News Scrapbooks 1977-1979

.~ov 1 o 1978

(71

TIMES-ADVOCATE THURSDAY, NOV. 9, 1978 8-1

54M- P,~j v .f11ett,~>1j

Festival Honors th• .-o~ 11- s- -?'l Virginia Woolf

'frib«1t

1~

USO plans fast

t.J

test because or injuries. their Oct. 21 visit to San Jerry Cottle, in his third Diego to face USIU, the season with the Gaels, will Gaels have lost nine players the starter at quarterback beCause of injuries. St. Mary's looks to tall- completed about 50 percent back Oliver Hillman for its of his tosses to date. Since , key yardage on the grou~ against Valenzuela. He has

S toih'11 ft1: uderts at the Univer111ty d Jan Diego have Invited the public to join them In their pirticlpation in the aMual "Jo' st foe a World Harv t" Cll Nov, 16, the Thursday before Thank giving In tlia e nt the COit d a day's meal.a · to Oxfam Amenca r lief programs Datat ona may be nt to Oxfam America, c-0 campus Mm! try, Untves-1lty of San Di o, San Ot o 92110. For infonn tlon, phCKil!l l•&IS> ext . 4486, (I/tr,, 'is"

University of San Diego will wind up their 1978 foot- ball season tomorrow at 2 in their annual battle with St. Mary's College. The Gaels, making their second trip of the season to this area (they beat U.S. Intemat10nal University 34- 21), have a young team which has compiled a 6-2 record for Coach Dick Man- nini. USO must win to finish above the .500 mark for the season. The Toreros are 4-4 for Division 3 games and 5-4 when the victory over Ed- wards Air Foire Base is rounted. i---.;;-_· The Toreros al<;() must

,,~

Weekend Time Out Free eoneerts provide great entertainment

Precious Sanity of Virginia Woolf: Three Guineas for war or Peace," will also speak. The festival, which is free to the public, is sponsored by the Forum of the Arts, a recently organized group that presents off-beat cul· tural programs, according to Henig. The program will be fol• lo\led by a dinner party and entertainment, for which tickets must be purchased. The menu will feature foods mentioned in Woolf's nov- el~ Dinner patrons will receive signed and numbered portfolios of dra-wing:; by Kennedy. Dinner reservations can be made by calling Jean (:'ilrs Saul) Karlen, 5972 Avenida Chamnez, La Jolla.

Richard Kennedy of Eng- land, who was an early manager of Leonard and V1rglma Woolf's Hogarth Press, \I ·11 be a speaker at th Virginia Woolf Festival at 4 p.m. today in De Sales Hall at the University of San Diego. Kennedy is author of a "A Boy at the Hogarth Press." A tape of Virginia Woolf r adlll from h r essay "V.ords f'atl ."1e," will be played The only knoY.n re- cording made by the late author, th tape was orig1• nally done for a BBC broad• cast, according to uzann 11 nlg, editor of "Th Vir· glnla Woolf Quarterly ' and , n organizer of the e\ nt. Qr Anwar D11, profe or of lingui tii:s at United States International Uni\ ·r- :; ty and author of "The

-

Local~ 'f\l '1 1 Jf-;~ ~c4'1-. .,, ~C\ c.f,$j SAN DIEGO-The USO Schoo o Law has r c 1v d $30,000 grant from the Department of H Ith, ouc !Ion nd Welf r for the developm nt of nv,ronmental and mental health le al clinics . SAN DIEGO- Th N tIon I Science Foundation h wartl d th University of San Diego a matctun gr,1nt totaling $12,300 to purchase a nucle r magnetic resonance spectometer. .,v.

Bargain hunters who appreciate good music have a rare weekend in store; by virtue of our civic and educational In- stitutions there are some excellent concerts free of charge. At 8 p.m, Friday there will be a concert by Musica Reperta, the 16-voice (all professional) choral ensemble directed by David Chase. At 8 p.m. Saturday there will be a concert by the Solisti de Alcala, chamber orchestra directed by Henry Kolar. Both are in the San Diego State University recital hall in con- junction with a weekend coloqulum on Barooue musi" ----'--

win to even the series with the Gaels at 4-4. USO stlll has strong memories of last year's game with the Gaels, who blocked a field goal try with less than two minutes remaining in the game and ran the ball back 72 yards for a touchdown and a 24-21 triumph Williams hopes quarter- back Jim Valenzuela 1s as hot as he was last week when he threw four touch- down passes against USIU. That gave :tum nine touch- downs and 915 yards on 70 completions out of 140 attempts. Nils Erickson, who has run for 327 yards on 95 tries, will be back at fullback for USD after being off a week with an injury, but Steve Danton and Dick King, starting offensive lineman, are lost for the closing con-

