News Scrapbook 1970-1972

S, o c,,,, '"' 1-1 '1- 11._ IT oreros Dro11 I Doubleheader SP•< ol lo The Son DlHO Union ORANGE - It took Chapman Coll ge unlit almo t dark y S• te1day hut 11 pre\aJkd m 22 In- mgs of ba cba\l to win both ends of a doublehead r fron the t:n1vcrsity of S, n Jliego. Gan Barri . who slamm<'d a thr -run homer 1n th~ flnl :n- ning o[ the game. prov dcd th winnJJ1g blow for Chapman In Its 8 7 \1ctory in the 12-lnrnn ' open r '\\hen he hit his second homer m the bottom of th 12th. ln the s cond game, former Point Loma !11gh and Mesa Coll ge pitcher Cumin Per- cival haodculfed th Torrros on ~wo singles by Ke1TY Din , nd Mel Arnerich to post a I o t v,ctorv ,n 10 inning.. Th c p ond game was scheduled for c, n lnntngs. Percival st111t'k outs , en 1dn't walk a ll~ll · a r lnnkcd his hometown rivnls aprnan scored th w1nnmg un wh n DennJs Gallagher wa af on an error In th bottom r the 10th and then stole ec- nd. An mtenuonal walk was irdered for Harri but pinch- iitter Sandy Spragu came hrough with a game-winnmg ,ngle as darkne s loomed Had 'prague not delivered, the game would have been callrd at the end of the 10th because of darkness. Dinee1i slapped out !our hits in th opener in addil'on to his single in the nightcap and w nt 5-for-10 for the day. USD IS now 9-4-1 wh le Chap- man .s 13-8. The Toreros return I to action Tuesday at El Toyon P~rk in National City wl1en the~• ho t Cal Bapti t ln a l doubleheader beginning at I ,30 p.m. ,-IA ST GAME g~""'".....:. = ffl !U ::t:: lf i 0~r'tc~_:u11 R:e~t,~~:.C.!1 ~t•c~ <1~~ 91, S ulv a < 8\' 1 landtn 11 H sl r HR Har 1 Cl 1 t I ::~• 6t• •,:c:N:iG:M~ t.: ' ; Chfl:f:°ond KlnMT'lon, ch,al b Hen 1 11er.;_-----

12.- 2...<,,~ 1 I

l-VV\llfi\...

JOHN P. ROCHE

THEATE S USD Slates T YJ.ij Operas Two.c.,6ife{~i4f· 1 3:{n "Suor Angelica" - will be presented by the University of San Diego at 8·15 p.m. Friday and Satur- day in the Camino Hall The- ater. "The Telephone" will feature Raymond E-ast an

Term Paper Sales Are Incitement To Cheatin

, sub-

111 ~7 it rdlpp tted lo ~UTI for hi

joil}Uy by aHlaadent andmyself during a year s time. r • over, anyone who has spent a quarter of a century in the academy knows that there are files of old papers here and there. Fraternities were fa- mous for their files. In fact, I first became leery of the whole term paper ex- ercise when I was working with Clinton Rossiter at Corn- ell in 1947. Rossiter, whose death last year left a real vacuum in the top echelon of historians, had attended Corn- ell as an undergraduate, taken a course on the presidency, written a term paper, and turned the latter (an A-plus) over to the fraternity file.

However, this one was a shocker. It read: ''Term pa• pers ! For Research and Refer- ence Purposes Only. Why Wor- ry? We are the quickest, most professional term paper ser- vice in the United States. A large professional staff of col- lege graduates will research, write, and type your order at the lowest prices available." There followed instructions on how to make the necessary connection. For some reason or other this outraged me. Not because I personally an- ticipate being foxed: I never assign term papers in big courses, and the honors theses I supervise are worked over

There have been several news stories about young en- trepreneurs who have gone into the business of providing term papers to college stu- dents, but l confess the signifi- cance did not hit me until the other day. When 1 went to the univer- sity park,ng lot. I noticed a flier on th\! w111dshields of all the cars This in itself is not abnor- mal. About once a week one finds a olitlca I exhortation such as ''Free Angela!," "End the War!," and even, one - presumably sneaked in by a hard-hat - stating "Stop Pol- 1 ution ! Unemploy Every- body!"

