News Scrapbooks 1977-1979

1 (l,~/t:tuk1~ / StUden·ts pick UCSD tor various reasons . body's fault that they like the Sllll, they like La By MARK T OLER because of the 81lll and I.a Jolla U ght taff urf. ed ndoo." Jolla." Why do tudenta go to Many tudents ask "Hali of them come UC D~ Why do they why they plc~ed here because UCSD has choo e the aprawling looked wl th ncr a science image, or at I north La at their Interviewer' least their parents and campus n h h d to pause a that Jolla aa the place where t en a deciding counselors ee it they hope to earn moment beforeA pie way," said Andy degree of h igher thefresirpo reasn~~~llows~ Schnelder, a s~udent edu ation'? 0 who is dorm adviser to Aft r many quick - "It was the UC 70 Third College freah- Sam Hinton, UCSD's lia ison with students wanting to come to tt:ie university, took a dif- ferent tack than other people when asked why he thought students came to UCSD.

111111

:{l(,_11}

J ' Puls, Reylea to haunt USD will see action for Cal Two former cotmty ~ootballes~a[~e Kingsmen help Uni- Lutheran CoJlege tomgh\t~78 season under way at 7:30 versity of San Diego get I on the Toreros' field . H J' High quarterback and Kent Puls a former e ix vi ·tors "He's a great basketball s~r. will punt for th ~.. ~ings~en Coach Bill punter, definitely a pro prospec ' Shoup said of Puls. ed for Palomar College, Skip Reylea, who fonn~rly play e line which averages will be on the Kingsmen s offens1v ' about 235 pounds. . e set a record when 18 The Kingsmen claim t ri:Vth1s year's team~ N1~e, quarterbacks turned ou en program, rem.am. including three with the frfss~;al caller, is side-lmed Mark Christensen, the No. B ' McFadden, who red with a broken thumb, so t r~ce favorite target will be shirted last se-ason, will star . ~!u ht 49 passes in 1977. wide receiver :'>like Hagen, ee ;oung backs. .Herbie The Kingsmen will sta1: k \s from Taft Junior Col- Graves, a 206-pound fullbac 'eedster running the 100 m lege. Kevin .Jackson, 19, is a:P.s back'arter being on the :09 5. Kirk Diego, a slotbac , I sidelines last year with a; !nj~~i·1034 yards a year ago, Jim Valenzuela , who t rewrt blck TIie Toreros will wlll be USD 's ~tarting q~aDae:e Ma.ynard to carry the count on Nils Ericson an

Hinton, although he has been at his post since UCSD started taking undergraduates in l964, said, "I'm still not sure why students come here. There are many possibilities." possibilities he listed included location, academic reputation and cost. Hinton said his per- sonal theory is that students choose the The

that was far- men.

campua

int rview with atudenta 1 t w k, it became app rent that , In the final analysis, there are more than 10,000 sons. ta there are more than 10,000 tudents . Still, ome ve ry of atuden~, advi ers and UCSD li Ison with high schools nd community colleges to th qu tion: Why UCSD1 one of t he major reasons t udents pick UCSD 1 s its reputation as a top-flight academic institution. Anoth r reason is the cost, wh ic h Is still relatively low despite fe hike in recent years. A third reason 1s location. Some students like UCSD because it Is close to home, some because it far away, ome because it ls in- between. Most like it J general emerged pattern s from the pon

thest away from my home ln San Francisco." " It was close to home and my parents wouldn't pay my way if I decided to go up north. ' ' " I want to go to med school, and UCSD is the place to go as far as that is concerned." -"I heard you could get good acid here." .. - I don't remember. -"I wanted to go to some place close, and 1 knew State is the pits. " -"I like to surf." -"It's a good school." School advisers talked more about UCSD 's academic reputation as a reason than did the students interviewed. "The majority of st udents come here primar ily for an education, not for the weather ," s aid Muir college r esident coun- selor Pat Danylyshyn- Adams. "Then, a lot of fre hmen don ' t find what they want here, and they leave . It's

"They're looking for heavy research , heavy s cience, pre -med courses. This is known as a tough school, with a reputation as being hard ass, and that's what they want ." Schneider said the other half of the students come to UCSD because "it 's a desirable area. They like to surf, they

slty. Bookstore executive director Ken Bower said the wait was as long as 45 minutes at some times Monday. (Photos by Mark Stadler)

