworthSouthwestern Coll., WinfieldSterling Coll.. SterlingTabor Coll_ HillsboroWashburn Univ. of TopekaWichita State Univ , Wichita

KENTUCKYAsbury Co/1,, 'iVilmore

. Asbury Theo. Sem.,Bel/armine Coil,. LouisvilleBerea Coll., BereaBrescia Coll_ OwensboroCentre Coll. of Kentucky,

DanvilleEastern Kentucky Univ,

RichmondGeorgetown Coll ,

Georgetown'Kentucky Mountain Bible

lost., VancleveKentucky, Univ. of,

LexingtonKentucky Wesleyan Col.

OwensboroLees Jr, Coll . Jackson

1

Lexington Theo. Sem .

Lexington'Lindsey Wilson Coil,.

ColumbiaLouisville Presbyterian

Theo. Sem., LoaisvilleLouisvil-e, Univ. of,

LouisvilleMurray State Univ., MurraySt. Mary's Coll.. St. MarySpalding Cod., Louisville

'Sue Bennett Coll., LondonThomas More Coll..

Fort MitchellTransylvania Univ., Lexington -

1

ORENbY SILLD1111513

11

25 26

18 15 33

11

13 13

8 8

7 8

55 12 2 129

1 76 88 164

8 52 72 431 10 513

2 257 38 252 464 57 77321 1 2 9 1136 37 250 455 57 752

16 161

2 19 1 20

2 2

12 12

- 2 - 216 16/ 29 1 1 31

3 2 59 9

28 - 1 2929 2 1 3213 66 53 1 120

17 46 355 301 1914 - 1

1 - 40 -12 1 3

_ 1

4

6751540166718

19 20 39

3 3

3 3

1.0 18 37 102 5 144

13 13

1

1

2 2

2 14 99 105 8 2123 - 16 6 221

1

7 1 82 2

12 13

r'n'runily techn,. ,3i ,r,s1,7,t,ons. and other l'S(1}1.1tIOnS;,PCV,13,5 'ass than 'far years. For f,rth.r

rFofinaton on students at these,,StIta!,:xs. see Table 4

50

f0fl110fi USSttiCIARS ifiCUITY

Union Coll , BarbourvilleWestern Kentucky Univ,,

Bowling Green 6

1014101

0 1

I 8

25 21 1 47

LOUISIANA 46 62 1,201 742 139 2,082Centenary Coll. of LouisianaShreveport

1

Charity Hasp. Sch. ofNursing, New Orleans - 1 2'Delgado Jr. Call., NewOrleans - 38 38Louisiana Coll Pineville - 7 7Louisiana State Univ,,(Total) 19 24 881 542 76 1,499Baton Rouge 19 24 674 473 76 1,223"Eunice - - 1 -- - 1New Orleans - 205 69 - 274Shreveport - 1 -- - tLouisiana Tech Univ., Ruston - 4 14 9 - 23Mc Neese State Univ..Lake Charles - 18 12 - 30Northeast Louisiana Univ,,Monroe 2 - - - -Northwestem State Univ.of Louisiana,Natchitoches - 18 29 5 52St. Mary's DominicanColl., New Orleans - 14 1 9 24Southeastern LouisianaUniv., Hammond - 58 12 1 71Southern Univ, in BatonRouge - 17 1 - 18Southwestern Louisiana,Univ. of, Lafayette - 5 80 18 5 103Tulane Univ. of Louisiana,New Orleans 24 29 69 117 4 190Xavier Univ. of towsiana,New Orleans - 24 1 - 25

MAINE

Bangor Theo. Sem., BangorBates Coll., Lewiston8owdoin Coll,, BrunswickColby Coll., WatervilleHasson Coll,, BangorMaine, Univ. of (Total}

AugustaFort KentOronoPortland

Nasson Coll., SpringvaleSt. Francis Coll., BiddefordSt, Joseph's Coll.,

North Windham'Southern Maine Vocational

Technical Inst., SouthPortland

Westbrook Coil., Portland

21

25 143 61 9 213- 1 3 42 24 - 3 276 17 - 17

12 26 1 - 27- 27 - 273 33 57 6 96- 3 _ 3

_ 30 57 6 932

2 1

- 2 2

3 _

2 27

7

966 769 43 1,778

24

119

MARYLAND 320 149Capitol Inst. of Tech-

nology. KensingtonColumbia Union Coll,,

Takoma ParkFrostburg State Coll.,

FrostburgGoucher Coll.. Towson

'Hagerstown Jr. Coll,,Hagerstown

Hayford Community Coll..Bel Air

Hood Colt., FrederickJohns Hopkins Univ

Baltimore 217Maryland, Univ. of (Total)

Baltimore Campus-Professional Sehs. 35 16

24

1 108 3 8

31 23

2

63

23

2

4

54 38 282 1 32182 567 442 14 1,023

REST COPY AVAILati

Page 59: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

I ORt s tORE GS SlliCENIS

Baltimore County Campus 1 1 -College Park 51 65 535 442 14 991Eastern Shore Campus 32 32Morgan State Coil.,Baltimore 125 33 4 162Mt. St. Mary's Coll.,Emmitsburg 1 9 9Notre Dame of Maryland,

of, Baltimore 9 9St. Joseph Coil Ernrinitsburg 3 3St. Mary's Sem. & Univ.,Baltimore

1

Towson State CollBaltimore 15 15 29U.S. Naval Acad.,Annapolis 23 -Washington Bible Coil,,Lanham 6

Washington Coil.,Chestertown 2 -

Washington Theo,Coalition, Silver Spring

Western Maryland Coll.,Westminster 10 10

9

23

6

2

9

MASSACHUSETTS 1,117 199 2,550 3,670 315 6,535American International COL,Springfield _ - 42 4 46Amherst Coll., Amherst 6 10 20 3 1 24Andover Newton Theo. Sch.,Newton Centre - - 9 - 9Anna Maria Coll., Paxton - 3 3Assumption Coil., Worcester 2 -Atlantic Chian Coil .

South Lancaster - 47 - 4 51Babson Coll., Babson park 54 16 70'Bay Path Jr. Coll.,Longmeadow 3 - 3Berklee Coll_ of Music,Boston 12 69 81Berkshire Christian CollLenox 2 1 3'Berkshire Community Coil.,Pittsfield - 9 - 9Boston Architectural CenterSch. of Architecture,Boston _ _ 18 5 3 26Boston Coll. (Total) 1 3 23 79 5 107Boston Coll., Chestnut Hill -- - 23 79 5 107Weston Coll., Cambridge 1 3 -. - -Boston Conservatory ofMusic, Boston - 1 2 3Boston State Colll, Boston - - 6 1 - 7Boston Univ., Boston 64 15 80 591 4 675Brandeis Univ., Waltham 20 23 80 103 4 187'Bristol Community Coll.,Fall River 5 - 5`Bryant & Stratton Sch ,

Boston 28 18 46Clark Univ.. Worcester 21 31 - 58Eastern Nazarene Coll..Wollaston 23 5 1 29'Endicott Jr. Coil., Bever; y - 22 22Episcopal Theo. Sch..Cambridge 1 1 8 8`Fisher Jr. Coll., Boston 10 - ICFitchburg State CcH.,Fitchburg 2 1 - 3Forsyth Dental Center.Boston

2 2Framingham State Coll..Framingham 1 10 1 11'Franklin Inst. of Boston 1E, 17Garland Jr, Coll.. Boston

Gordon Coll , 'irirenr,am 3 1n.Gordon Connell Theo. Sern

South Hamilton 3 I I1 11

2 42

'Junior coneges, commurwy cdi!eges, techn,ca1 Irsbiubons, and other t,StitutiCrisoffering programs of less than lour years For turtner ,nformat.on on students 31 theseinsttutons, see 1.3b/e 4.

10REIGN

SCHOLARS

` Greenfield Community Coll,,Greenfield -

Hampshire COIL, Amherst 2Harvard Univ., Cambridge 450Hellenic Coll., BrooklineHoly Cross, Coll, of the,

Worcester'Holyoke Community Coll.,

Holyoke'llasell Jr. Coll,, Auburndale'Leicester Jr, Coll., LeicesterLowell Technological Inst.,

Lowed

Massachusetts Coll. ofPharmacy, Boston

Massachusetts Inst. of Tech-nology, Cambridge 466

Massachusetts, Univ. cifI TOtall 20

Amherst 20Boston -

Merrimack Coll., NorthAndover -

Mt, Holyoke Coll,,South Hadley

'Mt. Ida Jr. CollNewton Centre

Museum of Fine Arts, Sohof the, Boston

New England Inst., Boston'Newbury Jr. Coll., BostonNewton Colt. of the

Sacred Heart, Newton"Newton Jr. Coll.,

NewtonvilleNorth Adams State Coll

North AdamsNortheastern Univ,, BostonOur Lady of the Elms,

Coll, of, Chicopee' Pine Manor Jr. Coll.,

Chestnut HillRegis Colt.. WestonSalem State Coil , SalemSalter Secretarial Sch..

WorcesterSimmons Coll., BostonSmith Coll. (Total)

Clarke Sch. for the Deaf,Northampton

Smith Coll,, Northampton 4Springfield Coll., Springfield

'Springfield TechnicalCommunity Coll.,Springfield

Stonehill Coll , NorthEaston

Swedenborg Sch, ofReligion. Newton -

Tufts Univ. (Total 45Boston 21Medford 24

Wellesley Coil., Wellesley 7Wentworth Inst., Boston -Western New England

Coll., Springfield -Wheaton Coll., NortonWheelock Coll., BostonWilliams Coil., Williamstown 1/ Woods Hole Oceanographic

Institution, Woods Hare 8'Worcester Jr. Coll.,

WorcesterWorcester Polytechnic Inst.,

WorcesterWorcester State Coll.,

Worcester

11S

IACULIY

34

FOREIGN SrL0EllISG 0

2 -

326 1,1289 5

5

4

1

3

53

2

1.50714

5

47

3

51 47 2 100

22 23 3 48

24 419 991 1 1,411

5050

5252

11

118117

1

8 8 39 16

4

1183

115

7 1

5

2

9

288172116

11

63

9

17 1 18

4 1 5456 164 620

3 6

1 131 12

3

31934

413 4

34 1212 18

12

5

3 1121

2 1126 661

4146

1463

I I 1

143 23 21

100

6

13123

32451

4 5030

12

5

4259

25970

1214

1 624

1 101

2 i 78 9.: 5 177

1ST COPY AVA!W"T'

