News Scrapbook 1970-1972
ew Headache For· Col -Year Adults Bring Fiscal Problems To Campu es
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- '·Homance and Rl'alitv. · 1\'ritt,·n and narrated by a1 t historwn 1,enneth Cl.irk. ,rs , hown on 1-~T\' network,. Cami no llall Tht•afrl'. l niversitv of San IJ1ego. Alcat,, !'ark. 11 a 111 and 7 p.111. Fr,·c tu lire 1iu blk. 291 -64811. ex tension 35 4-341i lor mfonnation . WEDNESDAY \ ,kt..r Fran~I. 7'I.U.. Ph. 0 .. ,·1111ne11t psyc·hother.. pist. pr.,fessor. .iutl1or and lecturer. t.'ami11u Thearre. l·niver,1ty 1Jf San IJ1ego. 8 p.m. Free LO tne publil'. 291-tH80. ,·xten ,on 35-1- :146 for lurtlwr infurmatron. TIIUR DAY - Lec1ure : ··P,:,chothcrap, and l'hilo.,ophv' bv
1- 1!111: r eatur,•- lengt11 adventure 1ravelog with m person narra1ion b1 Cla, Frzn,·1,co. l 'ivic Theatl'r. 8: 15 p.m. For inform.ition , all 23n- ti,,IO spoi:,;o:·~d b1 San Diego State College \ Iee1s tlai!v ,,L 11 .i.m. througl' t11e ttltl •a1 the, i itor,· center, 4016 lloll,,ce :t. 1·or rurth,r mfcn11a t1on c-a ll 2!'7-1831. TUESDAY Lecture : ··World Affairs" b1· !Jr. l lonzo Baker. Sp1Jnsored bv San IJ1cgo Wuma n s l'hiih,,rmonic l'om111i tlel' Sher,,ooct lla ll. ;oo Pru pell :,t.. I..., .Jolla 3 p.1 11 'I a~ters JJemunst ra 11011 .,f ,irrangers lro111 Ohio School. In tile CasJ IJel 1 'rado. Hal1ioa P.irk. 11 Ll.Tf,. I· •l.n Ser1ef: "C1vili1.~tion · Old To ,,n ll1stork l'ar'- 1\;,tl:i,ig To~r: Ike h.,n;i ln1<-rnat1onal .Japan,·,e 1Iowc,
tarded. Tf these programs were cut off at age 18. state allocation wot.ld be reduced b) 300 000 Jeopardizing con- tinuation of the programs by local distrn ts. Sen. Fred B. \l·rlcr, R-HeddmJ introduced legis- lation which would delay the applJcatmn of the l01wred age of ma;onty on commu- nity c-ollege operations for one J car g11 ing educators :ind college official, breath- ing pace fo r working out so- lutions tn their problems. Sen. Donald L. Grun ky, R \I abonville, introduced two bills which would Establish a one-year re ·1dt>ncy period for tuition- free attendance at commu- nity colle"es. FOU DATIO.. SUPPORT - E ·tabl'sh a u:1iform tax rate of 55c per $' a - scssed valuation in areas without a communit~ college ell trict, distributing the reve- nue among the college dis- trn·Ls taking student from hese areas Sen. \lfred E Alquist, D-San .Jose, has ·ntroduced a mea. ure \\ hich \\:OU!d make the foundation support for de- fmed ad ults the same as for n•gular tudents. n opini<,n has been re- qu · led from the attorr: • general on legal rarr. fica- li()r of the lowered age of ma,or ti tatute on commu- mty college operation~, but the college s; tern directors are "l:onvmced that the op1n- 10n wi ll be adver~e to the col- leges Director· of the Cahforma Commumt; Colle es are on record as favoring: - l:rgency legislation to defer the fiscal effects of the , 1wered age of majorit; bill until July, 1973. - Elimination of the de- fined adult catego~. - E tabhshmg of a 011€- ) ear res1denc; requirement - H1I11n, the eost of grad uates from high schools in noncolle"c d1slnct area. back to those roL1nt1es. - l' mg the di. trict of en- rollment rather than di trict of re 1dence for calcula mg state a,, , alleviatmg m1gr- 1mpact ec ,,ng the 21 year-old a •e lim 'lh, ,1call, hand 1capped · entaily I e- tarded Howe\ great dral
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DONALD T. WECKSTEIS .Weckstein named USD dean of law Donald T. Weckstein, who has been a professor of law at the University of Connecticut, is lhe new dean of the Univer- sity of San Diego School of Law. Dr. Author E. Hughes, USD president, announced to- day. Weckstein replaces Acting Dean Jo eph S. Brock, Hughes said. Weckstein, 40, has been a professor of law at the Uni versit of Cxonnecticut since 1967. Ile also taught law at the University of Tennessee. He was born in Newark, N.J.; received his bachelor of arts degree from the Univer- sity of Texas School of Law in 1958, and his master's degree from the Yale University Law School in 1959. His special legal fields are federal jurisdiction, arbi- tration, evidence, admmis- trative Jaw, legislation, con- tracts, judicial adminis- tration, miiitary Jaw and le- gal writing. Since 1958, Weckstein has served in the .Judge Advocate General's Corps of the Army s r •e He holds th<> rank of major, and is an instructor at the Judge Advocate General's School Weckstein and his wife have three daughters, 10, 8 and 7.
