News Scrapbook 1981-1982

:-8

11, 1981

THE SAN DIEGO UNION

USD Points For

r ect

ampaign, But Chances For. Playoffs Appear Slim

could do Saturdav? How manv have th chance to fm1 h a year with a perfect r rd? It' the chance of a lifetime, and I'm sure we'll play as well a we're capa- ble of playing." Win or lose 1t will be re- membered as a long day. The football team will re- port to Lindbergh Field at 6 a.m Saturday for its 7:0:i £light to an Francisco. On there, USD will re- qwre 90 minutes to reach 1oraga by bus. · Hopefully, it Will work to our advanta e," Williams aid. "Hopefully. we 11 be so busy we won't notice how big those monsters are." Eight of the club's 24 pla,ers will be on the side- line when the United States International Unlver ity · ey team plays host to rt • n Arizona turday and 'unday night at 7·30 in the Mira Mesa Ho c or Ice. Five of the right will be serving two-game su·pcn- 1ons for the!T role in relo- ca ing furniture from va- cant dormitory rooms into their own The three others rete1ved two-game sentenc- for ci.rfew violations on th Gu11 ' recent trip to the 1dwe 't and Roqkies Co h Ron Ingram has d clmed to identify he ath- Me~ involved, but all eight agam will be elig1b e for be rcmam er of the USil, sea-

sion I hockey after 10 years of club play, are 0-4. They have been outscored 42-12. Freddi Goss will unveil his USIU basketb II team tonight when the Gulls en- tertain England's Team Fiat in an exh1bit1on game slated for 8 o'clock at Mira Mesa High. Fiat is the English Bas- ketball Association's reign-

returning players, but the Gulls are hoping to post a second consecutive winning season when they open Nov. 27 at Stanford. Despite the Gulls spend, ing virtually the entire year on the road, they finished 13-12 last season. power£ul women's volleyball team will stage its second UCSD UCSD's

mg National League cham- pion. It features former USC star Greg White. In ad- dition to tonight's meeting against USIU, the visitors will visit Whittier, UC Santa Barbara, Pepperdine, use, UC Irvine and Fullerton late on its current tour. Don Robinson (6-9), Bob Hicks (6-6) and guard Char- lie Smith are USIU's only

top-ranked Division III vol- leyball team in the country. USD's women's volleyball team will conclude its sea- son this week. USD (4-10) will play host to USIU to- night and travel to UC Santa Barbara Friday night before ending the season Saturday night at Cal Poly of San Luis Obispo.

Invitational Friday and Sat- urday in Main Gym. Among those in the field are Air Force, UC Davis, UC Riverside, Cal Poly or Pomona and USIU. Pool play wilJ begin Fri- day morning and continue throughout the day and eve- ning. Championship match- es are scheduled for Satur- day at 7 p.m. UCSD is the

t o of t e top t ill th country thereby fmd them selves m the "West." They are Augustana (Ill) and Lawrence (Wis.), both un beaten. "Eight teams go to the playofrs." Wil11ams ex pla ned 'and the idea c; to get two fr m each of the four regions of the country " So, USD's · bowl game' undoubedly will be played Saturda • ·afternoon t s•. Mary's.· "It's fitting our final ob- stacle is the biggest one,' William said. "0rdmarily on paper you wouldn't give us much of a chanc lro gt schedule and ~aten com mon opponents much wo t.han we have. At times though, we have simply out- w1llcd people This JS an amazm ere o ids, and they arc determmed to g 10 and oh" <:t. Mary's 6-3, but th Gaels, s members of Div ~ion II, will be favored mham is concerned. "To be a ballboy ther~ you·ve got to be 6-2 225 " h said. ''Playmg them durm the daytime is scary be- cau. e when they take t field they cause an echp of the sun." But, h added: "Our play ers are really looking £o ward to it How many ata- lete , at any level in an} sport, ever do what w hcy've playe

In Moraga, late Saturday afternoon, the curtain will fall on the University of San Diego football ~eason, and, although they still may be unbeaten Coach 8111 Wil- liams d,lubts his club will be a ked for an encore. "Our cban of reaching the playorf are very hm," Williams y terday said ''It seems strange you could have a j)('rfect season and not go to the playoff but if we're mvitcd l"d be very ·urpr1sed You've got to re- member that the Western Region of Divll>1on Three goes all the way to Wiscon• ~in And even though we're 1g th-ranked t am n the country, we're the third• ranked team in the region. If we're mvited, fin , that w11uld be icmg on the cake. But right now the playoffs are the farth t thing from our mind" The Toreros (9-0) already h ve assured themselve the best fim h In the hi ·tory of the chool By winning Saturday at L Mary s the San D1egan could cap a perfect year. Still, i£ William is right, USO will need an upset or two by other contending t ms to reach the NCAA Division m playoffs. Because so few Far West- ern chools hold member- hip in Division III, the re- gion stretches ea tward to WISConsm and Ill_mois, and

LOCAL COLLEGES

LA JOLLA LIGHT .------_N_OV 1 2 198t

Toxic waste topic of symposium Toxic waste will be the topic of a symposium to be held at the University or San Diego on Nov. 21 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in More Hall, ,;"School or Law. registration made sons state agencies and one federal agency all having some respon- sibility in the field.

b)' Saturday is $30, or $10 with student iden- tification; late resgistration is $40 or $10 for students. The "Toxic Waste" symposium will address legal aspects of toxic waste and is designed to update lawyers, students, environ- mentalists and per-

concerned about public nealth in regard to current regulations, pending legislation and lit gation. The coordinator of the svmposium, USD a sistant professor Rick Barron, says, "Pre- sently the law of tox- ic waste is still in its infancy. There are four

''This is the first time, that such high ranking officials in the agencies , responsible for toxic• waste have come , together to educate•, lawyers and the public on the burgeoning law of toxics."

