News Scrapbook 1969-1971

Concert Sunday at USDJ- "// )1arsha, Long, 1970 winner of the Young Artists compe- tition pian ists, is to play two rhapsodies by Brahms for the Umversity of San Diego Spring Concert Sunday. Annual Spring Concert is to be held at 8:15 p.m. in Ca- mino Hall Theater, and fca• lures the USC chorus and or· I chestra .. There is no charge for admission. Dr. Henry Ko- lar, chairman of the depart- ment of music, directs both groups. Featured work by the Uni- versity Orchestra is to be "Suite for Strings," bai;ed on Polish folk tune . hv Lutos- lawski, one of Poland's lead- ing contemporary composers. The orchestra 1s also to per- fonn work~ by Gemi111ami, Elgan and Virgil Thompson. t will feature ~rize pianist ~./.,KA., S:'771 . larsha Long, winner of the mo Young AJ't1~ts com- petition for pianists, will be featut'ed in the annual spring co cert at the Univrr- sity of an Diego 1omorrow at 8:15 p.m. Miss Long will play two rhapsodies by Brahms. Dr. Henry Kolar wilJ direct the university orchestra and chorus in selections by Gemi- niani, Elgar Virgil Thomp- son and Lutoslawsk1, contem- porary Polish composer. The Young Arti ts com- petition is sponsored annually by the San Diego S)mphony Association

USD A xili~ry to mark

Torrer s test alen • Ill N AA to John Cunni gham's uni- Could be another reason for ketball as the the colleg.! vel"!nty of San Di o base- his four-acre smile. Tom- coach of former Boston Cel- ball r are bi with unlucky czyk, \\ho c r 1ed most of tic great Bill Russell, who's numbers. Torreros pitchers the C:niversity High School ·emphasis on defense chang-· recordf'd 13 shutouts this hop"s two years ~ut. ns:i·er ed the game and according • arrived at that pomt m time 1 ' campai!(n on their way to 30 when his prep coach. Robert to many court fans, helped wins against l O losses with "Bull" Trometer spelled his give the game the popularl- former Wes rn League hurl- name twice in_ a row t~e ty it enjoys today. ers Steve Davis, Greg Tom- same way, fuushed , h 1 3 Bernie Bickerstaff a for- czyk and Gary M)TOn ac- sophomore season with a ' counting for 26 of the vie- perfect 6-0 mark. He allowed mer Woolpert-cQached Tor- torie . but c,ne run in the regular I rero, was named coach of "It's the best year, ever, season final against Cal USD's cagers last; fall, when for u ," miles Cunningham I the fs>rmer national cham· with a grin that started ,-.-..,,....--..- - ·----· pion mentor decided to give some\1 here behind his left I up r_oaching an~ devote all ear and circled his face. his time to runnmg the Uni- "We've been selected for the I versity's athletic program. CAA college division reg- Cunningham presented ional playoffs and that's an- awards to one other senior, other first for us." but added might to his fu- 'l'he Torr os open touma• ture with presentations to a ent play aiainst defending pair of sophomores and a hampton San Fernando Val- freshman, Friday night at ley State College tomorrow the school's annual Athlete Ith Puget Sound meeting Awsrds Banquet. l niv,-rsit of California at Dave Gonzalez took home lnme (CC In the fir~t a pair of awards for duty in game of the double elimina- his last schola tic campaign. tion C'las ic. • He received the Captain's M ron will open for Cun- Trophy and was named l\lost ningham's crew. The former Valuable Player. Mission Bay diamond s1.ar Sophomores John McNa- leads the nation with 145 in- mara and Ken Kmsman re- nings pitched, 12 wins agains• '"'--~'--" cieved the Hustle and Most just 4 losses, and seven shut- Improved awards respec- outs. Myron, 5-11, stands a tive1y. Freshman Kerry Di- shade heavier at 175 than he neene, with a whopping .4()6 did while flinging for the average, easily won the Out- Bucs, figure~ to go high in Bapti:;t, winning 9-1 and po~t- standing Hitter's ~rophy. the upcoming major league ing the team's most impres-1 TPam and s ecial awar~s ba~eb21l draft sive ERA with a minute 1.53. were present to tenni~. II~ was named lJSD's out• "Tomczyk is the base ru golf, and freshman and \ • standing pitchPr thi~ year build my staff around next sity basketball n ,..bcrs. ("and for all other year~ a season." said the ever grm· Oscar Foster, a former .All- well," says his coach). My- ning Cunningham. :'.\1ust be C~ cager from San Diego ron finished the regular hard to frown when you're High School, was named season with a 3-0 shutout a big winner after several bas ·etball P, and ,rohn over Cal Baptist Saturday years of so-so to better than Boone was c o en by his lowering his earned run av'. but not much better than'. cage team tes for the erage to 1.98. fair baseball. ' Spartan Hu I award. S!Pve Davis did his prep While 'CAA college di- Mike , Kellog~ took MVP pitchmg at Point Loma and vision playoffs are a new ~onor_s m tennis, after lead- carrird his winning way; to thrill for the Torreros, na· mg his team to a 27-2 seas- Alco.1 Park. A tall 16-1), whip- tional championships are old on. Sophomore Steve Yavor- pet (]85 pounds,, who fires hat to USD's athletic direc- sky collared the Golf MVP from the •·wrong'' side. Da- tor, Phil Woolpert, the dean award. vis posted an 8-3 recorrl on of area baketball coaches on the campaign. inc·luding until his retirement from four shutouts, and auth:ired the e-ame, twice won the na a micro~ropic 1 63 ERA in tional crown while directing the process. Davis will !1:-e· things at University of San join :\Iyron in the early go- Francisco. His cage club, ing of tile baseball draft took the title in both 1955 Cunningham g ts 'fomcz:k and 1956. back for two more seasons. Wooolpert served all bas-

