News Scrapbook 1969-1971

Environment Group Forms ~o!J~ijebr A University of San Diego student ~roup ,s orgamzing an educational and political cam- paign on environmental prob- lems in the San Diego area. T~e organization, Students for Environmental Awareness (SEA), plans to hold seminars and workshops covering the principal legal, economic and social issues at stake in the environment question, accord- ing to SEA president Richard Gardner. Current projects include collection of biolog1 al and cheID1cal data on .San Diego County lagoons and a study of the inter-relationship among birds, animals and s a Ji e. Gardner 53} the SE.\ will pebtton the Board of Super- vi · rs to halt development of the lagoons because 1t would destroy spawning grounds for fish and possibly elimmate the PacU1c flyway of migra- tory birds. The group also is working with Uie Save San Diego Com- mittee which lS sponsoring a p11bhc meeting on environ- me 'ta! questions Thursday at Birney Elementary School. Other SEA officers at the umver ltJ are vice president Tim Prodanov1ch; ·etretary- trea Eagan; action coord· rt McClure; and program dlre<;tor Michael Bujazan.

Library's Chamber M Concert L g In

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terity of the already mentioned Maja y el Ruisenor" might have "Blake Songs" and the humble acted nicely as the central piece Christmas pieces did not create of Miss De Tadlock's portion of

By DONALD DIERKS The San Diego Union Music Critic

Four women musicians pooled a very persuasive cumulative the program, yet sh their talents last night for the e(fect. For a z:e\sonably co~- with?ut its San Diego Puhlic Library's vmcmg dramatic shape, this passions. regular Tuesday evening cham- half of. t~e program needed_ a Other compositions performed ber music series. co:11pos1t10n toward which were four of r'aure's "Pieces Heard in solos were Christine thm~s built a~d that would have breves," Opus 84, and bis A-flat Voigt. mezzo-soprano. and Elsa furmshed an impact. Nocturne and third Impromptu. Romero de Tadlock, pianist. The very rapid and wide vibr- Then there w re the Cancion y Ilana Mvsior provided piano ac-1 ato Miss Voigt used bard anzas, nu bers seven and compammehrs for •Hss Voigt ,matched the style of her mus c eight by Mo pou, and Falla's and Janice Strait. flutist, played A straight-(ine tone (or at least "Pie;:es e~f.a&noles,".. "Arago- the duet part when she sang the very sparmg vibrato) would nesa and Andaluza. "Blake Songs" by Vaughan Wil- have bee_n _more appropriate for Mis De _Tadlock. had re- Iiams and obligatos for a group the f~lk 1~1om_ ~f the carols, the sonably facile technique, 1f not of Christmas carols. bucohc s1mpltc1ty of the Vaug- overtaxed, and a cool and un- Miss Voigt chose some inter- han_ Williams and the child-like perturbed style of _playing. It esting and beautiful music to punty of the Revueltas. was agreeable playmg she of. sing, especially is this true of Such a vibrato is usually the fered us, and with more f~re and the "Five Songs of Childhood" accidental result of improper more of th~ fa1:1ous Lahn tern- I by Silvestre Revueltas. How- vocal production, and it may perament (t might have been ever, the simple beauties of have had a d..rrect connection in more than Just agreeable. these songs, along with the aus- this case with Miss Voig\'s need for greater breath sup and a played it inherent swelling

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firm, supported legato line with graceful phrase endings. I hope she will improve her ecl:iflique, because she was well prepared and a seemingly earnest young singer. Miss Mysior's accom- paniments were reasonably sen- sitive, but the flute playing of Miss Strait was pretty much without musically molded and flexible phrases which is the es- sence of the repertoire she was playing. Miss De Tadlock's half of the program also contained exam- ples of some the finest modern French and Spanish piano mu- sic, but here, too, there needed to be a dramatic focal point. All of the music had its own brand 0£ beauty to recommend it, but they were mostly placid beau- ties. The Granados "Quejas o la