The symposium is co- sponsored by the USD School of Law and the Environmental Law Society. Advance

SOUTHERN CROSS

Pipe organ making a comeback

symbolism that expressed faith elements. Even the abstract organ music of that period is sacred music " Father Reveles sees some encouraging indicators that good liturgical music for organ and choir is returning to the Church, and that even contemporary works are capable of being on par with the masterpieces of the Baroque and Classical periods. Father Reveles' hopes for a renewed emphasis on the role of the pipe organ in the liturgy is not meant as a criticism of other and newer forms of Church music, but only as the restoration of something which is in danger of being lost. The new pipe organ at USD represents a "very generous gift" of the Treptes, noted Father Reveles. It currently has 13 ranks of pipes, each rank representing one of 13 differing tonal qualities for each of the 56 keys on the keyboards. There is room for at least four additional ranks of pipes at some future date, he added. The dedication concert at Founders tomorrow night (Nov. 13 at 8 p .m.) will be given by Jared Jacobson, a USD faculty member and civic organist for the city of San Diego. Father Reveles will conduct the USD Chorus.

By Deacon James Steinberg SAN DIEGO-The dedication of a new pipe organ in the University of San Diego's Founders Chapel this week is indicative of that instrument's ''return'' to its traditional position of pre-eminence in the liturgy. Almost two decades have passed since the Second Vatican Council, and among the many changes in the Church smce then have been the de- emphasis -or even the outright disappearance-of the organ, choir smging and Gregorian chant; the Council's Constitutio11 on the Sacred Liturgy said all three were to be retained and given new life in the liturgy. THE NEW ORGAN at USD-it has 13 ranks of pipes and was built by Lyle Blackinton of El Cajon - is a gift to the university by Mr and Mrs. Eugene Trepte, and will play a prominent part in a liturgical music program "that is growing by leaps and bounds," said Father Nicolas Reveles, an instructor in USD's department of music. There are now two choirs at USD, said Father Reveles, along with an ever-expanding mu~ic library and plans to offer more courses in Church music. "My dream is a complete program of liturgical music on this campus within which musicians from the diocese can perfect their skills and explore the mtegral relationship between liturgy and music," But it is the new organ itself, with its outstanding tonal qualities and a "tracker" action (an xtremely sensitive connection between keyboard and pipe) which excites Father Reveles' interest as a concert musician himself: ··~ome tracker organs in Europe have lasted for 600 years and are still being played today." THE FOUNDERS CHAPEL instrument joins a growing list of outstanding pipe organs in the diocese, notes Father Reveles. He named Mission San Luis Rey in Oceanside and St. Brigid in Pacific Beach as two churches with older pipe organs of very fine quality. In addition, new pipe organs have already been installed over the past few years or are currently being built for Sacred Heart in Coronado; Blessed Sacrament and Our Mother of Confidence in San Diego; and San Rafael in Rancho Bernardo. Father Reveles laments the fact that many fine church organs, precision instruments handcrafted of wood, metal and leather, have fallen on hard times through neglect and disinterest. "Much liturgy today is going in one direction and one direction only, the direction of least resistance, the least trouble," he said.

Mark Ryland photo Father Reveles plays the new USD pipe organ.

This has resulted in "simplistic" solutions to music making, he said, with a lack of 'commitment-and money-to liturgical music, witnessed by choirs that have di d out, children who are no longer trained in music nd the mighty pipe organ, a rich part of the Chur 's musical heritage, all but gone in many places. "BACH'S WHOLE OUT:?UT was devoted to the liturgy," said Father Reveles. "During the Baroque period certain note groupings had a hidden

LA JOLLA LIGHT NOV 1 2 198t

Seminar topic: health care burnout

For the

"Burnout -

Nursing from 8:30 a.m. to 3: 30 p .m. The fee for the seminar, which may be taken for six contact hours credit, is $30 or $25 with student iden-

tification. "Burnout " is co-sponsored by USD 's Schools of Nursing and Continuing Education. For i nfo rmation and registr ation c all 293- 4585. The seminar will be led by Betty Jo Hosford B.S .N., who has con'. du ct e d burnout sem inars for hospital p~r~onnel and spe- c1~hz~s in psy- ch1atr_1c nur s ing a nd opera tmg room nursing I n addition to her professional training at North Caroli na Baptist Hos pita l School o f Nu r sing a nd USD.

Proa

Care

Health

Hosford 's experience is drawn from working at Duke University Medical Center, the Veteran's Adminis- trat!on Hospital , and Scripps Memorial Hospital. " Burnout" is designed for the health care professional and will define and examine the burnout syndrome , describe methods to cope with this phenomenon, and recommend methods to implement change both for the individual and for agencies .

~essional" top- ic of a seminar to be held at the University of San Diego on Dec. 5, in room 106 inche School of is the

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