News Scrapbook 1974-1975

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USO SUMMER SESSIONS

.(lo . J,..,./,~ q~•7< ef ef2tvzng 1 An Opera Workshop, covering performance in costume , staging , directing and preparation of productions, is just one of the offerings of the University of San Diego 's Summer Sessions '75. The Opera Workshop , directed by Robert Austin, Lecturer in Music, runs June 23-August 1. Other art and music classes available are Hi story of Jazz , Photography , Exhibition Design, Figure Drawing and Painting , and Twentieth Century Music. Several courses meet during evening hours. Exhibition Design , taught by Associate Professor Therese Whitcomb August 4-22, includes practice in the design , execution and managing of professional galleries and museum exhibition areas. James Sparks , Instructor in Art, will teach Figure Drawing and Painting June 2-20, and Photography June 23-August 1 . The photography course covers fundamentals of photographic techniques, stressing design principles and the photograph as an expressive medium. Modern music will be studied in two courses during the regular session June 23-August 1. Richard Braun , Instructor, will teach the History of Jazz , starting wi th early African and European influences , leading up to different directions of modern jazz. Twentieth Century Music , offered by Associate Professor Dr. Henry Kolar, is a survey of modern methods of composition from Debussy to the present. A full schedule of course offerings is available from the University of San Diego Summer Sessions office . Call 291-6480 x. 221 or write USO Summer Sessions, University of San Diego, San Diego, Ca. 92110. o USO SUMMER CLASSES

The University of San Diego will provide several courses this summer for the anthropology student, buff , or professional. Highlighting the Regular Summer Session, June 23 to August 1, will be the archeological field work in Old Town State Park. Historic Site Methods, taught by Dr. James Moriarty, will include on-site archaeology with lectures at the location and excavation of specific buildings that existed from 1830 to 1872. Dr. Peter Olafioye will teach The Culture and Civilization of Africa, a literary study of the development and practice of the culture of Africa. The course explores the traditions of oral satire and poetry . The Post Summer Session, August 4 to August 22, features a special course titled The Ethnohistory of Meso-Amencan. For more information write: Summer Sessions '75, Room 108, Founders Hall, University of San Diego, San Diego, Ca. 92110, or call: 291-6480 ext. 221 . •

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USO SUMMER COURSES

attempting to change police behavior, and the impact of such reforms. A full schedule of course offerings is available from th e University of San Diego Summer Sessions office . Call 291-6480 x . 221 or write Summer Sessions, University of San Diego, San Diego, Ca., 92110. o

Tl)' RICII l'll C. P ULDI 'G SAN DIEGO DAllY TIIJl"ISCIIIPI Stoll w,;,.,

The Psychology of Women, Mexican Americ ans in the Southwest , and Policing and Police Reform are just three of the many courses available this summer at the University of San Diego. Three sess ions are scheduled : June 2-20, June 23-August 1, and August 4-22. Some classes meet during evening hours. _ Other offering s in sociology and psychology i nclude . So ci al Diso rgan ization , Psych?b1ol?gy of Sexual Behavior, and Social Crises ,n American Public Education. A sociology/history course, A,:nerican Soaety: Race and Ethnicity in Historical lmm1grat1on and Trends, will be taught by Dr. Ron Goodenow of the Center for the Study of Race, Culture and Ethnicity, State University of New York at Buffalo. Policing and Police Reform will be offered by Visiting Professor Dr. Douglas Milner of Northwestern University an_d the University of Hawaii. The course will cover the police organization , pohc1es

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DR. BURNS NAMED USO SCHOOL DEAN President Author E. Hughes today announced that Dr. James M. Burns will be the Dean of the University of San Diego School of Business Administration. Dr. Bums has been the Acting Dean since Dr. Clement Nouri resigned to return to the class room in December 1974 Or . Burns studied for his Bachelor and Master of Science degrees at San Diego State University. He received his Doctor of Business Administration from the Harvard Business School Burns ' area of study was organizational behavior and his special field , complex organizations. He has been on the USO faculty since September of 1974. Prior to that, he taught in the undergraduate, MBAand Doctoral programs at the University of Southern California . Upon completion of his studies at Harvard, Burns coordinated the first year Organizational Behavior Laboratory and developed case material copyrighted by Harvard

;J,t1~ Kearny grads earn degr ~es Three

THE SAN DIEGO UNION

1-2

Sunday, June 1, 1975

Sc;hool received

WAS PHI. CE SATl'AM of Saudi Arabia saving up for the $6,000 buffet dinner he gave for 70 San Diegans at the Imperial House Wednesday night? On Tuesday he was two • hours late paying a royal visit to Sea World and when he phoned his apology he was having lunch at McDonald'S.

