News Scrapbook 1973
Pan American musical scheduled for Grossmont
School All-college night N~ws & set at Sea orld Views Valley Grove college students, faculties and their
THE!
and l at
v1 ual
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both
enjoy
A Pan American Music Festival inspired bv the Indian. Spanish and Ari-o musical heritage of the New World will be presented at 8 p.m . Sep. 21, at Grossmont College s Fine Arts Recital Hall pr:~:nt::ieSl~~al G~soss~~~~ College· Olfire of Commumty Services and will feature Elizabeth Waldo and her Pan American Ensemble. Mrs. Waldo, violin virtuoso. composer, recording artist and lecturer. interprets the .ounds and music of the Americas, both ancient and modern She was recently honored b the American· Society or Composers and Publi hers with a c1talton £or her contribution to rnencan :v!us1c Her com- position· have been featured over ;'l;ational Education Television and in the special Pre -Co rtezian musical sequences for the Wolper Production him made for CBS tttled "Cortez and Montezuma' An accomplished violinist. Mrs. Waldo won a scholarship at the Curtis Insitute or music in Philadelphia where he was cho en by Leopold Stokowski as one of the leading viohmsts of the All-American Youth Orchestra which toured the United States and South America. After a season as a member of the first violin ctton of the Lo ngeles Philharmonic Orchestra, she embarked on her own solo tours of leading Central and South American capitol This culminated in a concert tour of the Urnted States a featured soloist with Xavier Cugat and his orchestra. :\!rs. Waldo's Pan American En emble includes six artists. each a virtuoso on hts respective instruments of v1olin, flute. guitar, bass, marimba and vocal percussion Each member of the ensemble ts capable of doubling on ancient Indian and ~lesttzo l lndo-Htspano-Afro l folk instruments from throughout the Americas. The ensemble's
repertoire is rooted in the vast musical heritage of the Pan American countries Mexico. Central and South America and Southwest United States. The pubhc has been invited to
experience
listening
reflects the moods and and symbolism of the Americas. There 1s no rharge [or adm1ss1on
performed dub and u cert dates throughout the wt , and in Japan Mexico City and at the Mumch Ulympic·s. Thi group who will provide t•ntertammrnt, ha" been called "one ol the new super- groups of thr 70s · by a rt>cent rc•viev.pr San Dwgo·s own ''Fair!ll'ld,' onP or th<• most su!'cessful and sought aftPr group m this area, will prov1d a con lNnporary rock beat "Fa1r[1eld" is no!Pd !or its strong horn section and 1s synonu yous with good dance musi<' in San DiPgo The Sparkll'lts Waler ~'antasy show will be a special unt• for All Coll,•ge :--.ight, ll'alurmg rnrr<'nlly popular re• c-ordPd ro<'k groups III the sound, light and wall'r spectacular Part of the proc·eeds Irom All Colleiw Night will go to c•ach school partic1patmg, accordmg to Sea World officials. Sea World is located Just off 1·5 on Sea World Drive in Mission Bay with ampl<' free parking available.
