News Scrapbook 1980-1981

LOS ANGELES TIMES

SENTINEL

Writing workshop for nurses offered "Writing for Publi- cation: A Workshop for Professional Nurses" students, $30 for

4 USD Signees Include El Cajon Forward Reu

the public. The workshop may be taken for five hours of college credit. For information, phone 293-4585. The workshop is de- signed for nurses wish- ing to develop their per- sonal and professional writing skills. Areas covered will include: writing market potent- ial, characteristics of good writing, man· uscript preparation, author-editor respons- ibilities, and communi· cation with puplishers.

will be offered at the University of San Diego from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, April 25, in Room 106 of the Phillip Y . Hahn School of Nursing. Pre-registration is re- quested . Fee for the workshop is $25 for

SAN DIEGO NEWSLINE

1 5 CalPIRG lost the vote on manda- tory student fee funding at USO last week. "It's very chic to be a conservative on campus," said CalPIRG staffer Sue Woods.

SENTINEL

APR 1 5

..,. -r -r The University of San Diego's School of Business Administration is offering a one-day workshop, "Winning Through Negotiation," Friday, April 24, from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the Little America Westgate Hotel in downtown San Diego. The workshop, designed for persons involved in management, law, marketing, real estate, finance, government, or the armed services, will be con- ducted by Dr. Israel Unterman, management consultant. · Pre-registration is requested and a fee of $95 will be charged. For details, call 293-4585. The workshop ls co-sponsored by USD's Office of Continuing Education.

Dressing Up The Stars Charlton Heston looked great in that brown court robe he wore as Sir Thomas More in "A Man for All Seasons." And Tandy Cronin kept her head high in the tall turban for her role as Lady Capulet in "Romeo and Juliet" at the Old Globe Theater. Those costumes and some 40 others are on display through May 7 at Founders Gallery of the University o( San Diego to showcase the costume design talents of Robert Morgan. Morgan, one of America's leading con- temporary costume designers, will be here April 24 to work with Jack O'Brien, artistic director of the Old Globe Theater, on costumes for a Globe production of "King Lear." For each costume Morgan designed, USD students under the direction of Professor Terry Whitcomb, created a papier mache mannequin in the shape of the actor or actress who wore it. Included in the display are such beauties as a red velvet Empire-waisted gown Tovah Feldshuh wore in the production of "Romeo and Juliet" and the feathered and medallioned headdress worn by Susan Pellegrino as Bette in the play "A History of Amer- ican Film." O'Brien will speak on "The Director Looks at Costume" at 3 p.m. April 24 at the gallery.

SAN DIEGO UNION

COLLEGES/By Ailene Voisin Guard Gilliam Chooses Gulls

TIE SAN DIEGO UNION/JERRY RIFE

I teams on their court."

Sometime during USIU's final season game at Portland State, a game the Gulls lost, incidentally, Coach Freddie Goss made a favorable impression on Pirates' point guard Steve Gilliam. So when Goss approached Gilliam after the season - and after Portland State dropped its basketball program - the 6-foot-3 junior was receptive to the idea of transfer- ring to USIU. "I don't know what I did," said Goss, "but we got him."

• • • University of San Diego Coach Jim Brovelli, meanwhile, signed his fifth recruit, Byron Roberts of Manuel Arts of Los Angeles, and continues to await word on another, Tim Murphy of Long Beach City College. Roberts, a 6-3 guard, was All-City his senior year. Murphy, a 6-6 forward who led the California communi- ty colleges in scoring, has narrowed his choices to USD, UC Santa Barbara, Colorado State and Texas Christian. He is expected to make a decision today. The Toreros have already signed forwards Randy Brick- ley (6-6. Glendale College}, Robby Roberts (6-7, L.A. Val- ley) and Anthony Reuss (6-6, Christian High}, and guard Rich Davis (6-0, Central Anzoria). '·We've definitely improved ourselves in quickness and shooting," said Brovelli. "We didn't get a center, but we're going to make Steve Rocha the backup to Dave Heppell (last year's center}, and we c:m always slide Robby Rob- erts over there." USD returns starters Rusty Whitmarsh (6-3 guard}, Ger- ald Jones (6-6} forward, and Heppell (6-8). • • • Elsewhere: Point Loma bas added two of the area's premier prep runners to its track and cross country programs. Andy Morabe, a 5,000-15,000-meter standout from Bonita Vista, and Michael Oleata, the county's top-ranked miler from La Jolla, will attend Point Loma this fall. A thigh injury to Marilyn Martin, Point Loma's top 1,500-meter runner, has been diagnosed as a stress frac- ture, not a tumor as originally suspected. "She's back, and she's already set a school record in the 1,500 meters," said Coach Jim Crakes. "We're really relieved." Point Loma third baseman Kerry Everett is three RBIs short of John McGaffey's school record of 49. Everett also leads the Crusaders with a .389 average, followed by Bill Anderson at .369 and Keith Wilson at .361. lo local baseball, UC San Diego will host Point Loma today at 2:30, and USIU will meet the Crusaders in a 3 p.m. contest tomorrow at Point Loma. USD's annual football clinic is scheduled for April 25-26 at the campus stadium. The speakers include Mike Fuller (San Diego Chargers), Jim Arnaiz (Hehx High}, Joe Martin (Stanford), Ron Robinson (Pasadena City College} and the USD staff. , USIU Athletic Director Al Palmiotto will name a women's basketball coach, a head trainer and a sports information di.rec.to · week. ~--------'

- Lucretia Steiger

Gilliam, who averaged 10 points per game, is among three players who committed to USIU this past weekend. The others are Greg Car- roll, a 6-7 forward-center from Mt. San Antonio College, and Nigel Lloyd, a 6-2 guard who sat out last season after a year at Riverside City College. Lloyd and Gilliam should help minimize the loss of shooting guards Willie White and Tommy Hobson. But Carroll, who averaged 12 points and eight rebounds, could

SAN DIEGO UNION

2 Founders' Gallery· Costumes by Robert .Morgan. Through May 7. University of San Diego. Monday- Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednes- day 10 am. lo 9 p.m. 291-6480.

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Ailene Voisin be the key acquisition for USIU, a Division II team that won most o( its games (13-12} by dominating mside. "He's a real steal for us," said Goss. "He didn't get much exposure because he missed half the year with a broken hand. Otherwise, I don't know if we would have had a chance." The departure of John Greer and Stan Montgomery (both 6-7), and Mark Bryant (6-5), left Goss with only two returning front line players - Don Robinson, a multi- talented 6-9 forward whose major flaw is inconsistency and Bob Hicks, a 6-7 forward-center who starts, but gets pulled shortly into each contest. Goss still hopes to sign five others, preferably forwards "We're looking, though it's hard to imagine having as much talent as we did last year," he said. As in the recent past, the Gulls will spend most of their time on the road. The 1981-82 schedule includes contests at Nevada-Las Vegas, Penn State, Syracuse, Arizona, Stan- ford, New Orleans, and possibly Dayton. all six of them - consist of New Orleans. West Texas State, Delaware State, Chicago State, Southeastern Louisiana and Cleveland State. ''Like I tell the recruits," continued Goss, "schools like UCLA go 20-6, but they win most of those games against teams in their conference. We went 13-12 playing Division The home games -

DAILY CALIFORNIAN

LOS ANGELES TIMES

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