News Scrapbook 1970-1972

lbt Sau tJlitga Inion Sunday, August 20, 1972 @ Page A-23 ews In Capsule For Armed Forces --Designed To Follow The Flan---' San Diego A "liberation rock festival" drew 8,000 fans to Balboa Sta- dium •.. J]le Rex Charles Dollen, library director at the Uni- versity of San Diego, has authored a ballot argument against an initiative measure designed to aid prosecution of obscenity and pomograp~ .•. Rohr lndu tries v.a. awarded a $5.1 mil- lion ubcontract to build three of nine advanced urban transit bu e in an 18 mtllion federally sponsored design competition ••• A Model Cities research p · Indicated 40 per cent "ol black ch1ldren in Southeast San Diego's free lunch program

fed.Aw »J D}f£ USD and USIU gridders ·report for preseason drills

-72.

18

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Quality's question as USD opens drills

(.//Jl#j, -( f--?'L 60 Gridders Expect dAt USD Sunday

50.000 to cover

year goal ol operational costs

usn; CAMPAIG candidates

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for

Fill\ Cmtcd

lnternauonal

States

Cn1ver:1ty football team are experted to report on Thursday. Aug 31 when physical examinations and the is. umg ot equipment 1s scheduled. Coal'h Marv Braden, who . poru· a 20-10 record for three . easons with the Westerners aid that two-a-days will be held da1l) starting Fnday, epl I and wall continue through Saturda1 . S.pl 17 All workouts will be held on the C.il Western C.m1pus of CSIU but all five home games. mc-ludmg the opener gains\ the l of Puget Sound on atunlav Sept. 23 wall be played m Balboa Stadium mong 15 returning lettermen I Doug Oqier a do• ever) lhmg athlete w'ho II plav quarterback alter a one year absence at that position Omer, v.ho mt ed ·pring practice to attend the CSIU campus in England plaved running back and wide recetver la t year as a iumor and earned a letter m ha sophomore year as a quarterback He was a var 1ty pet'fotmcr ;1 a freshman m the de en ive backfield. GRADUATION HURT he offensive !me was rl led by graduation with onlv th holdovers , Bob .\rciaga at rd and Mike ~lcGnff and Andy Borgia at the tackle·. W lack . depth in the offensive line, Braden said but he noted that Dan Passlacqua, a transfer from Golden We t JC, looked good m sprmg practice at center and Don Carson David Schletc;h and Bob Hood. all with ome experience la t year, could fill the bill at guard along with Alex Esparza from Gav1lan JC t t.:SJU)

S.•Z.Mfl/~J U D classeS',¼ are offered

are rejecting milk." The children have an inherited physical condition that gives them a type of allergy to milk, researchers said ••• California State Uruversity, San Diego, received a 25.000 music endowment from the e 'late of a retired San Diego music teacher ... City Councilmen approved a 3.5 cent cul in the rax rate ..• R. Sargent hriver, Democratic vice pre~idential candidate, stopped in San Diego "to ee V1hat the people of the country are thinking about" ... Final adoption of plan to reorganize the mayoral and City Couneil o£fices was postponed for three week . . . Presi- dent Luis Echeverria Alvarez of Mexi- co dedicated a unique federal housing project in Tijuana .•. Research sug- ge ting that cancer viruses also cause

ss t~~?fdcfte/ 1 Report At USO Flft\ fl c n ldat s ch ck d out equ1pm n and took ph SI· cal cxamma on. ye terday for ttie University of San Diego footb.i I quad The Toreros re urning col- l ge d1\·1s1on foot,ial aftrr a JO. ) ear la~ off, b gm workouts \ 'edrcsda) al aval Trammg Center m preparation for their S pt 16 opener al Rt er 1de Among pro peels on hand for I physwals wen defe 11· hnemen Hay Armendariz a 230- pounder from College of the De ert and 233-pound Mark St1l n from Glendah, Colic e Tackles Ron White (2301 We- ber Stale a1d l\,J,kc Outlaw t212J, Palomar College, guard Jun Kdala ,2201 l•om ~le a College, halfback Sam Croom from De.\nza College and end BU Washmglon from DeAnza were others.

'Qe Rev. Dollen non malignant disea..es and that the viru es are harmful only to an individual with a genetic defect wa announced by medical scientists at Scripps Clinic ahd Re earch Foundation .•. Dr. Donald J. Kintner. 46, of Rancho • anta Fe, a hu. ine s-management consultant, was named di- rector of the San Diego Zoo. He succeeds Dr. Charles R. Schroeder •.• The San Diego Teachers As ociation said the Board of Education acted in secret in giving city schools Supt. Tom Goodman a 5 per cent pay raise .•. San Diego County's birth rate plunged to its !owe t point ~ince 1939. The death rate ached 1t highe~t pomt since 1952, according to Public Health Department statislie:<: .•• The celebration of an Diego' " merica' Fine City" gan with a 12-block• long parade VI ending pa...t City IJ,s.ll.

