News Scrapbook 1973-1974

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niversi y of San Diego t7n,•~i auxiliary membership te~' 1 "'

Lumlnarlas will mark pathways to the various y reas on the University of San Diego for the progressive dinner being given Aug. 28 to mark the 25th anniversary f the chartering or USD. University president, Dr. Author E. Hughes, and Mrs. Hughes will welcome guests in the foyer of De Sales Hall 4J or the social hour and then strolling musicians will lead them to De Sales Hall where a number of ltahan pastas will be served. Scandinavian salads will be served in Founders Hall rooms and dinner tables for the French main courses will be set in Founders Patio. Bavarian desserts and lnsh coffee will also be served on the patio with dancing to follow. Mrs. John D. Frager of La Jolla is chairman of the dinner sponsored by Dr. and ~rs. _Hughes and Las Patronas de la Univers1dad, a university support group. While not originally designed as a f~nd-raiser, the anni- versary party will benefit scholarships and campus im- provement programs. Reservations for the black tie event are bemg taken by the public relations office of the university.

Casa de Alcala. the home of Dr. Author Hughes, presi- dent of the Univers1tv of San Diego and Mrs. Hughes. will be the setting for the annual membership tea of the Uni- versity of San Diego auxiliary from 1 p.m. to 3 ll m. Tuesday. Members. mothers ot st~dent , faculty wiv and prospective new membe are invited Dr. Hughes will give a short talk on the uni- VeJ"S1ty's programs Music w l be providrd by the u!\iversity·s music de- P tment during the tea hours. James Kinder and Mrs Richard Barber co- c lrmen of the event will be assisted by 1rs Lrc Bartell, chairman of h stesse~ Auxiliary

!\Imes

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hostesses

auxiliary fashion show to be presented at the convention hall of Vacation Village, will attend Campus tours will be conducted after the tea by student guides. Mrs. James Davis is ~esident of the auxiliary.

Robert Howard, Robert Cihak. Dominic DePietri Leo Durkin. Ralph Hardie. John Hogan. Bernard Maloney and Paul Vesco Others are Mmes Robert Bond. :\felvin Bartell. David Garfield. Richard Levi. Helen Anne Bunn. Maurice Sims, thomas Holmes and Waller Wilkins Mrs. Ross Tharp and Mrs John Rippo, co-chairmen of

MRS. DAVIS '1/4/Jtj USD Auxiliary Plans Annual MembershipTea (,,'i.JtCA)

Mrs. James Robert Davis, 1 newly appointed president of the University of San Diego I Auxiliary, will preside at the annual membership tea from 1 to :1 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 17, at Casa de Alcala, residence of Author M. Hughes, university presi- dent, and Mrs. Hughes. New students and their mothers, faculty wives and prospective new members of the auxiliary are being invit- ed to the tea planned by Mrs. James S Kinder and Mrs. Richard A. Barber.

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9/6/li

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Recital Set By Robert Austin R..• 1tone Robert Austin will sing a reci~I at 8 p.m today in th u mversity of San Diego CaP1mo Theater aeco1r.par. ,•d by piam t Ilana tysior Both are m. true- include thr e songs from H ,\1oehler' · "Des Knaben Wunderhorn.'_ an ana.. fro1:1 Verdi's ":\Jacbeth" Ravel's "Histoires. aturelles, :\lu · sorg k} 's "Songs' and Dancf>s of D ath" and arias by Bach and Purcell . Austin wrote and ctireeted a mu ical revue titled ··carefully Taught' and presented at USO last sprmg and I the author and composer of "'.\ly Cousin Jo.' fa," pre.<;ented 111 1969 by Starlight tors at the unlver ity Th<' program will

Choosing wines to accompany the Italian pasta to bes rved at Del Sales Dining Room, second stop on the rout of the progressive internationa I dinner for the University of San Diego's 25th anniversary party on Aug. 28, are Mrs. John J. Wells, left, dinner chairman, and Mrs. Bob Crosby, music co- chairman. USD anniversary party plans jell 1r . John D Frager,

election of wines will be served with a number of Italian pastas. Lummaria Wlll point the way to Founders Hall to the next stop on the party's gourmet route. Scan- dinavian salads will be served in the foyer, American Parlor and French Parlor. In the dining hall behind Founders Patio, guests will be eated at tables for eight for a French dinner. Bavarian desserts aod Irish coHee will be erved on the patio, and dancing will continue unil 11 p.m. and dancing will continue until 11 p.m. Reservation for the affair may be made by calling the public relations office at USD, 291-6480, extension 354 .

chairman of the Univer ity of San Diego's 25th an- niversary party to be held Aug. 28, recently an- nounced completion of plan for the gala aHair. More than 5.000 friends of the university have been invited to join together to celebrate the 25th birthday of the university' charter at a progre ·sive in- ternational dinner and dance Guests will be greeted by pr . ident and Mrs. Author E Hughe In the foyer of De Sales Hall here mariachi m~1c will play during the serving of Mexican hor d'oeuvres. Accompanied by a strolling musician, guests will then proceed to De Sales Dining Hall, where a

- Slaff Pholo by Tony Doubek

WEEKEND ARCHEOLOGY DIG

was found. Work, sponsored by Muse- um of Man, will continue from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekends on the large bluff just north of the San Dieguito River mouth.

