News Scrapbook 1973-1974

\~;~;;.t bee~ had been arranged, said uel," Weathers :-.uss Sandler. . i buses require The Jan. 22 Pd1t1on of lions of diesel t;CSIJ's Triton Times _ _h,ad ;.._-~~----

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~AJ ci.1. Vatican Lard1na uu1Ines Hope, Concern Of Youths • Ft.'3 7

OrJroti/- 2-1,-Ji Afro-U.S. History Week Starts :\iarvin X readmg poetry, the Umoja Dancers, an exhibit of African art, the P1lgnm's Radio Choir. These are some or the special programs on the calendar for the rest of this week which has been proclaimed "Afro-Ameri- can History Week," by Mayor Wilson. The Februarv observance of a week devoted to the· accomplishments of !\e- groe was originated in 1926 by the Associ- ation for the Studv of Afro-American Life and History. The general theme this year is "Helping America Understand." A display of biographical sketches of Negro women and men who ha achieved fame In politics, science, business, athlet- ics and the arts has been arranged by the San Diego Human Relations Commission. It ls on view this week at the HRC office, 3730 Fifth Ave. Dancers Perform Tonight San Diego's Umoja dance troupe, rorm('d by Imamu Sukumu, head of the :'\at1onal Involvement Association, will perform tonight at USD Two components of th troupe, the Boot Dancers and the Zulus, will dance at 8 p.m. in the Camino Theater Their appearance will f o a "soul food · dmn r scheduled fo pm. tn the J:"ounders Dining Room. A r on show also v.111 be presented, with fncan styles m de. j by members of the Black Student l on of USD The Black Gospel Choir of San Diego State t,niver. ity will give a concert at 8 p.m tonight m .Montezuma Hall on the campus. Tomorrow at 8 p.m. m the Aztec Center. the Black Drama Workshop will stage a play written and directed by SDS student Rosalyn Jacquette, "The Black World Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow." Both SDS events are free and open to the public A reading of poetry by 'i!arvin X is being sponsored by the Third World studies program and the UCSD Department of Literature '.\larvin X will read his own and the poetry of other ~egroes at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Formal Lounge, Revelle College.

Full Despite Fuel Crisis pm;t 0n Mr tezuma \lesa few area college and high chool students with autos have stopped driving to school "People are till double- parking," said Bob Houle, a resident assistant at San IJiego State University. ·our parking lots are full ear doy,n. to the street," id ally Sandier of the bhc· alfi.llrs office at the uw rsJty of San Diego. "Ther s one less car here, I know,· said Paul West of the CSD t.llhc affairs or- hce. "beca { l ride in with anothrr 1,uy " "We ha\e ot seen any appreciable de f'a~e.'' said Don Smith, principal of Kearn) High School. ;'1,O1 lfE . 0 DIF1'"ERE TE "We ha\e not noticed any difference m our parking 10G smce the ga:solme crisis began,' said assistant prin- r1pal George Frey of l\lorse High School . . Whe tne gasoline situa- tion b ge.n df' ' lopmg last '.\ovember Patnck Henry High School dean or students Paul .1artln counted the number or autos in the school"s parking lots. On '.\o\ 10, he counted 552 cars, on ·ov 20 549. Last Frida\ :\1artm counted agam. ·Ther were 652 cars m the lol. There are fewer cars per capita th·· t <;an Diego State an and the dearth an st of gasoline has generate(j new campus interest m car pooling mo- torcvcles and bicycle fi. c1al '. say But it is hard to see th trends for the r;ir« ugh ga ollne is b t·c nl'l ll dear a park- mg ~

'They are against vio- because they feel 1t br oos more violence," he added Their religious concerns. th cardinal said, deal with ~uch qu ~t10ns as the ex1s- tem:e of God, whether H 1s interested ip human affairs and wheth ·r you can enter into a dialogue with Him. and In eternity and whether thP sp1r1l UV •s on Some youtns, tne caromat said, want to work out their odal and rcllg10us concerns oul.s d e tabllsh mstitu- t1011s and orgam lions lie. aid he round this to be tru, even n th Comm:.mlst cuuntn s Eastern Europ . In lus homily y sterday, which wa th keynote ad- dress or th congre , th cardinal. aid· 'Dt:I-.Pl.Y CO. "VI CED' lcm

A anxious annual count- down Involving thousands of youngsters has begun. The moment of truth comes on the evening of April 17. Then, more than 400 finalists in the Greater San Diego Science and Engineer- mg Fair will learn whether or not they have won awards. RESEARCH EXHIBITED _The next four days they will spend showing exhibits depicting their research work, rapping with senior scientists, touring famous research laboratories. .Presently, thousands of ju- nior and senior high school students throughout San Diego and Imperial counties are competing for spots at the big event by participat- mg m small science fairs at their schools. Only some are not so small. The fair at Muirlands Junior High School, for ex- ample, jnvolved 124 eighth and nin h graders.

