News Scrapbook 1974-1975

SAN DIEGO, CALIF., FRID~Y, JANUARY 24, 1975

ft'

·t---, -

---

--•- ,1

USD slates registration sc~cf~les'J~~

l

.13,111>'

scheduled9-ll a.m. Jan. 29,

semester

Spring registration

on the evenings of Jan. 30, r\b 3, 4 or 5 from 6-7 p.m.. E ening registration will

engrossing parties blnck velv t cap and J t Jewelry ... nd DI\. and rn J . IE S. ·1, DEil, h in a wlute, floor· I ngth own trimmed wiU1 w)lite ostrich £cath rs Round tables of eight encircled the president's table for 10. Candlelit centerpieces of white mums and

and

sophomores

the while

at

freshmen register 1-4 the same day in Serra Hall. Graduate and evening students may register at

University of San Diego is set for Jan. 29 and 30 and Feb 3,4 and 5 for st~dents who have not previously registered by mail.

the

in

handled

be

in

Office

R ~istrar's Ft unders Hall.

the same times Jan. 29 in Juniors and seniors are Serra Hall, or may register --

ilver foliage graced each table. Shrimp de Jon served in coquelle shell preceded the entree of boneless breast of chicken with apricot brandy sauce and macadamia nuts, rice medley with pine nuts, and snowpeas with mushrooms. In the continental manner, spinach salad with San .t'rancisco French dressing was served. The climax of the dinner was the spec- tacular naming of the lemon cheese crepes flambe. BISHOP . LEO T. MAHER, chairman of the USO Board of Trustees, opened the dinner with a prayer. · A musical program was per- formed by MISS GOLDIE INEGAL, a senior music major at the university, and ROBERT AUSTIN, pianist and faculty member. Following the program, Bishop Maher introduced Dr. Hughes, who thanked the members of the President's Club for their continued interest and support. Dr. Hughes then outlined the dreams and plans for USD's second 25 years. Dr. Hughes then presented to MR. and MRS. PHILIP Y. HAHN a Cybis "Madonna With Bird." A plaque ·attached to the wood base reads, "With gratitude from the University of San ' Diego." The Hahns are the benefactors of the newly created

Tw nty,fiv y r ago the vision and wisdom or a grand lady, the Rev. Mother Rosalie Hill, deter- min d the rchitecture and ma nlficent pariors of the San Diego Colleg for Women, npw part of the Umver ity of San Diego. On'S turd y night these gracious rooms wer> the ettlng for the ond annual U [) Pre 1dent's Club Dinner, hosted by DR. and )IRS. TIIOH t:. Ht.;GIIF.~. Dr and Mrs. Hughes greeted their 90 gue ts in the foyer. Mr . Hughes, a beautiful host , wore a gown of pastei affrnn yellow, pring green and a touch of harp pink, all over- woven by glittering metallic thread Cock! ii and hors d'oeuvres were rv d in I-'ounders foyer. · Bill Gre n's orche tra added to the fe ·tiv1ty of the evening. MRS. m:1,EN A.•. ·1<: nu. ·s. a member of the Presi'dent's Club Cow1c1I and party advi or, made the music po s1blc us a gift to the party. Mr . Bunn, who i alway fashion right, looked lovely in a very formal bl ck velv t dinner ult, the silver lameov rblouse ·hining beneath the fox collar Gue t were called into the exqui 1te French Parlor for an elegantly cooked and served dinner, catered by Carriage Trade.

:: ,.

post-RN degree program at the university. Mrs. Hahn chose for the occasion an apricot blouse and a shimmering apricot and gold metallic skirt. Gifts of an original etching of De Sales Hall, handsomely mounted and framed, were presented to each member. Dancing concluded the merry and distinguished evening, ending at midnight. Among other guests were MR. and ;\tRS. ANTHONY GHIO ... MR. and MRS. ADA!\1 KL'PIEC .. . THOMAS FLE:\tl 'G . . MR. and MRS. ALEX DeBAKCSY . . . DR. and MRS. ED'1Ul\D KEENEY . . . ,rns. JAMES COPLEY. MR. and :\1RS. LEO ROON . . . MR. and MRS. THOMAS FINN ... and MR. and ~RS. DEAN NINTEMAN.

direction of Dr. James Moriarty. Class is excavat- ing former site of United States House, which will be reconstructed. - Photo by Jerrry Rife

DIGGING J~ - USO students excavate historic site in Old Town, digging up relics of early American, Spanish and Indian periods, under

