News Scrapbook 1980-1981
SAN DIEGO UNION
SENTINEL
SAN DIEGO NEWSLINE
SAN DIEGO UNION
:v 3 USD offers 'Guys and Dolls'
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MAY 6
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USO STUDENT CHAMBER - The student chamber music ensem• bles wtll give a concert to continue the Noontime Coneert Serie• at 12.15 p.m. \'le 'lbe University of San Diego will present the musical "Guys and Dolls" May 7-10 in the Camino Theater. Perfonnances are at 8 p.m. Thursday through Saturday and at 2 p.m. Sunday. General admission costs $3.50, and for students and seniors, $1.50. For information, phone 291-6480 Ext. 4712. ·GUYS AND DOLLS' - The Un1Ve<6lty of San o,ego will New This Week 6• pr nt the Frank Laesser-Abe Burrows-Jo Swerl ng mus,caJ basod on stones by Damon Runyoo at 8 p m. Thursday through Saturd'lv_ and 2 p.m.·next Sunday In the Camino Theater, USO P mela Smith d11ects and Robert Austrn Is musical director. -A symposium on h be p1esented at USO Holocaust will e Sales Hall from "" d 8:30 AM-4 PM 6-10 PM Thursdav tonioht . S~o · c nrnred b . v or Ch . the National onferencr. 582-2483.__ ____, Jews. and rist,ans Tl MES-ADVOCATE MAY 5 1981 Workshop on mace use to be offered SAN DIEGO - A work- shop, "Self-Defense with LOS ANGELES TIMES DAILY TRANSCRIPT 5 • • • Each participant, over age 18, will be issued a can- ister of mace and the re- quired certificate of carry and use. Registration for participants under 18 years of age is $10; no mace will be issued. For more details, call 293-4585. The workshop will be lead by Sergeant Rick Michelson of the Crime Prevention Unit, San Diego Police De- partment, and is being c~ sponsored by the Office of Continuing Education, USD, and Charter 100. (Umver ly o .. works 1 n all med1a by an ---~--:cc=-;--,,ER-Y FOUNDERS G.\LL o,egol , "Senior '!'hes• · 0 mnt! MondJY with graduating USO ar~~~rti- ioa.m.•4 p.m week· a recepuon throug a 'i days ( to 9 p.m. Wednesdays Mace," will be held at the University of San Diego on Saturday, May 16, from 9 a.m. until noon In Salomon Lecture Hall. is reqllll'ed and tuition for the workshop is $35. Partici- pants will learn safety and protection methods, how to protect personal property, and defense techniques to use if victimized, including the use of mace. Advance registration 'Holocaust' will be the topic of the fourth annual Holocaust Symposium this week at the University of San Diego De Sale Hall. The meetings, open to the public with a $15 fee for both days, will be from 6 to 10 p.m. Wednesday and 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Thur day. LA JOLLA LIGHT 7 'Self-defense with Mace' scheduled A workshop, "Self- Lecture Hall. Registration for methods, how lo protect personal property, and defense techniques to use if victimized, in- cluding the use of mace. Each participant, over 18 years of age, wil_l be issued a canister of chemical Mace and the required certificate to carry and use Mace. participants under 18 years of age is $10; no Mace will be issued For more details, call 293· 4585. The workshop will be led by Sergeant Rick i\1ichelson of the Crime Prevention Unit, San Diego Police. registration Advance Defense with Mace," will be held at the University of San Diego is required and tuition for the workshop is $35. on May 16, from 9 a.m. Participants will learn until noon in Salomon safety and protection ___cc~~---"-'-'----'--"__.__;;:..;......;.c...__ ::.c:c'--'--- Mace class offer·ed A Workshop, "Self- Defence with Mace," will be offered at 9 a .m. Saturday, May 16, attbe University of San Diego in Salomon Lecture Hall. Advance registration is required and tuition for the workshop is $35. Participants will learn safety and protection methods, how to protect personal property and defense techniques to use if victimized, in- cluding the use of mace. Each participant over 18 years of age will be issued a canister of mace and the required certificate to carry and use mace. Registration for participants under 18 years of age is $10; no mace will be issued. For information, phone 293- 4585. SENTINEL READER GUYS AND DOLLS The Jo Swerling and Abe Burrows musical, based on the stories and characters of Damon Runyan, about Nathan Detroit's floating crap game and Sky Masterson·• hypocritical wooing of Sister Sarah Brown for financial profit Musical director Robert Austin and director Pamela Smith have assembled one of the largest casts ever for a production by the Univers,ty of San Diego. Principal members of the cast are Cathleen Hannasch as Sister Sarah Brown, Bill Kerr as Sky Masterson, Desiree Callahan as Miss Adelaide (who has been engaged to Nathan Detroit for fourteen years), and Thomas Paskowitz as her reluctant fianc~. Other cast members are James Morlino. Nick DrahL Curtis Greco, Marvin Hamilton, Meg Heidrick. Bill Dierkes, and Tom Korson. Marilyn Green is the choreographer. (Sm.) Camino Theater, University of San Diego, Thursday, May 7 through Saturday, May 9 at 8:00 p.m. Matinee Sunday, May IO at 2:00 p.m. • A Workshop, "Self- Defence with Mace," will be offered at 9 a.m. Saturday, May 16, at the University of San Diego in Salomon Lecture Hall. Advance registration is required and tuition for the workshop is $35. Participants will learn safety and protection methods, how to protect personal property and defense techniques to use if victimized, in- cluding the use of mace. Each participant over 18 years of age will be issued a canister of mace and the required certificate to carry and use mace. Registration for participants