News Scrapbook 1968-1969

'?)I, o 16 g

~-~~-~~'_P--,-,-0-::--,D:--U_C_T ~~·,o \'\

We

1c Peaks Expected ajon Youth At USD

! ~~!~,~~i.l !~~'"~l!L, utes and 46 seconds without a basket last night, and Cal Western took full advantage of the opportunity to score an easy 74-59 victory over the Toreros. ~- The contest, played at the the game in the first half by Sports Arena as a preliminary making 11 of 13 free throws. to the San Diego Rocket- When Western began hitting af- Cincinnali game, was the ter the intermission, the free Westerners' first win over USO throw bulge was too much for in three tries this season. Lhe Toreros. With 11: 52 remaining in the Western made 25 of 54 shots game, the Toreros owned a from the floor for a 45 per cent l4-41 lead in what appeared to shooting average while USD be a game that would go right was 24 of 70 for 34 per cent. down to the final seconds before Meyer scored all 16 of his being decided. points in the second half to lead But in the next 7:46, USO the Western attack, while Grey made only two free throws had 15 and Jon Madison 14. while Craig Meyer, Dennis Grey Ted Fields led USO shooters md Rich Wasser led a Western with 19, while Cabrera had 15 $urge that ran the count to 60-46 and Sheridan 10. ilh only 4: 14 left to play. The victory concluded the roo LATE FOR USO regular season for Cal Western USD's Bill Sheridan .finally with a 12-13 reco_rd. US~ still t d 'th 4 .06 1 ft b t - 1 has a game remammg with the nnec e WI • e • u I South Korean National team. as far too late for the cold- uso 0 F T C I W t h d t 'j d WIike 1 0-0 2 Mo

By HOMER CLA!IICE Ed Ostermeyer o{ El CaJon ls a quiet, udious young m who 1s out to set scholastic rec:o at the Uni- versity of San Diego. Ostermeyer, 2!. a senior, has only to maintAin his cur- rent 11.8 grade-level to grad- uate summa cum laude in June He is currently at the head of his class. Ed the son of Mr. and Mrs. K. D. Ostermeyer of 1114 Evilo St., El Cajon, will be the first with a double major to graduate from USO. RESIDENT SINCE 19:i6 He is one of l, 124 college senior who have been named Woodrow Wilson National Fel- lowship Designates. The design lion mean's the fello',Vship foundation recom- mend;; that he is "worthy of financi~I sllpport in graduate school." It also means that he is among the best future .college- teacher prospects in the Unit- ed States and Canada.

A resident of the area since 1936, Ed was placed in the gifted student program when it was started on an exper- • imental basis in junior high school in El Cajon. He was valedictorian of his senior class at El Cajon Val- ley High School, achieving a 4.0 grade, the highest pos- sible. "We had triple valedictori- ans that year (1964)," he recalled. "Two others in the same class also had 4.0 grades." Ed was active in student government in high school, was director of school arts, and a director of the Latin Club. PLANS TO CONTINUE ' He IS a life member of the California Scholarship Feder- ation but said he did not try for a National Merit Scholar- ship. "I selected USD because I wanted to stay in the San Diego 11.rea; it was a small

private had strong programs in Latin and the humanities," he said. Ed is interested in both fields-he is majoring in Latin and classical history - and plans to continue his studies, then become a college teach- er. Since he entered college Ed has averaged between 18 and 21 units each semester, and also bas attended summer school. The minimum units each semester is 12, while the av- erage is about 15 in most colleges In addition to Latin and his- tory, Ed is studying archaeol- ogy, philosophy, Spanish and French, among others. The archaeological field has led him to much research into documents, diaries and manuscripts up and down Cal- ifornia in connection with the missions established by Father Junipero Serra. Ed has also participated in excavation work being con- ducted at Mission San Diego de Alcala. OFFERS RECEIVED The young man said he ap- pled for graduate scholarships at several universities but has been •"getting offers from chools where I did not ap- ply," due to ,his designation by the Fellowship foundation. from among 11,600 students in the United States and Canada no- minated by members of the academic profession. He served as vice president of the Associated Student Body at USO in his junior year and is curently pres- ident. TO DECIDE LATER He said he probably will not decide until April where he will ccntinue his studies after graduation. Ed said an older brother obtained bis law degree at USO last year and is now in the legal department at Ryan Aeronautical Co. Ed a1so has a younger sister.' college and Ostermeyer was selected for the fellowship

