News Scrapbook 1972-1973

USD offers degr • e1n education University of San Diego is offering a master of education degree by attending graduate level courses on the campuses of Mira Costa College m Oceanside and Imperial Valley College in El Centro. "USD's External Degree Program is not a typical extension service," Dr. Gilbert Oddo, director of graduate programs, said recently . "Students must be qualified graduate students. "All courses are taught by professors from USD's School of Education, "he said The exteroal program was created as a service to tea- chers, school administrators and interested students residmg in the North County and Imperial County Six graduate units in ed- ucation is to be offered by USO each semester.. The sequence of courses is designed to offer students the opportunity to earn an ME with a specialization in educational psychology over a two-year period There is no language or ,thesis requirement for the degree.,·~--~--

SOUTHERN CROSS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 24, 1972 - Pa2e 3 Mrs. James Copley named USD trustee

Howe, Sister Mary Mardel, 1''rancisco Marty, Irving Salomon and Bruce V. Wagner.

Southern Cross Reporter l\1RS. JAMES S. Copley, wife of the p4blisher of the San Diego Union and 'vening Tribune. has been a inted to the University of n Diego's new urufied board of trustees. Her appointment was announced by Bishop Leo T. Maher, chairman of the uoard, which includes priests, nuns and lay men and women Thirteen of its 35 members were named previously. Mrs. Copley, active in civic and charitable organizations. is a member of Mary, Star of the Sea parish, La Jolla DH . /1. THOR E Hughes, USD ' president and board member, said that with the ncorporation the university's two col ges, the board of trustees is being reorganized "to meet our needs of reaching out into the community of San Diego and beyond" The other 11 trustees are Msgr. John E. Baer, Ramon Castro, Msgr. I. Brent Eagen, Sister Frances Danz, Dr Antta Figueredo, l\lurra:r Goodrich, Patricia

AT SCHOOL SEMINAR - A statewide kshop on school lei1Slation at the University of San Diego included a session on how a bill becomes law led by Assemblyman Pete Chacon, left. With him are Sis- ter Maria de Angeles Correa, principal, Mount St Joseph's school, Barstow, standing left, Sister M. Ele nore Foley, principal, Resurrection Academy, Fontana, and Dr. H. Giles Schmid, diocesan school superintendent. - SC photo

C/'7/~ 9 - /7- 7C:., Umoja Dancers To Perform

·nlvement Assuciation, an af- f1lia e of the Afro-American Cultural Organization. A program emphasi~ing rt"latio11sh1ps and common thdracten tics of the Pgro Amencan and African cul- ture 1s ~chedule

9-l opes _high

14-6 victory

20 of 22 ;tarter:; returning. -O} a 292-198 margin. The Toreros hope to tuke up "here they lefl off when they venture to Eagle Rock to face the Occidental Tigers on Saturday. Oxy, which opened its e - son witn a 14-13 conquest ol •\z~sa Parific, returns 3JI let · termen from a team " i<:h wa,; 3-6 last vear and won the Southern California Inter- collegiate Athletic Conference with a 3-1 record. The Toreros must stop spit t'nd Bob Canary. who · t 37 passe for five touc wns in gainmg all-district hdfiors last year. 1 Against UC Rivers1d~, fu a 34-H lo,., uso·s pa;;c; defense 11•a · riddled for 250 vards. It tightened up against the Stags, l1owe\'er. limiting the visitors to 108 yards and pick- ing off two passes. Oftensi1ely. USD netted 245 : ards on the ground. paced b1· De Anza ,JC tran~fer Sam c"room·s 141 yards iii 17 car- r;es. including a 90-yard eor- "J'.'. run lrom scr,mm~g

