News Scrapbook 1968-1969

USD Cofflffi8l1°Cel118l1t Rites S For Civic Theater on Saturda

US.DDue To Honor ·or. Love Dr. Malcolm A. Love, presi- dent of San Diego State Col- lege since 1952, began his ca- reer in education when in 1937 he, was named director of Toledo Junior College. One year later he was appointed dean of the College of Liberal Arts at Illinois Wesleyan Uni- versity. Dr. Love will receive the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws from the University of San Deigo at the institutiqn's graduation exercises Satur- day. He also will give the com- mencement address. Named President In 1942 the San Diego edu- cator was appointed Execu- -tive officer in charge of naval training schools in Ohio and Mississippi and, after World War II, became dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Denver. In 1950 he was named presi- dent of the University of Ne- vada. Dr. Love received his bach- elor's degree from Simpson College in 1927, his master's from the University of Iowa in 1933 and a doctorate of philos- ophy from the same school in 1937. Enrollment Jumps During President Love's ten- ure at San Diego State enroll- ment has jumped from 4,000 to 17,000, faculty members form 161 to 643, and major fields of undergraduate stud- ies from 29 to 57. Square foot- age of classroom and labora- tory bu ii dings was 250,000 in 1952. Today it is 1,500,000. Less than 100 applications for the master's degree were Dr. Love Honor Slated by USO rcontinu ·dfrompage 11 approved in 1952. Some 1,158 candidates were presented for the degree in 1965. Research projects, expan- sion of graduate programs, and a joint program w1~h the University of California_ to award a doctorate in the field of engineering are amon~ the many features of academic de- velopment initiated and brought to completion by Dr. Love.

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Three Colleges Due to Award egrees to 250 The Ci'l,ic Theater will he the venue uf t 01 1 . mo1t cxen:iscs at 4 p.m. this Satnr 1 exercises -were held for the graclua e, of tlil' c•ollt '• Ii 1en the College for \Vomen and the Sel10ol of I 1\.l~st H.ev. Francis J. Fu y will prl'sidt' al th, mon · i1. the Civic Theater and ,1ward tht> d pJ 1rn ' or. love to Receive Degree Dr. alcolm Love, president of San Dieg<> ~t· t, lege, \\ 111 dt>liver the commencerncHl address r cei ·1· the honorary degree of Doctor of I ,a\ ,. Pr Pntation of candidates for dt'gr<..!<'S •" ill IH 111, by Sister Sally Furay for the College_ for Wo11H•11. Dr ,1• Stever E. Schancs for the CoilP c· for :\lt:11 .i11d I 1 Joseph A. Sinclitico for the School_ of Law. Twenty students were named for I\\ arch at tl or Con;oC'ation held last Fricl.1. at tlw \\ omr 1, le , T 1er included freshmen, sophon10 ·1 JI•• • 1

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~- ENTER PHIL WOOLPERT?

~~ble defection of UOP, San Jose Stale and UC- Santa Barbara undouhtPd! will be the first order of business when \\ e t ( ·oa I Alhlctic Confere11ce moguls have theJr annual spring meeting on the :\lonterey Peninsula this weekend. It has ht'en rumored these three WCAC grid giants ha VP been huddling with San Dic>go

.Slate, Fresno Slate and Cal State Long Reach athletic of- ficials with I/le idea of estab- lishing a new ·ix school cir- cuit with NCAA approval and major college football status. ll the Tigers, Spartans and Gauchos do decide to leave the old league, lhe WCAC would drop from an eight school cir- cuit to below NCAA minimal requirements for sanction and post-season tournament eligi- bility. The champion of a five ~chool WCAC, for example, elcomed at West- ern Regional NCAA basketball tourneys at which, in previ- ous years, teams from Loyola, Pepperdine, .Santa Clara, UOf' and USF have made great im pact. Little more than a month ago, right after UCLA had snatched the Far West title from Santa Clara at Albuquer que, the Bruins' Athletic Direc- wouldn't be

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tor made ·pec1a1 note of the fact that champion fives from ood In\ anably cxpenenced their stiffest touri battle C ,\ \I e5tern Regionals from the \\'C.'\C titlisl. InterP.stingly, a slim and serious gentlem;in named Phil \\oolpert 11Ill be a Yisiting fireman at lhis 1,1erk1•nd's meetings in old ~Jontere;. HP. 1,11c-e II Pd the \Ir ·tprn Regionals as a spnnghoard trJ nat1on;il l'ham111onsh1p~ f(lr I s~ Don r1vP.s J11 tl1e labulnui flfbes. fnd~y the head ai:kelhall coach and athletic director of San Diego University, Phil will he there u1 the hop€ his Toreros ;;oon will mo elected lo WCAC mem- Turn to Page 13, Column 1 Wes in th