-Stoff PhOto man Oscar Rodriguez of Blythe, kneeling, and senior Johnny Downs of San Diego. Mrs. Knode is a for- mct· top ranking U.S. woman player.

Dorothy Knode, coach or the Uni- \ c1 ·ity of :an Diego tennis team, mon trate: the important follow- throu h on packhand 1.roke for frc ·h-

Bj t I / b 8

MEET MRS. KNODE ~ioV\

Western ahead to stay at 45-44, nd Grey scored from the post nd Meyer hit on a jump shot to make it 49-44. After Jim Usher's free throw for USO, Grey put in a left. handed hook shot, Wasser made a free throw and Mike Morey connected on a short jumper to make it 54-45 with 7: 21 left to play. FREE THROW BULGE return by USO was a free throw, by Rick Cabrera, and the Westerners were off again. Early Evans hit from 25 feet, Meyer tallied from the same distance, and Grey and Evans made free throws to make it 60-46 before Sheridan finally scored for USO. Cal Western never slacked off in the remaining time and, at one point, had an 18-point ad- vantage at 68-50. The Westerners, too, had their cold moments and had stayed m Again, the only

reat Name In Tennis

A

hots For USD

Calls T

. Among the t~pks much discussed on the campus recently lS the cancellation of graduate school and occupational defer-

ments. Many students are wondering why they worked so hard the past four years. The apparent impossibility of graduate school has caused ome seniors to ponder how to spend their last year at college, Endless discussion is heard concerning the advantage and disadvantages of the vari- ous enlisted and officer programs of the nation's military services. Students de• termined to at least be accepted and to enter graduate school plan lo register at a graduate school and wait and see what de- velops. The most optimistic students sug- gest that the war in Vietnam may be over

was anything but a "poor lit- tle rich girl." "I paid for my transporta- tion to llll the tournaments," h said. "I used to get hous- ing and food, once I got there, but I had to scrimp and save 1 to raise the money to get there. There was no expense account money or anything ebe under the table." ls she for open tennis? "Decidedly," she said. "Ev- erybody's on his own, that way. He gets just what he's worth." "What do the Australlans have that makes them so con- spicuously more successful than U.S. players?" the lady coach was asked. "Our players are better ed· ucated than the others, and I'm proud of them," she re- plied." The Australians quit school when they're 15 or 16 to devote all their time to tennis and their Jack of e u- cation shows when you talk to them." , Dotty, now doing graduate study in English, Spanish and French at the University of San Diego, got her first de- gree at University of Califor- nia at Berkeley and was a pupil of tennis pro Tom Stow for some 10 years - the same Stow who helped develop the great Don Budge backhand. Married in 1952, she had her first daughter, Karen, in 1954. The family moved to Tokyo on business in 1960. Kim \I as born in 1961. The Knodes were divorced in April of last year and Dotty sort of gravitated to La Jolla where she thought Karen was going to reenroll at The Bish- op's School last September. But the plans were changed and both daughters remain in

Diego and freshman Oscar Rodriguez of Blythe. So far, the team has done nothing but Jose. 'J'.he boys are eager but inexperienced. They should improve. They've got good coach. She's pretty, too.