A comparative study or mouthwashes. The nutrition- al value of dog foods . The pollution of San Diego Bay. The performance of stereo receivers. The oxygen need of a mouse MONTHS OF STUDY Most or the youngsters hav~ spent months studying subjects such as these. Usually the youngster's project begins with a fasci- nating idea, seeded by a good science teacher. Fre- quently the project first takes form as a hypothesis, s~ch as the concept that the nick or a lizard's tongue is qmcker than a human wink. Then the youngster faces the arduous task of proving or disproving the hypothesis. He ~ust re~d voluminously, obtam special equipment for precise testing and impro- vise tools. . Many of the studies, par- ticularly those of the high schoo) students, are highly technical and sophisticated. Last year, for example, a

physws student explored an idra for a nPw means to arhieve thermonuclear fusion . by creating shock waves m a vacuum chamber with a laser DEEPLY INVOLVED . The stud_ents get so deeply involved m such projects that parents and friends get caught up m the excitement. Thus, it has become a tradi- tio~al community event over its 20-year history . The San IJiego fair, in fact, is one of the best in the nallon and the world, rclips- mg the comparable events of such metropolitan giants as Los Angeles. Chairman of the fair this year 1s Walter A. Zitlau president or the San Dieg~ Gas & Electric Co. Members of the board of governors for the fair are Charles Ba- dewi , Dr. Clarence Berg- man, Charlrs Bieler, Dr. Sh~lburn Brown, Milford hipp, Yrank W. Davis, IJr. M. Ted Dixon, Rear Adm. John Davis, USN, rel. , Dr.

John Ford. Also, Rear Adm. Fillmore B. Gilkeson, USN, ret., Dr. Brage Golding, Dr Thomas Goodman, Dr. Bernard Gross, D..r..:.. Author E. Hughes, J.R. Iverson, .John V Long, Clarence R. Lowe Dr. William McElroy' Grorge D .\11llay, Or. Willi: am Nierenberg, William E Quirk, Burt Raynes, C.A: Rolander Jr., Dr. William c. Rust, Dr. Jonas Salk, Dr. H. Giles Schmid, Supervisor Jaek Walsh, Dr. Donald A Wilson and Mayor Wilson. · EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR King Durkee is executive director of the fair and Even'lt Lindem is chairman of the fair management committee. Two sweeP. takes winners in the senior division of the [air will participate in the International Science and Engineering Fair at Notre Dame, Ind., May 5-10. Scores or other awards will be presented at the fair here.

tog th r by criptural procla• hrlst: I am the truth and the hf •· the

cha111rd thrc •fold mat!on or -.1,ay. th

"If you have really decid- ed to errect, with your lives, a repetition of the message of Chri t, you must first of all be deeply convinced that Lhe Lord Himself has given you this mi· ion ... "Your community of ;,4:1,000 Catholics in a popula- tion or 2,720,000 in this (four- county) diocese indicates there is one Catholic for every five persons. You are no better than the others, or al least you cannot be sure you are. But with a certainty that come. only from faith you ha v been called to give witn ss to God A com- munity cannot say no to this call or God without being condemned to a spiritual death . . . Blekker m his 111story or Religt , uses this express on Religion 1~ what religion does.'" ............. Golf team

lll1 , ' 0 . YOl'Tll C rdinal P1 nedoll's rerer- Nll'tl to N lgerla, where h . scrvPd • papal nuncio, e mt· during a discussion 011 youth. llr ha. \IITltten three bo

