William Lyon University

William Lyon University was a former non-traditional school based in San Diego, California.

The school was named after Maj. General William Lyon (USAF), a decorated officer who served during the World War II, Korea, and Vietnam eras. Originally from Los Angeles, he founded and grew a homebuilding business in California called William Lyon Homes.[1][2][3]

History

The school was reported to have been founded as Gaylor Institute, but later became Lyon University and then William Lyon University. By 1983-84, the school received the assets and records of the former Beacon College of Washington, D. C. In the late 1980s the school changed its name to become American Commonwealth University and later, in the early 90s, was known as Huron International University. Huron International University continues to issue diplomas in Japan, but all operations of William Lyon University, and its various aliases in the U.S., have been terminated.

Another school, International College, Los Angeles, is also associated with William Lyon University. When International College, Los Angeles went out of business in the mid-1980s, its students were transferred to William Lyon University.[4]

Professors

Among the faculty of William Lyon University was Thomas R. Haines, PhD. A graduate of USIU and a distinguished professor at several Oregon and California universities, Dr. Haines developed a novel "Participatory, on-line educational program" at William Lyon University and served as its Vice President from 1985 until 1990. Additional noted professors included Jack R. Gibb, PhD. A pioneer in humanistic psychology and the originator of Trust Level theory, Jack Gibb's distinguished career as a psychologist and consultant spanned five decades. Gibb held a doctorate in psychology from Stanford and previously taught at Brigham Young, Michigan State, and the University of Colorado and International College.[5][6]

Accreditation status

William Lyon University was not accredited by one of the U.S. regional accreditation bodies recognized by traditional universities and colleges in the United States. It was reportedly granted California State approval to operate. Later, American Commonwealth University was accredited by the National Accreditation body the Accrediting Council for Independent Colleges and Schools—ACICS.[7][8] ACICS is a non-profit that provides national accreditation to non-degree programs, associate's, bachelor's, and master's degrees, but not doctoral degrees (i.e. Ph.D.).

Custodian of records

The California Department of Consumer Affairs Bureau of Private Postsecondary Education lists San Diego University for Integrative Studies [9] as the custodian of records for William Lyon University, American Commonwealth University, and Huron International University. San Diego University of Integrative Studies is not accredited by a Regional accreditation body.

gollark: However, the actual `reboot` command in the sandbox does *not* reboot it fully.
gollark: I can't get around that.
gollark: No, it does.
gollark: - PotatOS uses a single global process manager instance for nested potatOS instances. The ID is incremented by 1 each time a new process starts.- But each nested instance runs its own set of processes, because I never made them not do that and because without *some* of them things would break.- PotatOS has a "fast reboot" feature where, if you reboot in the sandbox, instead of *actually* rebooting the computer it just reinitializes the sandbox a bit.- For various reasons (resource exhaustion I think, mostly), if you nest it, stuff crashes a lot. This might end up causing some of the nested instances to reboot.- When they reboot, some of their processes many stay online because I never added sufficient protections against that because it never really came up.- The slowness is because each event goes to about 200 processes which then maybe do things.
gollark: WRONG!

References

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