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bership. llC-Irvine, which has become a ~a··ketball power too. The Anteaters are , co'ming fast, their athletic growth companng favorably with that o{ the student body _and _even Orange Coun- ty itself. Portland U. and Sea tile C. ltkew1se might be giv~n consideration though their prospects for WCAC me!nhersh1p are remote, iargely for geographic reasons. (Travel expen_ses would make it terribly impractical for Loyola and Pepperdine, in particular, to play baseball games with these two North· west schools.) OP San .lose State and UC-Santa ,,,. Barbara. aren't going to l\ionterey all prepared to quit the WCAC. Yet if they do, their exodus wouldn't automatically \\Teck It. Bnt the grand old league would be badly shaken by And such a void couldn't aulomat1cally, and immediat_ely, be lilied by hopeful would-be replacements on the horizon such as San Diego's Toreros and UC-Irvine's Anteaters. who charge into the arena armed with that terrifying battle cry "Zot." almost overmght could be seriously considered, Everybody hopes such a development. . .

D Colleges Due To Graduate 250

HONOR SOCIETY ESTABLISHED - Six honor students of Spanish at University of San Diego tc.llege for Women were made charter members of Eta Zeta Chapter, Sigma Delta Phi, at recent installa1ion cere- monies at Alcala Park. Dr. Manuel Guerra, chairman of the Spanish department at USC, estabHshed the chapter of the national honor society. "We are especially happy to have a chapter on campus," said Dr. Graciela Graves, chairman of the CW Spanish department. "One of the aims of the society is to bring to- gether peoples of differing cultures and outlook. In the light of San Diego's Spanish origins and the up- coming civic celebrations, I think we have our work cut out for us on the campus." Shown on the occasion are, left to right, Mrs. Graves, Dr. Guerra, Maria Teresa Graves, secretary; Dr. Antonio Blanco Sanchez, honorary member; Mrs. Jome Vetcher, president of the new chapter, and Dr. William J. Freitas, professor

,, , >11 nn, t'(f 1rntt1 11cu1,• I nison and DehDrah Duggan, Eng- lish; Marilyn Margutti, French; :\l.idel<1ine Kaiser and Sister M. Matthew, music; )effnt"r Allen and Constance Salovitch, philos- oph)'; Christine Brooks and San- dm \far

Deborah Duggan, vice presi- dent of the Associated Stu- dents and editor of CW litenuy magazine, was the first., ret..'lp- ient of the Alcal,1 Award. this prize was authorized by faculty vote to be given to a senior outst.1ndin!-( in character, leader- ~hip, ,ervic.:e and sc.:holarship. Departmental honors awarded hy the College for Men arc: Fred Ilag ,111d John Lafferty, biology; Richard Maxwell, ac-' countin~; Thomas La Puzza and Michael Fox, English; Rick Ca- brera, foreign language. Also Rohert E. Ostenneyer and Mark Herrenbnick, history; Rich- ard Duncanson, Frank Stachyra and Gilbert Brodie, philosophy; John Adams, physics; William Bachofner and Charles Rutledge, psychology, and Howard Lund, sociology. By a vote of the faculty and members of the senior class, Os- tern1eyer was named the out- standing senior.

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San Diego, Monday, May 13, 1968

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an sniff out a fox. Under contract to A & M are such stars as Claudine Longet (whose first album, "Claudine," is a gold one), Sergio Mendez and Brasil 66 and the Sandpipers. If Alpert hadn't gone to a bullfight in Tijuana a few year back, all this might not have happened. The sounds of the crowd and the trumpeters turned him on so much that next time he hung a micro- phone in the center of the ring. The result was ''The Lonely Bull" and it carried him to high plac~ in the entertain- ment world. Has success spoiled Herb Alpert'/ 'T don't think so," said the dark-haired, 30-year-old trum- peter-singer. ''I can do more and buy more now. I have enough clothes and cars (a Ferrari, a Jaguar and a Ghia) and two houses but money isn't that important. "The Brass could work 52 weeks a year and make .lots more but we're limiting our- selves to occasional tours of 10 to 14 days. That's plen y."

EVENING, TRIBUNE

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gives Alpert more time ith his striking wife, Sharo , and his son. Besides, all tha tal ent in his stable seems to profit from his pres c I,