5

51

15

Page 60: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

MICHIGAN 431 468Adrian Coil , Adrian - -Albion CoU , A bicpi 2 1

Alma Coll . Alma 2 14

AlpenaAndreas Univ, Berrien

SpringsAquinas Coll , Grand

RapidsArt Sch. of the Society of

Arts & Crafts, Detroit'Bay de Noc Community

Co I EscanabaCabin Coll , Grand RapidsCalvin Theo. Sem

Grand Rup dsCentral Michigan

011

Tid/1101 STUDENTS

3,085 3,540 3575

14 4 2Lb 1 1

6,9825

18

'5 0

11 47 41 3 91

2 14 1 15

11 1 12

11

5 151 2 3 166

4 15 5 24

Mt, Pleasant - 25 41 47 1 89Cleary Colt, Ypsilanti 16 16'Concordia I otherz.nCola, Ann Arbor - 16 1 17Cranbrook ACad. of Art.,Bloomfield

1 12 1 14'Davenport Coll. O. BasGrand Radios

'Delta Coll . University CenterDetroit Bible Coll., DetroitDetroit Inst. of Technology,

Detroit 120 6 21 147Detroit. Limy. of, Detroit 180 332 24 536Eastern Michigan Lfriv.,Ypsilanti 2 9 243 63 5 311Electronics inst. ofTechnology. Detroit

3 4Ferns State Coll., Big Rapids 5 3 52 52General Motors Inst., Flint 83 79 17 179'Glen Oaks Community Coll.,Centreville

Grace Bible Coll., WyomingGrand Valley State Coll.,

Allendale'Henry Ford Conimanity

Coll., Dearborn -'Highland Park Community

Coll., Highland Park 25 25Hillsdale Colt, I-Ws:dale 1 - 41 41Hope Coll., Holland1 16 36 3 39'Jackson Community Coil ,

JacksonKalamazoo Coil., Kalamazoo

'Ka'amazoo ValleyCommunity Coll.,Kalamazoo

Kendall Sch. of Design.Grand Rapids -

Lake Superior State Coll.,Sault Ste, Mahe 1

Lawrence Inst. of Technotogy. South!ield

Madonna Coll., LivoniaMarygro-Je Cold. DetroitMerrill-Palmer Ins*, .

Detroit .1

Mchigan State Univ.,East Lansing 141

M chigan Techncicg,calUniv.. Houghton

M,crngan. Univ. of,Ann Arbor 218 102 418 1.296 81 1.795

12 12105 105

6 3 9

8 83 3

8 16 17

23 1 24

17 1710 7 1 3 11

29 29

5 5

1 62 62

24 243 3

26 8 1 35

1

201

8

100 850 120 1.070

117 18 135

'Monroe County CommunityCO)) Monroe

Maskegon Community Coa.,Muskegon

Nazareth Coil,. NazarethNorthern Mir.higan Jriv

Marquette

3 3

4 411 11

19 9 1 29

co11.=.ges, :)11pgP.5. nstaullca-,s, and CVae. a,sntutron5Offenr,F, 0..ogryrr..5 ,ass ;hat, V.,Wr rea,5 Fcr cu.th.er mformanon or. studenh at these,,S1aut,on5 see Tab e4

52

fORkiPi U S FOREIGN STUDENTSSCULIIARS FACUIIY LI

Northwestern MichiganColl., Traverse City 1 2 14 14Northwood Midland 16 17'Oakland Community Coll.,Bloomfield Hills

1 18Oakland Univ., Rochester 8 10 18Saginaw Valley Coll.,

University Center 1

'SI, Clair County Corn.munity Coll., Putt Huron 17

Siena Heights Coll,, Adrian 1 6 6Spring Arbor Coll.,Spring Arbor 20 20*Suomi Coll., Hancock - 53 3 56Wayne State Univ,, Detroit 44 33 613 585 42 1,240Western Michigan Univ.,Kalamazoo 10 8 170 157 4 331Western Theo. Sem., Holland - 3 3

MINNESOTA

'Anoka-Ramsey State Jr. Coll.,Coon Rapids

Augsburg Coll., MinneapolisBemidji State Colt, BemidjiBethany Lutheran Coll,,

MankatoBethel Coll, & Sent., St. Paul

'Brainerd State Jr. Coll.,Brainerd

Concordia Coll.. MoorheadConcordia Coll., St, PaulDr. Martin Luther Colt,

New UlmDu nwoody Industrial Inst..

Minneapolis'Fergus Falls State Jr. Coll.,

Fergus Falls -Gustavus Adolphus Coll.,

St. PeterHamline Univ., St. Paul

'Inver Hills State Jr. Coil.,Inver Grove Heights

Luther Theo, Sent., St. Paul -Macalester Coll., St. Paul 3 12Mankato State Coll.,

Mankato' Mesabi State Jr. Coll.,

VirginiaMinnesota Bible Cot,

RochesterMinnesota, Univ. of (Total)'Crookston CampusDuluth CampusMinneapolis & St. Paul

CampusesMorris Campus

Moorhead State Coil.,Moorhead

'Normandale State Jr. Coll..Bloomington

North Central Bible Coll,,Minneapolis

'Northland State Jr. Coll.,Thiel River Falls

'Rainy River State Jr. Colt,International Falls

St. Benedict, Coll. of,St. Joseph

St atherine, Coll. of,St. Paul

St. Cloud State Coll.,St, Cloud 14

St. John's UfliV., CollegevilleSt. Mary's Coll., WinonaSt Olaf Coll,, NorthfieldSt Paul Bible Coll ,

Bible Co,Tege

29 176 584 131 52 761

4208

2

11

3 20 7

2

5 125

5 4

- 1174

2 1

41 211 20

327

1 - - 1

16 2 186 6

7 I 12 20

3 - - 3

19 - - 1923 3 26

61

37

65

15 52

109 86 1 196

2

66

41

10 1

5

7 -

31

21 2

3 3255 5

7

15 27

BEST COPY AVAILABLE

2

66

3 44

6

11

5

8

4 35

24

2 3861

7

27

Page 61: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

St Paul Sera St. ParilSt. Scholastioa. Cell- of

DuhutriSt Teiesa, of. trOo,iSt , yn rut

;IF

United Theo Sena ofTwin cities, NewBrighton

'Willmar State Jr Coll .

MISSISSIPPIBelhaven Loll Jacksonaue Mountain Con , aor,

Mountain'Clarke Coll , NewtonDraughon's Bus Coll

Jackson'Mary Holmes .

West PointMiiisaps. , JacksonMississippi Coll , ClintonMississippi State Coin for

Mississ,ppi Stitt' Lrnr,State College

Mississippi, Urn, of tiotaliJackson CampusUniversity Campus

Reformed Theo. SemJackson

Rust Coll , Holly SpringsSouthern Mississippi, Lima

of HattiesburgWilliam Carey Coll

Hattiesburg

MISSOURIAvila Coll.. Kansas CityCalvary able Coll Kansas

CityCentral B bleCo0

Spr ngfieldContra: trust for the Cleat,

St. LouisCentral Missouri State Con ,

WarrensburgConcorra,a Sem . St. LouisCovenant Theo. Sear . St

LouisCulver Stockton Coll

CantonDrury Coil Spr

'East Central Jr CoqUnion

Eden Theo. Sens, WebsterGroves

Evangel Coll . Sprosgfield'Florissant Val;ey Community

St. Lou 5Fontbonne Loll , St. LouisGrad wohl Sch, of Laboratory

Technique. St LouisKenhck Sem , St. LouisKirksville Con of Osteo-

pathic 1eLlioine.Kirksville

Linder wood (lolls, The.St Charles

Logan Coll of Chiropractic.St. 10.11s

Marina,: Coll St LoursManyetlei7n1l, St LouisMiowiisferri Eriipf st 1' iro

Sem Kansas City

!:

3

41

271117

13

317

A' Hi I r

18

1

4

3

78

1613

1L,

4

1437

1

2

2

10

24

24

1

86

14

9722

5

3

63

63

2

1

8

2

9

12

11

1211

1

3

1441

6

946

88

2

37

1,360

2

3

9414

15

2

2

1

5

trfliClfttrti

I

4

1

3

3

233

2

1

2

2

2

,3

1719

1?

3

5

2913

1

2

1

8

14

1216

115

3

123

14

2.5652

5

5

3

15914

15

15

2

a8

4

13

2

2

2

12

131512

5

Missouri Southern State Coll.,Joplin

Missouri, Univ. of iTota0 41Columbia 18Kansas City 3fioila 20St_ Louis

Nazarene Theo, Sem ,

Kansas CityNortheast Missouri State

Univ., KirksvilleNorthwest Missouri State

Univ., MaryvilleNotre Dame Coll., St, LouisPark Coll, Parkvilie

`Penn Valley CommunityColl.. Kansas City

f1dckhurst Coll KansasCity

St. Louis Coll, ofPharmacy, St. Louis

St. Louis Univ., St. Louis 37'St. Mary's Coll. of O'FatIon -Southwest Missouri State

Ur1v., SpringfieldStephens Coll., ColumbiaTarkio Coll.. Tarkio

`Three Rivers CommunityColl, Poplar Bluff

'Trenton Jr. Cob., TrentonWashington Univ., St. Louis 259Webster Coll., St. LouisWestnOster Coll., FultonWilliam Jewell Coll,, LibertyWilliam Woods Coll_ Fulton

MONTANA 12Carroll Coll., HelenaEastern Montana Coll.,

Billings 2Great Falls, Coll, of,

Great Falls -Montana Coll. of Mineral

Science & Technology,Butte 3

Montana State Univ.,Bozeman

Montana, Univ. of, Missoula 7Northern Montana Coll.,

HavreRocky Mountain Coll.,

Billings

NEBRASKA 42Chadron State Coil.,

ChadronConcordia Teachers Coll.,

SewardCreighton Univ., Omaha 27Dana Coll., BlairDoane Coll., Crete

`Fairbury Jr, Coll., FairburyGrace Bible Inst, OmahaKearney State Coll., Kearney

' Midland Lutheran Coll .

Fremont 1

'Nebraska Technical Coll.,Milford

Nebraska, Univ. of (Total) 13LincolnOmaha 1 3

Nebraska Wesleyan Univ ..

LincolnPer _a State Coll., PeruPratte Valley Bible Coll ,

Scottsbluff

USfACJIY

644810

6

-

-2-

12

-

10

4

-

-

1

3

2

27

9

3

1

--

5

3267151454427

160

31

319

27

48

3846

4367

34

777

699

1559

12

22

5840

3

11

452

9

317

818201017

1

312312

.

145

4

10F.f.10,1 S1USLMS

536 200427 8

49 249 18911 1

11 1

149

16 ---

4 4

_186 11

7

-

299 51 -

100 4

2 1

70 1

28 1

1

252 19

3

31

1

4 16

- 1

214 1

214 1

31,003

58696

28239

12

309

473

19

27

56

3281

6

5067

34

3818

699

2599

12

25

12969

4

11

723

12

3488

182011

37

2527527

-

145

4

Juri ,7:-i -refs, :rs}tincns. cfterofler,,g :ess Ira n r,,rtver tr,oc,,,at,on Studr...rOs at /ewnst,f.,:t4,7.1,i. see 1-3.ne.

