News Scrapbooks 1977-1979
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u1 pl?q saqs111u ~Jq asaq1 l.{l!M. s.1aww1M.s }. aq1 nv ·,(u~ aq1 u1 q1q'.il1a pull 'WI OOC: ain u1 qµnoJ l? 'aaJJ aq1 UJ aJl?{d lpJU ll )(OOl .1aq1aq;,s 'saqsruu {epaw SJl{ 01 uompp-e Ul AJffenb 01 'a)(OJlS1St1a.1q 09 , . Sundoy, February 26, 1978 £ SAN DltGO UNION • •·• , FACE PUGET SOUND IN REGIONALS s?. a-,;J1-7f Toreros Chosen For Playoffs Winner of Thursday's games will play Friday for the regional championship, losers will meet m a consola• tion contest. The regional champion will advance to the tournament's quarterfi• nal round. Brovelli's USD teams had hoped for an invitation to post-season play following 15-10 and 20-7 records over the past two years, but in each instance none was forthcoming. "This has been almost a two-year wait for some of the seniors, so it's very satis· fying to get thlS chance," . said Brovelli. "It has been a long season since we started working out in October, and this makP-5 it worthwhile." as the LSD head coach, the Toreros lost to Sonoma State tn a playoff to drtermtne the final regional entrant. Puget Sound will have a dlstinrt edge over USD in tournament experience, but USD has previously beaten Puget Sound this season, 74• 72, on Jan. 6 at USO. The Washington school won the DivL Ion II national championship two years ago, and lost in th1> tourna- ment finals last year to Cal Poly San Lui OblSpo. The Loggers feature returning All-American Rick Walker, a 6-5 forward, and 6-6 guard Tim Evans and additionally count on 6-9 center Phil Hiam. "We felt pretty confident y,e would get the bid, but after what we went through last year tie couldn't be to- tally sure," said senior guard Ron Cole. "There was a lot of enthusiasm when we got the word at the team meeting. But most of the celebrating had already been done after the game on Saturday night. "That's when we had champagne for the seniors." Thursday's game will be the fourth playoff experience for a USD squad. In 1973 the Toreros lost to Bakersfield in the opening round and defeated Puget Sound In the consolation game of the Western Regional. The fol• lowing year, Brovelli's first By HA. K WESCH Staff Writer, The San 01090 Uni• This year the parade didn't pass the University of San Diego basketball team by. The wallflowers for the past two seasons final!y got their invitation to the party. "We're in," said USD coach Jim Brovelll simply after receiving word yester- day afternoon that the Toreros had been chosen for an at-large berth in the a• tional Collegiate Athletic As• sociation (!',CAA) Division II West Regional which begins Thursday at Cal State Northridge. USD, which closed out a 20-6 regular season with ts eighth straight victory on Saturday night, will face Puget Sound (l!HI) In the opening game of a double- header Thursday with re- gion al host Cal State Northridge (21~) taking on the University of California at Davis (19-8) In toe· nightcap. The Shimada station on the Tokaido Rood by artist Hiroshige. Hiroshige Prints On Exhibit rt h Road Le e • 0 cut bloc 1e1ji period - 1868-1912.) All the prints are quite small, measuring pproxlmately 4x6 inches, and are bout the size of modern-day jumbo picture post cards. Within th t small spaL-e, lhrosruge skJllfull and aesthically re-created the p· nmages, com• merce and beauty round everywhere along the road. Viewers will find at nature pre- dominates, that men carried beavY loads on their back , and that only the privileged few rode horseback or were carried on th backs of other men. Teahouse fish rm n, ferries, rastles, foot bnd •e , shrines, us• rs ho d orde or travc er5 I ondary rvlPS to J·pan e , bays. pL,e and cl Hlrto hi& sands of p1ct landscapes of •ap many or them on cascovers other aspects of the great ma r's art He died during the great cholera epi· demic of 1858, and his tombstone bears in part, the followmg inscrip- tion written by a pupil: "He did not seek other teachers, being ambitious to found an ndependent school. He therefore studied nature itself, sketched it, scaled numerous moun- tains and desc nded into many val- leys. It is thus that he founded the free school for landscape true to nature." ThlS exhibition ls not a monumen- tal or epic production, but does prove that while mortal life is short, the life of good art is ageless. The rounders' Gallery, University of San Diego, is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays only. This exrubi· tion will end .March 3. during t.h the worthy of portrayal; beln women RD REILLY n portrayed prtmanly as Art Critic ging and courte ans, wait girls Art us- trale romantic novelette and pic- ture book . The land c pe was disre- gardl' Brovelli (foreground) and his charges reason to smile at a team meeting yesterday. News that they had been selected for the NCAA Division II regional basi etball tournament gave USD coach Jim Marge Huglies, wife of the pres1nem UI me University of San Diego, has that porcelain, patrician look which is, course, entirely unsuitable for any activity more .renuous than pouring at a faculty te.:i. So much for ks.