TOREROS Pil:K' 19 '1 LOGANAS ACI Umv r t) or n D1 today narr uick Lagan, 34, as it nrw football o r to succPed Andy Vmc1, who resigned. Logan has been offe11sive coordi- nator and junior eollf gt' recruiter at 5an Francisco Stnt<' the last four yearn Hr alsG played for that team, twice be ng selected an All-Far WestPrn League cent . The nrw Torero boss was head coaC'h at Santa Cruz High from 1965 through '70, winning one champ10n- sh1p and finishing second twice. In 1965 and agam in '67 he was nar1ed coach of t I year jn th Mo terpy Bay Lea e. Logan as captam or San Franc1s- eo Statr 'or two seasons 195g and 60. Tli team posted a 10-0 record m the latter S(·cl son UUSD ~-s~1(f 1 y In Doubleheader . Rick Ganner singled .Jimmy Williams home from second in the last of the

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Jules Perrot "Giselle" choreography to music by Adolph Adam has been staged by Hart, assisted by ...,.~~~~~.., Elaine Thomas.

An original music and dance program by women, an organ recital and a pro- gram featuring flute ·and classical guitar music are scheduled tonight m the San Die@area. The womens' music and dance program wiU open Womens Week at 8:30 to- night ~I the University of · San Diego. Madrigals, in-

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To Ti'tans lmversity of San Diego basketball rnach Jim Bro- ell1 believes his 11. 9 Toreros still have a shot at th e . NCAA college division reg10nal playoffs "If we can come up with a string of wms m our final home games." USD got started on the right foot Tuesday night with a 98-73 decision over Cal Poly of Pomona. Tonight the Toreros have a much stiffer assignment against Fullerton State at 8 . m the l'SD gym. Fullerton defeated LSD 011 the farmer's court, 85-68, two weeks ago. Tonight's meeting is the second successive home test for the Toreros who finish with six of their final seven ~m the USD boards. • Fullerton has a big front me of Jim Bogdanowicz and Paul Boskovich (both 6-5) at forwards and 6-7 Bob Smith at center. The Titans are now 10-7 for the season. The Toreros were outscored, 48-26, in the sec- ond .half at Fullerton after Ieadmg by five at recess Tliree USO players foled out and two others had four as the Toreros were whistled dow . 0 limes.

plans t io 1 :2/ 14', -Zf University of San Diego. one of 20 schools which have been invited to the fourth annual St. Andrews International Collegiate golf championships March :JO.April 6 m Scotland, is looking for funds to make the trip "We are the only team from the West Coast to be invited," coach John Wilson said yesterday. The Toreros hope to pick up some or the money to defray costs or the trip March 8 when they stage a Springtime Open golf tour- nament at Stardust Country Club. A donallon or $Hl0 for 18 ho! and $50 for nine holes wll, Include green fees, prizes and a buffet, Wilson said.

Dinner-Dance Tomorrow A dinner-dance and program honoring Willie '.\loore, community relations coordi- nator at t;SD, will be held at 7 p.m. tomorrow at the Sportsman's Club in southeast San Diego. Music will be provid- ed by organist Dee Dee Turner's Review Speakers for the occasion will be Robert J. Keyes, urban affairs director for Lockheed an:l former assistant to the governor for community relations; and Shirley Thomas, a professor in the Afro- Ameriran studies program at San Diego State. A counselor at Mesa College, Ruth Self, will be a noontime speaker on Friday in the Camino Patio at USD. She will talk on ' Accountability-A Necessary Component of Blackness." An exhibition or African and American egro art will be open to the public from 1 to 4 30 p.m., through Fnday, at the San Diego Histoncal Society in Pre "dio Park. The exhibit of African masks and sculp- ture and a senes of posters by the egro Amencan artist, Charles Alston White. are from Dr John Kimbrough's collectmn

Clergy,,ian explains 'future shock' idea

k)J USD's CROOM JO/NS MIAMI Running back Samrov Croom will pass up his final year of eligibility at the University of San Diego to try for a spot with the \1iami Dolphins. The school said y~terday the &-foot-2, 195-pound runn- mg back from Elgin, Ill , had signed with the Dol- phins as a free agent.