the pres enc~ ! But the odds against this sort of wild coincidence must range with those against drawing one card and filling an inside straight flush. How many other 'brothers" - or "sisters,·• for that mat- ter: T suspe the sororitie~, followed the same custom - cruised through courses with recycled term papers? C And then there have tradi- tionally been the special cus- todial arrangements for ath- letes at the big universities. As a graduate student, I used to make extra money tutoring several of Cornell's muscle men, but I quit when I dis- covered that they expected me to focus my tutorials precisely around upcoming exams - which we had the job of pre- paring! Aknowledge of the extent to which practice· of this ~ort existed in major American universities has tempered my response to the establishment of black studies programs. I am opposed to creating baron- ies with special academic privileges, but I fmd the right- eous pronouncements of many academic conservatives some- what nauseating. If they had raised hell about the fraternities or the athletes, they could enter the courtroom with clean hands. But one suspects that if the bl;icks were all athletes, black P ., programs wouId receivi: nds• ty, conservative absolution. 0 Nonetheless, the '·Term Pa- per Unlimited, Inc." adver• tisement (which was dis- tributed professionally at e\'- ery school in the area it is not a local student operation) put me up the wall. It is an incitement to cheat, a commercialization of academ- ic prostitution. :vtore fundamentally it is built around the notion that perverting academic stan- dards is a victory for the tudent, a triumph over the clnnttedly imperfect efforts to ansmit educallonal values. r) \lt\11 N I i 1 f oreros all oCaf o y Blitz, 90-66 Special to The San 0,,,0 Union FRES'.11O l n vers1l> of San Diego, b<•aten hy Cul Poly of Pomona by 15 pomts earlier thi. monlh, suc<·umucd to the same team by 90-fi6 here Ja. t mght in the first round of th,, Fresno Jnv1tatlonal Tourna- ment Host Frc no State and Fullrr- ton Stale met Jn th Sl)rond game last n1ghl with tlw Jo er ~lated to face LSD at 7 tonight m the con olal!on cont t. The Torcros neVPr h•d last night after Po!y lirokc a 5 5 11e and moved to a 39-25 halft1mc advantage. A switch from a man-to.man to zone drfc·n~,, lJy Poly forcpd 'CSD to take numerous oul id shot Bl'd !hr Torwo could not connect from long range. Poly also won the baltlt! of the boards, 56-44, m running its reC()rd to 3 5. USO Js now 2-4. Pinky Smith enjoyed anolh<'r good night for th<' Tori·ros \\ 1th ii points and ~kl Arnerich added 15. Poly had 20 from Keith J,<•e and got strong sup• port from two re <'I'\,. a, Bob Gray poun•d in 18 point. and Glenn Jones 11. U U got down 44 per cent of its shots in first '1alf but cooled to a 36 J)<'r cent in I h,• f1nal 20 m111ute~ hr a game 40 pc•r c·cnt 27 of 67) USO 16')

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11}._

I

l'n .. ,'NERS-Three University of San Diego School of Law students will leave tomorrow for ~ew York where they will participate in the fm

Hughes installed as USD presiden

l

FOCUS ON HISTORY~ I

Dr. Author E. Hughes was formally installed as the first layman president of the University of San Diego in a simple but solemn ceremony the night of Dec. 5 at the university. Hughes is also the first president of an enlarged version of USD, the Coordinated Colleges of USD, which for the first time is to include the College for Women. The 42 year old president, formerly vice president and provost of Northern Arizona State University at Flagstaff, brings_ a teaching background m business administration to his new job. Placing the medal ribbon and medal symbolizing the USD presidency around Hughes' neck were The Most Rev. Leo T. Maher, bishop of the San Diego Roman Catholic Diocese and chairman of the board of trustees of USD; Gilbert Fox. chairman of the board of trustees of the USO College for Women; and Joseph S. Brock, dean of the USD Law School. In his remarks, Hughes said the "the primary commitment of any university should be to the moral. intellectual, and social growth of the individual human being." But, he suggested, too many universities sacrifice moral development to attain either intellectual or social development, and even this, he said, is often done at the expense of the graduate student over the undergraduate student. "ls it possible to create a university environment which reflects academic excellence moral concerti, and at the same time provide com 1tment to the society of wh ich e are a part?" Hughes asked. "I think that it is, and 1t 1s with such a blend of priorities, that I suggest we proceed."