England's bugs- awns in pollution

0 UNION Halfback Harris Provides Boo t Fo USD Gridders

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By HERB LA'\\ RE CE EVEN r,c; TRIBUNE Env ronment Wn1er

'begun in some countries- Eurnpe. Chambers said the Thames Rn·er, which runs throu h the h~art of Lo is clea- ner today that 1t was 200 years agJ. "It's come about through hard-headed enforcement of antipollution regulations," he said. "The government doesn't allow industry to dump their garbage 111 the nver.' England also has an g- t,re lVe green belt program o a ure ''breathing spac emalrs in the country as a contra t to cities." ~w built a populat . Engl d has started to ean up e outside of some bmldin Centuries-old soot put thert' y many years of coa and co ·e burning is com- i pu ic buildings n Lon on and r all build- ings in smaller towns like Bath. Scotland is engaging in a mammoth tree-planting pro- gram. A tot,11 of 2.5 million trees have been planted there. · Germany Holland and Fra ce want lo d mething to "environmentally revive" in

near London, were from Eu• ropean countne . In tra1:e posters we see the parkling lakes of Swtt• zerland." he said. "In reality many of theere. 'The Scandanav1ans are complaining about this un- wanted import," he said. "But the British say they can't so ve 1t overnight." He said England is shifting away from coal and coke and more and more to burning natural gas - a fuel which doesn't cause the type of smoke which is bothering the Scandinavian countries. Beaches in Europe are he. mg lost to ravenous real 1 estate de1elopment. He said some beaches in France already have been lost and a number are in Jeopard; in Spain. A ort of a war against en-1 1ironmental insults has been

nd

the fish life · This

USD offers degree in education Univ r tty of San Diego 1 off rlng a ma tl•r of educat10n def:ree by attending graduate level cour · on the campu es of :'.11ra Co ta Coll g in 0c an ide and lmperi I Valley College mEl Centro " U D· External D gr Program I not a typica l exteru 10n erv1~e ' Or Gilbert Oddo dtrec tor of graduate program • said r cently "Students must be qualtf1ed graduate student. "All courses are taught by prof sors from U 'D's School of Education, "he said Th txternal program wa er ated a erv,ce to t a• che , rhool adrmna trator and interested students res1dmg m th North County and Imperwl County ' ,x graduate units m ed ucat10n i to be offered by USO each emP.ster The sequence of cour es ,s designed to offer students the opportunity to earn an ME with a peclalizahon m educational p ychology over a two-year period Thl•re 1s no language or the ,s requirement for the degr u~oo:-ns 12 Grid Drill

\.\111 m

~1opning

lndu t ·al firms f ,tJump- ing their effluent into the r v- er," he said. "Dischargers from all three countries are responsible. The river has he- come the drainage ditch for Western Europe." But Chambers doesn't ex- pect any quick solu'tion. "The problem is that you have three governments in- volved and the governments differ m their structure," he said. "Jn France the power c ~mes from Paris but in Ger- nany as in the United States e states have rights. 'So it will take some politi• engineering to move for to slop the pollution." said nations will hav to about slrict ideas< of lea boundaries if the n lo ve pollution oundary," he said. · Chambers, who is a speci ist in mternationa' polit said nations must be wil to cooperate on a reg basis. "The mind of must undergo some ev lion," he said. The conference Chambers attended a• sored by the British Fo e1g11 and Colonial Office. lem . " esn't stop at

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Mrs. Copley ppointed to USD board

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Mrs. Copley named university trustee CoPIIY Now, StrYlco 2.

SAN DIEGO - Mrs. James S. Copley has been appointed to the University of San Diego Board of Trustees, it was an- nounced Wednesday by USD board chairman Bishop Leo T. Maher. Mrs. Copley is the e of James S. Copley, chai of the corporation publishing the Copley Newspapers. Mrs. Copley was born in c;eciar Rapids, Iowa. She graduated from Benjamin Franklin High School there, then attended Hunter College in New York City. A La Jolla resident, Mrs. Copley is an active member of mSJ1y La Jolla and San Diego organizations, among them the Social Service League of La Jolla, Inc.; Scripps Memorial Hospital Aultlliary; the Freedom Foundation at Valley Forge; The Committee, a social group dedicated to philan- thropic endeavors; Belles for Me~tal Health; the Young Christian Association: the Lat Committee of the Fine Arts 'Society; the Star of India Auxiliary; MAKUA Auxiliary and the San Diego County Women's Council of the Navy League of the United States. Dr. Author E. Hughes, pres- dent of the Univ ty of San )iego, commenting on Mrs. ::Opley's appointment, de- :cribed the function of the D'Board of Trustees.

trustee by USD Mrs. James S. Copley of La the two t Jolla has been named to the University of San Diego in May newly organized University of 1of this year), it followeg that San Diego board of trustees, the board also be reorganized announced board chairman to meet our new needs of BishopLeoT.Maher. reaching out into the Mrs. Copley is the wife of community and beyond." said James S. Copley, chairman of USD president Dr. ¥thor E. Copley Press , Inc. Hughes. publisher ol the San The Board of Trustees Union and Tribune newspai611!1Ui. 1 1.ailtablishes the general "Since the incorporation o ope ting policies for the University which provide the overall direction for the university's growth, Hughes "/1 id "A trustee also assists the ,university president in meeting the peral public." Mrs. Co was born i, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, where she gr uated from Benjami F Jin High School. S attended Hunter College New York City. Mrs, Copley member of man a Jolla colleges into

MRS. JAMES S. COPLEY

"Since the 11tcorporation of the two colleges into one uni- versity of San Diego in May of this year (1972), it followed that the board of trustees also be reorganized to meet our new needs of reaching out into the community of San Diego and beyond. "The Board of Trustees es- tablishes the general r- ating policies for the universi- ty which provide the overall direction for the university's growth. Secondly, we ask our trustees to indi!;:ate their ar- eas of special interest and thus direct his or her atten- tion to that area. For exam- ple, if the_ interest be law, the trustee might be asked to be involved in USD's school of aw. "A trustee, also assists the university president in meet- ing the general public."

San Diego organizations. S belongs o the Social Servi League of La Jolla. I Scripps Memorial Hosp· Auxiliary: the Freed Foundation .it Valley FQI' The Committee: Bell~s Mental Health : the ,Y Christian. Association: Latin Committee of tl,tt , Arts Society ; the Star oHndla Auxiliary; Makua Auxiliary, and the San Dtgo Colftlty Women·s Council of the Navy, League of the United State}

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