News from area universities and San Diego State College. U.S. INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY By MARY ROBBINS .. :r,s "11 A closed-circuit radio station has begun broadcasting at Cal Western. An experiment of the publications board, the station is broadcast only in Cabrillo Hall, the student union building at present. It is hoped that a line will be put into the cafeteria and snack bar within the next few weeks. The station is operating on a public address system hookup with the call letters KLUB. It is on the air four hours a day, broadcasting from 10 to 11 a.m., from noon until 1 p.m. and from 4 until 6 p.m.

Station executives are sen- iors Jack Palmer and Den- nis Kasper, both editor-pro- ducers; junior Dave McKinney, program director, and Jeff Prescott, news di- rector. The format includes broad- casting popular music al- bums and student perform- ances from the campus cof- fee houses. "We're really excited about KLUB," said Palmer. '·Our purpose is to aid commu- nication and to supplement the Western Tide (the campus newspaper). The ra- dio station is entertainment

MARY ROBBINS for those listening and it is a valuable educational experience for those who are working on it." The station is operating on a trial basis now, Palmer ex- plained. UNIVERSITY OF SAN DIEGO By OSCAR RODRIGUEZ The department of education, division of special educ<1tion, has been awarded a $21,500 federal grant for undergraduate traineeships and graduate fellowships . The grant will be used to finance the training of teachers of the mentally retarded for both public and private schools. Freshmen Teri Duffy and Mary Frances Jackson have been elected cochairmen of the deaf program fer the 1971-72 school year. The deaf program is a student project in wb tudent volun- teers tea<'h deaf childr ev- ery Sa ay o a one-to-one ratio. After ~tudents learn sil!:r niques~1;:.1111,i-: deaf.