under 18 years of age is$10; no mace will be issued. For information, phone 293· 4585. The workshop will be lead by Sergeant Rick Michelson of the Crime Prevention Unit, San Diego Police Depart• ment. LOS ANGELES TIMES 8 I-art VII/ Sunday, May 10, 1981 San Diego on VIEW Marmolejo-Obregon Vows A.re Recited r turally Tom Fleming, who is Mrs. Halie's frequent dancing partner, was there. So were th Robert Lee- mans, the Hali:y Rogerses, the Gran Grcgorys and the Jack Lewis Powells who belong to the Los Amigos Dancing Club. Other hard-dancing guests included the 1ctor Krulaks, the Charles Mays, the Eddy Wiegles. t c Walter Treavors, the Marshall Whites an(\ Joanne Hutchinson and Bob Faust. The Piros have done all the usual tourist things in San Diego. But their eyes light up when they talk about having visited Rodeo, the stylish new country-western dJncehall on La Jolla Village Drive. * The Immaculata at the University of San Diego was the scene of the midday wedding of Martin Marmolejo and Maria Rita Obregon. Her late grandfather was Al- varo Obregon, president of MeXJco from 1920-2 •. The Rev. James Rankm performed the ceremony. The bride wore an ivory gown with a bodice of Brussels lace, made by Mrs. Ignacio Arvizu. In her hair was the same corona with wax orange blossoms her mother wore at her wedding in 1950. A seated luncheon for more than 300 followed the ceremony. It was held in and around the Versailles Room of the Westgate Hotel. Among the guests was the bfide's great-aunt, Hor- tencia Elias Calles de Torreblanca of Mexico City, daughter of former Mexican President Plutarco Elias Calles. Also on the bride's side were her maternal grandmother Maria Tobin de Carranza, her uncles En- rique Carranza, Fernando Lubbert, Alvaro Obregon and Ariel Obregon, and aunts Maria Obregon de Vargas and Refugio Obregon, all of Sonora. The bride, a graduate of Our Lady of Peace Academy and San Diego State, _is the daughter of the Mayo O1:Jre- . ,.,_ ationa ourism Council. Also present were her sister Zita of San Diego and brothers Jesus and Alvaro who are students in Mexico City. Her brother Eleazar and sister-m-law Zarina were up from Mexico City. The bridegroom's parents, Martin and Amelia Mar- malejo of Sonora, were also present as were his sister Sandra Amelia and brothers Mario Juan, Armando, Ger- ardo and Alonzo. San Diego guests included the Merlin Gales, the Everett Jacksons, the David Fleets, Maj. Gen. and Mrs. Walter G. Farrell. Rita Carbone!, the Christopher Havendenchilds, the Jonathan Parsers, Carmen Marti- nez and former Mexican Consul Ignacio Pesqueira. Oth- ers present included the Sirak Baloyans, the Ernesto Ellises and the Rafael Crendains of Tijuana, and Maria del Rosario Ramirez Esteva from Los Angeles. Guests from Sonora and Mexico City included the Jose San Vicentes, Mrs. Julio Hirschfeld, Gloria and Raoul Canales, Enrique Serrano, Norma and Jorge Wayne R., Pilar Peaks, Rogelio Bastida, Emilia and Raoul Flores, the Aaron Saenz Courests, the Raoul Romeros and the Jesus Rodriguez-Gomezes. After a honeymoon·in Europe, the couple will live m Mexico City where the bridegroom is a stockbroker em- ployed by Banco Nacional de Mexico. * For a person who admits to ulcers, a "bad ticker' and having had a cancer removed, Killer Joe Piro still cuts a mean figure on the dance floor. Piro, whose career goes back to World War II when he performed for his Navy shipmates in Long }3each to earn carfare to Los Angeles, has with his wife Lucienne been in La Jolla as the houseguest of Christ.lane Halle. The other mght, she gave a French goll(met di ner at the La Valencia Hotel in their honor, asklll3'Gene Hartwcll's enscm lo play tor dancing. It was a night for people who can't stop dancing ana 3LADE TRIBUNE MAY 7 1981 'lbe workshop will be lead by Sergeant Rick Michelson of the Crime Prevention Unit, San Diego Police Depart- ment. Jp-$.:.1< $,.., .. '(I GALLERIES "Senior Thesis," on exhibition of works In oil media by graduating art majors al the University of Son Diego will open May 11 In USD's Founders Gallery. The exhibition will begin with a reception and will continue through May 23. Admission Is free to the public. Gallery hours are 10 a.m.-4 p.m. weekdays, with exlende hours until 9 p.m. Wednesdays. For more information call 291-6480 -G% ' • 'Guys and Dollsf opening at USO SAN DIEGO - One of the largest casts ever assembled for a University of San Diego production will be on stage in Camino Theatre from tonight through Sunday for the Broadway musical "Guys and Dolls." Robert Austin is music director and Pamela Smith Con- nolly, stage director for the production. Choreography is by Marilyn Greene. In the cast are Cathleen Hannasch as Sister Sarah, the Salvation Army officer bent on saving souls in New York's toughest neighborhoods; Bill Kerr, the gambler who plans to use her as coverup but ends up falling in love; Desiree Callahan and Thomas Paskowitz as Miss Adelaide and Nathan Detroit, the gangster lover she can never get to the altar; James Morlino as the gambling gang leader; Nick Krahl, Curtis Greco, Marvin Hamilton, Meg Heidrick, Bill Dierkes and Tom Korson in other character roles. Tickets are $3.50, students and senior citizens $1.50, and may be reserved at 291-6480, Extension 4712. Performanc- es are at 8tonight through Saturday and at 2p.m. Sunday. LA JOLLA LIGHT Y7 • "Guys and Dolls" - USO will present the Broadway classic Thurs.-Sat. at 8 p.m. and Sun. at 2 p.m . in Camino Theater. 291-6480 ext. 4712.
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