is un-

unu ·ual. The mother of tv.o daughters, aged 13 and 6, she not only coachc the Univer~i- ty of San Die o tennis I am, she either pla on even terms 1th or beats every guy on th club \\ hen she giv tips on how t hit the ball, they listen cause Doroth Head Knode h made a few laps around th kmus world and can put her record where her mouth I The trim' freckled redhead a ranked among the top 10 U S women players 11 times 1 a 17-year span-the first me in 1943, the last in 1959. 1961, Y1el1 ,beyond her p 1k year , she defeated San o's Kathy Chabot in the in finals of the National llardcout Championships in L,1 Jolla, then lost to third- 1<1llked Nancy Richey in the championship match. "She kill d me," :\frs. Kn ode rec lls frankly. "It \Ya s a cloudy day, I had trouble seeing the ball and I just couldn't do anything right." In the six years (of the li-year span) that she missed top•IO ranking, "Dotty," as her close associates know her, wa either traveling exten- sively, getting married, hav- ing a child, sitting out a sus- pension or getting a "raw deal." In 1945, for instance, she defeated several people ranked above her, including the great Louise Brough, and Jo t to nobody beneath her, yet failed to make the top JO, She had been ;;-.;o. IO the year before. One year. she was suspend- ed for playing in foreign tour-

University of San Diego Col lege for Men, Or. Steven F Schanes, has announced the Dean's List for the previous semester. Students who earn a 3.25 or above grade point average are named to the List J<'1fty one students from the San Diego area received the academ 1e d istinctJon. Fresh men on the I ist are Robert E. Blake, .Jean Marie N. Carro!L · Thomas .J. Dietsch, ,James L. Hennessy, Jr., :1-tariano F. Or lando, William J. Recd, Thom as P. Richter, William W. Sav-, age, Jr., and Gregory J. Stahl. Sophomort•s are Hobert M. Bahne, George C. Hrown. Charles E. Brumfield, Dale ,J. Burton. Donald E. Cihak, Anthony ,Jungman, T. H. Kaur man, Put M. Lam..John P. Mac- Donald, Robert ,r. McClure. Miehacl C McCormack, George J Rahe, Benjamin 1". Smith, Kevin P Toohey and John R. Volk .Juniors on the list are Rob- ert P. Bil bray, John J. Howard, Jr.. James R. Hylton, Richard J. Knott. Arthur J. Weder. Jr., James L. Murphy, Sergio San- chez, ,James E. Sheil. Frank R. Trombley, Gregory J . Vinci- guerra, Charles A. Williams and Laurens W. Youmans. Seniors on the list are John A. Adams, Herbert Baker, .Jr., .Jose Flores, Michael V. Pox, Mark Herrenbru<'k John J. Lafferty, Gregory B. Long, Howard R. Lund, Daniel H. McLinden, Robert E. Oster- meyer, Dennis J. Sinclit1co. Brian M. Thompson, John W. Wheeler. Joseph ·c. Mall 11f!· er and Richard F. Maxwell

KENNEDY before they graduate. Representatives from the Marine Corps and the Peace Corps were on campus last week in the College for Men's Lark cafeteria. Many students browsed and sampled the informa- tion of one of the tables and then provided some friendly competition by walking over to talk to the other representa- tives. Both the Marines and the Peace Corps officials noted that they enjoyed the friendly viralry. Work continues on the University's first jointly produced yearbook. The College for Women and the College for Men previously produced separate books and incurred the addition- al expense of two staffs and the duplication of photograph and news co~er~ge of the year's events. Dennis Vice, a graduate student m history at the College for ;\,len, is editor of the joint publication, and has a staff of 52. 'Picnic' Scheduled For Colle e Stage 15 .. ts rnto the attitudes ofa qurntet of small-town Kansas women toward the arrival in their midst of an attractive young man, will be staged by the University of San Diego at 8 p.m. this Friday and Saturday, March 29 and 30, in the College for Women Theater. San Diego State College -------~---- senior Michael Greenwald . . . . . """ 't "P1cmc," Wilham Inge's rns, ,_ .