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USOWins, Ti~~ - As Finale Calle~ SPtC-101 to Tht Son Dino Urtion LO A ·c:EI.ES - Umversitv of San Diego mad good use of 11~ only hit to whip :Dec dental College, l-0, m the first game of a doubleheader and then held 1 on in the ~econd game, which was called becau ·e of darkness with the teams tied, ~. after II innings. Ken Kinsman singled in the , second inning of the first game, was sacrificed to second took third on a groundout and then scored on a balk for the game's o~ly run. In the second, Kerry Dineen blasted a homer and two sin- gles, while reliefer Phil Bajo · lammed a doubl~ and three · singles in the deadlock, which left the Toreros with a 5-1-1 record. USO ........ ~ 1-~!.~.~.,~£000 ._1 1 l Occldenrnf ...........ooo 000 O-t s J ro~t~b;~~! a!1!0, (7 God Kinsman; Mo- I us~ ·······SEf~N~:·~: 12 .. Occ1denlol OlO 100 101 f0.---4 11 o Archamhou t, 8010 '7) and Kinsman Fishw ck Benson , . Wolk.er (Pl and Bus: ;;n~~hols 9) HR - Dl~o (USO) rn,,
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rnllege S} stem ()f-:CI.. HA I 10. ·s OF I. rE ·r JaJ l.1chael, ~C omc,al in acr,, mento exp! 11ned that out-of. late tudent. now can f le decl!lfa l ons of intPnt to estabh h re 1dency at age 21 an b come eligible for t1, 1- llon rce edurat1on ;1t ai;e 22 U nd r the ne\\ law the dee- Jarat n could be f ed at 18 and becorr e effective at 19. 1 here are about 1,400 non- res1dert •udcnt at n.: campus now. Michael said. The P financial implica- t,ons of the 1011 ered age of maJonty have not been lost tu legi. lators and community college official!;. Several bills already have been introduced to soften the financial blows A ·errblyman Leroy Greene, D-Sacramento. cha1r- man of he As embly Educa- tion Committee, has in- troduced leg1slat10n which would - • pec1fy that the ne¼ law \1ould not applv to ,tatutes relating to apportionments and allowances for cummu- mt} coll ges Specif) that the new law rnuld not appl; to tte prov1- 1on for determmir:g re den- C} of r om-nun t c 1 tu• d program for m 11 tall) retarded and ph) ,1t II} hand icapped per,on.s up to .ige 21 A, emb[) 1, oman larch K. Fong, D-Oakland, mtrodu('ed a 1m1lar bill defimn, per ·on up to age 21 as minors in pro- grams for the phySJcally hand1c.appt"d and menially re-
I risJ I., .., r The l niversity of San Drego Auxiliary will stage an Irish potluck luncheon March 14 at the Atlantis restaurant The social hour will feature "Irish l)(>w" at 11:30 a.m., fol- lowed by luncheon at noon, Mrs. Frank J. O'Connor and Mrs. .John M. Murphy are co- chamnen. Other members appointed to assist by Mrs. William K. Buck ley, president, are Mmes. Ross G. Tharp and Lee J. Durkin, decorations; John E. Handley and George A. Kiligas. door; Frank A. Lauerman, Carl E. Lengyel and R Kenneth Whit• ney, reservations, and John G Churchill, Robert B. Simons, Harold N. Stoffel. Harold J;~ ; Tebbetts, Ernest P. Tnvani an Paul A. Vesco Sr host . ses. Guesl~ of the aux1llar; will be the \'er) Rrv. Msgrs. John Baer and J Brent F.agen. and Dr. Arthur K Hughes Jr., pre • 1dent of the univer ily.
