News Scrapbooks 1977-1979

San Diego, Thursday, Marci, 30, 1978 A-21 und-raising management class raises a lot of interest at USO ties. is over, I am staying on at to try to place those who By JOSEPH TIIESKEN the results of a new fund- at University of San Diego. 11u1uH • 1duca11on writer raising m nagement class The idea of the course is "Even though the course USD until the end of April are interested." EVfNINO TIIIUNE

a field that is becoming one of the nation's major indus- tries. As Huller pointed out, with over $29 billion raised in a single year in contribu- tions to non-profit-0rganiza· lions, the business is defi- nitely big league. "It's no longer a job for the amateurs,'' he noted. "At one time, very few were trained specifically for the job of raising funds. "But organizations today demand persons who are experts in many fields, ev- erything from la to taxa- tion, from deferred giving to direct mail solicitation "In the last 15 years. fund raising has been elevated to be part of the behavioral science department of some universities. The course we have here at U D 1s the only one of Its d on the west C-Oast. " Huller, who last year wrote a book, 'Guide to Sue ful Fund-Raising," said an mterestmg feature of the class that closed in February was the diversity" of the students. He outlined the back- ground and aims of some of them: - Ayoung man, associat- ed with a cancer research foundation, whose goal is to develop grants for the foun- dat10n. - Amldclle-aged woman, with years invested in vol• unteer work with agencies, anxious to get in the field professionally. - A welfare worker who wants to change jobs and go into fund raising for a liveli• hood, Huller said he was pleased with the outcome of the class. "I felt it worked out very well,'' he commented. "My own feelmg is that someone coming out of the course of 200 hours has the equivalent of two years of working at fund raismg. "And such a person is much more versed in spe- cific areas, such as public

relations, corporate giving and conducting annual campaigns.'' The three·month course is designed for working peo- ple. Classes are held three evenings a week and every other Saturday. There are 19 instruc~ors, experts in their particular field, who teach the course. Job placement isn't a part of the progra but six hours are devoted to writ- ing of resumes, interview procedure and job-search- ing techniques. Resumes of those who graduate from the course are sent to non-profit organ- izations in San Diego and Orange counties. "All those who want to send out resumes for jobs are aided,'' he said. "We send them to 100 different non-profit instltut10ns in San Diego and Orange oun-

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Al Hutl r wa evaluating he had conduct d recently

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"Should the Legal Ser- vIces Corporation be Abolished?" will be the topic of the sixth debate in the Law and Economics sertes sponsolred by the University of San Diego Law School that will begin at 8 p.m. Tliursday in Salomon Lec- ture Hall. Speakers will be Howard Phillips, national 01- rector of The Conservative Caucus, and Earl Johnson Jr., Univrrsity of Southern California law professor.

r: ,.,. 't-1 tJ ..... 1'? The Umve~ty of San Diego's F'riends or the Llbrary and Friends of Music will have a book and music fair at Founders Hall on the campus Thurs- day and Friday. Proceeds will provide new material for the two department.,; u,. :.- ,, _, _,., Dance CALIFORNIA ALLET - Members Of the c;jance company will present the r ptlng repertoire at 8 p.m Frioay In the University of San Diego Camino ~liter,

~- A~'' ,,1r I\J UNIVERSITY TO HOLD ~LASTOF LAW DEBATES • ' • Conservative Caucus director Howard Phillips will debate -, USC law professor F.arl Johnson Jr. on the future of the Legal Services C-Orp. at the University of San Diego School of Law at 8 p.m. tomghL Theirs is the last in a series of six debates on law and economics that the law school has sponsored this year. . I Phillips was founding director of Young Amcncans for '-\ Freedom and has served as deputy director of the Presi- E dent's C-Ouncil on Youth Opportunity and associate dltCCtor of the Office of Economic Opportunity. Johnson. a senior research associate at USC's Social Science Research \,: Institute. also directs 1ts Program for the Study of Dispute Resolution Policy and serves a~ president of the Boord of the Western Center on Law and Poverty and as a member of the State Bar Assoc.'s standing committee on legal services to the poor. _ I The debate is in Salomon Lecture Hall, DeSales Hall at the ""'I University of San Diego campus. _:: _ __::.,_ _________ "°'

preparation for Saturday s l'rew Cla~c }Jere Crtmson crews aJTI\ ed last w k to escape 1 on Bostons Charles Ri,er. - Photo by Joe Flynn *Crew

Sch larship und co cer1 scheduled The Eighth Annual Sr. Rossi Music Scholarship Fund C-OncEl't will be given by the USO Symphony on Sunday, April 9 at 4 p.m. The performance will be i.n Camino Theater on the University of San Diego campus. General ad- mission is $3; for r.tudents, $1.50. Marimbist Gary Pretty- man of El Cajon, this year's USO Student Aucfi. lions wiMer, will be fea- tured sol