$100 000 Gra~~ W .. i Aid US Rese~rch on Gaslamp Quarter. . h to aid in restoration o University of San Di~o researc wn San Diego will be the Gaslamp Quharter tJ~;~t~nder a $100,000 federal continued throug nex grant. d Training Grant. ent and Training dminiStered by the Regional EmP ym CETA and will a rti (RETC) is the second from Conso um uild. gs in the area. stud such factors as USD said it bas ~ed 16 pcrso~: lana use, bistorY of property ownership _over tbd!!elopers who have been building~ and archi 1 bounded by 4th and 6th Aves.. involved mthe 16-b OC . f The Comprehensive ~ucation support research on b Ill

Sunday, November 5, 1978 I I I I

'!YESTERNERS TOP STATS, usn TAKES SCOREBOARD U,.. i on

To

ros amble Past Error-Prone USIU, 38-20

the second half, for 220 yards tries. Adams l leading receiver was John race for 124 yards on 16 completed seven of 22 passes I Dudek with five catches for carries and_J..an:y- -Mef'gan--lor 133 y rds. _A 41 yards. iJs Ericson got -~ _ USIU, meanwhile, had account for 116 in an equal I to pace the USD offense. HIS freshman Keith Morgan number of

cored l '1' points In the gam 's first 19 minutes. A cle nly executed 52•yard driv off th opening kickoff was climaxed by Jim Valen• zuela pa ng 20 yards to light end Ken Loughran and on their n xt posse on the Toreros marched 64 yards to

plann It out," coach Bill WIIU m

y aft r th

Broadway and Harbor Drtve.

the largest portion (56 yards) of 104 yards for the Toreros rushing.

po itlon Mark Keleaian for a uso ..... ,........ N. 1, 1 4 14 • - 31 tr USIU .................. I 14 I 6 - 2t 22-yard field goal USt>- Louvhran 20 PO$S from Valenzue- A ti t d lo I Ktlevion kick) pparen Y s oppe on usD-FG Kelt!ilon 22YardS thelr third posseSSlon, USO USD- Green I POSS from 1/alenzutta (Keleglcn kick} got a girt when USIU's Bill USll>-Acbrm 3 rvn (Lar500 k c\J Leltn r fumbled a punt at usiu- L. 1 rvn !Lorson t,c1:1 the Western r 35- and three (K~~ 47 P0S5 from Vnlenzuela P lays tater USD's Dave USD-Er1csonsn,11Ktlevlonklckl USO- Gnen 'I - lfom Valt!\lUf!O Maynard ran a fake punt (Ke1e9ran klckl v n yards to keep the ,~'toii, Br,- u POSS from Adams

e ds

• ,ew

u r

• cs

Tor ros on the move When Valenzuela found John Green with a low pass In the nd z n with II :25 left in th half, it was 17--0. USIU came back to put together 75 and 35-yard marche to trim the Torero g to 17-14. Quarterba k Wayne Adams rolling in from the three to cap the first drive and Larry Mor- gan bursting 7 yard · up the middle for the second with 2:47 left before halftime. At that point the game's momentum was o"cidedly with USIU, but two quick occurances allowed USD to regain control and quash W erner hope Y.'irst, in a second-and-10 . ituatlon at the USIU 47 and halftime only 90 seconds away, :\Iaynard took a screen pass from Valenzue- la, cut against a fiov. of pursuers, outmaneuvered two would•be tacklers in th open field, and went In for touchdown that rebuilt th Torero lead to 10 points. On the fi.rst play after th ensuing kickoff, Adams Joi ed an apparent 57-yar touchdown pass to Stan Brewer, but the Westerneri, v.ere detected holding and the play was nullified. USO added two mo qutck scores in the secon half, marching 52 yards on their first possession then punching six yards following a recovery of one of rout CSIU fumble to build a 14 advantage.

to say whether college stu- dents today are more relig- ious, but that their anti- institutionalism is as strong as it ever was. "We still have plenty of students who are turned off by the lnstitut1onal church, but who identify with the Christian faith or some other faith, though they re- ally don't want to plug in to any one institution," says Huber. Huber also says he sees no evidence that students today find the credibilty of certain Christian doctrines - such as the existence of God or Christ's Resurrec- tion - any more or less of impediment to belief an

