News Scrapbooks 1977-1979

Personal History Class People wanting to trace their family history will be able to do so after studying "Geneaology and Family History" at the University of San Diego. . Included in the course, which is to be given on three Saturdays, from May 19 to June 9, will be in- terpretation of vital records, federal census reports, immigration records, and old photographs. For in• formation, call 291-6480. o"' l y Tr"', s l· 30 •1~

SUBSIDIZED THEATER ell'Arte

unt

o Few "Fore Lawn" is a bit- tersweet co edy which ex- cerclses a potent pull. The two old lad es ( Schirle and blnson again) do nothing but eat their lunches and bicker ov their past! , pre- nts d ut but, in a way, the play uses gentle format for some

fear kills k~n~,;:7~of!,~~ By DO. LEARNED Apparently concPmed that a pro- posed anti-cheating code might ere- at a witchhunt by student tattle- tales, Uniwrsity of San Diego stu- dent have turned thumbs down on a student honor codi-. • 1 1 think it wa somewhat mt.sconec1ved," said a disappointed Jon Matsuo, an Associated Student Bod ofllc r who wrote th< propo ·•d eight page code and ~pearheaded th dnve for its approval Bu• ye terday students voted down thc,ldea by a 291-221 margin. ''We went into as many eta · s as we could and tried to <'Xplain it on an individual basis," Matsuo said. "l think they thought It would create a w1tchhunt, that it wouldn't work and was too high-schoolish. • , tudents Thomas F. e who appl:iudr.d the ld<'a, aid Uff~ tudents had been asked to vote on th conC<'pt rather than the detailed plan of proccdur 'S - "it had about 40 different rtions" - that was on the ballot ' I think any time you are gomg lo 1mpo constraints you've got to have a pretty wide base of support," he said sophomore preparing for law school, said he expected the effort to be revived in the school's next academic year because many students are still concerned about cheatm . Burke said he hoped it would be revived. B m · , Matsuo, Dean of

THEATERS

The Dell'Arte style was best suited, of course, for the little farce

1

AA2 S~

l/11 CAl f,(., USD leaders embarassed after honor code rejected

amed

Women

To Municipal Co rt Be ch

problem at the private Cath• olic university. But Mitsuo said some stude,its had com· plained that aooit o percent cheat on exams, which Burke said was ' w b tlow the national aver:-1~. ·• "We don't need ,t," said nursing student. Therese Sweet, who voted al',.'.l!nst the code. Matsuo, a sophomore headed for law school, said he'll push for it again next year, "if I'm still in office."

page code would require of them. "I think the students be- lieved we wanted them to fink on each other if they saw anyone cheating, but we didn't want that at all," said Associated Student Body of• ficer Jon Matsuo, who spent nine months getting the code accepted by the student sen• ate. Dean of Stuiients Thomas F. Burke said that cheating 1s not consid ed a major

SA DIEGO (AP) - Ad- student leaders admit they are "a little embarassed" after University of San Diego stu- dents voted down a proposed honor code to deal with cheating during examina- tions. The vote revealed Friday was 291-221 against the pro- posed code, but campus leaders insist the defeat was caused by student m.isunder- tanding of what the eight- ministration and

effort to do some- ut it began nim months

atsuo said U 1

thing a

ago

' om were concerned about cheating and fell s11111eU1lng ought to be done about it before it gets out of hand," he said "It's rapidly growmg. There's a lot of pressure herr brcause It i · a fairly w althy :;chool and if parents pay that much you fe I you ought to g good grade " at uo aid ttie stude t com- pla ts to th ronc-1.• ned A H officers indicatrd that perhaps one out of IO students cheats on exams. p op!

SMALL COLLEGES ,. 1 1 '/1't Coache'~'·Grin Ab year.