A NEW BILL to declare jazz the national music has been reintroduced by Congressman Bob Wilson, on behalf of the West Coast J a;:z . • . . . . City publicist Mike Styles' credit cards ran up $1,600 worth_ of bills in three days. But he wasn't with them. The thief who stole 1.hcm was apprehended during a spending spree at Disneyland.... The impecunious arts: Narsha Lon_g, a USD student, ran out of gas en route to a piano concert for a COMBO coffee in l\1ission Hilis. She had no money and was bailed out with gasoline from Mrs. Carl Hauck's lawnmower.. . That was Andy Devine sitting at the oyster bar the othe1' day at Earl' Grotto.

The end of regular classes for this semester will be May 17 and final exams will start :May 19. The semester will end May 26, with graduation scheduled for May 30. The annual Spring Concert Station executives are sen- department at 8: 15 p.m. Sun- day in Cammo Hall theater. Performingin the concert will be :vrar h;i Long. a solo pianist, the choir and or-

Dollars for Scholars fund camp_a,i J,1,,1 opens

OSCAR RODRIGUEZ chestra. Miss Long, a jumor, will play two rhapso The choir will sing works by renaissance a composers. The orchestra will perform se niani. Elgar, Virgil Thomson and Lutoslawsk leading contemporary composers.

UNVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA By SUSA."'< GRAVES

San Diego County Citizens Scholarship Foundation kicked off its 1971 campaign with the annual Dollars for Scholars Day Wednesday, To celebraite the day, a breakfast was held on Harbor ls,land which featured procla- mations from the city and county. REPRESENTING THE CITY at the fete was _City Council- man AlilJI Hitch, and re

Voting continues this week at UCSD in runoff elections for student president, vice president, public relations director and several commissionerships. Competing for the presidency are Revelle College juniors Paul Kaufman and David Shaw. Kaufman drew 472 votes in last week's election to Shaw's 391. Kaufman's running mate, Tom Caryl, is matched against Carmen Nevarez in the vice-presidential runoff. Caryl, a Rev- elle junior, received 421 votes compared to 311 for Miss l\'evarez.

In the race for public rela- tions director, Tom Deits. Revelle junior, is in a runoff with Revelle freshman Craig Griffin. Muir junior Mike Duca is running against Revelle jun- ior Bob Jackson for the post of commissioner of academic affairs; and Third College jun- ior Ken Carr is competing against Revelle sophomore Kevin Olson for the post of commissioner of external af- fairs. Elected in last week's bal- loting were Muir junior Juan Lopez as commissioner of

commumty services; Muir junior Fred Fruchthendler as com- missioner of student welfare; and Dave Wallace, Revelle sophomore, as program board chairman. A resolution to reduce the salaries of student officers by 50 percent was passed with 60.5 of those who cast ballots favor- ing the pay cut. Thirty-three percent or 1,446 of the students voted. SAN DIEGO STATE COLLEGE By STEVE KARMAN It will be Steve "BJ" Nystrom against James .Nesteby in tomorrow's run-off election for student president. Nystrom polled 1,013, or 30 percent of the vote in last week's elections. Nesteby finished second with 565 votes, and write-in candidate Tom Stickel was third with 456 votes. Sti~kel, who _got 12 percent of the vote, appealed to the elections committee to have his name included on the runoff ballot. His appeal wa~ denied_by the committee yesterday. In the race for vice-president, Jeff Robinson topp~ Al

SCHOLARLY )IISS Karan Watson. 18, 1S71 Miss Dollars for Scholars

Lemke 1,682 to 937. All officers will e installed later this month. Chi Omega sorority took championship honors Satur- day in the annual Sigma Chi Derby Day h e l d in Aztec Bowl. The event, a combi- nation of fun and fund rais- ing. brought in $400 to be do- nated to the Student HELP Center. The center, located at 5812 Linda Paseo, is also looking for volunteer staff members for the summer and fall se- mesters. The center provides coun- seling and referral services to troubled students. Persons interested in volunteering to

STEVE KARMAN

work about 10 hours a week should contact the center for further information. Some e. perienc': 1\\ counseling is reguired.

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