gyman aid h re this week. At 1ssu • says the Rev Mr. Ja E. Lindquist, a t, D religlou studies pro- f ssor, ls ,,., hether God er ated man obligated to con- form to unchanging natural laws r whether man can him elf assume greater control over nature, mclud- lng his body, and the whol evolutionary proce ·. In a Lutheran clergy- men' seminar at Our • av1or's Luth ran Church, Mr Lmdqulst also said this 1 a major I ue at present d1vldmg Roman C'athohc from many Prote tants. The que lion aid Mr Lindquist is bet,,.,een the Id a that man JS m control or nat - a prrdomtnatly !'rote tant " w - and the 1d a that •h r xi • certain un hanging atural laws to winch man s xpected to conform r Lmdqu1st does not have a full tor answers to qu ·tions or th day, but he doe have a rew questions What would b the place of ar. unc'lianging moral law, for example, .n un £volvmg universe? Mr. Lindquist suggests that c;uch a notion nught have b n valid 111 the time or Thoma Aquinas or even or I aac wton. but that it hard,) fits 1nto the age- or Te1lhard de Chardln or Thomas 11.1xlry tan, whom the Bible, a -.1,as made "ln the ,mage , nrl likeness of God," 1s now wond nng hoy, seriously he hould r - a'ly take that • image or C.:od 1d •a, say '-i!r Lind- quist Could I" for III tuncc., 1 th !ates~ tcnllfic t ct1110Jngy to I terally re- mak<' him. 1r, to creatr II! or I h nut to attPmpt to •·pin~ God' in this man- ner, asks tr. l.mdqulst. In th rac or th • "fut1.re shock" synorome, says Mr Lmdqu1st. the <'hurches ca b either a reruge of rhang I ne repealing uld prtnclpl and formulas, r d vrlop into mo "fu tunstlc. ' C ,t •1 of &ct1V1ty o t f•1t11re nd new approat.:h to mw prob- I

eighth inning yesterday to break a 3-3 tie to give the Lntvers of San Diego a 4_ 3 win over Pepperdine and a split of their doubleheader at USO. Pepperdine won the opener, 5-3. Garner, who caught both game~, had two singles and a double during the day and drove m three runs. Willi- ams hit a solo homP run in the f(rst game and added two smgles. He scored four runs. L'SD is now 3-3.

Dr. Au r E. Hughes, president of the University of San Diego, and !\lrs. tfughes will begin a series of small dinner parties at their home, Casa de Alcala, on the university campus tomorrow evening. They will have a second party on Saturday..ev.ening.'. . /! I/ / 7 1./

USD's roller coaster r~ sports ride explored 1 / 11 1,,

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programs. which would be incorpo- rated into the athletic plan. "It was unfortunate," said basket- ball coach Jim Brovelli. who joined the staff at the same time as Cramer ··I came in and the first four months was all these problems. I thmk the problem arose, where is the priority - physical education or athletics? We didn't want to do away with one to have the other. We wanted to keep athletics at the level where 1t had been " Except for football, the level was ·c AA Division II and, De l\unzio noted, "we have achieved a certain amount of prominence." The Toreros made the basketball playoffs last year; the tenms team was third in the . "CAA college divi- sion tournament; the baseball team adl'anced to the championship round of the l\CAA college finals in 1971, and the golf team is one of 20 invited to an intercollegiate tournament this spring at St. Andrews, Scotland. "We had an athletic program that was relalivelv successful without a lot of money bemg spent on it," ob ened Cunningham. "The com- bined budgets for the four sports was in the bottom 3% of schools across th country. It was less than 6%, 1 thmk, or the total school budget. A lot of schools spend much more money and never are represented in postseason competition. ' We felt, gee, why can't WP. main- tam this. rather than go off tin a whole new tangent? Take what we already have, work with it, eniarge (Cont. on page C-2, col. l)

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r.J'?.. I cl7 USO TACKLES FULL R.TON Revenge will be in the th ughts of the University of an Diego basketball players tonight when they take on Fullerton State in the Toreros' gym at 8. , USD dropped an 85-68 de- cision to Fullerton last month on the winners' court. The Titans are 10-7 for the season, compared to USD's 11-9 slate. .:°') "1

