News Scrapbook 1968-1969
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TOREROS GET PLUMS
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2 - TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 1969 'Editorial ·
S.D City Stars Foster, ot· To Enroll At USO In Foll
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Apathetic department loses
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University of San Diego yes- terday reached out and picked a couple of ripe plums from the area junior college basket- ball tree. Oscar Foster, the 6-6 for- ward, and 6-4 Johnny Otis who can play either forward or guard, will enroll at USD this fall, it was announced by To- r e r o s basketball coach and athletic director Phil W 1- pl•rt. Both performed with San
Diego City College last sea- son, the second year there for Otis. Foster spent his fresh- man season at the University of Minnesota. Both graduates of Sa'n Diego High, they will enter USD as juniors with two years of ehgi- bility remaining. Foster averaged 20 points per game his senior year at San Diego High and set a school record of 41 points in one game. With the :\-1 innesota
fro~h he avrragcd 18 points a game and scored a 20.4 mean with the Knights last season. Otis connected for averages of 24.0 and 19.6 in his two sea- sons at SDCC. Both players were named 1 o the Pacific Southwest Conference first team last season with Otis named •·Player of the Year." "It goes without saying that we are very happy to be get- ting these two ~,, Wool• p~rt said "Fosfer'will help give us good height on our front line next season. Otis has good moves for a his size and could play a ard spot for us. Both are fine reboun- ders." Woolpert credited assistant coach Bernie Bickerstaff with landing the two players for the Torcros as part of his re- cruiting duties. Foster said there were sev- er! reasons for his returning to this area from :vtinnesota a year ago and his decl ion to f in i s h his college education here. "They made a c o a c h i n g change at Minnesota which upset some plans since there had been a good under tand- ing between the p r e v i o u s coach and m y s e l f, And I picked up so many allergies from the spring weather back there, I was over at the dis- pen~ary every day for treat- ment." Otis said he and Foster had talked over plans for finishing their education outside of San Diego. "But Flernic (Bicker- s t a f f) kept after us " said Otis. "Oscar and I kno~ each other's moves pretty well and wanted to stay together. We are both very impressed with the situation here at USD.'' The Toreros linished with only a 10-15 record last sea- son, but should have the talent to make a vast improvement in 1969-70. They lose only for- ward Jim Wilke from the list of regulars with such stand- outs as 6-4 Jeff Filzenger, 6-6 Gus Magee and 6-5 Benton White returning up front. Bo Scotian, a 6-7 junior tran er from the Cniversity of o rt 1 a d, and 6-2 Guy S1 on, who will enter USD . freshman after complet- ing duty at l'\aval Training Cent are others expected to help the Toreros' cause.
George Ziegenfuss before making a
That left them four choices: San Diego State, Cal Western, the University of California at San Diego or the University of San Diego. They made it official yes- terday; they chose the University of San San Diego State did not lose these players because it lacks something that USD has to offer. State lost its bid be- cause the athletic department has been Diego.
an Diego State'· basketball r cruiting s ason gr w suddenly colder yesterday wh n two of the grcate t players in San 'ollege history signed letters of intent to enroll at another college Diego 'ity Slate's athletic department wasn't c·omp ·ting with U L , the Univer ity of Houston, or any other big name school for th, servic . of City College star· Johnnie Otis and Oscar Fo ter next fall.
decision.
Naturally, any ball player would like to know who the coach is before commit- ting himself. But who can afford to wait when a college education is at stake? Over a month ago, the Daily Aztec print- ed a sports editorial urging the athletic department to chose a new coach. They
failed to do so.
sitting on its tail.