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Right now, Parker hasn't even dec1ded on the varsity eight who will start the sea- son Saturday He has two eight-oar shells working out and re- fuses to give one the nod over the other. "'But we'll find out how good we are Saturday." The rowmg regatta ove1 West MLSSton Bay will be held over an internat10nal 2,000-meter course, starting at 8 30 a.m Saturday. More than 900 rowers will com- pt te m a record S3 events lasting nght up to 4 p.m. This is the sixth ,Crew Classic and out-of-state schools include Brown, Wichita State, British Col- umbia and Oregon State. San Diego-area crews will include San Diego Slate, UC-San Diego, the Universi• ty of San Diego, , lission Bay Rowmg Association, ZLAC Rov,ing Club and the San Diego Ro\\ing Club. Practicing for the classic L<; held at 5 a.m. and 4 p.m. daily over the 2,000-meter rouri;e retching between the Batua Motor Hotel and the Catamaran Motor Hotel on Mission Bay.

strange: No ice to chop ll ER GRIF:FI. \\ ithout a doubt coach Harry Parkers Crimson crew from Harvard is in t p condition It hould be, according to Parker. Th 03r men ha, had to chop Ire just to get on the water back home on the Chari s Riv r Th y \e becom perts at " noted Parker Th, we k nd Parkt>r also "11 find out If his varsity oarsmen are experts at rowing. "'h Harvard er w I m town for Saturday's Crew Classic on lis.tjon Bay The two eight oar h 11 crews arrived eight day early for some extra tune on the water. Parker said they need all the actual rowing time they can get. "We only got on the water four times before coming here," said Parker, 'and our regular rowmg course was still iced In when we left. "W had to go up river and chop ice to get open water." Harvard will be going up against last year'. winner here, Penn as well as C-0rnell Washington, Wlseon n and Call!ornla in Saturday's CrPw Classic ov r We t Ml Ion Bay Th Crimson crew has been rowing on Mts,tjon Bay since Saturd y morning d Parker d there's only one thing his rowers appreciated more than the unshln There were no chunks of 1cc out there floating on the bay. "We're very happy to be here," not!:'d Parker, who said his crew about as ready a It can be, consldertng the late sprtng at Cambridge. II has been one of the worse winters in 10 years and his crew had to be content with working out In the indoor rowmg tank. Harvard ts 2-0 In the San Diego Crew Qas.<,ic regatta. The school won two years ago In one of the most aggressive races ever on ii on Bay and Harvard's 1975 crew here set a course record. The 1975 varsity had three members who went on to the Olympics. Last year, Harvard didn't get to San Di"go because of scheduling problems at hool but It did go on to dominate the end of the season in the Ea~ and Parker ~d six of last year's varsity crewmen are back this year. See CRE'f, C-5

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Frtends of th Library at the l'1 :ty of San Diego will stage their fourth annu book sale Thursday and Friday in the French Parlor, Founders' Hall. , Genevieve Bennett is pres- ,·

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ident of the Friends. othy Lowe, Kitty Razook, The university's newly or- Pat De.Maree, Betty Hub- ganized Friends of Music, bard, Alice Van lJew, Pat headed by Betty Brock, will Barfield, Fern Murphy, Lor- join forces with the library raine Maio, Louise Dexter, group for the benefit. Betty Fischer and Dolly Donated books, paper- DeMeglio. backs and magazines are Achievement .awards will being accepted by librarian be presented to 18 San Marian Holleman. Diegans during the May Sale hours are IO a.m. to 9 luncheon at Vacation Vil- p.m. Thursday, and 9 a.m. to !age. 3 p.m. on Friday.

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SOUTHERN CROSS, April 6, 1978-3 USD's 'university of third age' to stimulate elderly

Class for elders started by Conference Center

has proved so successful, he said, that the President of France has devoted millions of francs to its further development. Krulak, who has visited the program at Toulouse, spoke of its great success. "There are now 36 cam- puses 1n France, three 1n Switzerland, three in Belgium and two in Po- land," he said. "The impact of such programs 1n the United States, where people are aging faster, could be massive," said Krulak. THE FIRST course, which 1~ being privately funded, will make a minimum charge of $45 per student of the 50 finally selected, according to president Hughes, who said the total cost would be about $10,000. Under the direction of Malachi Rafferty, con ference center director of USO, the "university of the third age" will give a daily program, 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. and 2-4 p.m. •"We hope that the elderly will feel at home here," said Hughes. "We will attempt to demonstrate that we are 'person-oriented.' The holistic concept of educa tion at USO will be applied to these nontraditional students." IT IS POINTED out that there will be no academic tests, no exams, no expect• tations. "We shall simply stimulate," said Hughes.