LAREMONT STRONG

USO Prospects Are 'Frigh ening' By CII[CK SA\ 'Elt IJ~111g pan 11110

BACK ON THE FIELD - Coach Andy Vinci looks over University of San Diego stadium where football is scheduled to return next month after an 11-year absence. New USO team is run by non- profit organization separate from the university and meets Claremont in open- ing home Kame September 23 under

lights at 7:30 p.m. last official SD foot- ball team to play on this grou was in 1961. Vinci hopes 3,000 will use the stand and perhaps even overflow the maximum capacity of 7 ,ODD for games against teams like La Verne, Loyola and USIU. Season's first game is at UC Riverside, September 16. - SC photo

. SOUTHERN CROSS, THURSDAY,S PTEMBER21, 1972- Pag 9

Series challenges Catholics to learn more about their faith

,i-16v11<>

Rae wins title

"Religion and P r;.onal Values." MARCH 5 -Father James Carroll, CSP, chaplain, Boston University; ''The Imagination in the ife of Prayer." Dr. Jill Raitt, r igious studies professor, University of California at Riverside, will speak only in Riverside, Feb. 21, on "The Eucharist and the Unity of Christians." Tickets available from CCD offiC(!, Alcala Par , San Diego, 92110, or CCD office, 459 W. 17th St., San Ber- nardino, 92405.

theologians, a Christian Brother and a Jay woman who will explore challenges facing Christians because of their religion. THE AN:\'UAL series, sponsored by the CCD adult education offices in San Diego and San Bernardino, has been expanded to include a third location - Riverside. Speakers will appear first at USO Camino Theater, Alcala Park, and the following night either at St. Ann's parish , San Ber- nardino, or Our Lady of Perpetual Help, Riyerside. Speakers in both San Diego and San Bernardino and topics are· OCT. 10- Brother Gabriel Moran, FSC, of New York Tehological Seminary (Ecu- menical Center), "Revela- tion: the Immutability of the Past -0r the Uncon- trollability of the Future?" Oct. 31 - 1'',ither Kenan Osborne, OFM, Graduate Theological Union, Berkeley, "Christ in Progress." NOV. 14 - Father David Stanley, SJ, Regis College, Canada, "B iblical Spirituality for Modern Man." (USD More Hall, not Camino Theater) DEC. 5 - Father James Mackey of the UQjversity of San Francisco. ''Christ the Foundation of the Chutch." Appearing m San Diego and then Riverside are: JA. ·. 23 - Father Albert Jonsen, SJ, University of San Francisco; "Morality vs. ;\,fodcrnity in the Catholic i::hurch'!" Feb. 6 - Jo'ather John McCall, SJ, Boston College:

Southern Cross Reporter CHALLE. 'GE '72-'73 is designed to help Catholics get a "deeper un- derstanding·• of their faith and ··Jive it more fully," Bishop Leo T. Maher said in endorsing the series. He has urged pastors lo encourage people to take this "splendid opportunity to enrich themselves in the knowledge of our mutual faith." This year's series brings to the diocese six noted priest

Andy Vinci sometime this It took just t.,_._M,,es. University of San Di game of its new foolba mont College, H-6, before Claremont, li-3 over the

st home

last night celebrated the

Y•JU ould ha1e seen that eomplam.s , .uici ··rt was like playing on cement. The turf wa · real . d"i and they e\en cu1 out lJout two inc:hes deep 'o mark e.ieb lin at the I aro markers. We kept stepp11ig lil the ruts and twisting 11nkles all night. " Sanchez say · he w i II be read.; b Saturday. but we're not going to use hun ui, ess he is in A-l shape. We ha\'e eight games Jell after this one and he is too 1·aluable t,, risk losm IOI the rest of the year• DPfe11si.·e · bac•k Bill Yavorsky and l'ullba<•k XatP , Harris 11re ot hpr;, who prob- ably will lift b. ready Satur- da~ and dc·Tc%i1 e bac:k :\like \lurph) 1~ considt>red c1uef. tionable. Thus, Vu1t·i I ay need :;omp super-human eftnrts iu his llrst home ollermg. " We are going to o thing,·• he insist~ ·u:e ~1e going out there and play like there 1s no tomon v. We \\ill have the only C<'l'age gdme m town Saturday nl!'!L We hope to get a large fol101 mg to our· home ope r and 11e'll giw the people ot San Diego a real college Jootball ·gam<•. • The Torero, are suffering, but there·s no wlute Hag in io!Ji. ivet,ide field,"