If the San Diego State apathetic de-
an Diego to attend the
Fo ·t ·r left
. !Family Lile 1 Serzes To Hear Sperrazzo Dr Gerald Sperrazzo chairman of the psychology department, Univ.er ity of San Dieg~ College for_Men, will deliver the April 22 lecture in the Family Life Education Course sponsored by the diocesan Confraternity of Christian Doctrme. His Tuesday lecture will be given at the college where all sessions are being held He will --- - -- --- talk on Sex. Love, Marriage - Life and Love. and May Tl - A Psvcholog,cal View. Marital Sex: Growth in Love The cour e is being directed - Growth in Christ. bv Father Jeremiah O'Sullivan. Speaker on April 8 and 15 was CCD director, and Father Leo Koran of the Conciliation William Shipley ol the USD Court whose topic was Social philosophy departme_nt. . Aspect& of Sexuality. He has 1-·ather Shipley will deliver bt'en a marriage counselor al the last four of the five the court lor five years and has remaining lectures in the worked in psychiatric hospitals course after Dr. Sperrazzo with emolionallv handicapped speaks. On April 29, Dr. Carl veterans and - in alcoholic Lengyel, chief of foren~ic rehabilitation clinic . psychiatry. County-University He focused primarily on Jlosp1tal. is scheduled to talk on marriage and young people. In Mental and Emotional the u.s today. he said, one half Maturation of Amencan girls are married I 'inal Topics b, the time they are 20. and one The final four lectures by half of the boys are married by Father Shipley will be: May 6- the time they are 23 More Scripture: Sex is tor Life and marrv at t8 than at any other for Love, ',,lay 13 .. Premarital age. :fhey make this decision Sex: Growth for Love: May 20 about a mate before they are old Manta! Sex· Sacrament of enough to vote
Cage St~~; Set to Join USD Squad \,o tr.insfor students have signed with tht• Umvt·rsty ol San D1t·go'for ·ros, ll<.'ad Coach Phil Woolpt·rt .innouncl'
USO Students To Hear Judge • • '-l 11 bl? 1tushall r' McComb, assoc1at • Justice of the Califorrna Supreme Court, will i,:,vc ,, public talk r'nday, April lll, ut the Univer ·1ty ol San l>1l•!(o School ol Law, Ju t1t·e Mc 'omb will speak at 11:JU p.m. in lor llall, span• son•d by Delta Theta Phi Law 1"r111crn1t) The Judicial I ·m f l 'ulil orrna "'ill be his topic. ;J 11st 1cc McComb h,1s served 011 lhl' Calilornia Supreme Court s111ct• l\i;;6, l'rcviously, Ju ·liceMc 'omb was ,1 Judge of the Superior Court ol Lo· Ani,:ele~ from 1927 to t937, and on tht• District Court of Appeal, lfrcond Appellate Oivis1on, JJ1v1 ·ion Two, from l!J:!7 to 1955. from Yale U111vers1ly Law School and wa. adnutted to the C hforma Bar in 1!120. l was engaged in private law p1 uct1cc tn Los Angele until 1927. He received h1. LLB cum laude
The State Qu ...,... ,J,.,. 1 i& Championships will Friday and Saturday at the University of San Diego. About 400 ~tudents from 50 high schools are expected to c o mp e t e. The seven speech events are debate, extempora- neous impromptu, original ora- tor 'humorous, dramatic and orat~rical interpretation. They will begin at 3 p.m. Fri- da} m More Hall Awards will be presented at 9 p.m. Satur- day. Ju es l include quali- fied students m the San Diego area and USD speech students. ech
'ottt•g .-
San Diego, Thursday, April 17, 1969
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A-14 McGee Urges Hit ry Check In Viet War
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Relio·io11s tali serie~ ere 01 USD ca.1
Divorce and annulment rates in California are high, he said. r'igure show that divorce applications will be ap- proximately one half of . the marriage rate for any given year that with more freedom and the disap- pearance of chaperones, some feel that pre-marital sex is a generally accepted behavior pattern. However, most chil- dren are still brought up to be- lieve that intercourse should be saved for marriage, he ob- served. Premarital chastity is still the norm in our society no matter what the deviation may be from that norm, Koran said, and penalties have changed little for those who break the rules. Virginity has remained high among college students who have had no serious emotional commitment. but decreased as people approached . their weddings. he contrnued. However. a high percentage of engaged couples having pre- ma rita I intercourse usually break the engagement, he stated. Those who chose to remain virgins were asked reasons for doing so in a survey. Family training, religion. and the idealism associated with the desire to wait were given. Negative motives such as fear of pregnancy and disease have less weight today. Pos1\lve motives arc more accepted 111 which family attitudes and the conscious desire to have a good marriage are present. Close Relationship Behavior Pattern Koran reported