13E5 c..,{ )053

Page 62: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

St. Miry, Coll, Of. OmahaWayne State Coll, Wayne I

NEVADA 1

01.1 ) 1

`f1140 COTchunity Col" ,ElkoElkr

Las VegasRepo I

'Reno\Jr. Coll. of Bus., Reno

NEW HAMPSHIRE 14'Colby Jr. Coll., New LondonDartmouth Coil.. Hanover 7

Franklin Pierce Coll., RindgeMt St. Mary Coll.. HooksettNew England Aeronautical

Inst., NashuaNew England Colt, Henniker 1

New Hampshire Coll.,Manchester

'New Hampshire TechnicalInst.. Concord

New Hampshire, Univ, of(Total) b

Keene State Coll., KeeneNew Hampshire, Linn., of,

DurhamPlymouth State Colt,

Plymouth 6Notre Dame Coll ManchesterSt. Anselm's Coll

Manchester

NEW JERSEY 111`Bergen Community Coll..

ParamusBeth Medrash Govoha,

Lakewood'Burlington County Coll.,

PembertonColl., Caldwell

'County Coll, of Morris, DoverDon Bosco Coll.. NewtonDrew Univ., Madison

'Englewood Chffs Coll,,Englewood Cliffs

Fairtegh Dickinson Univ.(Total)

RutherfordTeaneck

Georgian Court Coil.,Lakewood

Glassboro State Coll.,Glassboro

Jersey City State Cola,Jersey City

'Mercer County CommunityCoil,. Trenton 1

'Middlesex County Coll.,Edison

Monmouth Coll., West LongBranch

Montclair State Colt..Upper Montclair 2

MuhIenberg Hosp. Sch. of. Medical Technology.

PlainfieldNewark Beth Israel Medical

Center Sch. of Nursing,Newark-

Newark Coll. of Engi-neering, Newark 16

Newark State Coll., UnionNortheastern Collegiate

Bible Inst.. Essex Fells

9

5

5

70

389

15

1

1

71

1

IT) I I

9

141I

)281

7

1873

8211

3

211

1

67

61

63

4

920

20

22

2

1514

235

7

872364

8

16

23

36

13

12

44

2093

6

FirYf

94

16

78

89

29

60

60

1,328

4

236

1

1

--,-,

1

2

16

5

. 17

.215

2

SluDINIS

22

1

1

3

3

92

2

6

1

1

4

67

1

5

237230

69160

2783

11411

3

2

11

1

,13/

121

3

4

2,340

22

26

2

15144

77

7

892465

8

17

24

36

13

14

.64

5

17

4913

9

t

KIR( VIAilt)1.ARS

'Ocean County Coll., TomsRiver

Passaic General Hosp. Sch.of Nursing. Passaic

Princeton Theo. Sent.,Princettli 2

Princeton Univ.. PrincetonRamapo Coll. of New

Jersey, MahwahRider Colt., Trenton I2Rutgers Univ. (Total) 68

CamdenNew Brunswick 68Newark

St. Elizabeth, Coll. of,Convent Station

Si. Peter's Coll., JerseyCity .

Seton Hall Univ,. SouthOrange 2

Stevens Inst. of Tech-nology, Hoboken 6

:Trenton State Coll.,Trenton 2

Upsala Coll East OrangeWestminster Choir Coll.,

Princeton

NEW MEXICO 24Eastern New Mexico Univ.,

PortalesNew Mexico Highlands

Univ., Las VegasNew Mexico Inst. of

Mining & Technology.Socorro 2

New Mexico State Univ.,Las Cruces 13

New Mexico, Univ. of,Albuquerque

Western New MexicoUniv., Silver City

NEW YORK 1,097Ad2:phi Univ., Garden

City .

"Ae)onautics, Acad. of,La Guardia Airport

Alfred Univ. (Total). 5Alfred Univ., Alfred 5

tCeramics, Coll. of, AlfredAmerican Acad.-McAllister

Inst. of FuneralService, New York

Art students League ofew York, *Mew York

By Coll., Annandale-on-' Hudson 2'Bennett Coil., Millbrook 1

Berkeley-Claremont Sch.,The, New York

Canisius Coil . Buffalo'Cazenovia Coll., Cazenovia,City Univ. of New York

(Total) 52Bernard M. Baruch Coll.

'Borough of ManhattanCommunity Coil.

Bronx Community Coil.Brooklyn Coll. 5Fiorello FL LaGuardia

Community Coll. -15Graduate- Center 4Herbert H. Lehman

Coll, 1

Hunter Coll. 6

1

1

38

38

2

2

17

3

5

37

16

21

701

44

1

1

91

91

217

218

2412

S

1

108

21

22105

1879

15

35

14

910

6

221

19

5

15

94

88

6,253

12

181367

20

9

816

1

323

161

_

10111611 STUDENTS

41

45 45300 408

2123

440 8 5531 2 21

407 5 49132 1 41

15

61 1 97

137 1 152

910

2 8

333 222 776

35 48 102

16 21

29 1 45

97 191

155 173 416

1 1

8,885 2,655 17,793

3 15

1811 1 25

1 710 1 18

1 1

3 8 21

- - 85 21

1.-

402 93 818'73 2 75

161

324 -- 324

71 80

Jurlior colleges, cornronity colleges. technical institutions, and other institutionsOffering program; of resS than low years. For further information on students at these.institutions, see Table 4.

I See also State University of New York..

54BEST COPY fiVAILABLE

Page 63: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

l Of-li Nis

l0kUG'f II S101ii1Gft Sl1.10141S

III it II

SCYOUtliS fACIltlY 11 G 0 1

'Xiog,;borciagh C,iaionarlityColl.

t. 4545 Manhattan Sch. of Music,

New York35 23 3 61

Queens Coy,9 12 3t 5 3 39

Manhattanville Coll.,'duce: sboro,gti Community

Purchase2 35 1 36

Cull.56

1 57 Marines Colt, of Music,R.ch-noml . ,ih

New York12 2 2 16

York Coil.4 21 16 3/ 'Maria Regina Coll.,

Clarkson Coll of tech

Syracuse8

1 9

nology, Potsdam 5 1 9 34 43 Marist Coll , PoughkeepsieColgate Rochester Be.iley

k4aryknoll Sem., Maryknoll1 - 6

HaII,Crozer Sem,

Maryinount Colt, Tarrytown22

22

Rochester1 9 9 Marymount Manhattan

Colgate UnIs., Hamilton6 6 Coll., New York 2 2 41 2 2 45

Columbia Inst. of Chiro-

'Mater Dei Coll., Ogdensburg1 - _. I

practic, New Yohi.1 6 7 Medallic Coll., Buffalo

44

Columbia Univ. I Tot,Oli 182 '.19 588 2.037 246 2,871 Mercy Coll., Dobbs Ferry 4 _ _ 4

Barnard Coll., New York 5 1 86 86 Mildred Elley Sch., Albany - 3 - 3

Columbia Univ..

Misericordia Hosp. Sch. ofNew York 176 81 498 1.665 213 2,406 Nursing, New York

6 - 1 7

Teachers COIL, New York1 17 4 372 3 379 Montefiore Hosp. & Medical

Concordia Coil., Bronvyilre12 12 Center, New York

1

Cooper Croon. New York 67 48 1 116 Mt. St. Alphonsus Sem,,Cornell Lbw,. (Total) 242lAgricalture. Coll. of.

Ithaca4.0

121

42

355

81

820

256

38

7

1,213

344

EsopusMt, St. Vincent, Coil. of,

New York18

16 16

18

Cornell Univ., Ith'ac,1 158 79 259 -190 30 779Nazareth Coil. of Rochester 9 9

I Human E.c.0:00'. Con. :_)1'

New Rochelle, Coil. of.Ithaca 2t Industrial & Labor 11 20 1 32

New RochelleNew Sch. for Social - 33 1 - 34

Relations. Sch. of,

Research, New York 1 3 72 - 72

Ithaca4 19 23

New York Inst, of Tech-Medical Coil., New York 32 r

19 19nology. New York

245 8 11 264

f Veterinary Coil., Ithaca16 16 New York Son, of Interior

Dalcroze Sch. of Music,

Design. New York - - 21 15 3 39

New York8 8 New York Univ., New York 80 60 685 1,567 1,316 3,568

Dominican Coll, of Blauvelt - 44 Nyack Coll., Nyack - - 21 1 1 23

Dowling Con., Oakdale - 3 - 3 Pace Univ. (Total)2 177 2 2 181

D'Youville Cola, Buffalo6 6 New York

2 171 2 2 175

Eisenhower Coil.. Seneca

Pleasantville6 - - 6

Falls6

....

Parsons Sch. of Design,Elmira Coil.. Elmira

1 37 37New York

37

Finch Coll . New York2 17 2 19

Smith',.. Coll., PaulFordharn Univ., New York [0 173 85 449 707 Smiths

18

Hamilton Coll., Clinton - 1 23 1 1 25Polytechnic Inst. of

Hartwick Coll., Oneonta 13-- -

Brooklyn, The, New York 4 1 62 123 2 181

Hebrew Union Coll.- Jewishlost. of Religion, New

Practical Bible Training Sch.,Bible School Park _

1 _1

York- 1

Pratt Inst, New York - 109 104 - 213

Hobart & William Smith

'RCA hosts., New York - 308 36 344

Coils., Geneva4

1 5Rensselaer Polytechnic Inst..

Hofstra Univ.. Hempstead12 3 1 16

Troy6 8 112 115 221

Houghton Coll., Houghton - 31 1 - 32*Rochester Bus. Inst.,

Immaculate Conception Sem..

Rochester1

Troy. 2

2Rochester Inst. of Tech-

Insurance, Coll. of,

nology, Rochester 2 42 18 3 63

New York49- 45 7 101

Rochester, Univ. at,bona Coll.. New Rochelle -

30 30Rochester 39 11 58 279 6 343

Jewish Hosp. & MedicalCenter Sch. of Nursing,

Rockefeller Univ.. The,New York 70 - 26 - 26

New York23 2 10 35

Rogers Coll., Maryknoll - - - 5 5

Jewish Theo. Sem. of

Rosary Hill Coll., BuffaloAmerica. New York - 14 - 14-

Russell Sage Coll.. Troy - 4 - - 4

Juilliard Sch.. New York. 3Keuka Coif, Keuka Park

King's Coll., BriarcliffManor

Kirkland Coll., Clinton1

Laboratory lost, of Met--chandising, New Void;

Latin American lnst..New York

.