ago we were still on the tag end of a lot of social activ- ism and I find none of that now." The Rev. Laurence Dolan, USD campus pastor, says it it's hard to say whether college students are more religious today than they were a decade ago. But he says those who are religious are especially interested in prayer and community. "Much of the attraction or the cults, like the Unifica- tion Church and others of that nature, resides In their commumty living and shar- ing and dedication to com- mon ideals," says Dolan. "Our kids at USO are very much mto that com· munity thmg. The retreat movement, for example, is growing every year and their attendance at Mass is also very good. On Sundays there's standing room only. So I think students' religios· ity today is being expressed along more traditional lines than the extreme social ac- tivism of the sixties. "Community i, very im· portant for l..e kids today. They're SC;~king people they can share deep conversa- tion, prayer and recreation with and in general mutual support and e.ncouragement for leading good spint· directed, God-fiUed lives." Tne Rev. Ed Hoffman, United Methodist campus minister at San Diego State University say , evangeli- cal and mainline Prote - tantism are registering gains gains among college students today. "I'd call 1t a re:;urgence of interest in rellgion rather than a revival, though, but it's verv evident to me " says Hoffman "1 think it's also reflected m the rapid growth of enrollments at seminaries acros<; the countrv" Not ·so optimistic the Rev S •ven McClaskey, pastor of Christ Tl'e King Episcopal Church in Alpine and a former Sail Diego State State campus minis- ter.

By ROBERT DI VEROLI TRIBUNE Reflg on Wril!r College st1,dent are somewhat more traditional in their rel.!glous beliefs and practices tcda) than they were a decade ago, accord· Ing to campus ministers here. But they say the anti- lnstitu 1onal trend, in lhls case againSt the church, 1s about as i:;trong as ever among stud"n This, they say refelects trends in ti' g neral sod· etv in both di.reclions and also toward a more interior, personal kind of religion. But although many cam• pus and other mimsters see a somewhat fn ndlier atti- tude tO\\ard religion today, few would call it a r v1val smce disaffil!ation still seems to be the norm. "The d1saffmat1on among Protestants and Jews 1s enormous. Among Catho- hi:s it's getting to be,'' says e Rev. Bernard Camp- bell, Roman Catholic cam- pus minJSter at 'C D. Campbell say alienation from the institutional church lS 1r the long run a blind alley. "I don't really thi11k then's a ehoice between institJt1onal a. d nontnstitu- t onlL rel gior Tl' re' only a choice between good and bad rnsl!tut1on ' says Campbell The Moomes, the Ea.ste.n' mysticism and evang( heal movements ich are en- joying some succe s among students, ays campbeil, are instituLo" ·no matter how they pitch their appeal Groups like the loonies,

1

JOHN HUBER

than the past.

FATHER CAMPBELL says Campbell, seem to have a special attraction for the children of the intel- ligentsia "They're not country boys, but the sons and daughters of faculty mem- bers, board presidents and the al suprarationalists," he. ys. Another UCSD campus miniSter, the Rev. Leslie Atkinson, thinks college stu• dents today are much more pnvate about their religion than students were a dec- ade ago. "They've become much more mtemal about it," say:s Atkinson, a United Presbyterian clergyman. "It's not exactly a do-your- O\ln-lhillg type of situation, but a much more inward looking kind of phenomenon than a few years ago "They're also in a differ- ent plaee today. Five years

Dolan, however, says find their arguments weak

tained that man has a fallen self, without any attention given to his basic spiritual and moral needs, tends to self-destruction." The theory that progress through knowledge is inevi- table, says McClaskey, con- mets with the Chnstian no• lion "that man needs the grace of Christ to change himself and his world." Episcopalian pastor at UCSD, says the church should look upon the secu- The Rev Joseph Young, . which so ago.

and sort of sophomoric and that they answer questions

nature and that, left to him- Catholic students at USO

are less apt to take church

teachings as final than stu- nobody's asking. they do dents were a generation or raise the discussion level

and that's always useful," At least one campus pas• tor thinks students were he says. than students are "They were more relig· ious in the sense that the were experimenting With then was theirs and tbeirs alone,." says the Rev. Da id they they shared with their ents and so they too· It "The average stud nt today has gotten his r from his parents r ion

"They're a lot more so- phisticated in that regard," says Dolan. "They're study-

ing theology and they're more religious a decade

seeing that many church ago teachings are time-bound today. and expressions of ideals to .

in many instances

they can conform, and in Eastern spirituality

others they can't.

"There's a real move- as a ment towards the format10n

ca p

le

1

us

of Q11nsc1ence with due re- Burmght of San DfPgo ?ard for the church teach· State. "It wasn't someth g

chief

missrnn field

antagonist, sa;>s Young, 1s a faith in science and technol• ogy as the means for creat- ing an earthly paradise to be inhabited by the perfect On todays secular ram- pus, he say. , the church is Jess apt to be callPd on to man.

humanism that preaches mgs, but ultimately they

Valenzuela completed 1 of 22 passes, four in a row start the first half six I =~~~~,;;h~e,.:;O~U::ts~et~ L--•----:'--;--

realize they stand alone be- fore Go~ and must make more seriously.

decisions

final

the

C\

themselves."

