News Scrapbook 1972-1973

BE!ROTHED - Mr. and Mrs. William Henrv Hippee of Des Mo1Des, Iowa, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Ann Page, to John Roland Allender son of Dr and :!i John_ Ste~art_ Allender of La Jolla. Miss Hippee att~ded e Umverstty ID Des Moines and is a member of Ka a flpha?~eta. She is employed by Midland United Dairy Indu!t~y M~soc ation and Iowa Diary_ Industry ,Commission in Ankeny. in A:1le nd er. w~s ~ad_uated June from Iowa State University H . es maJor1Dg ID mdustrial administration and economics u:i:e:s~:fb~!fJ•u KScapbpa Epsilon and is now attending th~ P lanned • r iego ool of Law. A Nov. 24 wedding is · T1N£L 1 -:i.q-7~

/0-2. ! 1 ull slate of Thursday looms as practic~l U

~f• .\,V-.l6 , Tuesday, October 31, 1972 Vinci plans to travel far with Toreros By JACK WILLIAMS Most of those familiar with Andy Vinci, Univers t) of San Diego's first-year football cnach, feel !pat he will gp far. Yesterday, Vinci went a lpng way toward living up to that impression. "What I would like to·do,'' he told the Sportswriters- Suortscasters ssn. at 7 Seas Hyatt Lodge. "LS go out nf the country to pla) football next year. That way we could schPdule extra games. "If we pla)ed out of he country, in Mexico, it wouldn't count on iur record." Vinci's idea hit a resplln- sibe chord with U.S. lntfr- national University co,ch Marv Braden, whose W st- erners are scheduled to tilce l'SD a week from Saturday night. "Let's plRy each othe in Tijuana," suggested Braden "That wav nPither of us would be ·disappointed if it doesn't count." Considering the records of the two San Diego sma]J col- leges, it's not such a bad idea. Neither team is in the position to afford a loss in this crosstown rivalry and call the season successful. USIU is playing .500 ball, 3-3, after a 21·20 victory over 'Los Angeles State Saturday. USO 1s 4-3. following a 35-18 breeze over L-Oyola Thursday. USIO will be favored, hav- ing defeated an L.A. State outfit which has h1>aten USO, but the first mPetlng between these schools since 1961 will be interesting. It also will be on the USD field. where Vinci ~aid the Toreros drew 2,4CO - 200 mor.e than prPviously an- nounced - for ! heir rain thr tened homecomin la•t w ek. USO is idle this wPek while USIU entertains Cal Lutheran Fridll\ night at 7:30 in Bal- boa, tadium Br;iden said he is unde• rided as to his starting quar- terba . Ruben Anderson. a freshman from TamrH , Fla., started Saturclay and com- pleted six of 10 pa.sscs for 98 yards. Doug Omer, coming on in a relief role, threw three touchdown passes, how- ever. ' Omer oompleted 11 of 20 for 107 yards on a day when ju- mor Dwight McDonald caught all but one Westerner completion. Dwight had t 16 for 191 yards and three touch- downs,'' said Braden. "We positioned him at split end this time where it was hard for the defense to double cov- er him He actually caught 21. Three II ere nullified by penalties and two were out of bounds." Braden denied he may use an alternating quarterback system in the pattern of Cali- fornia State University, San Diego. and USO. "I haven't decided to go that route yet,'' he assured.

I0-1...C\-

USD Ore

"Adieu, Vorrls" Tcllaikov ky'" "Joan d' Arc" and "L'Amour Est un Oiseau" from Bizet's "Carmen " The orchestra will conclude the program with the "Emper- or Waltzes" of Johann Strau~s.

The 50-piece !lrfhe

ii

posed of :1Yell community members also will play Dvora1<'s ''New World" tudents as

winner due for U D talk

1961. "Croom is the best small college running back in the Southland," remarked Loyola bead coach Tom Richards. Here Croom is brought down by Lions' Bob Krueger (69),Jobn Van Liefde (45) and Mike McCarthy (52). Torero blockers Brian Connoly (82) and Mike Kee dark) aid in paving the way. . (Photo by MIKE DATE)

.::.:;:....:;:....:..:.:::...::..:.::=.:.::....:..::..:::....:::....____-:-_ ____

gmnmg o develop a little c-ohe~1veness.'' explained \\1th a htl,e more help · and some good rccru1ting we

Kori p

can realll start to take on some new dimensions ·• After all why noP·

Bl JEAN iE'lTE BRANIN a of Joe

course, is for the sity to supply 1he one- ninth of the total sum needed by the more than 700 students who are re- ceiving financial aid. "For instance, if the finan_cial aids off_ice d_e- ver- ~0,000 for }o~, the ~fflce of HE~, will Pf

College er, who ough col- parents pay is fast fading

the bill from vie{v.

The focus today is on the undergraduate who earns a grant, scholar- ship or loan, and who of- ten takes a job to sup- plement those funds.

. other $10,000," explamed Approximately 54 per Mrs. William Yancey, c nt of the W1der- chairman of an event graduate .stud:nt of~ which will raise funds , at the Umversity for that purpose. Diego_ ~8:s taken th ti;· The event is "Holiday sponsibihty of_ ace g Happenings," a cocktail l?ans to obtam che- party and luncheon fol- 11shed degree. lowed by a showing of One of e most popu- holiday fashions at 11 lar of the_ loan pr~gi:ams a.m. Nov. 9 at the Mis- a~ USD is the National sion Bay Room of Bahia Direct Student Loan Hotel. It is ~sored by Program.. the University of San Under its terms, the Diego Auxiliary. Department of Health, Mrs. Thomas T. Education and Welfare Holmes has been named makes an. amount of cochairman by the aux- money available to the iliary which is com- college which the col~ege posea' of 250 women fac- must add to by one-ninth ulty members, faculty of the granted amount. wives, mothers of stu- "The money is loaned dents and friends of the out at three per cent, to university. be repaid in 10 years be- -We have raised thou- ginning nine months af. sands of dollars for this ter graduation," said type of student aid, George T. Urdzik, finan- enabling hundreds of cial aids director at the students to complete university. their education," said "But there's an at- Mrs. Yancey. tractive teacher can 1- "It is gratifying to see lation clause: if these students complete graduate becomes a their education instead teacher, the loan is dis- of dropping out of counted 10 per cent each school, and it's a splen- year up to 50 r f did thing to ·see them go the Iron on to become commu- "iAnd tlie gradu te nity leade ." should bec.'Otne teach r eservation~ for the of low·mcom biffidi- party, which is open to <: pped chil , the the public, may be ob-

loan will

di counted

tained from Mrs. John A. Waters of 2104 Tokain St. or Mrs. Edwin C. Ferguson of 2604 Pen-

-Slaff Pnotos l>Y J

/amily of

L nn Tlemorclino ure among nni , Ronald and Be11wcl ti .

at 15 per cent a year up to 100 per cent of the en-

Recipients of National Direct Student Loan funds are tfi fers of Fullerton, from left, Roseanne, Mary o,nJ Jeanine, also hold job to supplement income.

tire loan."

~~~~C:.....-----~-------- ~---Th~ e

problem,

of

rose St.

-----

Made with FlippingBook flipbook maker