y M ~91"Srrt Set Dec. 14 Th Umver. 1t ot • an Diego's annual hnstm onccrt will be pr :s ntcd at 8 p.m. Sunday, Dt-cembcr 14, in the College for Women Thcab'r. There is no admission charg for the conecrt The Uni vcrsity Chorus will mg the "Te Deum ' by Anton Dvorak The "Te Deum" uses th traditional text and is wnttcn for mixed chorus and soprano und bass solos, Marsha Long is the accompanist. . oprano soloists will be Mary Ann app., Dolores Humes, nd Cath rine Vattuonc Miss Capps 1s from Las Vegas, Nev,, Miss Humes, a blind student, nd Mi. V ttuone ar both from San Diego The bass 0101st is Alan Pitt, • banlonl' The Chorus is directed bl Dr. John A. Williams. '!'ht• t:niversity Orchestra, cf1r{'(·ted by Dr. Henry Kolar, will play excerpts from Mou1rts !:iymphony No. 38, ''Th· Prague.''~ Bid For arm I , .s-. 6? Union Blocked, Priest Charges rt r thr e years th trike failed and th onl} thing the farm workers of Del;1no have g m for th m Js th boy t on lifom1a grapes, a pric ·t told I tud nts ye ·tcrday nt the Jl!i.!· vers1ty of San Diego. , Th Rev. \ustin Morn spoke to m n and women in the lounge nt t College fo~ Women at th£' noo hour. lie poko again last mg • Both sessions w ,re public Th ee year after 87 per cent of the workers who voted asked for union th farmers ~till re- fu to talk contract and refuse to knowledge the maionty of the workers want a union, said Fa r Morri , S.F. PHOFESSOR The Jesuit prie t, a profes or of law at the University of San Franci co wh•> sp nt two ye m Washington a lobbyist for farm worker , 1d this is an ag when leaders hesitate to say they sp~k for organizations, um rs1ty adnumstrations he 1- tate to say they speak for facul- ty or tud nts and ven parent h s1tat to say they speak for th tr children. 'But the farmers till clafm to peak for the farm worker," he , s 1d ". . The fact the farm worke1 did not organize for year i. no indication of what they want " I- e satd that since. efforts to organize on a state, ide basi were abardoned aod orgamza- ti drive became local, "the ~ork •rs hav2 voted for a union t1nie after hme."

la Vista ·r Passes Exam for Bar By JERRY FROIDE CHULA VISTA The Phelp ' household here took on the appearance of a Jaw firm yesterday with the an• nounccmcnt that I wo ol its ml'mbers have become law- yers, ~r. and Mrs. G. William Phelps, 109 Jelferson Ave., are among the latest group lo pass the California Bar Asso- ciation examination. The test was held at the UniversitY,..Q,f San Diego in August. "Phelps, 47. chief of U1e pro- bate examining division in the county clerk's office, said passing the test was a real surprise. Sons Give Aid "I wasn't counting on pass- ing it because it was my first try," he said. "When Betty Lee (his wife) and I took the ~~:::_}:ir:as\~~tii;tt f;~\i~ Phelps said his three teen- 13th time."

LAW ALUMNI PICK OFF/ ERS

Studies. The committee is now in the pro e:, · of studying ('!ass off r1 their conlen . f this tudy i du The Univ rsity is a private, Catholic institution with an enrollment of approximately 1.300 students of which about 50 are Blac'•.

:\lexican-American

Valdez,

Ethnic studies at USO

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Youth Associallon 'A r\ ), and Jon Co!ln tne Hlac l l!

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Self-Help Leader ] Will Speak Here · ration Hootstrap,'' a Los self-help group. will . peak at 2 p.m. \\ednrsday in the I heater nt ) e Univernty of Angeles LoUts Smith. co-founder of "0

h first meeting on l",ovember 12, Mr. Valdez and ::vtr. Connor outlined the'r desires and proposals pertaining to Ethnic u~ committee s

President, haYe as their two part goal 1) Examination of all courses to determine if thev deal in "substial part" (at- least 25') in minority studies· and 2) Instituting new courses where gaps presently exist. The committee is comprised of faculty members from various departments, students from he Associated Student Body (ASB) and two representatives from minority organizations. These representatives a r e Ric$

'Ju, San Diego, which has managed to a 1d campus disturbJnces, took a major tep in con- tinumg peace ul studies. The Unlversit) has announced the formatton o a commitl<>e that 1s to pro se an Ethnic Studies d rtment at the ~chool. Ethnic studies would b o£fcred in •iex.1can Am e r i c a n Affairs, Black Stud nd Indian Affairs. Th mmittee \\Orking on 1mers ty o[ ins life is a questton. The extent of its readership will deter- mine the amount of distortion and the olume and aature of the propaganda It s cla 'l1ed that the focus of rt!search will be different than several competing in- stitutes which, dealing )lilh all Western countries, have broader constituencies. ..... - The claan for the "Institute of the -U. A.' i that th analyses of our activities will be pragmatic and not dogmat- ic . ·evcrtheless. 11 remains to be seen whether the analyses will add 2 and 2 and get 4 or whether they will get 22. The temptation to do this in Soviet studies is so ingrained and traditional that it would seem a d1recl1Ye Reverend from the Very Jorn E. Baer

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USD Rally Nips ' R ·, ve rside 100-96 I · : .

RIVERSIDE - University of. San _Diego came off a-[lvc age sons, William, 16, Charles, halftime deficit to defeat UC R1vers1de, 1_00:96. m a free-s 14, and Andrew, 13, took turns basketball opener for both schools here last mght. • helping both he and his wife Guard Jeff Filzenger paced' study for the examination. the Toreros with 26 points as he "It was really a family proj- led five USD players in double ect," be said.. · 1 01· dd d 1r, Tested m August figures. Jo mny is a e '· Mrs. Phelps said she almost Bob Scotian 15, Gus Magee IZ became a nervous wreck wait- and Gie Simpson 11. ing for the outcome of the ex- Simpson, the former NTC ca- amination. ger came off the bench m the "My husband and I took the ' 1 test in August," she said, second half to replace Neal "a d 1 had been anxiously Schram who was in foul trouble aw~iting the results ever and led the USD comeback since."