The lines were long at the UCSD Bookst~e Monday' and they promise to continue n that fashion throughout this week, the first week of fall quarter classes at the unlver-

the campus to the student's

from

anything

individual for very

running attack .

of

course

fact that a boyfriend dr proposed

the st udy.

is at

girlfriend

-

reasons

SA DIE GO CLIPPIJ\.G SERVICE SEP 2 41978 SAi\ DIEGO UNIOJ\. USD Rallies;'~ Tips Pomona Bill Peters came off the bench to spark the Universi- ty of an Diego football team to a 27-23 victory over Pomo- na-Pitzer last night at the USD Stadium. Peters, who replaced Jim \ alenzuela in the second haH, through touchdown passes of 66 and 5 yards, the final to John Dudek for the deciding score to complete a IO-play, 59-yard dr1vP with L32 remaining to play. Pomona-Pitzer came back to score what appeared to bf' a winning score in the final seconds, but were nagged for backfield in motmn and the game ended with the visitors on the CSD two. Peters romplett'd seven of 11 passes for 134 yards to bring USD back from a 17-7 deficit in the third quarter His first touchdown went to Ken Loughran, a 66-yarder that inspired the Toreros to a later scon• by Jeff Moraga and the eH'r tual winner to Dudek. USD is now 1-2 for the season, whJ!e Pomona Pitzer· s record is 0-1-1. Pomona Pitzer .. . 7 O 10 6 - 23 27 USD-- locclno 20 pess from Valenzuela (Kelegio" c~I / PP- Del Peno 2 run (Zenger kid) PP- Zenger 32 FG PP.- Buzzard 29 POSS int. return (Zenger kick, i.lSD-- LoughrM 66 POSS from Peters (Keleg,on kick) USD--Morago 9 run (Kick Foil) PP- Bragg 19 run ff ck to I) USD--Oudek5 POSS from Peters (Kelegi- oo 16 LA JOLLA LIGHT -SEP 141978 USO ........ ........ 7 0 7 1l -

SAN D IEGO CLIPPING SERV ICE

EVENING TR IBUNE SEP 18 1978

USD, US/U search for win University of San Diego and U.S. International Uni- versJty will try again Satur- day to break into football's 1978 win column. USD, nosed out 24-22 by Redlands, will entertain Po- mona at 7:30 p.m. usru lost its season opener in Balboa Stadium to Occidental 21-0 and now will oppos~ Lav' erne on the same field Sat- urday at I : 30. The Toreros were leading Redlands 22-17 late in the game, but the Bulldogs scored on a five-yard pas,s lo emerge victorious. Nils Ericson scored twice for USD, thP last time with seven minutes left to give the Toreros .a 22-17 edge. USD now is 0-2.

SPRING VALLEY BULLETIN ~l:.P 21 1978

ames Ritter. ews Writer Post •

SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE

SAN DIEGO UNION

. usru will be working on its offense before laking on Laverne. The Westerners picked up only 133 yards on offense to 211 for the visi- tors. 'Fashion Flash' committee

j

Bass, John Porter McGregor Mrs . John A. Waters Jr

Eric

Mrs . hostess

in charge of hotei

to assis t her as co-. is

chairman "Fash,·on Flash," University of San Diego for

h · c airman.

arrangements.

Hostesses from the La "Fashion Flash" from Auxiliary's fashion show Jolla area include Mrs. Bullock's will benefit the and luncheon scheduled David S. Casey, Mrs . univers ity 's financial for Thursday, Sept. 28, Jack Lewis Powell, Mrs. a id program for needy in the International William J. Schall, Mrs. students.

SOCCER TO ME - It's heads-up ball that soccer instructor Ed Mulligan shows the kids gathering at the California Soccer Camp. at USD. They're learrung about the frantic game of bumps and grinds

which has most of the world in a frenzy - except the United States, which vawns. But people like Mulligan are doing their best to wake it up. More pictures, story, on B-1. - Joe Holly photo, Tribune staff.

