News Scrapbook 1972-1973

. 5c,-,i,1NEL.. University tea, tour are planned Cf - 2.o - 7 '">- The annual membership tea and tour of the University of San Diego campus will be held from 1 to 3 p.m. Tburlday by members of the U D Auxiliary. The women will meet in the Bishops' Dming Room in Founders' Hall Building. J.rntners of incoming freshmen have also been invited, Bill Bourus will be soloist. Dr. Virginia Livingston of La .Jolla is president of the auxiliary. Chairman of the tea is Mrs. irving W. Martin of Point Loma while Mrs. David L. Short of Point Loma is cochairman. Hostesses will be Mmes. Harold F. Tebbetts of Point I.om a, George Kiligas and Short. Purposes of the auxiliary are to further the growth and stimulate interest and pride in the University of San Diego as an effective cultural part of the community and to· support the activities of the auxiliary for the benefit of USO. ,.s USO To End Cage Season At Cal Poly Uml'l'r:..itv ol an Diego needing .dory tu1 a .500 "ea ~on 1akes on Cat Poly of San L111s Oh1sp,:i at 8 tonight 111 the Torero,· g~ m 111 thr final game of I he . ea on for roaC'h Berni, Bickerstafi C'lub '1 h<' TorerCJs 11111 ha1e lo halt ;a 1110-~anw losini;? tr a· to l'P?.l'il 111£> hrenh-<,>V(?II f J!lll"P at ' 11'1' .~:Ifl<' rillt! !05,e to So Fri• na 11l11 and l'ullPrton Oil lh~ rnilrl

• 0_1ng an Diego

In

THE STCTIGART Bil.ASS CHOTR will play at 8 pm Tuesday in thr Christ Lut11Pr• an Ch·urch, 47fil Cass St ~no at l\ r- m Thursday 'n t e Cnl· 1 ~n· LuthPI"an Church, 3060 · r S1 U4,1ni, 9-,? Dance ArHICA:-. FOLK DA. 'ERS v.ill pc for'l1 ~t 7:!10 p.lT' WetlnP dav ri t , USU Cam ino Hall Ttll'aler. '"ROMEO A, D JULIIIT," s•arring Jillana and Thor Su• 1011 ski II ill open the San l);rgo llallrt season m the C1v1c theater w,th pcriorm• arrcs at 8·3U p.m Friday and Saturday ana at 2 :io p.m Saturday

Theater ATI..AS AWAROS w 'I be ptesented lo p rformers ,, the 1971-72 s :fson :it •he Old Globe Thraler 1r the anm b3'1Qllel at •he thPater Sall rc~ue, closes on the Ca ,1u, carter Cent.er Stage of I.he Old G lohe Theater after 2. and 8 30 p.m. performances today. "BUTTERFLIES Ar.E f REE." th<: L(>c,na ·d C.er ..,e p R) about a bli id ho} \/ 1m I own, >1111 oprn .ti 8 • pln. Friday m trc Coronado Plavhouse for performance 21 a,~o p.m. F•1day~ througl: s..,nda) ending Oct. 21!. day at 6 30 p.rr,. '"Bf:\'O I) THE I< Bl. 'GE'' a Br tis conejy

Redu ing mistakes Rt B IA.f\J [. goal of Tori~9,~, .,__

VIL-

THE

••GADZOOKS LAI. ," or "WI! Our ,·ell?,'

'o

V, s T

w Ill the South Bay Players at 8 p.m. Saturda>· and sept. 3: at he Palomar car , Pa omar be present d b~

an 1ntercl'p\io11 t<~Jk them out of the g:ime. Quarterback Henry . mtay cored one T ro touclJtlown on a two•\ artl'run In the t q a er \. tiile th· other c e

Coa<:h And) \ mci i bark to fundamental,

lountam.