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REPORT CARD School and Youth N t s

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Senate Panel Kills Bill To Start State Law School In San Di go s. 01 - uni°" 5 1a 11 01 -•c:11 Both Moscone's and Kapi- Supporters said they were lawyers each year than SACRAMENTO-A bill to !off's bills provide for the not creating a new law could be employed. establish a branch of the state to buy out the Califor- school, but were merely re- Author Hughes, president state-owned Hastings Law ma Western School of Law in placing a private school with of the UniverSJty of School in San Diego died ma downtown San Diego for $2.5 a public facility. The lower Diego, which operates a law state Senate committee yes- million and make it a part of tuition fees and the location, school, also spoke agalnst terday. Hastings, which is part of they said, would allow more the bill. Opponents said there is no the state university system San Diego minority students Toe objections of the oppo- justificatlon for the state to but operated independently to get a legal education. nents were summarized by add to the oversupply of law- of the UC Board of Regents. And, they said, it could be Sen. Donald' runsky, yers. The bill was killed in The university, in fact, accomplished at a fraction Watsonville, himself an at- the Senate Education Com- was part of the opposition of the cost by taking over the torney, who said : "To me, rnittee on a 3-7 vote. appearing against the bill. Cal Western facilities. Toe the greatest disservice we KAPILOFF BILL 9 OF 11 REJECTED law school established at can do to young men and Pleas from the bill's au- Moscone, Kapiloff and UC-Davis several years ago women is to take the best thor, Sen. George Moscone, Dean Anderson told the com- cost $8 million. years of their lives to give D- an F;rancisco, and sup- rnittee that the creation of BILL OPPOSED tr.em a law degree that isn' t porting testimony from. As- the new publi~ law school , Moscone_'s bill req~s t~e worth the paper its written semblyman Larry Kapiloff, was justified because the new Hastings to mamtam on i f they can't get a job." D- an Diego, and Hastings private schools could not the 500-student enrollment The needs of the rninori- Dean Marvin Anderson, meet the needs of the minor- level of Cal Western and to ties could be achieved by were not enough to keep the ity communities for quality, reserve 150 openings for mi- more tuition and grant aid in bill alive. low-cost legal education. nority students. the existing schools, Grun- Kapiloff has a similar bill There is only one public The spokesmen for the sky said. pending in the Assembly law school in Southern Calj- university, for the Post-Sec- Moscone, a Hastings grad- Ways and 1eans Committee fornia, at UCLA, they said. o~dary Education_Cornmis- uate, pleaded with the corn- and the Assembly budget llill It and the other three public s10n, and for pnvate law rnittee not to allow statistics has $950,000 in it to begin schools in the state are turn- school~ all stressed the fact on job availability persuade paying for the school and to ing away nine out of 10 appli· that the ex!sting schools them to pu restrictions on operate it for the first year. cants, Anderson said. were producing far more what people can do. I-.__., _______________________________

u, newspaper tlT' the Califor- 01 his outstanding

Jack Thomas Chang, an Evening T1 earner, has received a $500 scholar 1p f nia Newspaper Youth Foundation, Inc

performance as a newspaper carrier • Chang, a junior at Bonita V1sti H·gh School, was a . recipient last year and thi year of Co ley l',ewspaper : Carrier scholarships. The California , ewspaper. Youth Foundation award was based on recommendations sub- mitted by ihang's circulation district manager and a high school counselor.

Wittman has also had recent problems. rcsid nt 'Of D&E Enlerpr1se,, which n t n 1s genera l partner of Parkway Pro rhe which filed for real property arrangement under Chapter _xn of the l B1> nkruptq A t last month, listing assets of 2.7 mtlhon and SI.S2 million In out- t nding lru t deeds. I He I

RANCHO RESIDENT

Lawyer Selected For Federal Po t Sn Dt

Four students win $1,000 Four area students have received $1,000, first-place awards in the finals of the Bank of America's 1975 Achievement Awards for high school seniors from San Diego, Riverside and Imperial counties. The winners and the re- spective schools and ,,ca- dernie categories are I rin :"-Aurphy, Helix High School, vocational arts ; Geoffrey Thompson, La Jolla High, frne arts ; Meredith Stewart, Clairernont High, liberal arts, and Carla Lupi,

•· Personal Paragraphs

uthor E Hughes, president of the Um- v r ·Jty of an Diego, ~nd ~rs. Hughe , and Donald T. Weckstem, dean of the USO law school, and ~rs. Weckstein r re- cently honored at a dinner in the California Club, Los Angeles, given by tr and Mrs. C Edward )!ilter and Mr. and Mrs. C. Edward ~iller Jr Toe j unior r -'tiller is an alumnus of the l 'SD school of law, I~ 71 ' 4tn,'-'"

JACK CHANG

Castle Park High: science and mathematics.