Dave Mclntqre's FRONT ROW "Th/f:i:i'ii;, "M~g~i;e;,~~..~·ari;a -;b~~t~;;·i-;i;h-secr~t soci~ty formed during the coal mining strikes Pennsylvan(a durmg the 1870s. The picture is being ma~e m Penn,~ylvama. Zerbe also has a prominent role in "Will Penny, the Charlton Heston film which will be next at the Fox Theater. Your youngsters undoubtedly will recall the canceled appear- ance of a group known as the Young Rascals who were to ~v,e erformed April 10 in the San Diego Sports Arena. They ~idn_ t 1:nake it because Felix Cavaliere, lead ~inge~ and orgamst m the group, was hit ~y a severe virus rnfectJon that day and taken to Mercy Hospital. $120 000 in Bookings Abandoned Felix \s just now recovering. Billy Smith, a representatibe the Rascals, informs me that the. young ~an tried to go ac d t 9 work soon after returning to his home ?-Jew -york. He ha .. a relapse. The group had to forego $120,000 m bookings. The Herb Alreji concert in the Spo~ts ~rena last ":eek proved prohtab¥to its sponsors, the University of San Diego G.flllege for Men 1 so I don't imagine tile lads will mmd me te ling a hitie story. . . When a representative of the Alpert organ_1zat1on called, he though! he was contacting the largest school m the area. After the contract was signed, the Alpert man learned the College of :\tlen has fewer than 1,000 students enrolled and he almost dropped an eye tooth. The Alpert :man offered t? buy back the contract, but the collegians declmed. Everythmg turne? o~t nicely _ except, perhaps, for-the people who got stuck n t e traffic jam at the Spor,s Arena.

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at 18 funerals m one day. said that toughened · lips. "I wanted to be a Jazz mu sician but I soon realized that the best guys in the business - Miles Davis, Ditzy Gillespie - were too good for me. I felt like I was copying them. "But I have done a lot of arranging and so\ne songwrit- ing. One thing I rote, '·Won- derful World," was a big hit for the late Sam ooke." STYLE UNIQUE Herb Alpert has helped make the music world a won- derful one with his unique sty- ling. "Music is my pleasure," he'll tell you, "even if, that does sound corny." There is nothing very corny about a group that has sold 28 million records. And all be- cause of a lonely bull.

College for Women Elec sNew Officers -S.~u·~ <'""• -s S'.. I~- ,9 Students at University of San Diego College for Women, Al- cala Park, elected officers for next year in a record turnout vote. Terry G:taves, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Graves of La Jolla was elected president; Christy Thomp_son, resident student

Brass is the sound of my horn - bold as that sounds." Alpert admitted he'd taken acting lessons and would con- sider doing a movie "if the right script came along. But I'd never venture fulltime into any other field at the expense of the Brass." Alpert said that, back in 1962, his A&M Records Co. ()mployed two people - him- self and his partner, Jerry Moss. TALENT FOUND "A&i\I is now the !ourlh- large t record company in the country in sales," Alpert said, '·and that is one reason I'm not taking the Brass on tour so much There is much to do at A&l\1. We've got some fine talent."

from Colton, was chosen vice. president; Christy Thompson, resident student from Colton, was chosen vice-president. Anne Dougherty of Pottsville, Pa., and Marcia Rarick of Rolling Hills Estate were vot- ed in as recording and cor- responding secretaries. Christine Shanes of San Die- go was elected treasurer and Janet Schweitzer from San Bernardino was voted social chairman. Nancy Mccann from Sacramento and Jane McGil- licuddy were elected chair- men of resident and day stu- dentcommittees. BO Per Cent Vote According to Connie Salo- vitch, ASB president at Col- lege for Women, 80% of the student body pai:ticipated in the elections. All resident students on the Alcala Park Campus voted. "Last year," Connie recalled, "only 43% of the students cast votes. I think this shows that student gov- ernme11t is working." Class officers were elected

after student body selections were made. Stephanie Hamil- ton, resident student from Co vina, will be president of CW senior class; Betty Hansen, from Omaha, was elected vice. president. Diane Solomon and Pat Monti went in as secretary and treasurer. Junior officers next year will be Marijane Pollak, presi- dent; Pat Cobb, vice-president; Diane Poirer and Michele . Wren. Colleen Otten, Debbie Comfort, Helen Burke, and Maggie Bullock will conduct class business for the sopho- mores. Elections for club offices will be run off this week. In- stallation ceremonies will conclude the series of elec- tions.

8-8 THE SAN DIEGO UNION Friday, May IO, 1968 'Oles' Sweep Arena For Tijuana Brass By DICK BOWMAN When Alpert blows those gold- "Lonely Bull," which got the " "In Tijuana," h~ ;,ve~t on, When they played "Zorba the en notes, his is a horn of plenty. TJB start~. . the. real dan!!er n t m th~ Greek" you had images of a Th t ed b th Alpert, a boyish young man of bullring but m the streets. e concer sponsor Y e •th 'Id I h · · Th "Ti· T · " hummrngbird flapping its wings . ' . 30 w1 w1 cur y air, 1s an en came Juana aXJ. at top speed to keep up. Asso_ciated st udents at th e Um- exciting entertainer. When ~e A tribute to To/llmy Dorsey Their "Spanish Flea'' rocl

ed 'the air with "oles" rb even reached the t,ed stag . Thrs, of , a tribute to hlf

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