-: te Moyne Coll., Syracusetong Island Univ,- hotel)

Brooklyn Center. New York

-

1

22

935

105

3

3359311

42-

_

_

--

459414

-

1

-

103

41

1355

11

5

3

1033

-822726

St. Anthony-on-HudsonSem., Rensselaer

St, Bernard's Sem. &Rothester .

St. Bonaventure Univ., St.Bonaventure

St. John Vianney Sem.,East Aurora

St. Joseph's Coll., New YorkSt. Lawrence Univ., CantonSt, Rose, Coll, of, Albany

1

3

8

9486

9

9499

Merriweather Campus,Greenvale i ..

" SoAhaMpton.CainpusManhattan Coll., Nevi- York :

-- 102

. 48 --

l 18

.45-2

3

2

96--

22

St. Thomas Aquinas Coll.,Sparkill

St. Vladimir's Orthodox .-

Theo. Sem-, Tuckahoe

2

12

2

13*hvn rollhEes- coihirrwriity codeges. technical institutions, and other institutionsotteng prograr s of less than foray e.,3 !s.. for lurtnerintorrnabon on studetts at V-ieseinstdoions, sea Table 4.

I See a:so State Jniversy r-F New

55

Page 64: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Sarah Lih re'lCe CoEitcoville

S enu Coll LoudonvilleSk ainore Colt, Stratoiga

state tiriro. of New Yurk(Total)

'AdirondackColl , C'eris Falls

Agricultural & TechnicalColl. at Alfred 1

'Agricultural & TechnicalColt at CobleskIl

'Agricultural & TechnicalColl at Delhi

' Agricultural & TechnicalColl. at Farmingdale

'Agricultural & TechnicalColl, at Morrisville

lAgriculture, Coll, of, atCoel1 Ur»iy

"Ceramcs. Coll. ot, atAlfred Univ.

Downstate Medical Center,New York 27

Duchess CouvntnIity Coll.Poughkeepsie

Environmental Science &Forestry, Coll. of, atSyracuse Univ. -

' Fulton- Montgomery Com-munity Coil.. Johnstown -

'Genesee Community Coll.,Batavia -

4Human Ecology, Coll. of, atCorr ell Univ. 2

[industrial & Labor Rebons, Sch of, atCornell Univ. -

'Jamestown CommunityColl., Jamestown

Maritime Coll,. Fort. Schuyler

'Mohawk Valley CommunityColl., Utica -

'Monroe Community Coll..Rochester -

'Orange County Com-munity Coll., Middletown 1

Rockland Community Coil.,Sutfern -

State Univ. Coll. atBrockport

State Univ. Coll. atBuffalo

State Univ. Coll atCortland

State Univ. Cott. atFredonia

State Univ. Coll atNew F'altz

Stale Univ. Cali atOneonta 5

State Um v. Coll atOswego

State Univ. Coll. atPo std am

Stale Univ. Cell, of Arts& Scientes. Geneseo

Stale Univ. Coll. of Arts& Sciences, Plattsburgh 24

State Univ. of New Yorkat Albany' 21

State finis. 01 New Yorkat Binghamton 18

State Univ. of New Yorkat Buffalo 181

i[IPp,

3 10 131 7

34 1

310 211 1.14) 2.112

1 147

1 36

3 732

3

173

3 3

19 2 21

10 10

10 10

40 42 81 256 7 344

7 10 1 18

5 12 24 36

13 5 5

18 50 68

5 5

3 3

1 i 20 1 32

- 4 19 - 23

4 4

- 52 - 2 54

8 - 8

34 34

1 8 - 8

13. 59 8 4 71

60 4

11 15 19 1 35

49 12 1 62

- 63 7 1 71

17 25 11 - 36

9 42 16 - 58

4 12 3 15

8 37 1 46

4 77 14 6 97

17 90 _ 107

23 37 163 52 252

61 548 844 80 1,472

1

8 3

)un,of coneges. community colleges, -techmcal institutions, and other institutionsaffetrg wegtams of less than roor yea's for furtherinformation or students at thesest tcr s see Taoie 4.

56

tcv'A ARS

State Limy, of New Yorkat Stony Brook

'Su livan County Com.munity Coll., SouthFalli,burg

Upstate Medica. Lerter,Syracuse

I Veterinary Coll, atCornell Univ.

Syracuse Univ. !Total)Environmental Science &

Forestry, toll. of,Syracuse

Syracuse Univ., SyracuseUtica Coll., Utica

Union Colt, & Univ. (Total)AlbanySchenectady

Union Theo, Sena, NewYork

U.S. Merchant MarineAcad., Kings Point

U.S. Military Acad.,West Point

Vassar Coll PoughkeepsieWagner Coll,, New YorkWatchtower Bible Sch. of

Gilead, New YorkWells Coif, AuroraWhite Plains, Colt of.

White PlainsWoodstock Coll., New YorkYeshiva Univ., New York

NORTH CAROLINA"Albemarle, Coll, of the,

Elizabeth CityAppalachian State Univ.,

BooneAtlantic Christian Coll.,

WilsonBennett Coll., Greensboro

'Brevard Colt., BrevardCampbell Coll., Buie's Creek

Chowan Coll., MurfreesboroDavidson Coil Davidson 1

Duke Univ.. Durham 99'Durham Technical Inst.,

DurhamEast Carolina Univ.,

GreenvilleElizabeth City State Univ.,

Elizabeth CityElon Coll., Elon College

'Fayetteville Technical Inst.,Fayetteville

Gardner-Webb Coll., BoilingSprings

Guilford Coll Greensboro'Guilford Technical Inst.,

JamestownJohnson C. Smith Univ.,

Charlotte'Lees-McRae Coll., Banner

ElkLenoir-Rhyne Colt HickoryLivingstone Coll., SalisburyMars Hill Coll., Mars HillMeredith Coll., Raleigh

"Montreal-Anderson Coll.,Montreal

North Carolina Agricultural& Technical State Univ.,Greens bOro -

North Carolina Central Univ.,Durham

1

1

8

8

33

2

7

2

_

63

249

3

10

--

t See also State tin-versity of New York.tSce also Cornet) University.'See also Alfred University..Stre'al so Syracuse university.

BEST CM AVAILABLE

MCAT).FOREIGN SIUDENTS

3 127 474 601

5 14 19

6 15 21

16 1627 190 617 39 846

- 18 50 6827 156 567 39 762

16 166 19 )8 382 10 114 18 8 1 27

22 22

1 1

2 21 212 33 1 2 36

21 12 1 34

53 533

18 _ 185 5

13 22 41 63

237 653 944 95 1,692

2 2

3 5 1 9

2 3 1 46 1 74 4

34 3416 16

3 5 7 1258 39 161 5 205

7 7

13 12 14 26

19- 15 15

10 2 12

13 1315 1 16

6 6

7 8

6 - 617 - - 17

1 1 - 27 7

36

11 14 1 26

Page 65: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

irrt n5IORDGN U S I OR1IGN $11101liTS

SCHOLARS f ACUtli 0 1North Carolina Sch. of theArts. Winston Salem 'Cincinnati Technical Coll.,

Cincinnati 8 8North Carolina, Univ. of(Total) 133 101 207 721 69 997

Cincinnati, Univ, of,Cincinnati 41 235 2 278Chapel Hui 105 57 45 333 47 125 Circleville Bible Coll,;:narlotte

33 Circleville3 1 4Greensboro 5 22 33 55 Cleveland Inst. of Art,North Carolina State Limy

Cleveland 1 1 1 2at Raleigh 28 42 112 351 21 184 Cleveland Inst. of Music,North Carolina WesleyanCleveland 11 7 18Coil.. Rocky Mount 5 5 'Cuyahoga Community Coll.'Peace Coil., Raleigh

11 (Total) 31 31Queens Coil , Charlotte

1 2 Cleveland 21 21Sacred Heart Coll, Belmont 2 2 Parma 10 10St. Andrew's PresbyterianDayton, Univ. of, Dayton 55 44 99Coll., LILA ri nburg 0 3 3 Denison Univ., Granville. 2 10 19 19Salem Cola, Winston-Salem 4 2 2 Dyke Coll., Cleveland

7 7Southeastern Baptist Theo.Fincliay Coll., Findlay 5 7 7Sem., Wake Forest 3 3 God's Bible Sch. & Coll.,'Southwood Coll.. Salemburg 9 9 Cincinnati 8 8*Sorry Commun(ly Coil,.Hebrew Union Coll.JewishDobson 4 4 Inst. of'Technical Inst. of Alaniance,

Cincinnati 9 9Burlington 2 2 Heidelberg Coll., Tiffin 1 4 - _ 4Wake Forest Univ. (Total) 2 5 12 17 1 30 Hiram Coll., Hiram 11 3 14BOST131'. Gray Sch of

Medicine. Winston John Carroll Univ.,Cleveland 1 4 12 9 21

Salem'Kettering Coil. of MedicalWake Forest Univ.,

Arts, Kettering - 4 4Winston-Salem 2 5 12 16 1 29

Lake Erie Coil,, Painesville 4 4Warren Wilson Coll,.

Swannamaa 107 107 'Lakeland Community Coll.,Mentor 9 9

Western Carolina Univ.,Cullowhee 8 6 3 9 'Lorain County Community

Coll., Elyria 25 - 1 26'Wingate Coll . WingateWinston-Salem State Univ..

Winston-Salem

16 16Malone Coll., CantonMarietta Coll., MariettaMedical Coll. of Ohio at

914

1

---

1014

Toledo 1NORTH OAKOTA 31 10 278 147 12 437 Methodist Theo. Sch. in"Bismarck Jr. Coll Bismarck 6 6 Ohio, Delaware - 2 1 7 aJamestown Coll.. Jamestown 9 9 'Miami- Jacobs Jr. Coll. ofMary Coll,. Bismarck 8 1 1 10 Bus.. Dayton 5 - 5Mayville State Coll., Miami Univ., Oxford 6 5 36 55 2 93Mayville`North Dakota State Sch of

Science, W,3hpetonNor!, -to Univ

6

5

6

6

Mt. St. Joseph. Coll. of,Mt. St. Joseph

Mt. Union Coll.. AllianceMuskingum Coll.. New

1

- -1512

1 1612

I a!,North 1/a- 4 of

(Totai. 31Grand F 31 10

13

222221

92

5454

3

7

7

108

283282

ConcordNotre Dame Coll., ClevelandOberlin Coll., OberlinOhio Dominican Coll.,

-4

6-

151122 19

1144

1 Columbus 11 11Northwest ti le Coll, Minot 9 9 Ohio Northern Univ.. Ada -Ohio State Univ., Columbus 77 63 259 904 10 1,173Ohio Univ., Athens 3 13 201 187 26 414OHIO 221 197 1,727 2,219 110 4,056 Ohio Wesleyan Univ.,Air Force Inst. of Tech.