ball. I thmk they were supposed to be mern bers or the student body " Then came Andy Vinci. The ambi- tious \"inci made the scene in ·n and promptly transformed the casual -:i:orero clubbers into a disciplined machine, which ground out a &-3-1 record. Last fall football became a part of the school's athletic pro- gram, and the Toreros went 9-1-1 and to Ohio, where thev bowed to Wittenberg, 21-14, in the NCAA Divi- sion III playoffs. Cunningham. though, could see the- hand,,.,TJtmg on the wall, which had been erased in 1961. "Until this year " said Cunningham, baseball coach and assistant athletic direc- tor. "we had 24 athletes in this entire un,\ersity rece1V1ng any kmd of fi. nanc1al aid. And Andv wanted 55 full s,·holarshios for lootbalL "Coach "vmci wa~ a very aggres- sive md.vidual He never took no for an answer from anybody. So if it wasn't done one way, it was done another. He would say. I want to do this, and we'll worry about paying for It some other way. I don't think that's bf'ing fiscally responsible. "That's why the program didn't .ast originally. That is why the pro- gram was m danger of not lasting again.' What conC'erned Cunningham and the other coaches was that if football fell, It might take their sports with 1t. Also they felt threatened by, Dr. John Cramer, y,ho assumed the posi- tion of athletic direr.tor in September 1Hth the respon ib11ily of creating p 1 1ys1ral educatmn and recreation

By BOB ORTMAS John C!mnmgham, scmor member of thr Lntver. lty of San Diego coach- mg staff. arrived 12 years ago, just in time to help pick up the pieces after the Toreros' ·otre Dame-of- the-West football bubble burst. "ll was,' recalled Cunningham, "a d1sastPr. ' The glonous experiment was abandoned m 1961 after six years, and football was Junked. "In Decem- ber," remembered publicity director Gabe DeNunzlo, "a statement was issued that, from the standpoint of fmanc s, they Just couldn't hack it." llov.ever, the after effects, like the b:ter •aste of mPdlcine lingered on. '\~hen I got down here m1962,'' said Cunningham, "they had just dropped football, and our name .. lhr l mverslty of San Diego reputa- tion was not rral high. They thought w• were a bandit school Tin I what I r.m 11110 my first four yrar1; herr • Durmg tho years, USO confined 1L~ at'llet1c endeavors to basketbal, ba ba I t nnis and golf. Then i~ 1 9 football wa r v1ved as a cluo llLtlV1 y. · Club football y,as owned and op- er led b) !l' student body,' ex p1air a Autnor IIUghes, who be- ca p dent 'Jf USIJ in 1971 after 10 at Northern Arizona U wh re e was dean of the busine~ cllool ancf vice presld('nt "It was t purt of the university's intercol- 1 gtate athl 11<' program." II it wa . 'said De ·unzlo, "kids h wrd up on Sunday to play foot-

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USD Gains Shot At Playoff Berth By CHUCK SAWYER Winning its last five bas: USD's fast finish enabled ketball games has paid off the Toreros to post a 16-10 for the Universitv of San season record. The latter Diego. • portion of the schedule was The Toreros have been filled with strong victories named as the independent over such worthy opponents entry for a runoff game to as Washington State of the determine the four teams in Pac-8 Conference, USJU (22- the !\"CAA western regional 5). Riverside and Grand small college playoffs and Canyon (25-1). . . will meet Sonoma state of Sonoma State 1s located m the Far West Conference on Rohnert Park, Calif., north the latter's r tomorrow of San Francisco near Santa night Rosa. It won its first nine The winner of that game conference games this sea- wlll advance to the regional son, th_en lost the last three playoffs Friday and Satur- to fall mto a tie for the title day at San Luis Obispo and The Cossacks are a run- will meet Cal Poly (SLO) and-shoot team which does Friday night. not stress defense and pas- Another Far West Confer- sess several outstanding out- ence member, .Chico state, side shooters. Bill Beland_er, will meet UC Riverside in a 6-4 forward, is the leading the other game Friday with scorer with a 23-point aver- the two wmners meeting Sat- age. . urday for the regional title .Center Bob LeBrun (6-8) 1s and a trip to the NCAA finals hitting at 15.6 with 6-2 guard in Evansville, Ind. Tom F1tch1e enioymg a 13- Cal Poly won the CCAA pomt norm. The other championship and finished starters. are 6-2 for~ard the regular season with a 17- Steve Tiedeman and either 9 overall mark. Riverside Jim Bristol (6-3) or Dan was runnerup in the CCAA Heme (6-4) who alternate as and has a 19-6 season figure. the other guard.. Sonoma State and Chico _USO wil! fly. out of San State· hared thr Far west Diego tonight with coach crown and had 17-9 and 20-8 Jim Brovelli planning a light season records. respE'ctive- workout tomorrow morning 1 -------~on the Sonoma State floor.

U IU, USO clash in' 'must' tilt

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