Vlr W~;B or\.\~nW =:; ut Recruits San Diego County JC pro_s- Noii,a Par er. DB, s-10. 1 • eomoton; U 511ermc,nAuVuS!us,DB S-11.175 LAOtv. pec ts headed to US1 m- TOP Fresllfflei>- M Poscoie, OL, 1,-1 ., er John 190 Lavolo Higb IL.A.>; Rod SChOrr DL It- 'kt [)l)!IOIO. LB. H, 190 Odom and Aaron Graham Tempie c1iy; Miu Knodsen. RB, 1,-1 197. J from Grossmont and Marek Gtrord Colhollc, AL~1u elude Tom ,ag • 1 i,o Hlfoll; Wnght from Mesa Former Grossmont standout Ken 1 5on Sutton Is also t:SIU bou nd as fi \~ 1 ~~erJnv~l:t, DB, s-a: 1~. Ei a transfer from the Uruversi- eom1110· Tonv Ou rort• LB H, 20S, L.A. va11ey Charle'! Hines. oE, s-10 1w, L.A. ty of Pacific, an ex·. · • vanei· val Fove1w;. or. 6-3, m, gustine High qu 1 artierbat~! ~~'. ::"JcJ~ti'. 0 1,-f1k,Hciot~ Mike Kennedy o ns wesi, Kellh Por1er, Te-oe. µ, 730, Son Tronsler... Rob c<:~ 1 18 ·cJ11rusoctn10;c,.r~ 1~Hor~san.'os. s-,: °'°11.CB 6-G. l!l t,«1• d St Au Grossrncnl; Poul Southwesiem; Ran woc1e. LB, 1,-3, 20! soo- dlebOd< Enc H,1 wR. s-11, 1s. Tott, cruits include Kevin Kocher t~:hi\'. 6 s-tf•g,•a~~•i:'.~t/~~ from '.\1esa, Dana Skeggs ne<11. oB. 1,-1, 190. or~~l!:':! 0 Jg't d Paul LB ~3.235 WeslLA · Eduv"=" ' from Palomar an . 1, i9s. 0einzo, Tom Arons. LB. 1,-3. m Smith from Grossmont. Wll- =1:l:f ~J: 1 =.• 8:: tl i~: uams is also enthused by the 5ou1nwes1ern uiu1s,ono: Ed 01111. RB. f quarterback s-io 111 , west LA., Kev•n KDmal, RB. s- IO, ias. Mer~; AOrOn Gmnom. DB, 6-0. Tim Call from Dixie Colleged 1as, G~ 0~ 5 ~'rif:i~ u~~; in Utah. Call was the secon E~rf" 1~nn. TE, 1,-2, l(JIIO Q, RB. 5-10 llll rom · . · . . . acqulSIUOn O . westerners as a transfer cso·s oflenS1ve lme re- f Oregon ~" J=~·.JJ; tl· ~-

Byll .' 'WE CH Staff Wrller, Tll4 Soll Dle,o UnlOII For Tom Wal h it has been tus first recruiting ex- perl ence a head coach of a college footbal earn. For Bill Williams 1t has A a result both Walsh, who Is responsible for United tates 1nternat1onal Univer- ty' program, and the Uni- ltams are looking forward with some optimism to next • 1 t n h . 15 best. s D . go's Wil 1e • ver t_y of an "It IS our be t recruiting Y ear ever," says Wllllams f s and 25 "Thirty trans er high school kids plus the_ 45 P layers we have coming t us m very fall .

Ir§

LL-LIKED STUDENTS

eath Of 2 Cast Pall Over USO By CARL M. CANSO Wrller, TIie Sall Dle90 UnlOft "Do town they went ahead and

what he preached. He would do for others " she said in an interview in her Orean Beach apartment. Paul was headed for a career in special education, she said, working wil!J the mentally and emotionally handi- capped. "I knew his family, and I was very interested in meeting Paul when he came here," Dolan said. "He turned out to be a super lad. He was involved m the campus ministry and the orientation team. He was one of these guys who didn't know v,,hen to stop volunteering. He viol_at- ed the basic law of the Manne C'.orps. 'Never volunteer.' He v,,as cheerful, kind, interested in sports . . he had a basic good- ness he always sparkled." JJn Coyne of San Diego, a friend of the Boyd family whom he bad met in the Middle East, spoke affection- ately of Matt, and said that when he heard of the death, "It was as if my own son had died." Coyne said, "Matt just loved life.'' Mike Brinkman got to know Matt when they went to an American school in Saudi Arabia and then to rugh schoo in ome. e was r happy-go-lucky. He was not.hw;i,g up on what people thought of him. Brinkman said Matt loved almost all sports, especially skiing an~ baseball. "He was the most competi- tive person I ever met. H~ wa,~ always fightmg for that extra mch. Joseph L. Lyle, who now rooms with Bnnkman in De Sale Hall, said Matt wouldn't have been pleased by a morbid conversation about him: "Matt got a lot out of life. I didn't see a day when he was unhappy. "Just picture a guy with blond hair and bluf' eyes, an Irish-type guy who smiled a tot, who loved to driny· k beer. The kind of guy you liked to be around.'