Delaware 1 2 20 1 21nology, Wright-Otterbein Coll., Westerville 6 9 6 1 7Patterson Air Force

"Perin-Ohio Jr. Coll..Base 2 3 3 3 Youngstown5 5Akron, Univ. 01, Akron . 39 4 201 159 24 384 Per Coll. Josephinum,Antioch Coll., Yellow Springs 2 11 20 1 21 Worthington 2 2

Art Acad. of Cincinnati . - 1 1 2 Rio Grande Coll . Rio GrandeAshland Coll., Ashland 12 4 16 St. John Coll. of Cleveland3Baldwin-Wallace Coll,.

St. Mary Sem., CleVeland1 1

. Berea 6 14 1 15 St. Thomas InSt., Cincinnati - 4 4Bluffton Coll., Bluffton - - 17 17 Steubenville, The Coll. of,Bow_ ling Green State Univ..Steubenville - - 1 1-Bowl-rig Green 20 8 88 41 5 134 Toledo, Univ. of, Toledo - 3 _Capital Univ., Columbus 8 8 Ursuline Coll., Cleveland _ 8Case Western Reserve Univ.,

Western Coll.. The, Oxford - 4 36 5 41Cleveland 45 13 113 410 529 Wrimington.Coll., Wilmington 2 3 19 19Cedarville Coil., Cedarville 9 9 Winebrenner Theo. Sem..Central State Univ.,. Findlay

IWiltaerforce - 32 1 34 Wittenberg Univ., Springfield 13 13Cincinnati Bible Serra,-WoOste,r, Coll. of, Wooster:- 5 23 28Cincinnati 15 11 28 Wright State Univ., Dayton 2 4 10

Joniof col'eges. community colleges. techmtaf instetations. and other inst,tutionsoffering programs of less than four years, for further information on students at theseinst.t/tions. see Table 4.

BEST COPY AVAILABLE 57

Page 66: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

XavrerYoungstown State Univ

Yourgstomn

OKLAHOMAAmerican Cht,shan

Tulsa 1

Bethany Natarere Coll.,Bethany

Central State Univ., Er ionil 1

East Central State Coll..Ada

Langston Univ.. LangstonMurray State Coil

Tishomingo'Northeastern Oklahoma

A. & M. Coll MiamiNorthwestern State Coll.,

AlvaOklahoma Baptist Urns.,

ShawneeOklahoma City Univ.,

Oklahoma CityOklahoma Coll. of Liberal

Arts, Chickasha*Oklahoma So-, of Account

ancy, Bus, Law &Finance, Tulsa

Oklahoma, State Univ.(Total) 24

Oklahoma State Univ.,Stillwater 24

'Technical inst.. OklahomaCity -

'Technical Inst., OkmulgeeOklahoma, Univ. of (Total) 2

Norman 2Oklahoma City -

'St Gregory's Coll.. Shawnee'Seminole Jr. Coll,. Seminole -Southeastern State Coll.,

Durant'Spartan Sch. of Aero-

nautics, TulsaTulsa, Univ. of, Tulsa

OREGON

Columbia Christian Col).,Portland

'Concordia Coll., PortlandConquerors Bible Coll,,

PortlandEastern Oregon Coil..

La GrandeGeorge Fox Coll Newberg

'Lane Community Coll ,Eugene

Lewis & Clark Coll.,Portland

Linfield Coll., McMinnvilleMarylhurst Colt., MarylhurstMt. Angel Sem.. St. Benedict

'Mt. Hood Community Coll.,Gresham

Multnomah Sch. of theBible, Portland

Northwest Christian Coll.,Eugene

Oregon Graduate Center,Beaverton

Oregon State Univ.-Corvallis

Oregon Yechnicial Inst-Klamath Falls

Oregon.- Univ. of (Total)EugenePOrtland

,1 A, 11

29 24 1,116 713

92

584111

16

12 222

12 215

1

67 2617 261

4021

115

212 182

1,415111

35

64

2

1 29

7

9

3

28 44

4031

9

10R1

15 25

103 65

31 9

61

5

342324

18

68

21

273

273

Cabrini Coll., RadnorCarlow Coll., Pittsburgh

889

-

5

24 314

27,

37 521 1

4

13 -6 1

15 1

3

296 323

-14 -437 337.436 330

1 -- 7

SluDiNTS

40

10 268

140 1,969

1 41

617

5

3 38

64

44

8 58

7

2 18

59 554

56 544

1

323 62623 608

181 41

21

1

339

116

24289

127 2,431

- 1

1

- 5

- 27- 14

27

7 491 23

_4

- 13

1 8

1 17

- 3

65 684

2 1615 -78915 -781--

8.

'Jur.or c-Jileges, torhrhuruly colleges, technical institutions, and other Mst,luhanScffer.rg programs of less than four years Par further inforrnat;cncn students at thesetosttutor,s. use fable 4

58

Itik111,ft

Pacific Univ., Forest Grove'Portland Community COL,

PortlandPortland State Univ_

Portland'Portland. Univ. of,

tl S1400115 LI

27

105

185

Portland 1 4 133Reed Coll., Portland 1 10 37

'Rogue Community Coil.,Grants Pass 1

Southern Oregon Call ,Ashland 1

'Umpqua Community Coii ,Roseburg 3

Warner Pacific Call.,Portland 14

Western ConservativeBaptist Sem., Portland

Western Evangelical Sent.,Portland

Willamette Univ., Salem 1

PENNSYLVANIA 764 252 1,475Albert Einstein Medical

Center Sch. of Nursing.Philadelphia

Allegheny Coll., Meadville 1

Allentown Coll. of St.Francis de Sales,Center Valley 1

Al:lance Coll., CambridgeSprings 2-

Alvernia Colt., Reading - 3Baptist Bible Con. of

Pennsylvania, ClarksSummit 6

Beaver Coll., Glenside 3 3 24Bloomsburg Mate Coll.,

Bloomsburg _ 8Bryn Mawr Coll., Bryn Mawr 25

615

Carnegie-Mellon Univ.,Pittsburgh 44 4 27

Cedar Crest Coll,, Allentown - 2Charles Morris Price Sch.

of Advertising &Journalism, Philadelphia - --

Chestnut Hill Coll.,Philadelphia 1 - 13

Clarion State Coll. (Total) 1 1 7

Clarion _ - 7Oil City 1 1

College MisericordiaDallas - 8

Curtis Inst. of Music,Philadelphia - 19

Delaware Valley Colt,Doylestown - - 6

Dickinson Sch. of Law,Carlisle

Drexel Univ., Philadelphia 25Dropsie Univ., Philadelphia 2Duquesne Univ., Pittsburgh 5 7 9East Stroudsburg State

Coll., East Stroudsburg 5 3Eastern Baptist Theo, Sem..

Philadelphia -Eastern Con St, DaJids - 5Edinboro State Coll.,

Edinboro 10- Elizabethtown Coll.,

Elilabethtown .

Franklin & Marshall Coll,,Lancaster - 19

Franklin Sch. of Science &Arts, Philadelphia 8

S111111N1S

14

1

147 15

32 17

2

9

6 -

41

106

347

18238

1

3

16

10

6

3,447 185 5,107

1

-

1

-

224

3

3

1

1232136

5

-

6

625

1049

615

2 2172

5

1377

23

6

1

4 1523 24

45

4

5

15

20

16

Page 67: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

11,WtfY,v

ii!Ai..11

1014 it SltiPic"S

Geneva Cull., Beaver Falls 10Graft Co lt,, PhilaUe Ipt,Q

1 4Grove City Coll., Grove City 5Gwynedd Mercy Coll.,

CiwyraiddFlahnencarni Me:1,Co!

Pfulade/ph-d 5'Harcurn Jr. Coil..

Bryn MawrHavertord Coll., Hici.eiford 10Holy Fancily Coil .

Philade/ph a 8Iturnaculata

linrnacolata 9Indiana Univ. of

Pennsylvania. Indiana 25 3Juniata Coll., Huntingdon

'Keystone Jr. Coil., La Plume 2Ring's Coil., Wilkes Barre 1 4Kutztown State Coll

utztoA 0 8'Lackawanna Jr. Coll ,

S:rantonLafayette Coil., Easton 2 9La Roche Coil , Pittstur,0 6Lebanon Valley Coil

.

Annville 3 2 4 2'1. me) County CommunityColl., Schrecksville

1

Lehigh Univ.. Bethlehem 11 14 60 153 1"Levitan Sch., The.Philadelphia 11 1Lincoln Univ.. LincolnUniversity 8 1

Lock Haven Statc Coil.,Lock Haven 2 2 22

Lutheran Theo. Serif,Gettysburg

Lutheran Theo. Sem.,Philadelphia

1Lycoming Coll., Williamsport 1

'Manor Jr, Con, Jenkintown - 4Mansfield State Coll.,

Mansfield 4Mary Immaculate Sem.,

Northampton 3Medical Coll. of Pennsyl-

vania, The, Philadelphia1 5

Mercyhurst Con, Erie 3Messiah Coll., Grantham 3Moore Coll, of Arr,

Philadelphia 7 - -Moravian Coll., Bethlehem 6Muhlenberg Coll., Allentown 14 -New Church Coll., Acad. of

-the, Bryn Athyn 16 2 3'Northeasteim Christian Jr.

Coll., V:ilanova 5 1

Pennsylvania Acad. of FineArts: Philadelphia 2 14 1

Pennsylvania Coil. ofOptometry, Philadelphia 3

Pennsylvania State Univ,,University Park 62 686 36

Pennsylvania, Univ. of(Total) 490 158 881 84

Pennsylvania. Univ. of,Philadelphia 490 158 880 84

Presbyterian MedicalCenter. Philadelphia_

1

Philadelphia Coll, of Art,Philadelphia 5

Philadelphia Coll. ofPharmacy & Science,.Philadelphia . 42 15

Philadelphia-Coll, ofTextiles i& Science,Philadelphia 104

1045

5

8

9

28264

8

9

6

6

214

12

22

1

4

4

3

63

76

14

21

6

17

3

784

1,123

1.122

1

iCiPtc('il J S5CHOIARS FACiii if

Philadelphia Divinity Sch.,Philadelphia

Philadelphia Musical Acad.,Philadelphia - -

Pittsburgh. Univ. of trotall 129 105Johnstown 1 1

Pittsburgh 128 104Reformed Episcopal Church,

Theo, Sem. of the,Philadelphia

Reformed Presbyterian Theo.Sem., Pittsburgh

Robert Morris Coll.,Coraopolis

Rosemont Coll., RosemontSt. Francis Coil., LorettoSt. Joseph's Coll.,

PhiladelphiaSt, Vincent Coll., LatrobeScranton, Univ. of, ScrantonShippensburg State Coll.,

Shippensburg - 9Slippery Rock State Coll.,

Slippery Rock - 12Susquehanna Univ,,

Selinsgrove 2Swarthmore Coll.,

Swarthmore 3Temple Univ., Philadelphia 34Thiel Coll., Greenville -Thomas Jefferson Univ.,

Philadelphia 2United Wesleyan Colt.,

AllentownUrsinus Coll., Collegeville

'Valley Forge Military Jr,Coll., Wayne

Villa Maria Coll., ErieVilianova Univ., Villanciva 2Vocal Arts, Acad. of,

PhiladelphiaWestminster Coll., New

WilmingtonWestminster Theo. Sem,

PhiladelphiaWidener Coll., ChesterWilkes Coll,, Wilkes-Barre

'Williamsport Area Com-munity Coll., Williams-(sort

Wilson Coll., ChambercburgYork Coll. of Pennsylvania.