"KAJJ!\,'' a :"llembers of

rry

bv Sa

a 58 yar

<

Croom~-__,~--- fourth

sAN DIEGO UNION

'I ' /.Cf • USD Loses 2 Starters For Opener

"Pl 'OOCHIO,'' a play for children, will be pre~entec1 'at Actors Quarter, 480 Eln: St., at 2 p.m. Saturday~ .and • un- days through Ort. 1 SHAKESPEARE at lhe Old Globe will end until next ~url• mer with performances of ''Tbt' Merry Wive~ ol lnil- or" at2 p.m. " n Rich- ard III" at 30 pm, today. "SUDS IN '\'OUR EYE,'' the farce based Ill San Diego, wit t,e, presenter! by Actors Quar- ter at 8 JO rt' Friday~ and Saturdays throu Ii Sept. 30.

2-B

I HE ::,ENTINEL W'EDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 20. 1972 Toreros fundamentally ready, USIU home opener S urd y

If at first you don't succeed, bring it on home and try it again. That's exactly what Univer• s1ty of San Diego head football coach Andy Vind plans on doing against Clairemont follow Ing the To reros · "unwelcome back to college football " loss to UC Riverside. The 7:30 p.m. game Saturday will be the first home appearance of the season for USO, the first ever night contest in the newly renovated campus stadium and hopefully the Toreros first win since returning to college football after an 11-year absence . The Toreros w!II be out to avenge its 34-14 opemng game loss to Riverside. " We were up against a super team, there's no doubt about that," said Vinci "They were a fine team but we beat ourselves. · PERSONNEL CHANGES With that. the Toreros will spend the greater part of this week drilling on fundamentals

and making personnel changes. "We talked about our mistakes aiter the game and guess what - they were t e same fundamentals we talked about the first day of practice, " said Vinci. " There will be some changes made this week , you can bet on that." Clairemont brmgs a 1971 season record of 7-2 to Alcala Park, mcludmg two conse- cutive second-place fm1shes m the District Three NAIA ratings This year's Stag squad offers 25 returning lettermen, mcluding 10 of 11 offensive starters and a strong defense bolted down by tackle Chris Stecher I6~.270 l Vmc1 will be hoping for some offensive continuity when he sends his Toreros out on the field . Against Riverside quarter- back Henry Sintay passed for 167 vards but was the v1chm of five mterceptions. two of which were returned for touch• downs. End Roger Leonard hauled m

five Sintay tosses for 127 yards and runnmg back Sammy Croom outdistanced a trio of defenders on route to a 58-yd scormg bust This Saturday they'll settle for an outscoring performance. WESTERNERS OPE Two things are on the mind of United State~ International University h·•ad football coach Marv Brar.en. He·s got until Saturday t, 1ght .o get relief That"s w~ m Braden sends his Westerner , out for the first time this season to meet tough Puget Sound University. Game time is 7:30 at San Diego's Balboa Stadium. First thing on the agenda is to iron out the mistakes made against Grossmont JC in last week's scr,mmage. Second , get everything together for Puget Sound • Against Grossmont the Westerner·s running and passmg game pleased Braden. He looks toward fullbacks Rod Perkins, a 190 pounder from West Los Angeles JC, Colin Cann, a sophomore from Yonker~. N. Y. and Chris Sullivan out of Fullerton JC, to supply the punch of the ground game. By air, Braden wIII go with semor quaxterback Doug Omer of Anaheim. "[ thought Doug threw the ball well. but he is capable of better option execut10n, .. said Braden following the three- hour scrimmage. Dwight McDonald, a 6-3, 19(). lb. ex-Kearny Korn~ continues to make impress1Jns on everyone

USD launches study of Aqua Hedionda Lagoon

'Politico' on display

sediment temperature, salinity, chemical measurements, hydrograpbic factors and other populations or communities. The study is to be completed by next March. The ecological study of the Agua Hedionda Lagoon is one of three research projects underway at the Encina Power Plant. In one of the other projects, researchers are investigating the use of power plant cooling water effluent to speed up the growth of both tht American eastern lobster and the western spiny lobster. In the third 11roject, research is be"lng done to determine the feasibility of raising oysters commercially in the power plant lagoon environment. grarn size,