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A concert o Christmas music will be presented at 3 p.m. to- morrow in the Apolliad Thea~r at San Diego Mesa College, 7250 Artillery Drive. The college orchestra, con- ducted by Henrv Kolar I will of- fer Bach's "Arrnso, 11 the first movement of :Mozart's Sym- phony No. 29 in A major and Gustav Holst's "Brook G ecn Suite" in the first half of the concert The second portion will fea- ture the college's Olympic Cho- rale, a 60-voice choir. Soloist will be sophomor IUdent Karol Hanson. Dr. Charlene Archibe~ 1s di- rector of both choral.~roups. The concert is open lo the pub- lic without charge.

1e o\\ever. he the product . r mtives?

There is a genuine fear in • losco\\ hat the U.S. is seek ing to affili1,1te with Commu- nist China n a conspiracy di- rected ag'ainst the Soviet Uni1.in The Russian leaders are no11 constant!) probing our enrnys and officials in search for ;,m activities and attitudes in this direction. When thev were told bv one o[ our o£r"- cials that there is nothing to it, a member o[ the politburo replied. "The matter is so vi- tal to us that we will not stop looking." The -·1nst1tute on the C. is likely to include in 1 constituency tile "All-Um Society for Disseminat10 Knowledge," known as y. It has about 2 million m m- bers who hear over 15 million lectures a year in shops, halls and other meeting places. Three million Russians attend these meetings. The Znaniye Society also has Its own television studio and publisbes two pamphlets or magazines a month with about 3 million circulation. 0 ..... It will be interesti to see whether the information going t the Znaniye Society from the ' lnslltute on the t'·S.A." t e Znaniye Society. This 1s an amazing org zation that reaches out to ery segment of Soviet soc i- v-

"I am very happy and espe- cially proud of my husband since he made it the hard way studying at home." Phelps started studying law (Cont. on Page B-3, Col. 4) New Law-,.1rs Listed on Page A-16.

surge. Mike Washington. Riverside's 6-1 transfer from Los Angeles City College, burned the nets for 33 points to lead all scorers. Holdover John Masi was next with 22. The Toreros hit 41 of 83 at- tempts from the floor_ for an _im- pressive season-opening 49 per cent. Riverside was even hotter from the field with 38 of 68 for 56 per cent. However, the USD to- wering front line of 6-6 Oscar Foster, 6-6 Scollan and 6-7 ::'vtagee limited the losers to a minimum of shots. USD now enters the Aztec! in- vitational at San Diego tate's gym, meeting UC Davis in the first round game tomorrow night. USD (100) RIVERSIDE

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UNIVERSITY OF SAN DlEGO I).. ,.3 By BELITA TAYLOR Students will be able to refister by mail for the first time, for next eme ter's classes, pendmg fulfillment of all financial obli- gations by Jan. 17, according to Sister Sally Furay, academic de.an at the Collere for Women. The students who register by mail will need only appear in time for th beginning of classes next semester. All other stu- dents mu. t come Jan, 31, and reglst r in the usual fashion. Club football will art of next ear' athletic program, as

THE SAN DIEGO UNION

Dr fee Topi Scheduled

GFTT 9 A-6 7 5·10 19 6 0-l 2 0-0 A 2 2-4 6 33 22 12

GFTT

26 Woshgtn 12 9-9

-4-5

11

Fllzengr Schram Magee Foster Scotian Garrett Otis

9 Masi 12 Lee 9 Greene 15 Gordon 2 Knapik

2 5-9 6 0-0 3 3 • 6 3-6 1 0-2

7 2-2 16 Lonee

a result of a recent student vote. The decision to have club football a a student operated and fi n program, passed by a 390- ~argin. The estimated cost of the program · $26,000, The cost in- cludes staffing, transportation, and equipment for the team. The money will come from AS fees and ou ide donations, Rev. Austin Morris SJ., will speak here at noon and 7:30 p.m. tomorrow on "Washing- ton's Outlook on the Farm Worker." Rev. Morris is a professor of law at the Univer- sity of San Francisco.

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~i~:1~ 0" 4,S11!ia 1~ Total, S8 20-31 9'] Halftime score - R erside 58, USO 53. Fouled -- Lee, Greentl'; Mosiee. To1al fouls -JJSD 24, Riverside 23.

DDT. Lecture Monday Dr Karena Shield , medical anthropologist and profe

will emphasize or the diff rences in gy, our demv ra freedom:;

BELITA TAYLOR Nicolas Re ·eles, a senior at the Colle e for :\fen will be a piano soloist wi h the San Diego Symphony Orchestra on Dec. 13, at the Civic Theater. Reveles competed for the honor la~t month with other music students in the an Diego area. The resident tud nts at t 1e College for Women collected mon y prtor to the Thanksgiving holidays for needy families of the lmrnc.culatc Conception Church in Old Town.

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