York

ft'REIGN SII1DENIS1

4 1 576 73` 14 825

76 735 14 825

3 7 2 12

- 23 23

4 2 - 6

9 5 1 151 11 1 12- 5 152 - 157

RHODE ISLANDBarrington Coll., BarringtonBrown Univ., ProvidenceBryant Coll., SmithfieldJohnson & Wales Colf,

ProvidenceProvidence Coll.. ProvidenceRhode island Coll.,

ProvidenceRhode Island Sch. of

Design, ProvidenceRhode Island, Univ. 01,

KingstonRoger Williams Coil. (Total)

BristolProvidence

Zion Bible InSt., EastProvidence

57 SOUTH CAROLINA'Anderson COIC,, AndersonBenediCt Coll., Columbia

104 Bob JOnes Univ., Greenville

'aurCo col eges, commorilty coileges, technicai institutions, and other insttutionsotferi'g programs of fess than four years, For further information on students at theseinst.t.,tons. see Table 4.

1 4 - 5

2 2 4

6 6

10 42 - 4 4643 30 89 1 120

1 4 - - 4

2 - 8 - 8

_ 1 1- 9 - - 9

- 12 - 12- 1 _ _ 1

7 257 219 13 489

3 1 4

2 9 2 11

9

31

7

22

1 9 16 25- 16 10 - 262 18 2 20

3 32 9 9

37 247 40S 14 66710 1094 246 7 347

2 2

9 _2

7 11 2 3 16

23 4 27

28 72 152 4 2288 84 44 4

20 20

45 47 204 210 17 4316 - - 65 5

40 9 4 53

59

Page 68: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

t, AN, SiI Ill IS li

Clemson Univ., Clemson 13 3 35

Columbia Bible Co;1.,Columbia

Converse Con SpartanburgErskine Coil Due 0:est

UMW') Greenville 4 8I itheran Theo, Southern

Sem., Columbia'Midlands Technical Educa-

tion Center, Columbia 5

Presbyterian Coll, Clinton 1

.South Carolina, Univ. of,Columbia 18 27 71

'Spartanburg Jr. Coll.,Spartanburg 3

Vorhees Coll., Denmark 12Winthrop Coll., Rock Hill 2

SIUDENTS

46 1 82

23 7

SOUTH DAKOTAAugustana Coll., Sioux

FallsBlack Hills State Coll.,

Spear lushDakota State Coll , MadisonDakota Wesleyan Univ.,

Mitchell'Freeman Jr. Coll., FreemanHuron Coil., HuronMt. Marty Coil,, YanktonNorth American Baptist

Sem,, Sioux Falls -Sioux Falls Coll., Sioux Falls -South Dakota Sch. of

Mines & Technology.Rapid City

South Dakota State Univ.,Brookings

South Dakota, Univ. of,Vermillion

1

1 31

5

17

5

1

127 9 207

3

11 2 15

6 3 120 114 6 240

18 1 19

1

1 1

TENNESSEEAmerican Baptist Theo.

Sem, Nashville'Aquinas Jr. Coll., NashvilleAustin Peay State Univ.,

ClarksvilleBelmont Coll., NashvilleBethel Coll., McKenzieCarson-Newman Coil.,

Jefferson CityChristian Brothers Coll.,

Memphis'Columbia State Community

Coll.. ColumbiaCovenant Coll., Lookout

Mountain'Cumberland Coll. of

Tennessee. LebanonDraughon's Coll., NashvilleEast Tennessee State

Univ., Johnson CityFree Will Baptist Bible

Coll., Nashville'Freed-Hardernan Coll.,

HendersonGeorge Peabody Coll. for

Teachers, NashvilleKing Coil., BristolKnoxville Coil.. KnoxvilleLambuth Coll., JacksonLee Col ClevelandLe Moyne-Owen Coll

MemphisLincoln Memorial

HarrogateMaryville Coll . Maryville

323

125

323

125

5 1 54 50 - 104

- - 17 38 1 56

1 16 14 4 34

80 92 671 605 192 1,468

124

lid

4

2

59 2 1 6218 18

- 14 13

12

1

5

27

34 11

2

17

37

910

7

13

13

5

52

2

7

753

912

57

'Junior colleges. community colleges. technrcat msttuhons, and other inst+tutonsoffering prOgrams of less than four years For further Informabon on students at thesensbtutions, see Table 4

60

fOREIGN

SCHOLARS

Meharry Medical CollNashville

Memphis Acad. of Arts,Memphis

Memphis State Univ,,Memphis 5

Memphis Theo. Sem.,Memphis

Mid-South Bible Coil,,Memphis

Middle Tennessee StateUniv., Murfreesboro 7

'Motlow State CommunityColl., Tullahoma

Scarritt Coll. for ChristianWorkers, Nashville

South, Univ. of the, SewaneeSouthern Coll. of Optometry,

Memphis'State Technical Inst. at

MemphisTennessee Technological

Univ., CookevilleTennessee, Univ. of (Total) 28

Chattanooga -Knoxville 28Martin -Memphis -

Tennessee Wesleyan Coll.,Athens

Trevecca Nazarene Coil.,Nashville

Vanderbilt Univ., Nashville

TEXASAbilene Christian Coll.,

Abilene*Amarillo , AmarilloAngelo State Univ., San

Angelo -Austin Coll Sherman -Austin Presbyterian Theo,

Sem., Austin 1

Baylor Univ. (Total) 102Dallas -Houston 101Waco

Bishop Coll., Dallas -`Blinn Coll., Brenham'Cisco Jr. Coll., Cisco'Concordia Lutheran Coll.,

Austin -Corpus Christi, Univ. of,

Corpus Christi -Dallas Bible Coll., DallasDallas Theo. Sem., DallasDallas, Univ. of, Irving

'Del Mar Coll, CorpusChristi

East Texas State Univ.,Commerce

'Frank Phillips Coll.,Borger

'Grayson County Coil.,Denison

Hardin-Simmons Univ.,Abilene

'Hill Jr. Coll., HillsboroHouston, Univ. of.

Houston'Howard County Jr. Coll,.

Big SpringHoward Payne Coll,,

BrownwoodHuston-TillotSOn Coll ,

Austin

40

371

U S

fACUL EY U

FOREIGN SIUDENTS

G 0

3 22 1

6

131 47 18

4

1

49 100 2

2

4 -

1

2

3

2

41 204 140 160

41 194 110 1605 1

4 29

7 .-36 16 206

206 4,711 2,509 713

13 81

95

3

14 42 283

1442 2542 2

14557

26

6

196

4

151

2

13

1

3

2504

1

4646

33

8

7224

7,933

211

95

470

3

6751

14557

4

86

2523

5

65 76

ittat COPY AVAILABLE

1

2

3

191

798 355 93 1,246

1 1

8 8

58 3 61

Page 69: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

lItILtEl StiiDEN'ti

it 0

Incarnate Word Con , SanAntonio 54 3

Lamar Linn? , Beaumont 48 61'Lee Coll , Baytown 37Le Tourneau Coll., Longview 17

"tiro Morris CO.

Jacksonville 12Lubbock Christian

Lubbock 14'McLennan Community Coil.,

lalaco7

McMurry Coll., Abilene 3 1*Mtd'and Coll., Midland1

'Navarro Jr, Coll.. Corsicana 49North Texas State Univ ,

Denton 2 113 192Northwood Inst, Cedar 11,11 8Our Lady of the Lake

Coll., San Antonio 13Pan American Univ..

Edinburg 33Paul Quinn Coll., Waco

1 --Port Arthur Coll , PoitArthur 2 -

'Ranger Jr. Coll., Ranger 29 -Rice Univ,, Houston 35 24 53 1 30St Edward's Univ.,

Austin 99 5St. Mary's Univ., San

Anton o 1 1 33 26 -St. Thomas, Univ. of,Houston 53 2 1Sam Houston State Univ.,Huntsville 30 12 3'San Antonio Coll., SanAntonio 39

'South Plains Coll.. Levelland - 47 -'South Texas Jr. Coi.Houston 468 6Southern Methodist Univ..Dallas I 10 60 171 38

Southwest Texas StateUniv., San Marcos -

Southwestern Assembles ofGod Coll., Waxahachie -

Southwestern Baptist Theo.Sem., Fort Worth 2 2 33

Southwestern Union Coll.,Keene 8

Southwestern Univ.,Georgetown 1 -

Stephen F. Austin StateUniv., Nacogdoches 4 33 20

'Tarrant County Jr. Coll..Fort Worth 15 2 17'Temple Jr. Coll., Temple 15 1 16Texas A. & I. Univ.,Kingsville 369 369Texas A. & M. Univ.College Station 11 25 406 320 2 728

Texas Christian Univ..Fort Worth - - 39 44 -

Texas Lutheran Coll.,Seguin 8

'Texas State TechnicalInst. (Total) 15 8 23Harlingen 5 _ SWaco 10 8 18Texas Tech Univ.. Lubbock 34 1 132 168 10 310Texas, Univ. of (Total) 165 114 1.319 766 75 2,160Arlington 1 3 147 45 4 196Austin 137 103 792 639 54 1.485Dallas 6 6Ei Paso 380 66 17 463Galveston 17 4 _ _