Mrs. James s. Kinder

Room of the Hotel El Harry Lee Smith and Cortez , has selected her Mrs. Richard W. Tullar. her. She has chosen Mrs. planning the table decor. event. committee to serve with

is reser-

of La Jolla

Mrs. Ross G. Tharp is vation chairman for the

Figh Against Inflation Cal e By 00 ALil C. H DER F IIGl1 Editor TIie Son Dlevo U"lon

;,unday, September 24, 1978

THE SAN DIEGO UNJON .R•..r;y Vital For Healthy Dollar

Our morally righteous Pre 1dent does not give a damn (er, a hoot.) A~ interviews "1ith economists and market analysts reveal , Mr. Garter· refusal to slow down the economy to fight inflation and bol- ster the dollar will bring about ex- tremely unpleasant consequenc.-es : Inflat10n and intere t rates \\i ll soar as the dollar plummets until, at some point In 1979, Mr. Carter, fac- ing th • 1980 election, will finally abandon his Sept. 20 pledg - bring- ing on a reC'ess10n (if the con:;umer hasn't started one already) . Once the receS:;ion has run as course, th dollar will strengthen - brtngm m a veritable flood of dol- lars from abroad s kmg U.S ln- vestm ·nt harem; This phenomenon will kill the prevailing American view that a \\eak d llar has no lgmf1cant dom1• tic repercussions. Thi flood of dollars from abroad could " II touch off a runaway stock market and runaway inflation. If thl happ n , the precipitous 1977- 1979 d rune of th£ dollar - which occurred "-lthout the US. govern- ment lifting a finger to ~'top it - \1111

have forced Americans to relive the wild years which preceded 1929. Alas, we would probably also relive the years that foUowed 1929. All this does not have to happen. Nobody wants it to happen. But it mu~'t be understood that there are a Jot of dollars abroad - perhaps as many or more as there are in the United States. As inflation soars - as it w!U until the government stops printing money to pay for its profli- gate spending - the• doUar will decline. Foreigners, who already are awash with dollars, will try to use them to buy something wl1ich will bold value - in the same \\ay that Americans today are gobbling up gold, antique , real estate art ob- jerts and the like. Many, many of those purchases will be in the U.S. - and that will drive up prices horren- dously , obody knows for ure how many dollars there are overseas. Alan Reynolds of First National Bank of Chicago uses the figure of $250 bil- lion to $.320 billion in Eurodollars or dollars held outside the U.S., usually

perhaps $500 billion or more. Such totals are not much different from the number of dollars in the U.S. According to a report by the Federal Reserve last Thursday, there are $360.2 billion in cash and demand deposits here (what is called Ml) . If You add in savings deposits (M2), there are $861.2 bil- lion. Foreigners are already buying U.S. assets and purchasing U.S. securities, of courSP. That has been going on for several years, as the dollar has declined. One thing they have done is buy our Treasury's debt. Reynolds estimates foreigners own $119 billion of Treasury debt, out of a total of $477 billion which is privately-held. Cracked Reynolds, "Tbey used to say, when explaining our huge amount of government debt, 'Well, we just owe it to ourselves.' But we don't owe it to ourselves any more " And foreigners have been buying U.S. assets, too, as the dollar has declined According to Morgan Guaranty Trust, foreign purchases of U.S. assets - everything from our corporations to our farmland -

have gone up more than 65 percent in the past four years, from $20:6 billion in 1973 to $34.1 billion last year. In addition, foreigners haYe_ been buying up pieces' of U.S. assets:• At the end of 19n, foreign holdings. of stocks and bonds represen~ less than 10 percent ownership of the entity were $53.1 billion During 1978, of course, as the dollar has contui- ued its decline, these figures ha'l!C risen dramatically. Said professor Arthur A. Shen- field, a British economist now in residence at USD, "Mr Carter wants to fight inflation wi' Jut put- ting a lot of Americans out of work. But when you start monetary disci- pline, you can't avoid putting people out of work at first. The grim joke 1s that if you let inflation get out of hand, more people eventually end up being out of work than 1f you try to contain it "Inflation is like a drug. You feel good at first. T n it hits.'' And stopping inflat10n is a little like going cold turkey on a drug - it's painful at first. (Continued on A-33, Col. I)

SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE :SEA.1771);:}0 EP 2 4 ~78 Nader to speak \ 1 \ Consumer activist Ralph Nader will be the guest speaker at the University ct San Diego's Camino Theater at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 'ZT. · Admission is free to USO students , $1.50 for USO law and graduate students, $2.50 for other students an'!.,.,- $3.50 to the general ~blic.

ARTlffR A. SHENFIELD . .. infiation like drug

on deposit in banks. The total of Eurodollar deposits d · no illdude dollar holdings b~ foreign crntral bank. , and som other dollar over a With Ur lnrl uded, the totaljs

Made with FlippingBook flipbook maker