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SCHOOLS FORM T~AMS a11r,rn ;;i/s-Jv::;;. rf's Up, And So~s Interest In Making It Competitive By NEIL BALL Staff Writer, The San Diego Union facilities and develop potential
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F SAN DIEGO RU\'ALCAB .\
UN!VERSJ
It wasn't supposed to hap- pen _but it did. USD's strong tennis team figured to beat La Jolla High yesterday on the Toreros' courts but the fi- nal count was 5-4 in favor of :e prep squad - first loss of e year for the collegians. Adoubles match victory by Ted Hagey and Bruce Kleege over_John Schwikert and Har- rY_ OJala. 6-2, 6-3, clinched the triumph for the Vikings R~ suJts. • ~- An~1:.'l!~a-; J~n ~ 011 0doy, lo Jolla df df. Mike KeitogSJ 6 ,i:i ~~eGMotr, La Jolla; ft Jolla, df. GIJY Fr'itz, 6-4 't}alo Nunez, ogey, Lo Jolla df JOh $ h • 6-4; Ted be 6-2; Earle Freemon' us& l, WIM~ert, 6-J, I rry, 6-3, 6....C • f-ta0 • • Jke New. Bruce Kle~e. l~s, 6-£0~ USO, df. OOUbles-f-t e - Hagey. Schwlkert-OJo~, YfJ,~;3. \? Jolla dt, Wr1fli:, UJs 0 o, dti,_ H~~'w.c;J';~~~~R:: I
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With lh_e start o the pn ,, emeste , ail campus st.1dent rga11.W1t10ns began operating from a centralized complex of office in and arnund the S udent lnion Ru1lding The ctlnsolidatwo \I as made po ble brpugl:j ·a 10,000 con- l lifeguards, too, through water safety instruction and ex- perience," said Baldwin. "We could train 600 youngster a s:.immer in water safety this way. 11 He said Venice High School near Los An- geles has had such a program for about 18 months. 700 Members Gary Becker, president of the UCSD Surfing Club, said that club has 100 members and is allied with The Western Intercollegiate Surf- ing Council for competition. "We have leag:.ies and compete three limes a year, have semifinals and finals," said B<:cker. He said each college team will have 12 members. rated 1 to 12 and they will be paired in heats with surfers with higher and lower ratings. Two In Water "Usually two from each team will be in the water, said Becker. ''Three judges will judge the heats and rate the surfers ·on their threee best rides. They can get points from O to 20 on a nde, depending on balance, trucks, maneuvers, recovery from an upset, riding inside and other things." "Yo:.i can pick up points, say, for a 360- degree turn," said Rusty Preisendorfer, 18, of Honolulu. who goes to UCSD. Becker said 14 to 15 points is a "good ride," and the average is 10. The only 20 ride I have heard of was in Hawaii." He said surfers have "A'' to "AAAA" rat- ings and the fourth or top spots are usually getting into professional stat:.is. "We do not have girls on the team but are trying to set up something for the girls," said Becker. Wi ndansea He said there also is a drive to organize teams at the jumor colleges. He said surfing is big at Orange Coast and Golden West ju- nior colleges in Orange County. Members of his team paid a special visit to Windansea Beach in LaJolla so a photo- grapher could film what to do and what not to do. Dan Bridgeman, 18, of LaJolla. and Gary Keating, 20 of San Diego, completed the foursome. Before they co:ild get .in the water, another ruler caught the photographer's eye through telescopic lensecs. "That's Tim Lynch, another member of our club." said Becker as 1he L J olla 20- year-old rode one near-perfc~t wave nearly to shore. The surf is up and so is surfing'. OCEANSIDE - The sport of surfing con- tinues to heighten in popularity, so much so that schools are focusing on it. On the college level, San Diego State, the I University of San Diego and UCSD have or- ganized sarfing clubs, and compete with each other. On the high school level, Carlsbad Hi~h is the only coastal school from San Clemente to the South Bay area without a club for surfers. First Year "We snuffed San Diego area teams in our first two meets," said physical education in- structor Art L:ippino, who 1s