to tile Torero u ct nt
lamtlies hav<• been mvited to an All College Night al Sea World Continous professiona I enter- tamment and non-stop dancmg lo two bands will highlight the cvenmg when the 80-acre marine park opens at 7· 30 p m , Sep, 28. The park will be op<•n to those from San Diego Statt• University, Un1wrs1ty of 'an Diego, United StatPS Inter national University, l!n1vcrs1ty of California at San Diego. and Mesa . Grossmont, South· western , City and Palomar Junior Colleges. All six a World shows and 2.'\ exhibits, l)lu !ht• rock bands and entcrlam,•rs. will b,, avail• able al a d1 -eounl rate. Ticket must be• purchased on c.irnpus for All College N1 ht at the park which will dose at I am Two band wtll perlorm m separate arc•as of the park, prov1d11)g continuous dance music· Warner Bros recording artists. · Corroborce ' have
Grod-spec·1ol progr m director for USD named
Master's degrees in Ecluc-ation , English, French. History . International Helat1ons . Psychology and Spamsh Special programs taught by lJSD professors at loc-al1ons other than the Alcala Park campu · arr undn the direction of D1 Brandes. Tlus war courses which inciude Education clas. es are bcmg taught at :\1CRI>. Escondido, El Centro and Oceanside. As Director of Special Programs. Dr Hrandes will also be respons1hle !or inlersess10n program, hdd at USO lrom Januar) 3 to January 24. and h thr e divisions of suron\ r hool
Dr Ra \'mond S Brandes, professor of history at the University of San Diego and former director of the educational opportunity program, has been namPd Director of Graduate and Special Programs. President uthor E. Hughes announced Brandes. who has been at USO since 1966. 1s a native ol an Diego. He studied at !he Universit} of ·\nzona where he received a B.A in Anthropology and his Ph.D m American Historv m 1965. peciahzing m the Amencan West The Graduate School at the University of San Diego offers
)(- ()A.}tOAJ 9'pf1.;I USD Win Includes A Loss-Anderson a, their suffering a lacPrated k1dne) In season record al l•I as coach the Saturday contest He under- ~nd, \'Jnci promised the) went major ?IJ gery Sunday. would. . "II is a eH•rc hlow both for They lso patd a price for . . ,, . Saturdcrv's 35.7 \!Ctory over !hr ho) and our . quad, ',, inl'i Claremont Coll~ge said yestrrday. 'He was one of Vinci yestcrda revealed de- our finest down linrmen and fens1ve end Rich Anderson has was our h1ghe,t points sc-orer under nur grading s) stem Sat- urday despite his injury." Th l!ros o{ the Ul)J hav cvene r it been lo~ for thP season af1Pr or San 1)1
USD 1 s 2:cf~H~(f o Whips Oxy R\ CHlCK SAWYER Ho~ 'I o, 'v a one to~chdown a1cl hrlped l 'D m !he rnarch 'Pad at the hall \ ntvrr~11y o[ with 011h ch mashm!! nine ~an Diego )U hrrt owr thrrr yards on a keeprr for the long- morr n th fmal tw pr1 iocls lo est 11rlr gain \I h1n i; nw out outclassrd Occ1 Th" T1grrs wkNI up two drntal Cnllegr. ~l 14 hrfo1 I' an first downs lair!". 11 1hr oprmng e~t 111 ~cc! 3,500 fan al L'S!) prr1nd hul it on!\ took thrm to Stadi Jl)l I, t rugh\ thr1r own ~4 from :"hrrr they Tatlh;, k Rich Paul on scon•rl 1,1err forr"cl to punt ,1g~m. tw1cr for thr Tnrcros who •1cre \ SD th<'n movrd from its • • • nv.•1 15 In tt,,. Oxv 20 from srAnsncsuso 0 ,, whrrr nulich rolled aroumi his ,IL - !? own I ight rnrl ln c1 oss the goal R ,vn,d,,qe • 4,r""...., ., ,,,, cl "• no "'"""' • .. . 12 so lme but the play was C'alle ~i·~r;. YO 00 •• ::. .5;6-l , 2 •g lrnck Wtlh (hr. Torerns 1n mo- 1:U"'t,es 10S1 ° .... •.. r, O 5 ~l tion. P..,n1t1e vo,~; .