Houston 10 4 6 6San Antonio 4 4

Texas Woman's U1 59 Denton2 111 Trinity Univ., Sari Antonio

38 West Texas State Univ,,17 Canyon

10K US cOPOGN SUMSSOICARS iACilinf u G 0

1 34 65 1 20021 15 1 37

- 6 t3 1

12 UTAH 9tBrigham Young Univ., Provo 7

14 'Eastern Utah, Coll, of,Price

7 'L. D. S. Bus. Coll., Sail4 Lake City1 'Snow Coll., Ephraim

2 51 Southern Utah State Coll.,Cedar City

2 307 Utah State Univ Logan8 'Utah Technical Coll,,

Salt Lake City10 15' 38 Utah. Univ. of, Salt

Lake City2 36 Westminster Coll., Salt Lake

1 City

229

183

104

59

56

45

VERMONTBennington Coll.,

BenningtonGoddard Coll.. Plan field

*Green Mountain Coll.,Poultney

International Training,Sch. for, Brattleboro

Lyndon State Coll.,Lyndonville

Middlebury-Coll., MiddleburyNorwich Unlv., Northfield40 Trinity Coll., Burlington

'Vermont Technical Coll.,Randolph Center474 Vermont, Univ. of,Burlington

Windham Coll., Putney

47

269

7

1

35

8

53

83

8

"Juror coileces, commi-in,ty colieges, technical institutions, and other institutionsotter.r.gprogra-,s of !ess than our years. For further information on-studentS at lheSe,nshttrlians, see Table 4

VIRGINIAAverett Coll., Danville

*Bluefield Coil., BluefieldBridgewater Coll.,

Bridgewater'Dabney S. Lancaster Com-

munity Coll., CliftonForge

'Danville Community Coll.,Danville

Eastern Mennonite Coll,,Ha rrisonburg

Emory & Henry Coll., EmoryHampden-Sydney Coil.,

Hampden-SydneyHampton Inst., HamptonHollins Coll., Hollins

CollegeLongwood Coll., FarmvireLynchburg Coll., LynchburgMadison Coll., HarrisonburgMary Baldwin Coll., StauntonMary Washington Coll.,

Fredericksburg'New River Community

Coll,, DublinOld Dominion Univ.,

NorfolkPresbyterian Sch. of

Christian Education,Richmond

Radford Coll., RadfordRandolph-Macon Coll.,

Ashland

76 1,388 865 129 2,3829 890 299 18 1,207

3 3

38 382 2

164 18 191 245 110 546

7

80 44 222 321 1 544

5 19 19

27 25 66 38 5 109

9 1 5 5- 2 2

4 - 4

- - - 10 IC

- 5 - 52 3 4 4- 7 - 7- 2 - 3 5

- - 2 - 2

16 15 29 28 2 59- 6 6 - - 6

74 88 365 467 63 8957 1 8

16 - 16

2

11F1, Avr.1, r3 t r.

1 - 1

- - 1 - - 1

2 39 7 - 4611 _ 11

- 2 - 2- 2 24 - - 24

2 6 17 1 18- 2 1 - 33 - - 9 9

9 8 1 18

2

2 2 4

2 3 15 - 1 16

- 4 - 4

_ _ _ -

- 1 3 11 1 15_ 15 3 - 18

4 - - 4

61

Page 70: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

fi,11.do. or V.),-on, tyricnburg

Richmond. Univ. Dt ;-10t.711rirmirri

versify of Ric riniclinj

vet i;ity ot RichmondCoH Urn-

sersoy of itichinLaid'Sullins Coll , Bristol!Sweet Briar Coll., Sweet

Hrtar()moll Theo. Solt. in

Virginia. Richmondl/iry..rdic a COrt4600,se,i((fl

lif6v (1-030'Medical Coll. of Virginia,

RichmondVirginia Commonwealth

ttrii RichmondVirgnirs iCorri-

iet,nity , AhingilonVirginia Interment Coil ,

BristolVirginia Military Inst,

LevirigtriciVirginia Polytechnic., Inst.

& State Univ.,Blacksburg

Virginia State Coll.,Petersburg

Virginia Union Limy.,Richmond

Virginia. Univ. of,Charlottesville

V.rginla Wesleyan Coil .

Norfolk`Virginia Western Com

munity Coil RoarcieeWashington & Lee Univ.,

Lea ingtonWdhaot & Mary. Coll. of

(Total)Christopher Newport

Coll., Newport News& Mary. Coll.

of, WiaLimsburg

t13 1 I "22

9

31 0

5 5

I 3 1/ 11

7 7

2 1 41 20 61

I3 13

2 4 41 7 48

3 3

1 5 9 9

24 20 42 190 232

3 6 9

36 36

32 20 24 187 1 212

3

7

3 5

3 5

WASHINGTON 275 138'Big Bend Community Coll.,

Moses LakeCentral Washington State

Coll,, EmlensburgCiark Coll., Vancouver' Columbia Basin Coil., PascoEastern 'Washington State

Coll., CheneyEdmonds Community Coll.,

Lynnwood1

Evergreen State Coll.,Olympia

1

Fort Wright Colt , SpokaneGontaga Univ.. SpokaneGreen River Coll., Auburn 1

'Lower Columbia Coil.,Longview

Northwest Coll., Kirkland-plympic Coll., BremertonPacific. Lutheran Univ.,

Tatoma'Peninsula Coll , Port

AngelesPuget Sound, Univ, of.

Tacoma5t. Martin's Coti .

Seattle PacitirSeattle

10 - 1 11

- 2 2

18 18 4 40

6 3 9

12 18 1 31

1,744 1,Q54 104 2,902

13 13

8 815 1 16

5 5

44 9 53

342 11 53

29 296 6

16 16

6 72 12 3 87

7 _ 7

3 59 23 4 8631 31

1 62 9 71

)Lroor 'colleges, community colleges. technrcei 1,stihrtioirs, and other institutionsolleririg programs of less than tout years Fm further Int o rinatoo suAents at theseaist.tLtic,s, see Tabre 4

62

St:.,C1 2).6

Seattle Univ., Seattle 3 1

Shoreline Community ColtSeattle

` Skagit Valley Coll., Mt.Vernon

lsiiink ine Fails CommunityColl., Spokivia

Wald Walla Coll . CollegePla e

' Walla Walla CommunityColl.; Walla Walla

Washington State Urns.,Pullman 14 14

Washington, Univ. 01,Seattle 250 80

Wenatchee Va5ey Coll.,Wenatchee

Western Washington StateCoil,. Bellingham 4 13

Whitman Coll,, Walla Walla 1 5

WEST VIRGINIA 1 f 20Alderson Broaddus Coll.

Philippi 4 2Appalachian Bible Inst.,

Bradley'Beckley Coll., BeckleyBethany Coll., Bethany --Concord Coll., AthensDavis & Elkins Coll.,

ElkinsFairmont State Coll.,

FairmontMarshall Univ., Huntington 2Morris Harvey Coll.,

Charleston'Ohio Valley Coll.,

ParkersburgSalons Coll Salem &

ClarksburgWest Liberty State Coll.,

s West LibertyWest Virginia Inst. of

Technology, MontgomeryWest Virginia State Con.,

InstituteWest Virginia Urns,,

Morgantown 5 15West Virginia Wesleyan

Coll., Buckhannon - 1

Wheeling Coll,. Wheeling 2 --

WISCONSINAtvemo Call., MilwaukeeBeloit Coll., BeloitCardinal Strilch Coll,.

MilwaukeeCarroll Colt., WaukeshaCarthage Coll., KenoshaEdgewood Coll., Madison

'Gateway Technical Inst.,Racine

Holy Family Coll.,Manitowoc

Holy Redeemer Coll.,Waterford

Lawrence Univ-AppletonLayton Soh. of Art &

Design, MilwaukeeMarian Colt. of Fond du Lac -Marquette Univ.,

Milwaukee 7Medical Coll, of Wisconsin,

The, MilwaukeeMilton Coll,. Milton

* Milwaukee Area TechnicalColl., Milwaukee

I/ 5 52

91 '11

8 8

163 6 4 1/3

19 19

198 186 2 386

762 178 89 1,629

11

38 L5 1 54

200 7 364 571

4 4

1 1

11 175 1 6

20 1 21

5 1 1

17 3 20

10 10

1

4 4

20 20

41 41

41 41

363 363

9 91 5

375 255 1,446 2,025 109 3,580-- - 4 - - 45 16 21 - - 21

2 5 3 816 - - 1611 1 - 12

- 4 - - 4

2 2

2 2

6 62 26 8 1 1 10

2 25 _ 5

82 112 3 197

- 8 8- 13 14

23 32

BEST COY AVP.ii.ABLE

Page 71: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

mkt ii,r+

M ce Sch. of Frig,i

S

(trot lylOP.Hr.S

r,I fORitc)fi

SCHOIANS

'Central Wyoming Coll.,

U SIACUlfy U

fOREIGN AGENTSneering, Milwaukee

15 4 1 20 Riverton3 3

Mt. Mary Cell Milwaukee8

1 9 "taram,e County ConnMt. Senario Col/, Ladysmith 3

3 munity Coll., Cheyenne1

New Tribes lost. (Tolac)4 12 0 25 'Northwest Community

New Tribes Bible inst,Car , Powell

19 2 21

Waukesha3 IL) 7 ,.40 'Sheridan Coll., Sheridan

15 )5

New Tribes Inst.Fredonia

1 2 2 5Wyoming, Univ. of,

dfnie 28 9 127 95 6 228

'North Central TechnicalInst. Wausau

22Northland Coll , Ashland

55

GUAM137 6 12 255

Paper Chemistry. Oust. of.

Guam. Univ. of, Agana) 37 6 12 155

Appleton5 5Ripon Coil , Ripon

1 2Sacred Heart Sch. of

PUERTO RICO 235 36 622 166 92 880

Theology, HalesCorners

6 6 Bayamon Central Univ.,Bayamon - 19 2 21

St. Norbert Coll., West

Catholic Univ. of Puertode Pere

201 21

Rico, Ponce 13 4 37 4 41

Viterbo Cola. la Crosse10

10Intel-American Univ. of

Wisconsin Coil.-

Puerto Rico (Totalt21 1 22

Conservatory. Milwaukee 2 -- 2`Aguadilla Regional Coll,,

Wisconsin, Univ. of Cfotall 360 206 1,175 1.872 82 3.129Aguadilta

22

Eau Claire73 17 3 93

San German Campus19 1 20

Green Bay2 3 7 - _ 7

Puerto Rico, Univ, ofIs Crosse

51 3 _ 56 (Total) 222 31 545 161 90 796

Madison 336 13 540 1 635 73 2,248Arecibo- Regional Coll .

Milwaukee 8 13 171 163 4 338 Arecibo 10Oshkosh

1 3 04 16 1 111 Cayey Univ, Cayey 16Parksrde

4 4 - _ 4'Humacao Regional Coll,

River Falls 5 5 37 6 43 Humacao1 9 9

Stevens Point72

71Mayaguez Campus 18 515 74 589

Stout1 2 55 25 80

'Ponce Regional Coll.,Superior 3 3 .. - _

Ponce 2 33

WhiteWa ter4 70 7 1 78

Rio Piedras Campus 175 31 14 22 08 124San Juan Campus4 65 r2 71

WYOMING 28 9 180 95 8, 283 Sacred Heart, Coll. of the,*Casper Con , Casper

1515 Santurce

1'Junior colleges, community colleges. technicat institutions, and other instatutiOnsoffering programs of less than four years. For furtherinformation on students attheseiflstitufions, see Table 4.