. ~~-g177) ~;)/ Road mark hits 0-8 EVENING TRIBUNE Dispatch THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. - The Toreros of Ur.iversi- ty of San Diego will try again tonight to chalk up their first basketball victo- ry of the new season on the road. They will engage Cal Lutheran following a 63-54 setback to Cal Poly at San Luis Obispo last night. That left the Toreros with a rec- ord of 0-8 for away-from- home games this season. USO fared well in the first half and was ahead by eight points neat the break but suddenly the Toreros couldn't find the basket. They failed to score in the last two minutes of the first half and the iirst eight min- utes of the second half. Can Poly's nine straight points allowed it to gain a 29-24 edge at halftime and the Mustangs went on to tally six unanswered points to open the second half. Cal Poly was able to hold an eight to nine-point edge throughout the second half. The Toreros hit a cold 35 per cent from the floor in bowing. Summary USO CAL POLY (SLO) Jones (10) • Bush (8) Meade (2) Holl 16) Traub U) Flavin (8) Smith (12) Orgill (12) DeMoestrl 16) Jones (10) USO .................... .....24·30-54 caJt~:~i sco·a;,g:....:·use·=· Fer·o 2 i;~f, Cathers (!), Seavers (6) , Harnett (4). Col Poly: O'FlonertY (3), Ritchie (1), MIiis (2), Erickson (13). Fouled out- Ferguson (USO). Technlcal foul -Cosenza (USDJ. Totol louls - USO 25. Col Poly 20.

.;l'

USO Falls To Cal Poly Surge, 63-54 Speclol to The Son Dlevo Union SAN LUIS OBISPO - Cal Poly (San Luis Obispo) shrugged off an early deficit and outscored the University of San Diego, 15-0.. over a 10- minute stretch in the middle of the game to defeat the Toreros, 63-54, last night. The loss kept the Toreros winless on the road in eight tries, as opposed to a perfect 7-0 record on their own boards. They get another chance tonight to break the travel jinx, visiting Cal Lutheran in Thousand Oaks at 8 p.m. The Tareros ·wanted to break Poly's slowdown rhythm and gain an early lead and appeared to be ac- complishing that with a full court press and some good shooting. USO hit nine of its first 16 attempts from the floor and held an eight-point lead as the halftime break neared. But Poly then proceeded to wreck the Toreros' plans. USO did not score a point through the last two minutes of the first half and the first eight minutes of the second . Poly, meanwhile, ran off nine straight points to take a 29-24 lead to the intermis- sion, then scored six more unanswered points to start the second half. The hosts maintained an eight- or nine- point margin the rest or the way. USO finished with a 35 per cent floor performance. For- ward Ken Smith topped Torero scoring with 12 pomts, followed by forward Allan Jones with 10. But the usual scoring punch from center Neil Traub and guard Joe De- Maestri was missing. Traub went 2-for-7 from the field before retiring in favor of Greg Seavers, and DeMaes- tri canned six. Sixth man Dave Erickson led Poly scoring with 13 points.and Gary Orgill• added 12 as the club im- proved its record to 10-6. Y:n~s IIO) CAL POLY (SLO) Meade (2) B~~ri m Troub '4) Flavin (8) Smith 112) Orgill (12) DeMoestri 16) Jones tlO) g:,opi,jy": :::::::::::.:: :::::: ::::1i 4 tt:,,5: Others scoring-USO ; Ferguson ( 8 ), Cathers (2), Seavers (6), Harnett (.4) Col Poly: O'Floherty CJ), Ritchie (I). MIiis (2), Erickson ClJ). • Fouled out- Fer~uson (USO). Techn1co1 foul-Cosenza (USO) Total fouls - USO 25, Col Poly 20,

7s'

4-.

Television and radio personality Art Linkletter will speak on "Human Values in a Changing Society" at 8 p.m. Monday, Feb. 10, in Salomon Hall at San Diego University. Sponsored by the Campus Ministrv, the lecture is free and open to the public .

/ University plans fete for parents A reception for parents of University ot San Diego students 1s planned at 3 p.m. Tuesdav in the Founders Hall French Parlor. All parents are invited to meet the deans anJ take a student-guided tour of the campus. La Jollans Mrs. E.J . Bavasi and Mr. and Mrs. Daniel ;11tulv1hill are members o• the executive committee of the USD Parents· Club .

1

at

1 ;

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Letts Jones arrive at the doorway of Founders Hall at the University of San Diego to be greeted by Or. Author E. Hughes, USO president, and Mn. Hughes at the President's Club Dinner Saturday night.

·~ J USD Parents Invited To Tour Parents of University of San Diego students are invit- ed to take a tour of the campus and meet the deans at 3 p.m., Tuesday, Jan. 28. Parents are aslced to meet m 1 the Founders Hall French t Parlor. t The event is sponsored by c the USD Parents' Club. Mr. t and Mrs. Louis Bartek are f cochairmen. A showing of c Norman Rockwell liHlo- graphs may be seen in the Copley Library.

1.