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DAVID GRAVES usIU recruit

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95 Po1om0r; Mike "'

· · ·

resolved the thing, to them it was just another number. But it was two people for us," said the Rev. Larry Dolan, chaplain at the University of San Diego. Dolan was speaking of Matthew Boyd, 18, and Paul Fitzpatnck, 19, who were killed Feb. 3 when a drunken driver sma heel mto thell' motorcycle. The deaths of the two students who are remembered y those who knew them as special young men, cast a pall O\er the catholic school. To h1s sister Jane, Paul was a young man •'with a Jot of class," who loved to do things for other people. To Dolan students and other faculty of the ~ool overlooking Mission Valley, Paul was an active, univer- sally liked student. To his friends at the school, Matt Boyd was known as a scrappy ath- lete, a guy who always smiled, en- joyed life and was extremely close to his brothers who go to school in Los t.ngelcs. It was a Saturday afternoon two months ago when Boyd and Fitzpa- trick headed for the school gym to shoot some baskets. The gym was being used, so they started out .on Boyd's motorcycle to a junior high school gym blocks away They probably never saw the car that roared up on them from behind on Lmda Vista Road, just past the light at Via Las Cumbres, and killed them 'instantly. Within minutes, news of their death began travelmg across cam- pu~. By Sunday rught, when students assembled at the USO Jmmaculata for the week.Iv Mass, the deathS had "plunged the whole campus into grief," according to Dolan USO has fewer than 3,000 under- graduate students. Nearly all of them knew at least one of the two. Paul was particularly well-known "He was really well-liked," sa.id John Trifiletti, a graduate student who recruited Paul for his fraterni• ty. Trifiletti said Paul had been chosen for the freshman onentation team, and with his enthusiasm had so epitomized the spirit of the wel- coming program that the school has decided to establish an annual Paul Fitzpatrick Memorial Award to the outstanding person on the 40-student orientation staff.

Id

the na- l(rUlhen. DE. 1,-1, 1 • Steve Ford. LB. 1,-1. 21,, Gov 1on DL, H, 2ss, Poctflc, Geol'9e wmm•~· 1i~~.:.'ii:'G:?s1~?ot :t ti: C Escondido; Rond• Ess111vt011, QB, lt-2, 195. z O 1,-l 2l) MMI• Vlsto· Michael Pate, OT, H 235, - ~· 1,-~nsTt'Lt'~i;~•,,., 2.210,G1enoale ' r.'. ;;;g SOdd eoocK\ e11 •

"We'll be awarding probably leading JC passer m

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t \.• I upol,. TE breakfast t give San Diego "New D velopments o . people an I • " will bu mess in E tale P anmng portunity to interact be the ~ubje~t of th e 0 ~th the USD School of ninth Umver ity of San WI • lty . UPDATE break- Business facu . b Diego d John McCa e, fa t eminar, t? be As istant Professor of on F day, Apnl 13,117. . Bu iness Law and · the Ga eria • ·11 a.m., m 1 . Estate Planrung, Wl Room of th La Va enc1a lead the seminar Hotel . el Th eminar costs $15. The rie of tw ve . . meeting runs through For registration in- May 4, and i d igned formation, call 291

lion behind Mesa s Fairchild two season ago.

pa

"It's good because for any 4a full an

d

the biggest ships.

small college

one a

"We think we've

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ff

Sol D!090 s small Collecie Football Recruits

..st pretty good ]Ob recrui~lng But now we're In a position where we'll have o a e 'CAA programs and m a way t t k thi!i f d ,

lpl~~~e~ !~Yt~~~s°th~n~_ Y ear we've had for omg Uslu Upgrading its P ro- d that .,

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USO

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Tr~>- Kev n Koc1>er 0 LL.s-n: 225 surrou;t, H,iih. Burllcnk: Ken ).vons, TE, 0 t,.J.220,Rot,v,,IY,H,J,:/....~ttBrmf~-1· Z t,-5, 210, Whittier. v,_,.. vOCO, • • '-'

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'lOS: ~.,~~k;m Clemente, John 6c~11,i'k1 '~iJ. ~lf:Owo~ 'or. 6-0)5, South oo· 'rem 1/iJ one RB, H, r~ i½. /:;J'~1onv1e~, bovid • DT 6-5 250 GonesllO 0onnv Gur· ~0 "01 6-3 71.S, 'Rublc!OvX \:m'deb; ~=- :!ia1s:,.5 1 •~sJ~·2L~; re~ or1 F~t ~l rk 1m

large group from different s.o /,leSQ~~"8ts-11 210 Pa~ '-""N mar; Paul Smith, c. 1t- 0, Mt '5anAntonlo; :~1.°8ftll2SD u ot ManlOllO, i1• tit: il.n1o~SJ~ve status, \as at- make them jell, Our sched· tract ed a huge group numer- ule JS quite a step up from Alon Koh~} ast schedules " One pnze :.'s~~·s-9. ~~~fune: !~nsf~~:/fo be ~atch for Walsh's Western- ~~ot="'''loh~i:~.\~rciB\:i· Zl· JS incoming freshman D xle Cot~ tt 5co~ ~B H an~oWue~?eed.been a non-schol- David Graves from Escond1· ~: mgs Et p

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Pf axes and Homeownership Wealth" will be_ discussed by Ste- phen Richardson, Universi- ty of San_ Diego assistant professor of finance, at 7:30 a.m. Friday in the La Valencia Hotel as part of the weekly breakfast semi- nar series sponsored by the school's business faculty.