A commitment to the moral development of students has alway been part of USD's heritage, he said. •·The university was built lo carry on the educational mission of the Roman Catholic Church.'" Hughes said, adding that the "living presence of the Church in the future can be expected through the teaching and services of priests of the diocese and Sisters of the Religious of the Sacred Heart.' By "living presence of the Church.'· he said he was referring to "the manifestation on a day-to-day basis of thP belief m Christ's teaching and the resultant concern for the well-being of each individual person. The USD Madrigal Singers, Concert Choir and Chamber Orchestra performed before and after the installation ceremony. Following the ceremony Hughes and his wife, Marge, were honored at a reception in Founders Hall on the camous.

I .-i...Lw>U. 12..- COLLEGE HOOP SUMMARIES Texas (4iSl UCLA Ol5l G F G F 1 I

T 20 16

0-1 -i-7

10

~obinson 7 7.7 ~fg~tr~k j g:} Lnrrobee 3 2-2 Grosr:rth O 2-3 Wi!son 4 1..J

6

1 ]J 52 J

. OBERT BETTS Ceprey Ntws Strvict

23

9 5-6 2 O·O o 0-0

4 o 4 2 5 6

stored and furnished in au- thenhc detail to make up the Ranch Headquarters Mu-

Talk of revolution on the :ol1ege . campus thP..se days 1s turning more and more to one wh c made a real mark on history - the Revolution of '76. and colleges are planning or al- ready have arrangPd special programs to commemorate the nation's founding 200 years ago. Students particularly want to see more than a mere re- cital of historic events. They believe Bicentennial celebra- tions should be an occasion for launching programs auned at improving the gen- eral welfare of Amcnca. Such concern was ex- pressed by a student from Xavier University of Chicago at a l'Onvcntion of !hr. Ameri- can Revolutinn B1rentcnnial Commission held in that citv recently. He said that youth would be interested in many asperl~ of the Bicentennial. but that the message wruld have to he one that would ap- peal to students and young peoople of all !)!'rsuasions. URGE COMMISSION Other vouths attending the session urged tne comm1ss1on to "use its political. social and professional influence to act as a catalyst in effecting n eded social programs." One program accla1mr.d as appealing to youth bec;iu e of the valuable tonlribution it could make to the welfare of mankind grncrally, is the proJ)llscd international food research center m the heart of the world's greatest food production area, Iowa Facul- ty members and r~search Epcc1alists from Iow;i State University would assist in the planning. Opening as "World Food Expo '76, • it would also be available for future gPner- at1011s to use in solvmg prob• ]ems of hunger. Surh a center would pro• vidl." a place for internship 1ind advanced study for grad- I uates of Iowa unher;itws who ht1VP. spec1ahzcd in ani- mal science, home econom- ics, chemistry, vetPflnary medicine and other fields re- lated to the food production industry, I ATTn.ACT scm msrs It also Several un1versities

olcr

o 3-5 2 0-2 O 0-0 1 0-0 l o 0

Howden Slaton Louis Stacv Brook:s Totals

Chapman 3 0-0 , Franklin 2 0-2

. American

1 0-0 1 3-4

0 Corson ? Hi!I

44 27-38 115

seum.

25 15-24 65 Totals

1

UCLA 55, Texas <10. Texas 28, UCLA 19.

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ro~l 1

DATA BANK

Son

F~g~tfill

Diecio ~ily ?O\

(Pomona)