USO receives $25,000 federal grant A $25,000 federal grant for graduate training in the education of mentally retarded children has been awarded the University of San Diego's School of Education. The U.S. Office of Education grant is for professional prepara- tion of teachers of the mentally retarded in public and private schools. Minority journalism students win scholarships i;:our !Ilinority journalism students at San Diego State University have received $500 scholarships for the coming year from the American Newspaper Publishers Assn. Foundation . The students are Daryl Floyd, Jacqueline McGhee, :'>fary Rodriguez and Justo Santiago. $ high school seniors honored for science talent Science talent awards are being presented to five area. high school seniors tonight by the Greater San Diego Industry-Education Council in c:oopPratJon with the Natur- al History Museum. The students, who submitted papers in the Wsstinghousc Scie~ce Talent Search, are Howard James Grunloh, Monte Vista High School; Alice Evelyn Koniges, Poway High; Daniel Robert Marshak, La Jolla High, Pamela Gay Messer, Patrick Henry High, and Stuart Schechter, Muir Alternative School. Ralph Fear elected presid•nt of USO alumni Ralph Fear, a deputy dbtnct attorney for San Diego County, has been elected president of the University of San Diego Alumni Assn. Other officer:; elec:ted are Rosemary ,Johnston, vice president; Pam LPighton, s~re- tary, and Tim Shaw, reasurer.

. i:#;;,s~/ti/?< Share top T.:'ni- versity of San Diego was off to a strong start yesterdav in defense of the NCAA eoi lege Division tennis crown The Toreros and UC-Ir- vi~e each picked up 12 pomts m_two rounds of play Smee ram delayed start of competition Tuesday, two rounds were played yester- day. Two more rounds were on tap today, with finals due Saturday. Andrew Rae, Russell Watts, Ken Simpson and J_ay Harvey chalked up singles and doubles victo- ries for USD. Results , EVENING TRIBUNE Dispatch PUEBLO, Colo. -

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are. Betrothal

tr and Mrs Vincent ares announced the engagern nt o'. their daughter, Norma, to William Davila a a party given In honor of th Ir daughter, who was grad from Qnlverslt of San Die o and th ir n, Edward, who was graduated from D hoo . Miss ar attended Rosary High School and studied at; Univer It} of GuadalaJara and the Ibero-Americana Uni- ver lty In \Iexico City. She i.s a rnember of Beta S1 Phi Mr. Davila is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Davila of

USD alumni elects Fear I:alph Fe>1r of University City has been elected president o the t:niversity of San Diego Alumni Association.

ahead of schedule, with S20,000 of the $30,000 goal already in. Two successful telethons have increased participation. Serving with Fear as officers are Rosemary Johnston of Mira Mesa, vice-president; Pam Leighton of San Diego, secretary; and Tim. haw of San Diego, treasurer.

this city. He attended St. Augustine High School and was graduated from He 1s a member of Phi Kappa Theta A Sept 6 wedding is planned with a reception to follow at the Cuyamaca Club. The party decor featured the wedding-graduat on theme - love- birds and mortarboard With flow- er s.

Fear a 1963 graduate of the university, is a• deputy district attorney for San Diego County. Fear's first an- nouncement was that the Alumni Fund Drive is

ame Ins ra tors

For Paralegals

Single-s-flrst round: RusS'.\ll Wott/ IUSD) df. s,••• Bryant ! Flo Tech.), 6 2, 6-7, 6-1; Andrew Roe (USO) drew bve; Kon Slm0500 - son (USD) df. Schnoll-Adomson (Wssl Gtoro10), 6·2, 7 5; Roe Watts (USO) ctrew bve, Second round-t4Qrvev- S1mpson df . Estrodo·Ancierson (Chico Sf.L 6-J, 6-4, Roe-won, df. Sewell Rot>- ,nson (S011sburv St 6--4, 6-0

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