- • •" ii 93 ' A fourth down fiPld goal al• w nrn1g for a srcond straight tl'mpt by Rothrock was wN•k aflr a ,ca~on-opl'ning blockNI Joss. With only 29 sPC'onrls remain• On sulfrred its sC'rond sr\- ing in the first q11ilr(c-r, Sehne- 1 ba,.k· in as ma°' n11l111gs. beck loft rd a sho_rt pass from Qua <>rh;itk Bnh DU!i('h and drro in Oxy INn lory. Duncan f',1nk Andy Sanchrz also r:icrd in to pick tl off al lhe lfi s< nred [) · for csn on running and ran into the. end zcnP un- pla1 s with ckfPnsire latkle touched Gonion ~un~an running hack Rothrock s kick made 1t 11-0 ;in ·n crcept1on Jf> )ards lnr the LSD. remRining. core \11d1, ay of the second period noug Rothrock booted four of the Tigers struck bark. \ rive POJl\'('l' 1011 attrrnpts to ac• An 111t1>rreplion gavP them rn11n1 for the USO total. . possession al the LSfl 41 Nine o_cc·1d('ntal q11,a1 erback .lohnl plays l:-1tPr. with a fourth and Schneherk sf'orcd holh of the twn al the Torero seven. Schne ds1t01 s' lalliP going seven hr(·k facl('(i to pass. founriod lh<> score . A th1ee-vard dash bv Paulson The PAT kick made 11 13-7 al and Du11cart interception ga1·<' th<' half. USD a 13;'7 halftime rdge. . locc,don1a1 ................... 010 7-" Jidw y of the lhird period, u~~ 0 .... ,;~·~,;~~1 ;~~-;k;~;;·;;/,:.'i' ,_,.. ' l ":lC Toreros moved from 1hc11· I ~ot~ro3.\Jkfc'11c:" 15 POS~ in1rrceDt!on own 39 to the T1gers 1 24 from &Sb ic::i~~;c,~~,~~~~~1h~~~tJict>. v. here nuli1 h pitched out wide. g!u R.~~~:.vr~J~r~~ri~,W., lo Paulson who scampered all usb- A Sonchot 7 """ from Dullch .. (RC'lthrork klrk1 the way for the score. Thirt}-four seconds later,
Deans announced
Dr lJSD I rom Csrtnnell College where he wa Chairman of the English Department Fo ter attended Regis High School in :-.ew York Cit) He received hi· B A from St Peter·s College. ;s;ew Jersey and his Ph D. from the lJnivcr ih• of P..orhester in :\ew York m 196:i Ht. pecialties inc!ude :.11ddlc English Literature Re toration and Eighteenth Century Literature and Lin1?utslics The College of Arts and Sc1t·nce · , the oldest of the four ool at l'SD. Twentv ar offered at the rgraduate level and the 1?raduate program award· t r degree· in even REV. WILLIA\1 E. ELLIOIT Reverend William Elliott. Ph.D ~ill head the School of Education He comes to USD from Marquette University where he wa. \s oc1ate Profes or Fr. Elliott graduated with a :\laster's degree from John Caroll \.Jniver 1ty in Cleveland. Ohio. and received his Ph D at Ohio State l nn ersit,· rn 1970, maJ ring in Educational Admm1strat1on. The l'SD School of Eduration ofter undergraduate programs leading to Elementary and Secondar~· Education teaching credentials, as well as training sp x-1al t m the area of Spec1a Edu,at10n USO al offer· :\laster's degree programs rn five different fields of Education Fo ter came to
Ander. on. a transl r from Saddlebac:k Collf•ge, 1111! be re·. placed by Gordon Duncan, a 5-11 and 228-poundet also from Saddleback. Vmc:1 was well pleased with the Torcto ' efforts at Clare- mont as USO Pr<'pan•s to re- turn lo Jts horn,. fll'ld Saturdav night agam ·t Ocddcnl I. · "Our rlefrnsc hc>lct C'lllrernont to a me~ 62 yards in rota! of. fen. e," the coach revealed. "Quarterback Bob DU!Tch h compMed 50 ")(!r ten of !Us passes in the fir t two ganies. We believe v.e are on the 11·?.v lo having a fine football team." C remont's lone ID Satuc~ day came in the sec- ond half after the Torcros scored the first five times they had I he ball in the first half for a 35-0 !tad. Linebacker Darrell Beshears was credited with USD's ''hit of the week" on the very first play of the game, Vinci announced. "We lnrd a lot of difleren things on offense 1n the secon half." Vmci expla1nr•d. ''As a result, we didn't score in the fj. nal lwo periods, but our defen•e stayed tough to help us main- tain a comfm1ablc le;:~." After two gamc>s, two ta1l- bac·ks. Rich Paulson and Sam- my Croom. lead the Toreros' rushing figures 11 ilh 7.5 and 3.8 averagc•s, rrspecth cly, both on 21 carries. Fullhac:k llcnn· Sin- tay has 48 yards for a 4.0 inean but h;1s carried the hall onl) 12 times. QB Dulich has conm•ctr