63

Page 72: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Table 8-U.S. INSTITUTIONS REPORTING 10 OR MORE FOREIGN STUDENTS IN 1971-1972THAT DID NOT RESPOND TO THE 1972-1973 CENSUS

TOTAL FOR ALL U.S, AREAS

ALABAMASouth Alabama, Univ. of, Mobile

ARIZONACentral Arizona COIL, Coolidge

CALIFORNIAAllan Hancock Coll., Santa MariaArmstrong Coll., BerkeleyCalifornia Coll, of Arts R. Crafts, OaklandCalifornia Inst, of the Arts, ValenciaCalifornia Polytechnic State Univ.. PomonaCalifornia State Univ., San DiegoHeald Engineering coll., San Franciscoimmaculate Heart Coll.. Los AngelesLincoln Univ.. San Franciscoos Angeles liar bor Coll., Wilmington

Marin, Coil, of, KentlieldSanta Barbara City Coll., Santa BarbaraSequoias, Coll, of the, VisaliaSouthern California Sch, of Theo., ClaremontWest Coast Univ., Orange

CONNECTICUTNew Haven, Univ. of, West HavenNorwalk Community Coll , Norwalk

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIASoutheastern Univ.

FLORIDACharron-Willi?ms Coll., MiamiFlorida Jr. C. JacksonvillePolk Comrnu,lay Coll., Winter Haven

GEORGIAAbraham Baldwin Agricultural Coll., TiftonGeorgia Southern Coll., StatesboroOglethorpe Coll.. Atlanta

HAWAIIU.S. fnternatonaf Univ.. Makawao

ILLINOISBarat Coll., Lake ForestChicago Acad. of Fine Arts, ChicagoGreenville Coll., GreenvilleLake Forest Coln, Lake ForestMcKendree Cod., LebanonNational Coll. of Chiropractic, ChicagoRockford Coll., RockfordSt. Mary of Nazareth Hosp. (Total)

Medical Technology, Sch. of, ChicagoNursing. Sch. of, Chicago

INDIANAEarlham Coll., RichmondNorthwood lost , West BadenPurdue Univ., Lafayette

KANSASDonnelly Coll., Kansas CityFriends Univ., Wichita

KENTUCKYMorehead Stale Univ., Morenead

LOUISIANACentenary Coil. of Louisiaril, Shreveport

MAINERicker Coll., Houlton

MARYLANDFrederick Community Coll., FrederickMaryland, Lin:v. of,

Baltimore Campus- Professional Schs.

MASSACHUSETTSChamberlayne Jr. Coll., Boston

Number01 Stu ,nails

Reported1971 -1912

5,633

2121

1010

1,52513

196ol20

445256283

33159

101966331318

1446084

1313

115641338

62311912

4444

20934161416115510531241

8161021

785

523913

1717

1818

1SIS

3313

20

16123

Emmanuel Coll., BostonGrahm Jr. Coll., BostonNew England Conservatory of Music, BostonTufts Univ., BostonWentworth Inst., Boston

MICHIGANGrand Rapids Baptist Bible Coll. and Sem., Grand RapidsGrand Rapids Jr. Colt, Grand RapidsKellogg Community Coll., Battle CreekOlivet Coll., OlivetReformed Bible Inst., The, Grand Rapids

MINNESOTANorth Hennepin State Jr. Coil,, MinneapolisWinona State Coll., Winona

MISSISSIPPIMississippi State Univ., State CollegeRust Coll., Holly Springs

MISSOURIForest Park Community Coll, St. LouisLincoln Univ., Jefferson CityMissouri Western Coll., St. JosephNew Tribes Inst., Camdenton

NEBRASKAUnion Coll., Lincoln

HEW HAMPSHIRENew Hampshire Coll,* Manchester

NEW JERSEYBerkeley Sch,, The, East Orange

NEW YORKCity Univ. of New Ycrk

City Coll , New YorkHunter Coll., New YorkNew York City Community Coil., New York

Collegiate Inst., New YorkColumbia Univ., New York

Pharmaceutical Sciences, Coll. ofEisenhower Coll., Seneca FallsElizabeth Seton Coll., YonkersManhattan Medical & Dental Assistants Sch., New YorkMartha Graham Sch. of Contemporary Dance, New YorkNew York Medical Coll., New YorkPan-American Art Sch., New YorkSt. John Fisher Coil., RochesterState Univ. of New York

Agricultural & Technical Coll, at CantonCorning Community Coll. at CorningFashion Inst. of Technology at New YorkHudson Valley Community Coll. at TroyUlster County Community Coll. at Stone RidgeWestchester Community Coll, at Valhalla

Traphagen Sch. of Fashion, New York

NORTH CAROLINAShaw Univ,, Raleigh

OHIOMuskingum Coll., New ConcordOhio Northern Univ., AdaToledo, Univ. of, Toledo

OKLAHOMACameron Coll., LawtonNorthern Oklahoma Coll., TonkawaOklahoma Christian Coll., Oklahoma CityOral Robert. Univ., TulsaPhillips Univ., Enid

OREGONMarylhurst Coll., Ma rylhurstSouthern Oregon Coll., AshlandSouthwestern Oregon Community Coll., Coos Bay

PENNSYLVANIABucknell Univ., LewisburgMessiah Coll., Grantham

Numberof Students

Reported1911-1912

3324293715

8$1321191022

341816

235223

12

15629

1021114

4747

1414

1515

562

83384123

3322175430101815

18128423101516

1313

1821013

159

1271415185228

57162615

513417

64BEST COeY AVAILABLE

Page 73: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Table 8U.S. INSTITUTIONS REPORTING 10 OR MORE FOREIGN STUDENTS IN 1971-1972THAI DID NOT RESPOND TO THE 1972-1973 CENSUS (continued)

NumberDI Students

Repotted1911-1972

Nun berof students

Reported1971-1912

RHODE ISLAND 11 UTAH 18Vernon Court Jr Coll., Newport Weber State Coll., Ogden 16

SOUTH CAROLINA'Friendship Coll,, Rock HO

1818

VIRGINIAOld Dominion Univ., Norfolk

7272

SOUTH DAKOTA 12National Coll, of Bus., Rapid City 12 WASHINGTON 88

Centralia Coll,, Centralia 12TENNESSEE 25 Everett Community Coil., Everett 44David Lipscomb Cod., Nashville 15 Hightine Community Coll , Midway 32Nashville State Technical Inst., Nashville 10

TEXASHenderson County Jr. Colt., Athens

28910

WISCONSINWisconsin, Univ. of, Superior

112112

May Hardin Baylor Coll., Belton 17Odessa Coll., Odessa 20 PUERTO RICO 33Paris Jr. Coir., Paris 18 Sacred Heart, Coll, of the, Santurce 33San Jacinto Coil., Pasadena 92Southwestern Univ, Georgetown 13 VIRGIN ISLANDS 124Texas Southern Umv., Houston 119 Virgin Islands, Coll. of the, St. Thomas 124

BEST COPY AVAILABLE

65

Page 74: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

Ii nisi/pile inreymitimmi El/l/17//il)/0 309 UNITED NATIONS PLAZA, NEW YORK, N. Y. 10017

Regional Offices Overseas OfficesMIDWEST EAST AFRICA

,uiA,t) Nairotii. Kenya

ROCKY MOUNTAINCapitol i te CenterE. 10th Avenue at Grant StreetDenser, Colorado 8020 3

SOUTHEAST56 17th Street, N.L.Atlanta, Georgia 3030')

SOUTHERNSuite 1 A World trade Ce iter1520 Texas Avon,Houston. texas 77002

WASHINGTON1709 New York Ai.enue. N WWashington, 1) G. 20006

WEST COAST1212 Wilshire BoulevardLos Angeles, California 90017

291 Geary StreetSan Francisco, California 94102

NORTHEAST REGIONAL SERVICES809 United Nations PlazaNew York, New York 10017

SOUTH AMERICAApartado 300Lima 1, Peru

Branch office at Moneda 1467. Casilla 9286, Santiago, Chile

SOUTHEASTERN ASIAP O. Box 6007Tsimshatsui. Hong Kong

Branch office at the National Education Commission Building,Sukhothai Road, Dusa, Bangkolhailand

The Institute of International Education, founded in 1919. is a private, nonprofit organization which develops and administers programs ofeducational exchange for foundations, private organizations, governments. colleges, universities, and corporations in the United States andabroad Approximately 7,500 students. teachers, technicians, and specialists from about 110 countries study or train through these programseach year. Through its counseling and information services and its publications, the Institute assists thousands of individuals and many organizatons With matters of international education here and abroad.

The Institute relies on contributions from those interested in educational exchange to meet its annual operating costs, and it invites mdivictuals. foundations, and corporations to share in its important activities, Contributors may establish special scholarship opportunities for U.S.and foreign students and provide supplementary grantsiin-aid Contributions to the Institute are tax deductible for federal income tax purposesup to 50 per cent of the contributor's adjusted gross income for the taxable year in which the contribution is made. IIE is not a private foundationwithin the meaning of the Tax Reform Act of 1969.

REST COPY AVAILABLE

Page 75: DOCUMENT RESUME Open Doors 1973. Report on ...DOCUMENT RESUME ED 091 958 HE 005 461 TITLE Open Doors 1973. Report on International Exchange. INSTITUTION Institute of International

OTHER IF PUEitit'AtIONSThe Community and Junior College in the United States. 1973. 75 cents.Engineering Education in the United States, 1973. 75 cents,Graduate Study in the United States. 19/2. Fi0 cents,Guide to Foreign Medical Schools. By Dr. Daniel Marien. 1973. $4.00.Handbook on International Study for U.S. Nationals. 1970. $7.00.Handbook on U.S. Study for Foreign Nationals. 1973. $8.9b.International Educational Exchange: A Bibliography, 1970. $6.00.Meet the U.S.A. By Henry Steele Commager. 1970.. $2.75.Summer Study Abroad. 1973. $2.00. 197,1 edit+on Ma'cll. 19741 $3.0a.Teacher Education in the United States. 1971, 50 cents.Teaching Abroad. 1973. $1.00.Undergraduate Study in the United States: The FourYear College. 1973, 75 cents.U.S. CollegeSponsored Programs Abroad: Academic Year. 1973. $3.50.

A complete list of lIE publications is available from IIE's Publications Division,,t,J-Vfr!, or, re.,. S

lEST3'eit.A9LE

45;a 10.73