cussions, field trips, physical education and other daily routines through Aug. 24. USD President Author E. Hughes said there will be 10 maior divisions in the program: physical condi- tionin.&, current affairs, law, economics. religion, retirement issues, medi· cine, languages, art and music. SELECTED undergrad• uate students will be taking the program with the senior citizens as a "leavening", according to Krulak. "Our park-like campus which is centrally located on bus routes is an ideal setting for our senior citizens to mix with our undergraduate students," said Hughes. "We look for support.of the professional commun• ity to assist us with exper• t1se in the medical and instructional aspects of the 'university of the third age."' ANNOUNCING the pro gram last week, Krulak said the "third age"-when people are above middle age- often receives no stimulus to do other than grow older. "It is possible to arrest the aging process," he said, "by stimulating the mind and the body." adversely on retirement commun- 1t1es, he said "The Sun City syndrome 1s stultifying. It makes old people older quicker There are no stimuli. They age rapidly." THE TOULOUSE exper,• ment, now in its third year, Commenting

oast £ is t pie~~ -Ji: of talk"°'>-'" Our coastal environm t and the ecology o 'i!!ll marshes and rocky hore habitats are tne sub.iect of lectures scheduled Wed- nesday evening, April 12, at 7 p.m . .at the Natural His- tory Museum in Balboa Park. Speakers are Dr. Jack Bradshaw of the University of San Diego and Dr. Craig Barilotti of San Diego St.ate University. Dr. Barilotti will discuss the ecology of exposed and protected intertidal coastal habitats such as the La Jolla Tide pools. Dr Bl'Jldshaw will talk about ta! lagoons and estuan - distribution, geologic origin and envir• onmental factors peculiar to these protected habitats He v.ill present a survey of the more 1rnportant plants and animals inhabiting this ecosJstem including variou adaptive trat- egies be illu rated. Three more lectur are sch~uled on succeeding Wed{Jesday everun~. They will cover the coastal plains and in- land valley, desert ecology and mruntain ecology. Tickets are av ilabl at the door at $3 75 The talks wtll

doctor's approval; current affairs and politics; law and law and order; economics, religion, retirement issues; medicine; languages, art, and music. There will be miscellaneous field trips. In announcing the program, USD President Author E. Hughes said "As an indepen- dent, Catholic university, we feel an obligation to serve the growing population of the elderly in San Diego. USD's community is a caring community through its employees as well as its student body. We hope the elderly will feel at home here. "Our park-like campus which is centrally located and on the city bus route is an ideal setting for our senior citizens to mix with our undergraduate students." Classes will begin July 19 and run through August 24. Information may be obtained by calling Coordinator Mal Rafferty, at 291-6480, ext. 4318. L/- - 7- 77

The University of San Diego will initiate a pilot program for the elderly this summer. Coordinated by Conference Center Director Malachi Rafferty, it will be called The University of the Third Age. Modeled after a project designed by Professor Pierre Vellas in 1972 at the University of Toulouse, France, the USD program will be the first of its kind on the west coast. Similar undertakings have been made at Notre Dame, Ohio State, and several eastern universities. USD's pilot project will accept fifty students and begin this summer. It will run for five and a half weeks, from 9:30 am to 12:30 pm, and 2:00 - 4:00. Instruction will include lectures, conferences, field trips, and small group discussions. The program is envisioned as comprising ten major subdivis- ions: Physical Conditioning, following a health exam and

Southern Cross Reporter It 1s not "Close encoun ters of a third kind" but the 'university of the third age". And it will start at the University of San Diego this summer. The "university of the third age" is aimed at stimulating people over 55 who otherwise might drift into a life which does nothing but age them, according to retired Marine Gen. Victor H. Kru'ak, who promoted the idea with USD MODELED AFTER a project designed by Prof. Pierre Vellas at the Univer- sity of Toulouse, France. the USD program will be the first of its kind on the West Coast. The pilot program will accept 50 older persons as students startmgJuly 19 for a series of talks, dis-

EVENING TllllUNE

San Diego, Friday, April 7, 1978

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USD sets program for ballet The Callforma Ballet Company will present I Spring Repetoire at 8 p m, next Friday at the t!niversity of San Diego' Camino The• ater. Maxine ~tahon, artis- tic director, ha choreo- graphed two of the three works. ' L'HI tolre de Ballet,' l a history P nnlng 400 years from th mlnu t to contempo- rary jazz. Variation from well-known ballets are inrlud d in this mu- ical narrative En• counter ." Is a contem- porlll'} ballet ba d on a study In linear geome- tri dancing syn- cop t th cor of neo• eta c compo er Henry Shapiro r Pagn • "Pa tre" Is the third originated to d1 play the kllls of th I adin ball rlna. of the day ~ahon's cond work, " erenade Ce de Q work It' a romantl em b II

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•university of third age' page 3 Do Catholics have to tithe? pap7 Religion and the state

TUE DANCERS, FRO'.\I LEFT: JERI JONES, EUGE'.\IA KEEF1':R ~D CHER CARNELL

Information is available from Rafferty at 298-6140, ext. 4318.

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