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Sister ft •ne Murphy. pro- fessor of history at the Um vers1ty of San Diego. will be the leatured speaker at the meetmg ot the Sierra Club \San Diego Chapter) this Friday, ' The program 1s dedicated to San Diego's 200th anniversary, and Sister Murptiy•s talk will be on r'ather Jumpero Serr~. The meeting will be al 7:30 p.m in an Diego Narural History Museum, New Students ToJ~Gr~\~<{ '~"~ Alumm of the University of !:;an Diego will entertain high school students accepted for the tall term at USD at a series of parties in San Diego and Los Angeles areas The hrs! will be a pool party hosted jointly by Mr. and Mrs. Charles King of Pacific Beach, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Frit- zenkotler of La Mesa, and Mr. ancl Mrs. John Rodee of San Uiego. The alumni represented are from San Diego, Point Loma, La Jolla, Clairemont, Del Mar and La Mesa. The party will be held at the Mt. Helix home of Mr. and Mrs. K1eran F. Vanier, parents of Mrs. r'ntzenkotter. The second San Diego area party will be h~ld Sunday, April 27 at the home ol Mr. and Mrs. Armando Martinez of Camino Elevado, Bonita. April 18. USO Team Bows In Law Contest A team of second-y w students from the Univers1 y_ of San Diego lost in the semifinal round to the University of Cali forn1a at Davis in the Appell le Moot Court state f in a I s Jn Berkeley. The USD team included Sam Alhadeff, p r e s i d e n t of t~e school', Student Bar As oc1a- lion, Joel Golden and Raymond 1 Gorn The team rom UCLA took · first place and UC Davis fin- ishrrl second. U,J/OIJ 11--1'1-lo'l
in Room 24-0 of De
an1::iwanke
act of Faith,"
' l he
pro;;ram I Sales Hall.
cducat10n
adult
Wyoming Senator Says Balance of Power Real Issue
Tickets for the senes cost
the Diocesan
15 per mar- and Llturgical $10 per per on, Commissions of S.an Diego. ried couple, $5 for students is continuing into a second with B card, or $2 per per- iienes of lectures, y, hich be- son pe 1 ture. gan Thursday and will be Furt!rer rnfo h n is held every Thu rsd ay th rough available at De Sales Hall or ~lay 22 - . . by calling FatheT Alcaraz' of- scnpture and morals in sep- =~------===== The series cover~ l:ilurgy,\fice a 298-1163. .. By MONTY NORRIS Americans who oppose the Vietnam war should take a closer look at history, a Dem- ocratic senator said here last night. "If anyone thinks an ag- gressor is eventually going to get full and just lie down and go to sleep," said U.S. Sen. Gale McGee of Wyoming, "then he should take a look into history at Ma ia or the Rhineland'. "The problems in heast sia involve much more than a question of Vietnam or com- munism," McGee told a gath- ering in the University of San Diego's College for Women Theater. •·It is a very real de• fense measure necessary t retam a balance of power. Pullout Opposed "We really can "t be sure what to do, but by taking a long, serious look at history we certainly can 1earn what not to do." McGee, a member of the Senate Foreign Re 1 a ti o n s C om m i t t e e, said much of Southeast Asia would crumble within \I eeks if there were a complete pullout of U.S. mili- tary forces. "But all this does not pre- clude negotiations to come to terms and 11Jnderstanding with Red China, North Vi et n am and N or th Korea," McGee said. "To pull out would be stra- tegically unwise, but to turn our backs on negotiations with one-third of the world also would b a mistake. Motives Cited CAMPUS RNER arate lecture series, given in De Sales Hall at the Univer- s1ty of San Diego, said Dr. John Swanke. general chair- man of the adult education program and an associate pro- f e~: 1e!~~~::ahJ Diocesan Liturgial Commis- sion and rector of St. Fran- els Seminar~, is presenting the series of six talks on rites, principles of the Eucharistic celebration and the !",3.Cramental encoun- ter. pture will be the sub- jec given by the Rev. Lau- rence Dolan a~s1stant profes- .sor of theology at l!SD His topics ·will be revelation as the Word, history of Genesis and its problems, prophets and their relevance today , Psalms as Christian prayer, synoptic Gospels and John, and Epistles. Dr. Swanke will present the series on morals. The lee• tures will be concerned with the nature of the moral act, the moral standard, the self as moral law, the moral agent, the moral act is per- formed in circumstances, and the goal of the moral agent. Father Alcaraz' group \\;IJ meet in Room 235, Father olan s in Room 2..'3!1, and Dr. executive secretary of the liturgy, Father karat \\1ll speak on psychologr or rite. He- brew-Christian ongms. early development of Christian reform, L 11,. RV LL fl L Jl -1....JJ tt .l , J and LA JOLLA JOURNAL La Jolla, California Thursday, April 17, 1969 Y-~-(.,. Kiwanis to Hear USD College Head The Very Reverend John E. Father Baer, president of the c O 11 e g e since June, 1967, at- tended San Diego State College and in 1949 entered st. Francis Baer president of the college for Men, University of San Diego, will be guest spe er ale UNIVERSITY OF SAN DIEGO By JOH. KU., ED\ e are n sprmg vacation until 1onday Some tu• tak ng advantage of the lull to catch up on reading assignments or finish term papers. 