News Scrapbook 1979

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SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERV ICE DAILY CALIFORNIAN AUG 18 1979

SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE EVENING TRIBUNE AUG • R 191 Dr. DeRoche gets USO post Dr. Edward F. DeRoche 47, is the new dean of th~ ~~xersitx of San Dieeo's c ool of Education. He succeeds the Rev. William E 10 , who is now vicar for education of the R ma-I!' Catholic Diocese of an Diego.

'foreros to start .J,,otball drill'i

More than 100 players , in- cluding 13 starters, are ex- pected today when the !JW., versjty of ~an Diego begins preseasonootbali practice. The Toreros open the season Saturday. Sept. l , against Edwards Air Force Base. Among the returnees for head coach Bill Williams is senior running back Dave Maynard, who rushed for more than 600 yards in 1978. Backfield mate J eff Morgan, also a senior , re- turns. The defense will be an- chored by senior tackle Chuck Schoepp, who is a four-year starter, Last year, USD was ranked 18th na- tionally in total defense. The team will practice daily at USD Stadium.

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SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE EVENING TRIBUNE AUG 2 1 1971

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D sp te its fai..ts ralifor- still is the leadEr 1r '!l ncan education, a11 rr1ca s 111 lead th c ac,.ording to Dr. E v.ard F eRoctie, whc ta been appomted dear of thl ':uvers1ty of San Diego 5 tool of Education after 15 } rs as a professor i: '.\ arquette t.:nlversity. ' Whether it be teachrr credentialrng or tax rrform, whatever happers rn California still rever- berates around the countrv ·• said DeRoche, who ai haS gprved as a teacher, principal and school lioard member. As an of the education d p ent, which gradu- ates about 100 teachers " c · · DeRoche said he to e'T!'Hl-ll~siz a brPakdown of the tradition- al "two-by-four teacher - the teacher who lives in the confrnes of the two covers of a textbook and the four walls of a classroom." es

SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE DAILY - TRANSCRIPT AU 2 1979

Government regulation of food supplies will be debated Sept. 13 at 8 p.m. in the Salomon Lecture Hall on the University of San Diego campus. Ellen Haas, director of the Com- munity Nutrition Institute, will debate Dr. Elizabeth Whelan, executive director of the American Council on Science and Health.

(Neil Morgan is on assign• ment. This column is written by his assistant, Tom Blair.)

LEGAL TANGLE: In a law- yers' softball game over the weekend at SD High, former Chargers running back Mike Garrett (a law student now) slid fiome and upended the catcher, Superior Court Judge Norbert Ehrenfreund. When the dust set- tled, Garrett was safe. "I never saw the ball," sighs Ehren- freund. "But no hard feelings. I even offered him a job as my research assistant." ITEMS INF Sea World, the zoo, nd the Convis Bureau have antNI seed money of $75,000 to lure er ner Dean Martin to San Diego this fall for his annual TV Christmas special. He'll tape in October. ... A San Diego Inside (L.J. Cella) poll of public officials and activists rates Jeffrey Frautschy and Tim Cohelan as most-effective mem- bers of the SD Coast Regional Commission. Low men on the poll: Gordon Williams and Tom Gade, the councilman. . . . Ala- bamian Charles Woods, trying to pump new life into his downtown discotheque, has changed the name from Disco Haven to The Executive Disco and dropped promoter Chris Palumbo as part- ner. Wes Parker, the Dodgers star, will hold his interest in the disco, which has added a happy hour and is auditioning live entertainment. DOT DOT DOT: Two familiar ex-Padres' names turn up on the roster at USD: McNamara and Bavasi. But it's second-genera- tion: Mike, son of John, and Bill, son of Buzzie, are assistants in he sports information office.... D ill Ritter slipped into the North Park Bakery for bagels and cracked up over the counter ign: Se Habla Yiddish.... Roy Lake, the Grant Hotel manager who's turned his top-floor office into a showcase for his photo- graphs, is taking his show on the road - to 6th and C. He'll have his first one-man display at Cam- era World's Maximum Aperture Gallery.

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He said he agrees with manv students who com- plain that most school pro- ~-~- grams ar~ out of touch with

realitv am! bear little rela- tion to the world in which they live. "The Basal reader is boring," and has little con- tact with the student's real world, DeRoche said. That is why he advocates use of daily newspapers. "It is the best single learning tool l have een. It can teach ·everything from reading to ma hematics, history, geography and so- cial studies. "The weather report page alone can teach map reading, world geography,

SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE

LEMON GROVE REVIEW AUG 2 3 9 9

De~ate Open to Public Regulation of food supplies and the gn\·ernment's role in the war on cancer will be the subjects of a debate at the t{.Wyers·1a5 of Sa : ~i i!fe/1 £a- Jomon Lecture Hall on Thun:- day, Sept. 13 at 8 p.m. Sponsored by the School of Law, the debate will feature Dr. Elizabeth Whelan Executive Director of th~ American Council on Science and Health, and Ellen Haas of the Community Nutrition Ins- titute's Consumer Division in Washington, D.C. The dr•bate is open to the public at no charge. Call 291-6180, ext. 2296.

USD Dean Lauds California Schools (Continued from B-2) He said, however, that the little or no interest in their own family development.

He said that there is endless de- bate over which is the best way to teach and that much of the contro- versy and disagreement is generat- ed by educators themselves, without resulting in much improvement. "But no public school system in the world does as much as the American public expects the schools here to do, and I believe the schools here do a very fine job," De Roche said.

DeRoche rejected a frequently used argument that with increasing prices, both parents have to work, leaving little time for them to be involved in school affairs. "When this was an agrarian soci- ety, both parents worked and worked longer hours than today, but they still fO:Jnd time to be involved in their children's education. It is largely a matter of whether they want to be mterested," he said.

toughest question to answer was to describe what good things are hap- pening. The schools, he said, "are doing the best job th y can to prepare young people for th world they will live In." He accused parents of expecting too much of their schools, demand- ing the classroom "feed, wean, baby-sit and educate" their children, while the parents themselves take

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