adviser for the Oceanside High School Surfing Club. "It is our first year and with only 12 members but those boys really love to surf " Luppmo said one member, .John Boyden, is •·among the top 10 surfers on !he coast'' and he said when the sarf is down in the usually better places. Oceanside can find some surf around its harbor. The surfing upsurge ls heartening to people such as Don Hansen, Encinitas surfing sup- plies dealer, who gives surf and snow infor- mation by daily recordings over the phone. · August Meet ''We're trying to set up a big three-day meet in August." said Hansen, who is head- ing a committee for the Encinitas Chamber of Commerce. "We are going to invite all the other coastal chambers to participate in vari- ous ways.'' Nearby, at San Dieguito High School, sub- stitute teacher Walter Baldwin advises about 60 stadents in a surfing club that was formed last year and is still growing. "It's open to all students and from it we will pick a competitive team," said Baldwin. "The team will go against others m the San Diego area and we expect some 'AAA' and 'AAAA' class surfers. At the end of the year, top clubs will compete to go lo a Los Angeles banquet and movie.'' Fu nds Sought Baldwin said he is seeking money from the San Dieguito Union High School district's recreation department for rental of surfing films and to help the group buy s:irfboards in quantity and take trips. "So far, the surfing has heen so good that the program has been crowded with individ- uals and we have not done much as a club," said Baldwin. He said he opes to sell school officials on the idea of granting physical education cred- its for sarfing activity under supervision. "We could take th<'m clown to surf. .10 at a time, relieve the school physical education When planning for the proj- ect began m August several student organizations were already hou. ed in the Student t.:11\on Building. They were the Black Students Union MECHA (a Mexican-Ameri'. can organization) and the Ex- perimental College. Addeo to those through the change were the student government offices. offices for the campus newspaoer, news- letter and yearbook, and a darkroom for the student photographic . ervice. More than $2,000 of the pr eel co t as allocaled for furniture and carpeting for the which was renovated in con- udent Union Building, . , . ESTEBAl'. RL\ALCARA dation A snack bar ) s opened in the n . on with t building and a,ooiuo,nru game tabie ailed. ''This will hopefuil) be more efficien .' said Murphy, ere 1n 5-( /1{.. ,,.Jro,m. Wildness leads to USD Eleven walks issued by four opposing pitcbers helped UC-Irvine roll over the L'SD 14-4, on the Toreros' diamond yesterday. The visitors also collected . 12 hits. Six of them were off the bats of Rod Spence, for- mer St. Augustine High star and Tom Stucky - each get: ting three. _USD will meet Dominguez Hills State in a doubleheader Saturday on National City's El Toyon R k diamond tarting at noon. Sc • ' --400 202"7'o1--=ii"-12 2 -r H~cirvm, syc • a 1st ere e to meet contemporary forms of neuroses and emotional disturbances Frank l states in his book. "~lan ·s Search for Meanmg'' that "every age has its own collective neurosis. and every age, needs its own psychothl·rapy to cope with 1t. " He feels that contemporary man is mostl~ disturbed bv his lack of faith ·in the meaning of hie. neurology and psychiatry at the University of Vienna Medical School, professo r of logotherapy at United States International University, and \ 1s1ung cli nical professor of psyc hiatry a t Stan ford University. The author of 17 books. his works have been of :·Man's Search for Meanmg" ,ias sold more than a million ~----n:c:iia::;:::~ translated into '!'he American t4 languages. edition copies. f' 1 4 I •:"is":-::,=--~.,""IIOO 000 130 2 (ltk~;re?ci 10 ca~ug~;:sKf~!: - Garner (USO), 8th, orie on. ~r~i~Howba~~ Frank -----------...- 1s ...an. < a professor of
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