University San Diego Environmental Laboratory has started an ecological study of the Agua Hedionda. Lagoon under a grant from the San Diego Gas and Electric Company. Prelimmary results of the study are to be included in the environmental report for generating unit 5 at the Encina Power Plant. Results of the completed study are then to be included in a supplemental report on marine studies for the new unit. SUBTIDAL ECOLOGY STUDIED Dr. John S. Bradshaw, associate professor of biology at USO, is directing the research study which is concentrating on the subtidal ecology of the lagoon. Bradshaw, who received his of

Ph. D. in biological oceano• graphy from Scripps Institution of Oceanography, has published several papers on marine ecological studies. In the current studies of the Agua Hedionda Lagoon·, samples of plant and fish life, water and sediment are being taken from the three sections of the lagoon. Specimens are to be identified and inventoried. Core samples are to be analyzed for nitrogen and organic content, while water samples are to be analyzed for salinity, dissolved oxygen, nutrients and plankton. MARCH COMPLETION SET Researchers are to seek to establish a statistical correlation between representative marine organism populations and

''Politico." the latest work of

is in

"obile,

sculptress Myrna

«

display

on

Q currently

the

at

r,l Founders' Gallery

J

San Diego

of

University

through Oct. 8. The 20-piece collection which is to be viewed as one sculpture is the artist's " statement" directed toward the political arena in this campaign year. 'l) Politico includes 15 aluminum • personages resting on blue +. wooden cubes along with sound t effects. Myrna Nobile is a lecturer in v, USD's Art Department. She ..has served on the board of the . San Diego Art Guild and is a past president of Kappa Pi international art fraternity. The gallery is open daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and on weekends by appointment. USO campus with record enrollment THE UNIVERSITY of San Diego has a record enrollment at undergraduate and graduate levels tlir.; year. Dr. Author Hughes, president, told the Southern Cross that provisional figures show 1,499 un• dcrgraduate students taking on-campus courses and 75 studying off campus. In addition, the law school has an enrollment of ap- proximately 8.50, making a total university student body of 2,424. DR. IIUGIIES said that there was a large increase in transfer students frl}m ,:om munity colleges this year. The new scale of tuition costs has not, ap• parently, affected enrollment. 5" (') ..1f'

ev n

es. Mmes. G{>orge Kil Harold F. Tebbetts.

a m1mmum of 20 ho•J s at Ba} side Settlement House be- fore beconmg active mem· bt'rs this June San Diego Auxiliary will h Id i'.s annu I mcrrbE::.iihlp tea and tc\il" of th campas frc~ 1 to 3 p.rr Thur5day w1tn the tea to be held at the Bishop's din· JM roorri in Founaers Hall :'.t~the ,of hcommg fresh• me1 have been im- 1 ed as ptcrn. guests. Dr. Virginia LI\, 1g 11.., prcside,t of the a\jXII! ry, w1l JOin Mrs. rr- v ng W Martin, tea cha1 • man and '.\frs. Oav1d L. Shori, cochairman_. in 'greet- ing r; sts alon with ho tes - The University of

1, al memhers

Seven prov1

1:.1-z I 7 USD gets lederql prant lor teacher education The University of San Diego has been awarded a federal grant of $23,500 to gram can contact Dr. Robert E. Nelson, chairman of the department of education, or Dr. DeForest L. Strunk, di• rector of special education at USO.

Jumor of Social Ser-

of th

San Diego County ,redical Society Woman's uxil ary pres ent !\!rs Howa d Hew- it Ii.., pre·entcd a cm.ck for 1,800 from the aux,hary to the Mcd,cal Society's student loan admtn1 trator '.\ln;, i\lil ton Evargclou to be used for low•.nterest serolarsh1p loans. The lG ,s are allocated by the Medical Society's Assn. for :\ledica\ and Para• medical Education· and Re search (A:VlPER). The funds were der.ved from the aux• ihary 's 1971-72 benevoknce fund. 'Mrs. Ev:?:>Jelou is pres- ident of thC' non profit agcyi• ey s board of directors.

'

support graduate training in the education of mentally re• larded children. Directed by ·the Bureau of Education for the Handi· capped under the U.S. Office of Education, the grant is for the professional preparation of teachers of the mentally retarded in public and pri• for training leading to a master's degree in special education. Persons interested in the pro-- vate schools. , Funds are to be us

j

Made with FlippingBook flipbook maker