era by ,taggering the Stag of Clare- 3,200 fans at USO Stadium. st two seasons and 7-2 la year,

ags had lost

was rated a good bet to go unbeata11 in 1972. The

ago and had 20 qf 22 startcn;

only four players from a ye

returning. But,

two of thece were at quarterback and seruor Craig '~D had to rn ke a stron D11cey was found wantmg as· goahne sta.nd ml way of the th~ replacement last night He fomth per10d t • • • lnumph. Ducey ddenly got STAT1sT1cs hot to onnect on three passes ~.,,,downs ...............~ 50 fiont• nd moved to the Toreros' 10 ltushe,.yo,doge ............ 55• oO from his own 18. ~~ii~~"v~~d~~-;•. :::::::::::: Passino .................... ,.1 1 However, on a fourth and two :i;;:~,.~:iosi":::::::::::::::. 6 · 3 •1 ,. 2 · at the two, Cornell Stanle;y Yard, Penalized ............. 69 26 stopped Bill Nash a yard short, * * * . . Sintay, whose booming punts m3naged seven completions m /kept USO out of danger all I 20 attempts for 108 yards, b~t night, came then through once I was badly off target when it, more to stave off the final I counted. ·Claremont threat. t The Toreros, 34-14 losers tol ci,,remont .......... • • o Riverside in the season opened U~?_.:·c~,·.,;·,·;~;;·t·O a,r.ai' a week ago, made a million 8~8 = ~~,;'Ji 1~ Jo~t:kc,~~>. mistakes lJ1 tha one. They made ' ide with a good iff-arm.

Father McCall, Sj

. as

lecturer Daniel controversial

a

Ellsberg,

figure the Vietnam war, is scheduled to speak at the Umversity of San Diego Wednesday The lecture, cospon red by the A c1ated Student Body, th tudent Bar A sociation nd Gr duate t\ldents 1r1ation, i · to be held at or Hall El& berg now awa1tln trial, copi$! a top . ecret tntagon study on the Indonesian war in 1969 which led to the ntual publication o( the •·p ntagon Pupers " In his lectures Ellsbcrg explam whv he risked prison and discusses the unprece- dented controversies revolvmt around government secrecy, military policy and press suppr ssion that have resulted m his h1story-makmg actions. in

Bill Jache kicked the PAT and USD was in front to stay. The clincher came m the third period when running back yards for .inothPr USO score. USO had ;ust lost eight yards on a previous play fumble for a 2nd-and-18 situation from its own 10. Croom, a 6·2, 190-pound transfer from DeAnza .Junior College. then took quarterbac Sintay's handoff and drove of rii;: t tackle. He appeared stopped a er a few yards, bounced off Iwo sec ondary defenders and headed for the right sidchncs. Only the .ags' Bob Muirhead then food between Croom and six points a he deftl brushed I ·n Sammy Croom galloped 90

' a few more last night, but in be- tween miscues they kept driving in a dogged attempt to pull out

and it paid off

the upset - handsomely.

STAGS SCORE FIRST

The Slags st.rurk first, !'{'- covering a USO fumble on the ]~tier's four yard line late in the opening period. Two plays later Ducey went over Ifrom less than a yard out. The first-per od score might have momentarily slowed the Toreros, but when the conver- sion attempt was missed, they filed up agam. S i'ting from their own 39 early in the second quarter, t )' went the 61 yards in 13 plars, •helped out by a 15-yaJd pmally £or grabbing the face mask. Sintay went the final six u,ches.

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