EVENING TRIIUHE s.. n [ H ZEL TDW EVEN/NG TRIBUNE Society Editor
D-2
n,mal Jock :\lacArlam or Rev-
US/U AT LAVERNE Toreros Tackle Tigers onigh By CHliCK SAWYER Seemingly improving acb rushing, verage ~l arries. w~k, University of San / Sammv Croo l! k C Diego ho~s lo contin in Ison anct'Lee Davis :re otha:; at fa,hion torught when the strong running backs kee in 'J'.~re~~ h~5tthe Tigers qf Oc- the opposition honest ihi!! ~sins~ di o ege at 7:30 in Dulich has been completing a um. 22 of 38 passes against two in- At the same hour, .S. In- terceptions. ternational talces to the road Sanchez has made II recep- tor the first time this season lions for 129 yards while wide w~en the Westerners tangle receiver Ernie Yarbrough with LaVerne Colrege on the h · t h f Bonita High School field in as six ca c es or 69 yards. Laverne.
l'SD had another sevrn points on the hoard An :ntrrception hy Winston Sharp pul lhrm m b:1sineso; at the Oxy 48 from \\ ),Ne Ouhrh went wide left on thC' option play He kept posses- s,on. however. staying on his fPet alter being hit four times and went the entire 48 yards for thP TO. On the last play or the third quartrr Oxy had a fourth and 16 at the l]SO 23 but Schnebeck hit widP rPce1ver Luis Sama- nll'go nn a slnke at lhP one- yard line. Schn brck smashed over \o st irl thP final quarter. Oec1rlent;il's hnal hopes faded 1, hen \ndr San,.hez caught a a s from Duhch m the Jell lat at the Tigers.' s<'ven, found tw ~1f hemmed m and used three un bloc·ks to reverse his f n I race auoss the fiold I nd y made the right cor- n0r o! end zone. Tho r ro•, scored the first lime tli ') had possession, going 66 )ards in n111e plays wilh Paulson going the final three on a ')ltchout around left end. Two penalties for a total of 20
!.'Ont· June.
h1 h:w Co onri. of cu1 rcntly 1\1 111
Leo Clark (6-2, 240) from Mt. Hood College in Oregon, has moved mto a defensive end spot aligned with Oornell Stanley (240\ and George Mancillas (230l in the "Big Three" up front. Occidental will be making lts second start after lo ing to Azusa Pacific, 32-14, last week. Meanwhile, VSW goes af- ter a second straight success flllder new coach Don Turner after a !Hi opening victory over Southern Utah last week. I The Westerners bave made a couple of changes in their defe~sive µneup, one of them j movrng wide receiver Perry Burnham to left cornerhack. An inexperienced offensive line will get another test after ban Tonight's game complete a three-game string against the identical opponents of a year ago for coach Andy Vin- ci and his USD squad. The Toreros have made better showings over 1972 in losing to Riverside (2.0-16) and defeating Claremont, 35. 7, thus far this season. USO stopped Oxy, 19-7, last year. _Vinci is expected to open with most of last starters although the ach admits "!!e have had a jillion di~gs (mmor injuries to the unmfonned) this week and it has had an effect on our prac- tice sessions." Bob Du!ich, junior transfer from Saddleback College will once again he at quarterback Rich Paulson at tailback' Andy Sanchez at flanker and Henry Sintay at full. Paulson, from L.A. Harbor, ~a scored four touchdowns m two games, one on a 73. romp, and owns a 7.5
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