USO Hopes To Rewrite Road Story Special to The San Diego Union SAN LUIS OBISPO - Seven and seven. It's enough to drive a man to drink. Jim Brovelli, the basket- ball coach at the University of San Diego, has a basket- ball team that is perfect at home. seven victories, no defeats. It is also a team that is perfectly imperfect away from home. seven de- feats, no victories. . Tonight, they're on the road again, which won't put the coach on the wagon. Fur- 1 thermore, the opposition is Cal Poly (San Luis Obispo), a slowdown team that is not easy on the nerves. "If they're ahead by two with 12 minutes to go, they'll go into a stall," Brovelli said, half-humorously. He has a plan, proven to work, to drive that team - and his - out of a rut. A good friend of his at Cal State Hayward watched Hayward, which had lost at home to Poly, rout the same team at San Luis Obispo last week, 78-59 The secret, Brovelli's friend told him, is get an early lead and set a fast pace. "That's the main rea- son Hayward won, and we'll try to do the same thing," Brovelli said.

.a,,

l~1~

.&,n &\~ lt.n,dl'>

CALLED POOR PRESCRIPTION

Nursing Aid Veto Criticized By RAY KIPP Education Writer The an lego Union able to other college stu- dents.

nursing program but there was no immediate assess- ment of the affect there. Walter Coats, vocational coordinator for the San Diego Community College District, did not feel the veto would have much impact on the district's programs for nurses aides, licensed voca- tional nurses (LV. ') and up- grading registered nurses. He said support for these programs comes through state vocational financing.

authorized $46,906 between June, 1973, and June, 1975, for capitation (augmentation of state support) financing and $13,062 to nursing stu- dent grants and aids be- tween September, 1974, and August, 1976. These programs already authorized will not be affect- ed by the veto. The effects, however, will be felt in fu- ture programs, officials said. Point Loma College has 108 students enrolled in its

Mr. Ford said he would propose a comprehensive health manpower bill, in- cluding nursing programs, to the 94th Congress. Dr. Palmer said the veto will have adverse effects on all of the 1,377 schools and hospitals offering degree or diploma nurstng training as well as those offering master and doctoral studies. ", ·ursmg schools across the coi.ntry \\111 have to un- derwrite whatever support they might have gotten by raising tuition or donations or the quahty of health care will (in the long run) be diminished,'' she said. Even if nursing support is included in a comprehensive health measure, Dr. Palmer feels there will not be the type of support that would be avallable If 1t were treated separately. Dr. Palmer said the exact effects of the veto on the USD nursing school are not yet known, but it is certai11 to affect students needing grants or other financial as- sistance. At San Diego State univ • 1ty here nearly 190 u- n ar rroll d n ntir ng la , th re \\as no 1mme- 1ate 1mate on the 1111- pact Howe~er, the San Diego State School of N ur. ,ng was

,President Ford's veto of $654 million in support for nurses training 1s a poor prescription for fut~rc health care, according to the head of the University of San Diego's nul'Slilg program. "It has essentially \\1ped out any federal support for nur Ing programs or nur , ' Dr Irene Palmer said of r Ford's decision to veto the three-year-feder- al appropriation bill for nurs ng programs. Th blll would have ex- tended fedcr I assistance to nurs ng program~ - curric- ulum expansion, nursing stu- dent grants and scholar- ships, augmentation of state support, nur mg facility con- tructlon and expan~Jon - and would have created new . programs designed to train nur In speclali1.ed med1• cal treatment )Ir Ford based his drci- sion to pocket veto the bill la t month becau he felt it placed too mu ·h emphasis on con truct1on, did not em- pha~lz sperlalized training and did not do enough to r uev vre ortage or 11Jr e 1n p r Jar apt1 ar Tt p Id n al

(2)

EVENING TRIBUNE

San Diega, Wednesday, Jan. 29, 1975

C-3

USD wins on road

Members of the Universi- ty of San Diego basketball team will feel a lot better about playing a road game Saturday against the Whittier Poets than they have. After seven straight loss- es on the road the Toreros found a winning combina- tion last night and beat Cal Lutheran at Thousand Oaks, 65-61. A big part of that combination was Ken

Smith who scored 24 points for the Toreros. USD's record is 8-8. Sum- mary: USO SmithfW DeMoestri (8) CAL LUTHERAN Bowman (77) Prewitt (l1) Embry (A) Web!) 16) Lobltz 121 34--45 Cal Lutheran .............. J3 2t--41 Other scorlnv--USO: Cosenza•· Fer- guson 2. Col Lutheran: BobSOn Bobsin 2, Dente 9. Fouled out-USO: OeMoestrJ Cat Lutheran: Webb. Technical fouls-USO: OeMoestri. Total fouls-USO 21, Col Lutheran 24. Troub (12) Jones 00) -(8) USO ..................... ... 31

th t nur tr. receive thc- rtnanc al a

Made with FlippingBook Learn more on our blog