• iarge arrt ed at the dinner given by the '.'lational nference of Christians and Jews the other night not ven Wind d after completing 21l laps around the track in ne university's Jog•a•thon. (Her astomshed sponsors in he USD fund-raiser included - at $10 a lajO'- Audrey ~eisE-1.) '<. - 'WOMEN OF DEDICATION' Dozen Honored For Community Work----------- 1 r-_,""- 2 _-2._,;.-_ 7 1.__ dozen '\~om ·• of Dedication' Y.er honored for their Individual Mary Glen Phalen, who has served on many of the major cultur- al boards here in addition to writing skits for several philanthropic events, including :'dadcaps fashion shows and Charity Ball entertain- ment. The wife of Dr. James Phalen, she is the mother of five children. Lynn A. Schenk, an attorney and adjunct professor or law at the Uni- versity of San Diego Law School. One of the originators and directors of the Women's Bank and a White House fellow, she has served on the city's advisory board on the Status of Women and the state attorney general's Women's Rights Task Force. La Waoda Sievert, who has done volunteer work with the Girl Scouts, Children's Hospital and Health Cen- ter, Madcaps, the Symphony Or- chestra and other organi.7.ations. She serves on several local boards and does volunteer work at the Child Guidance Clinic. Lou Smith, a golier who helped develop golfing events for junior goliers through the Junior Gou Asso- ciation which she serves as secre- tary-treasurer. She also is treasurer of the Century Club and secretary of the Southern Section of thP Southern California Golf Association. Hazel Tow, society editor of the Evening Tribune, who has given of h r own time in promoting and at- tending vatlous community endeav- ors. She also is Involved In profes- sional journalistic societies and is a past president of Women in Commu- nication Inc. Joao C. Warreo, who 1s complet- Adm. James Robert DaVJs, retired, she is involved in writing for chil- dren. Sister Sally 1. Furay, provost of the University of San Diego, who entered the Society of the Sacred Heart in 1944. Agraduate of Stanford university and the University of San Diego's School of Law, she works as a volunteer in parole programs with the San Diego County Bar Associa- tion and the California Youth Au• thority and as a volunteer supervisor with the Women's Legal Center. Sara Goodrich, a member or a number of volunteer organizations, includ ng the Council of Jewish Women, Makua, a home adoption center for children, and the advisory board of the National Conference of Christians and Jews and its scholar- ship fund. She is president or Good· rich on Main Inc., a corporation of surplus stores. Qulncella Nickerson Kimbrough, founder of Las Munecas Society, which is an agency to promote adop- tion of black children under auspi• ices of Children's Home Society. She also serves as a member of more than a dozen volunteer organi.7.a- tions, mcluding several sister city societies. With her husband, Dr. Jack Kimbrough, she collects and lectures on African art. Priscilla Lichty Mo ley, who, as wife of Dr. John H. Moxley, dean of the UCSD School of .Medicine, start• ed a faculty wives group at the university and served as its chair• woman. She does volunteer work with the Juruor League, San Diego Symphony and several other organ- i.7.ations. community servtce at a luncheon yesterday at Hotel del Coronado ponsored b) the Salvation Anny \\omen' Auxlilary to the Door of Hope Rece1V1ng silver platters and the congratulation of the 600 women and quite a few men attending, the honoree Y.ere presented at the 13th annual such event, according to lunch on chairwoman Sally Jones. As each woman was escorted to a stage flanked th white chrysan• themun , In a room filled with red• cloth d table decorated with fems, a photograph of her, theater-size, Jormed a backdrop. In past years, th cer mony honored "women of eleganc ," bµt the word "dedlca• Uon" more accurately expr~s the reason they ar bemg honored, ac• cording to Jon s. Th luncheon bene- !ltted the Door of Hope home operat• ed by the Salvation Army Honored were. Dr. Bernice G. Davidson, presi• dent-elect of the medical staff of Children' Ho pita! and Health Cen· ter, who rves as medical staff pediatnclan at the Door of Hope horn . A graduate of the University of Oregon Medical School at Port• land, he is the wife of Dr. Doug D vidson She I especially interest- d In preventative medicine for infants, children and adolescents. Heleo ctaugblln Davi , who rv as a volunteer on the boards of more than a dozen local organi2a- t1on , lncludmg Goodwill Industr! , Starlight Wo en' ociation and • Committee of . Wife of Rear Three of the dozen "Women of Dedication" honored by the Salvation Army Women's Auxiliary to the Door of Hope pause outside Hotel del Coronado where ceremonies were held yesterday. From lef.t are Sis• cer Sally Furay, provost of the University of San Diego; Mary Glen Phalen, author of several Children's Hospital and Health Center shows, and Lynn Schenk, an attor- ney and one of the origina• tors of the Women's Bank. • - Staff Photo lng a two-year term as president of Country Friends and is a member o( Children s Hospital and Health Center's board of trustees and foun- datmn board. She serves as record• mg secret ry for the Rancho Santa Fe Opera Guild and on the San Diego , Symphony Orchestra Associ- ation's board of directors.
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