Presidential Race Tallies Posted By USD Stu ~nts By HOMER CLANCE Sherman and Murphy said The~ snd anllr mo ive A huge bo~d -:- listing the the il?,ard will be kep~ up-to- Is to show the public the high man Y presidential hopefuls date all th e way until Nov. quality of education offered and the so states _ is posted 5," the date of the general t USO hi h . " t in the main hall of the Uni- election. a , w c 1s no as versity of San Diego College The board, with its mun- well known as other colleges for Men. erous candidates now, will be in the San Diego area." It is part of the Presiden- revised after the nominating The club is also sponsoring tial Primary Information Cen- conventions to narrow the Ti me Magazine's National ter being set up by the USD field. In addition, it will con- Collegiate Presidential Pri- Political Science Club. It will tain the results of the Gallup mary which will be conducted keep students informed on and Harris polls on the vari- among f i v e million college developments of the presiden- ous candidates. students April 24. Hal iprimaries and nomina• POLLS PLANNED The ballot to be used by the ting conventions. "We expect to take some college students contains the The board illustrates the straw polls around the cam- names of 14 hopefuls, plus number and changing com- three issues. mitment of delegate votes, as pus," th e two juniors said Two issues In v o 1 v e the well as the popular votes, in in an interview, "but we'll Vietnam war. Students will the primaries which began probably wait until after th e be asked to check one of five hir first or second primary." with New Hamps · e I as t In addition ,the club will proposed courses of military week. attempt to obtain nationally action the United St ate s IDEA A'ITRIBUTED known figures to speak on should pursue~ Vietnam. · b t h d'd t They also will be asked to Ray Sherman of Clarremont campus a ou t e can I a es check one of five courses of and James .M?rphy 0 ! _La and issues. action the U.S. should pursue ~olla, .~th JU!110rs m3:Jormg "Our primary function is to regarding the bombing of ~n pohtical science, said the educate and interest tj:Je stu- North Vietnam. idea for such a center came dents in politics," they said. from Dr. A. Paul Theil and "The club is nonpartisan." CANDIDATES LISTED Professor John Chambers. They also plan to invite the The students will be asked Theil is chairman of the public to inspect the board to check which of five alter- political science department. and observe the latest results. natives should receive the Chambers is an instructor in The club has 50 members highest priority in govern- the department. but has attracted interest ment spending to confront the The two students, assisted among the 1,600 students on "urban crisi\" by Greg Vinciguerra, secre- the campus, they said. The presidential hopefuls tary-treasurer of the c 1 u b, "This is a unique venture listed, in alphabetical order, developed the idea into real- on a campus." Sherman said, are: Fred Halstead, Socialist ity with the cooperation of "but Jim and I feel that the Worker; Mark O. Hatfield, the faculty and other stu- college student's voice is im- Republican· Lyndon B. John- ta t " > dents. por n . son, Democrat; Robert F. - Kennedy, Democrat; Martin Luther King, independent.

aged, who are more or less romantically attached to a couple of the women. Rounding out the cast are Thomas Jacl;:son, Patrica Rot- ramel. and Valerie Beidel- man. Miss Beidelman is doubling as production manager for director-designer Ann Kern of the College for Women faculty. Miss Comfort is stage manager; Colleen Lannen, a freshmen, lighting mistress; Carol Rossi, a senior, make-up and sound mistress and Miss Kearney, properties mistress.

has been cast in the role of Hal Carter, the young man around whom the drama revolves, ·and five College for Women students have been cast as the five women whose existence the young man's arrival af- fects. They are Barbara Kind- lein, Eileen Kearney, Debo- rah Comfort, all freshmen; Cynthia Smith, a junior, and Linda Larsen. a senior. San Diego State juniors Stephen Echard and Geoffrey Hainds play a pair of men, one y':Jung and the other middle-

Tokyo.