• Y • J~ Jff~ • \\ \ John Dean foun

. Has the gresent gener~-

t1on of youth . been cond1• church and in college s tJoned to so disrespect au- going through a natural

thonty that it resents an riod of testing and rebeUmg shepherd committed Cllr!s- mstJtuion h~e _the church against them because tians than to contend ·th tellmg 1t what 1s nght and they'i;P not his. They're his pagans and non-Chr ia11s wrong? parents. Ten years ago they or to rec·Ia1m ex-( hrLr;t1ans Huber says students had Just moved into a new who hive never really un• aren't ne~ssarily against kind of spirituality that was cterstood what Ch'"istlatlity all authonty, but that they very much ligious back JS. demand good reasons for then." Young, who ha ~n a accepting any belief. c a . pa or more "If there's a professor on than 20 years, says one of campus who ·really is per- the biggest changes in cam· suas1ve m the classroom, pus ministnes today is that they'll buy rnto that if they are broader in scope. they've learned something "A generation ago a cam- and it's meaningful. They'll pus ministry was latgely a a_ccept that as authorita- chaplaincy to its own peo- tive. ple. Today, it's a ministry "So, no, I don 't think to the whole campus com· they're just being anti- munily - students, faculty authoritarian. They just

Festival Honors Virginia Woolf

Richard Kennedy of Eng- Precious Sanity of Virginia land, who was an early Woolf: Three Guineas for manager of Leonard and War or Peace," will also Virginia Woolf's Hogarth speak. Press, will be a speaker at The festival, which is free the Virginia Woolf Festival to the public, is sponsored at 4 p.m. today in De Sales by the Forum of the Arts, a Hall at the University of recently organized group San Diego. that presents off-beat cul- Kennedy is author of a "A tural programs, according Boy at the Hogarth Press." to Henig. A tape of Virginia Woolf The program will be fol• reading from her essay, lowed by a dinner party and "Words Fail Me," will be entertainment, for which played. The only known re- tickets must be purchased. rordmg made by the late The menu will feature foods author, the tape was origi- mentioned in Woolf's nov- nally done for a BBC broad· els. Dinner patrons will cast, according to Suzanne receive signed and Henig, editor of "The Vir- numbered portfolios of ginia Woolf Quarterly" and drawings by Kennedy. an organizer of the event. Dinner reservations can Dr. Anwar Dil, professor be made by calling Jean of linguistics at United (Mrs. Saul) Karlen, 5972 States International Univer- Avenida Chamnez, La sity and author of "The Jolla. /i Sa.h Dt'e.:., v ll Nbv.. S"J "' -n

lloSMQt\u 5\lQff *

5 J Wtd., Nov. 1, 1978-Par, II

In general, says Mcclas- key, students are no more religious today than stu- dents were a decade ago "The disaffection for in• stitutions - rehg1ous in• eluded - that charactu- ized the youth of th sJXtl . is still there, though without mur.h of the hostil1ty," sa)S Mcclaskey. "But I si: e no evidence of any great spirit ual revival among young people. "I think most young peo- ple, like people around them in the general society, have accepted the myth of progress that says that in- evitably in every way things are always getting better and better and on that account they see no need for the church. "The organtzrd Chrtstlan church h al v in

Workshop at USD Nov. 14 Wil Focus on Role of the Pope A worbhop 011 the role of the Pope to be held at 9 a.m. Nov. 14 at the Univ8slty of San Diego'• Salomon J...«ture Hall The program will focus on papal primacy and infallibility ·th ers Or. John ft Elliott. Uniffmty of San Francisco prof r of theology. and Dr. K enan B. Ol!bome. profe.,r of eystemaltc theology and pr dent of th Fr ncl!can School of Theology at Berkeley. Workshop f arc $5 for the general public. $2 for udent&

and staf!," says YO'Ung. want to test the authority • It's a listening post I0r the with his facts before accept- church mg it. I think they re JUSt The secularism dommant tiemg sel cttve." on campuse · toda). howe\• offman say· the very er is being mor seriously presence of a student athe• q~e lloned, Young bellevf's. i~t group at State suggests 'It's a time -whrn senous the.e a greater Interest m and fundamcnwl questions rel)t;lon . are being asked of the aca I .think 1t s rather re- dem1c -world and the nature freshing becam,e although I

-

of higher education, which for so long has sought to dispense a value-free education,' he says. You says there is no such t as a valut--free education, he only question being on who e values edu• cation will be ba. ·d.

J h'l Huber, ' hard

Tt:

u-,•o"

Made with FlippingBook flipbook maker