· · GrO\SII\Ol\1 Rod s,mmermono~T-tl m· t~~.~ttot;~l~)ti~:i;~

ushed for 180 Menlo Lewis ConchOlo. ~B.

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arshlp school and in going to do High OIVlslon lI statu v.e're a~

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towed a .m~~imum \?fa'tsh v.:sioglF co-plaver of the t)~a,~~, LB,~. 225, o1,1e. ccm1no scholarships, say '' · ·

Short Takes

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t./.' 11· Elisa~th Kubler-Ross recently decllned a invitation from the University of San Diego, explauung that her busy schedule allowed her to accept Just one of every 50 requests. So Jeff Moore of USD's S~ers Bureau sent her 49 more invitations - hand-signed. Smitten by Moore's originality, Kubler-Ross a~ceded and will ap~ tomorrowElght..a!,the~~~~;!.,..:,:.:

. . ..

---

Saturday, April 14, 1979

RELIGION BRIEFS

. "The Passion and Death of Our Lord Jesus Christ" will be performed for the first time here by the Uni- versity of San Diego's choir, vocal ensemble and £..~..." ch[mber orchestra ·aL.. p.m. Friday and Saturday m the Founders Chapel on campus. The Passion music was composed by the Rev. Nico- las ·Reveles, a member of the university faculty. ne- veles will conduct the work/ . . . ,, .. / //,,-Z7_.

Seminar Deals With Holocaust

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-J-Frl.• At;,( 27, 1979-I ,Ausical Famities to Entertain n Mother's Day Concert at USO A Mother's Day concert on Ma at th e University of an Diego's Canuno Theater will feature four San Diego .usical families plus one group - the Burke Family hythm and Washboard Band _ which clauns to have no • cal talent at all. Co rt f perfonmng Will be the Kent Family Reco rd er ~so 0 hula Vista playing Renaissance music, the Wingard am1ly Stri Quartet, mcluding San Diego Syrnp_hony 10 imst Eile n ngard, the gospel groLaupJc:i 1 risllan · ence and the Coulson Family Jazz Band of O a. dmJSS1on for the 2,30 p.m. concert will be 25 cents for hildren and $1 for adults - except for mothers, who will e adrmtted free.

USO Nine to Play Mon. at Malibu The U.S.D. baseball team will be enjoying their Easter break, and will return to lea- gue action on Monday, at 2:30 p.m. in Malibu, where they will face the P e p p e rd i n e Waves. Wednesday, April 18 at 2:30 p.m. the Toreros will travel to Point Loma College for a non-conference .e;ame. The Toreros now have a 2-5 conference record and are 18- 12 overall. USD has found a bright spot in the line up in freshman first baseman Andy Asaro. Andy, during confer- ence play, has 8 hits for 21 times at bat, 2 home runs, and a .381 batting average. Anoth• er highlighter is Don Slater, who continues to lead the team in hitting for the ninth consecutive week. Don has 42 hits for 109 at bats, 75 RBI's, 19 stolen bases, 27 runs scored

••· '1/, I 1 1

"MANAGING IN ORGANIZATIONS" is the subject of the eighth University of San Diego UPDATE breakfast seminar, to be held tomorrow at 7:30 a.m. in the Galleria Room of the La Valencia Hotel in La Jolla. I.a )'oil• ~.jP The series of twelve meetings runs through May 4, and is designed to give San Diego business people an opportunity to interact with the USO School of Business faculty. Dr. Phillip Hunsaker, Associate Professor of Management and Organizational Development at USD, will lead the seminar. The program will examine potential time-wasting business prac- tices, and provide practical techniques to help managers manage their time more effectively. The seminar costs $15. For registration in- formation, call the USO Continuing Education Department at 291-6480, extension 4318. MANAGERS TIME

Lutheran Church; William Hartgen. editorial con for the Pastoral Arts Assoc1at10n on North Am ca; Ellen O'Leary, expert In liturgical dance; Mary The Sweeney, expert in liturgical art, and Bea Wagner, director of the San Diego Roman Catholic DI 's Media Center. A $8 fee will be charged for the Saturday program RegJStratlon may be made th(ough USD's Continuing Education Department

USO ls a Fitzpatrick family tradi• tion Jane was a senior last year at the hool and enjoyed watching her· litlle"brother come into h own. "Paul was a Catholic, but he didn't just go to church, · toed

will be explored ty or San Diego's Salomon

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