Rice University, at Hous- ton, Tex., has proposed an American Education Center, an h1storiral data bank for the 50 states. It is scheduled to open about 1976. Another exposition planned to tie in with the Bicentennial is being designed by a team of marine and ocean-engi- neering scientists at the Uni- versity of Hawaii. Proposed by the university's dean of marine programs. Dr. John P. Craven, who also is state marine affairs coordinator, it will be ocean-oriented and have the theme: "The Ocean .._ A New Frontier for the Benefit of Man on Earth." Several universities are en- gaged in historical research projects in connection with the Bicentennial. holding spe- cial symposiums and arrang• ing for publication of new material dealing with the na- tion's origins and its prog- ress. Some books already have been published. ''The American Revolution, 176.1-1783: A Bicentennial Col- lection," edited by Prof. ~ichard B. Morris and pub- hshC'd by the University of ~outh Carolina Press, groups important documents reveal• Ing the onset of the Revolu- tion. RECENT PRINTINGS Two othl'r recent publica- tions from the same pre~s are "South Carolina: A Docu- mentary Profile of the Palm- etto Slate," editPd by Elmer D. Johnson and Kathleen Lewis Stone, and "De Brahm's Report of the Gener- al Survey Jn the Southern Di..~- trtct of North America " edited by Dr. L-Ouis De. vdr- scy Jr., acting head of the llnivers1ty of Georgia's geog- raphy department. William Grrard D~ Brahm was surve- yor-general or tlie S()uthem Dislnct of North America in the 1760s. His report is of the first scientific survey of pre rrt-day South Carolina, GC'org,a and Florida. The book's public-ation also com- memorates the founding of South Carolina in 1670. At the University of Wis- consin, the American Dialect Sonety is compiling a "Dic- tionary of American Regional English," to be published in 1976. At the University of Cali- forma, the Oral History Asso- ciation has brought out a "Di- rectory of Oral History m the United States." Oral history 1s a record of information, gathered in oral form, usual- ly on tape, but later trans- cribed, as the result of a planned interview. Such in• !erv1ew.,, recording early ex- periences of old residents and addmg valuable details to the historical record o. f certain l0-1 ralitiC's, have been conducted by Pnnccton Umversity and several other institutions. IIISTORY MEE'IThG

~l 1 j

11

i~~uhsh ,I Miller

0-~ 5-l!

Aralz: Boss Burris t~~~fk Gortrier Totol5 Sims

1 0-0

2 6

1 2-2

13 Antoine 10 1'1-15 34 3 C remele 2 2·2

4

Rodgers O 3-4

o

3 Oo

B 1& 0-0 2

'

24 14-26 n Tntol\

70 '20-'24 60 1 0IY 28, SDCC

Col

110lftlme score

None.

Fouled out Tola! Fouls Rodlandl (67)

Col Poly 18, SDCC 18,

USIU (76)

GFT

GFT 4 7.9

7

.15 Thr,rnton 3 1-J 5 Stevenson 3 l•l

Grtgo Hida, Neuman Will ,oms ~,:edy

7

1-2 : J

2 4

11 Brush .( 4~ 12 Morris 1: Bri~:s j g~

16 U 1~ 9

6 4-6 3 3 3

7 1

3 1-1

2 Davis

Hocklemn 1 0-0

3

Hf!rnandz l Sullivan O 1-1 us·u 36, Redlands 28. 1-1 31 14-20 76

2& JS 18 67 To1als

Totals

,-iolftime tore ~gr~f1o~Y!. - ~~~,ands 15, \ISi!, lS

h

cloremont-MUdd

USO (8.()

T

F

G

G F T

(73)

7 1-2 : f:~ 2 2-2 i tl

e~:~fe

Hudord ~~fe~lff Hansen Well.s

9 18 25 Smith

1S i: .4

tj '

t:9 16 Arnerith 2 0-0

i; J

9 Cosenza

6

-

f 8.8

~~?~on

Totnls 32 20-25 84 Holflime score. USD 40, Claremont Mudd 111. ou ea out C cremcnt-Mudd, Hansen, Goddard U D, ~mnn. Totals fouls Claremont-Mudd 21, USO 20. Palomar 041 San Bernardino (71} GFT GFT Ness 2 . P~rkins 3 6-8 1.4 Nelson 6 2 1 14 Martinez I .'i-5 19 Nrlqht O , 2 Howor-d 2 3-.4 7 Kuhle 4 7 10 l!i- GrO'IO J-3 9 Pr ~e O O1 0 Atl

2

s· eN f~v

/:t t

USD sets 'crash' intersession plan

offcrPd during the morninf! and evenmg sess10ns. Three semester units of academu: credit mav be earnl.'d. Mormng classes are scheduled lo be taught li\e davs a week from 9 to 11 54 whill' evening classes are lo taught Mondav through Tlmrsdav lrom 6 .:lO to 9:45 Jntt"rested per ms lllilY rail thr \ISi) registrar at 291-6480. exl(onsion 253 tor morP inlonnatwn

Non-students students may for "crash"' mtersess1on courses, lasting from JM.3 through Jan. 22 at the University of San Diego. Registration is set Jor Jan. 3. begmningat8·30a.m. in Found('rS Hall. Classes m anthr pology. educ-a lion. F:nglish history. philosophy. poht ical sl'ic-nre. psvchology and Spanish reading are among those as well register as

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