Dr. James Moriarity, of the Univer- sity of San Diego, supervises students digging at site in Del Mar wnere a recently redated 48,000-year-old skull

To sing a recital today. 1J15}7, , . -

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~l1dN Free concert Robert Austin. baritone vocalist. will perform in concert at-8 p.m . on Sundav in the U/1\ver ity of San D1~go·s Camino Theatre o The performance is fret: and will feature selections of Ravel Bach. Mahler and Pured!. The public is invit d to attend.

College costs and students take jump CONTINUED FROM PAGE B-1

EnrollmJ~;:1,4,, costs soar at colleges By BOB DORN TRIBUNE Ecrucation Writer Pnces have risen, enrollments are groi~mg and there·s no more dormi- tory space at collf>ges and universi- ties opening here this month. At San Diego State University, which last week was the first school 10 the area to begin classes a record enrollment. estimated at 31,000 has sent admm1strators. searching for a way to make add1t1onal sections of closed out classes available to stu- dents low on registration priority llsts. Classes began yesterday at Uni- versity of San Diego. An enrollment gam of about 200 students has result- ed III the conversion to dormitory space of one floor previously housing admmistrative offices An administrative conference room adjoining the provost·s office on another floor is now housing students. Yet I? open are United States Internatwnal University on the 19th CCSD on the 23rd and Point Lorn~ College on the 26th. Of the five schools, only USIU estimates no enrollment ~ains over last year, when, according to univer- sity spokesmen, a little more than (Cont. p on page B-6, col. 4)

5,000 part and full time students were enrolled. Roughly 3,000 of those attended classes at Camp Elliott and the downtown law school. USIU op- erates smaller campuses in Colora- do, Hawaii, Africa, Mexico City and France. The French program is new this year, partially replacing the 200- student campus in Sussex, England, which USIU closed last spring and sold following a dispute over work- mg conditions with the British facul- ty. Inflation is at work at all the campuses. Tuition and room and board charges are up 7.5 per cent at USD, 7.67 per cent at UCSD (the mcrease is accounted for by room and board charges only, tuition re- mams the same as last year), s per cent at USIU and 12.5 per cent at Pmnt Loma Collf>ge. . ,Housing officials at.the schools say it s not Just growing enrollments that are filling the dorms to capacity - the past lwo years have seen a return to on-campus living among many students who m better times might have lived in more expensive off campus housing. Last year at UCSD dorms jumped to 99 per cent occupancy from the 88 per cent rate the year before _ an mcrease out of proportion to the school's enrollment growth. . This year, UCSD's enrollment will mcrease an estimated 600, to 8,619 undergraduates and graduate stu- dents - making the dormitory situa- tion, if possible, even more difficult "Well'II squeeze everybody i~ somewhere," says Larry Barrett, d!fector of housing and food servic- es.

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GlJDO I\ . JUND - The ensemble wUI present a progrc.1,7; c:,f~renai sance music entitled .._Iusic for Maxi- ~~J:!1;; P!~{ 30 P m. tomorrow m the Old Globe Tbeatf'C, LO DO:\' SHI PHONY ORCHESTR • A d p . ,.,. I c ct ·t h . '' - n re revm 1..1.' o. uc t orchestra ma concert sponsored bv the is An.;elP Plulhannomc at 8 p m toda~ i·n the c·..· Theater. • · · , •~1c KORL\P,\ DIT-Th · e organ t WJl: plav a concert at 8 pl.m Saturday m the Southland l\tusic Center 34"9 mpenal Ave , Lemon Grove ·

Kathryn Ando · · · be 0 an playing at 5

Recital Slated By Pianist Kathryn Ando

Pianist Kathryn Ando will play a recital at 8 p.m today m the University of an D1rgo Camino Theater opening the fall mu c sea'. son at the school. The program will mcludr thr Beethoven . onata m B Flat Major, Opus 22, five mazurkas and thP Ballade in J.' :\1mor, Opus 52, by Cho- pm, Stefan Wolpc·s ·'Form for l'1a110" ( J9j9J. and Mus- sorgsky's "P1eturl's at an Exhibtt10n " l1ss \ndo ., nat1v of Sant.'.! Mo111ea who has be n pla; in , thr piano Iner :;hfl \Ht 1. l1a:; B.A, B \I nnd 1 lL\I A d •grc :; from t.:SC ; She rt·<· •ntly tud1f'd m Italy ' 011 a Fulbnght Sd1olarsh1p. ( ~---------~a

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