0th rs have taken off for Meioco a11d other vacation spots, The university calendar is t !I nt.s d nt a at the La Jolla Kiwanis Club College in El Cajon to study for the priesthood, being or- the Presbyterian meeting in Church Social Hall tomorrow dained In 1956. He completed Title of his his doctoral studies in 'T'heology at 12:10 p.m. virtually unmterrupted by a holiday until the ,pring semes- ter closes May 31. Alcala Park campus students have filed a Black Students Union constitution with the As- 50(•1ated Students government. The organization is headed by Leonard Jones. a juruor trans- fer from Southwestern Junior College. Six goals have been set out by the Union including: to inspire black and brown high school and junior college ~tudents to seek higher educa- t10n; to encourage academic cooperation between its mem- bers; to distribute information on higher education and finan- in 1963. address will be "USD, Past, Present and Future.'' Most marriages that are not working out do not have a close social relationship, Koran observed The family does not engage in activities together such as going to the beach or park. and has a low rate of church attendance together. Pre-marital intercourse in- evitably affects the relation- ship since sex is too intimate a part of the emotiona I nature to be of no consequence, he said. Summing up his talk and the discussion which was part of the session, Koran said research shows that the child who saw his parents as happy, who fell close to his mother and father. who fe lt happy and secure. who saw his mother and father have a 50- 50 type of relationship_will rate high on marriageability In other words, the home is the parents, and responsibilit} for happy marriages lies with the parents. It has been said that the greatest thing that parents can do for th1,ir children is to love each othrr. JOHN KENNEDY rity stud nts; to ·ponsor ocial and cultural exchan11es; to span rj dialogues and p aker , and to set up a forum for free expres- sion The orgamzat1on now ha 24 members. . Loyola {.;nivcrs1ty will host the cast and produc11on er w of USD's play, "Member of the Wedding." tomorrow through Saturday The play, directed by Kathleen Zaworsk1, opened here .March 28. _ . USD ANCE ENDS IN ROW 0 o.,~ J.\-(\ l, USO Physicist At Meeting IJ1•. Gerald E Iberg, ci l aid at USD o m UNIVERSITY OF SAN DIEGO By JOHN KENNEDY "In negotiatmg or even co~- s i d e r i n g the problems m Southeast Asia. we should not obscure things by using the word communism.' The real motives behind all internation- al conflicts primarily involve individual nations." There are social, economic and po.litical revolutions and turmoils going on within all the Asian n a t i o n s, McGee said. He said he doubted a real international Communist conspiracy, however. M c G e e told his audience that much antiwar sentiment here and abroad is fostered from a lack of clear-cut goals Southeast Asia. He said television and film coverage also stimulate~ dis- sent because it distorts "the big picture" and focuses on a "m o m e n t of dramatic and tragic violence." Senate Foreign Relations Committee member Sen. Gale McGee, D-Wyoming, will speak on Vietnam at the university's College for Women Theater at 7:30 tomorrow night. McGee is a strong supporter of the maintenance of the United States com- mitment in Vietnam. He will define the necessity of U.S. in- volvement in Vietnam in his talk "Vietnam, Why We Axe There and Why We Should Stay." The program is open to the pOblic. The university continues to be a center of 200th anniversa- ry activities. Bus l o a d s of Spanish midshipmen arrived on the Alcala Park c amp u s Sunday evening for a ball held in their honor in the College for Women's main patio. A stu- dent art exhibit of water colors and oils of scenes depicting San Diego' history ls on dis- cha1rm.111 ol the University of San ()1 •go Colle •e for Men de partmenl of physics, will at- tend the ~pr11114 meeting of the mcricnn Physical Society 111 Washington. lJ (', pril 28 to \t:,y I I JOHN KENNEDY play in the Rose ROJm of the College for Women. "lbe show is open for viewing daily from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. through Thursday. Stµdent and faculty representatives are finalizing plans for the university's commencement exercises June 1. L
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