So Dotty wound up at USD naments out of. season._ 1:he with a graduate scholarship in U.S. La~n _Tenms Associahon return for her volunteer work has ltm1tabons on when our , as a tennis coach. people can compete abroad. . "1 paid my own way and On th~ Torero tenms squad everything," Dotty recalls, are se_mors Joh~y Downs of "but they just wouldn't !is- San Diego and M_1ke Taylor of ten." Chula Vlsta; Jumor Greg Toi- And that's another tender ton and Tim Dcyle of Los pot with Dotty. Born in Rich- An eles and Bob Cota of San

mond, Calif., the daughter of an oil refinery foreman, she

Hilltop Hi hWins ~R-~i!t ~,,,!~!. 1~ u "1.-L , mm~ ' frigh'

Dr. Carls To Lect~re

Also, John V. Lindsay, Re- publican; Eugene J. McCar- thy, Democrat; Richard M. ~ixon, Republican; Charles H. Percy, Republican; Ron- ald W. Reagan, Republican; Nelson A. Rockefeller. Repub- lican; George W. Romney, Republican; Harold E. Stas- sen Republican; and George C. Wallace, American Indep- endent Party.

~Th~~arlson, profes- sor of theology at Claremont Graduate School of Theology, will speak on "The Rise of Puritanism" at 7 30 tomght (Thursday) in More Hall on the l mversity of San Diego cam- pus. Carl. on was visiting· profes sor oi ecumenism on the faculty of the College for Men last year. lie began the lecture series last year and inter rupted the lectures when he rN•eived an academ1t"appoint- ment at Cam bridge University. Carlson rcC"e1ved his B.A from Beloit College and his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. lie has done research and advanced study at the Uni versity of (:rcnoblc and Cam- bridge University He was formerly the direC"tor of the Chicago Thl'olog1cal Seminary .ind pres ident of Rockfo rd College. Hockford.111. Carlson tb a fellow of the Hoyal Historica l Society in London and the r'olger Shake- speare Library. He has been awardl•d grants from t he merican Philosophical So- ("tl'tY and the Rockefeller l"oundation.

balers have outtalked teams from 21 other high schools to walk off wilt\ top honors at the third ann 1 University of an Diego Speech Champion- ships. With 64 points, giving Hill- top a 26-point margin over runnerup Sweetwater High, the team won sweepstakes honors in the recent event. Grossmont High's team placed third in the champion- ships, which attracted 300 de- baters from schools in San Diego and Imperial counties. Bill Rogers and Paul Gaske of Hilltop won the champion- ship debate. Pam SayJes of Lincoln High took first place in girls' extemporaneous de- b\lte and Pete 0' Connell of Otange Glen High won the boy ' extemporaneous debate title. In the oratory competition,

Mineks of Grossmont High and Kathy Williams of Hilltop High. Top honors in boys' im• promptu debate went to Sweetwater High's Richard B r o w n, w hi 1 e M e 11 i s a McClaren of Our Lady of Peace Academy placed first in girls' imprpmptu. The top ·ve schools were, in order, Hilltop High, Sweet- water High, Grossmont High, Ocr Lady of Peace Academy, and El Cajon Valley High School. Also competing were teams from Fallbrook, Crawford, Chula Vista, Lincoln, Castle Park, University, Orange Glen, Bonita Vista, Madison, Holtville, Helix, Brawley, ~ar Vista, Monte Vista, Sacred Heart, San Dieguito-, and El Centro High Schools.

r'.~~!, Comfort

"Pirni,~s~,~:.~~ 8 ~,,1~r humid drama about romance in a small town, will be given

Owrns,

Thomas Jackson as Bomber,

'.\fadge Owens, the mauve he- roine in love with Hal Carter,

Fl

as

Deborah

to be portrayed by Michael Owens, .Stephen Echard a Greenwald. Cynthia Smith has Alan Seymour, Patricia Ro,

performances at 8 p.m. Fri- day and Saturday in the Uni- versity of San Diego College Director Ann Kern views the drama as a play of many proach it as such, rather than concentrating on plot. for Women Theater. moods and intends to ap-

tramel as Irma Cronkite an ' Valerie Beidelman as Chris-

been cast as Rosemary Syd-

school-

old-maid

the

ney,

tine Schoenwalder.

teacher, and Geoffrey Hainds

Miss

designing

is

Smith

her

Bevans,

Howard

as

costumes for the production and Miss Kerns is handling

beau.

Also in the cast are Linda Larsen as !Helen Potts, Eileen

sets. -----------

Made with FlippingBook - professional solution for displaying marketing and sales documents online