News Scrapbooks 1977-1979

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I •11').-1~1 REROS DRILL WESTERNERS WAIT

A-12 • University of Third Age seeks to perk up senior cr·•,zens EVINIHO 111 UNI Diego, Thursday, July 27, 1978 • •

USD, USIU Look Forward To 1978 Football Season By HANK WESCH a consistent rushing attack look at freshman Johnny stoffWnter, TlltSGn DleOO UniOII Nhich would pay dividends Dodge, from Hawaii. The re- The grtnd has begun for .n the won-lost column port on Dodge, Deniston the University of San Diego .On defense, end Greg Per- relates, is that he rushed for football team, and it is about kins and linebackers Jim 220 yards and scored four to begin for their counter- Gonzalez and Barney Rumps touchdowns in only 12 car- parts at United States Inter- are the key returnees. ries in the final game of his national University. Um~d Slates Internatlon- high school career. With an opening-game al Umverslty football coach "Our problem last year date with Cal Lutheran on Shan Den1Ston, meanwhile, (when the Westerners went Sept.9 rapidly approaching is eagerly awaiting a turnout 2-9) was that we didn't have coach Bill Williams' USD he expects to number from any running backs," Denis- team completed its first 75-85 players Monday to ton says. "We hope that week of pre-season practice open dr1lls for his Westerner won't be the problem this yesterday. USIU, which club. year." starts its regular season a Candldate_s are expected Deniston expects 6-5, 215- week later than USD wlll from such diverse geograph- pound Wayne Adams, a gather its squad next'Mon- teal areas as Korea, J_Iawaii, transfer from Pittsburgh, to day to begin preseason Alaska, Canada, Mexico and take over the quarterback- work. Samoa. While Deniston ad- ing duties though he'll get The thing both schools mils that many of the re- competition from senior re- covet is a winning season, cru1ts he has yet to see m the ~urnee_ Gerald Thom.as and something neither has been flesh, what he has. heard mcommg freshman Jun Fos- a party to in recent years. about them makes him anx- ter from Santana. There is reason for hope in 1ous for the opportunity. Neither of last year's al- that regard at both schools •·we have three guys that ternating starters, Jim but only the actual confron'. run the 100 in 9.7 or better," Harris and Roy Blakeway, tallons of upcoming satur- says Deniston, and he lists elected to come out for foot- day afternoons and evenings incoming junior college ball this season. will determine if that hope transfer Larry Morgan from Deniston will be taking a was founded on fact. Georgia and freshman hard look at transfer Stan USD went 3-7 last season James Johnson from Alaska Brewer from Barstow JC at its best record since 1971'. In the group. wide receiver and has senior Experience at key positions Add1t1onally, Dcnl_ston is Sam Williamson retu~ing at is the major factor in the eagerly awaiting hlS first another receiver position. Toreros' chances of improv- ing on that record In 1978.

Jim Gordon, a tall, dapper per on who has many interests, everything from swimming to ball- room dancing, from bridge to foreign languages, said he joined the group for sev- eral reasons_ "I thought the program would offer bOth stimula- tion and information, and give me a chance to meet other people," he added. If the firSt day's activities were any indication, Gor- don and h15 Jellow students are in for a fulfilling time in the next five weeks. I \ I

at University of San Diego. The class is for senior citizens. - Photo by Barry Fitzsimmons

, E lOR Cl.ASS - Students of the University of the Third Age listen carefully to their instructor

tud nt at , said he ha been In San Diego for !1v months "he moved here from San Francisco. , nd admit 'I'm not a ,.ery communlcatlv person. I fmd it diffiNII to make frtends." ~·or that r ason, sh feels

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au you" M, lachl Raf erty, who I. coord,natln ntverslty o! th Thtrd Age at U D. aid th first day went well "Tile vtbra lions arc good," h Id 'Th<' people who ar h re are very grat ful they got Into th w had bOut 300 appllr.ant who wanted to nroll. •Surprtsm y, many r 1 ktng for a regular tine, v. hlC'h we hav tn cla ' . A sch I is I porta t to th m You v.ould th '1k they w.inted a fn: r system, but that Isn't true V.H Krulak, retlr Ma- nne Corp genC>ral who brought the oneept to the attention of D officials, sat In on some th class- e "The ba le Idea of the Univ ty of the Third Ag I first to provide n unlver- Jty environment· second, to brtng about mental and phy cal stimulation, and third, to mix th young and the old In the same progr m," h said "With th se thre mgred• t nt , th con pt should be uccc r 1. • During a br as mcla , some of th stt ents talked about why they jo1n d up. "For me, J hav a multi- tude of lnteres , ' re- marked Munet Patch n. "I bicycle, I swim and I walk a lot. As an ex-Ney. Yorker, I m used to walking a lot. 'l hav anbOunded ener• m b cau th udents Id they w re gy, and I hop to runn 1th! en rgy and Ir.' ·rests lnto on or tv.o n lds that wth make m a proc!Jctlv part or the com umty I don t want to be on the penphcry" Hugh and Eileen H:m n one of four coup! taking the cours , aid they have been tied to the chore:; of fixing up an old r home for the past r wyears and they look upon the U nlversity or the Tit•rd Ag as a welcome ion Winlker, tl!e oldest

Williams can build an of- f en se around returning quarterback Jim Valenzue- la, who threw for 1,043 yards and five touchdowns last season, and two returning senior receivers. I Pat Iaccino led the in receptions two seasons ago and was plan- ning a repeat performance before separating a shoulder in last year's season opener and sitting out six weeks or action. In Jaccino's absence, John Dudek led the team in recep• tions last year with 29 for 377 yards and three touchdowns. The two leading ground gainers of 1977, Nils Ericson and Joffre Chess, also · return. But _Ericson's team- leading rushmg total of 340 is Toreros

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usD t:~r~hfu/., Gaslamp Quarter A ~3,!JO? grant has been given to the !-7mvers1ty of San Diego by the Region~I Employment Training Consortium (RETC) for hiring and training 17 persons to assist in developing historical and cultural information about the downtown 16 _ block Gaslamp Quarter. Heading the project is Dr. Ray Brand:s, U§D fldminis~ IOr the h1stor1cal research project. The grant, which lasts two and a half months, will finance four distinct teams. I One will examine sites for possible J!Se as a business history museum a tre~tcar depot and museum and 'an 'old-time post office. Another will wmp~e an !nventory of historical n~te~1al, while a third will look at mildmgs ~o document their histories ttt~ ~roVJde data for their cer- tficatron as historic landmarks. A fourth team is writing a history the San Diego streetcar system, area 1886-1955 and ,·s gath . . f . • ermg in ormat1on on technical aspects of tr~lley systems, styles of cars and uniforms. ''!his program is a community serVJce of USD-a way of helping loc~I government do something it can t do alone, and at the same time olf?r employment to research assistants E• , , .• .,.,,.,.rle th . skills " Dr .--- eir

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DS,ee~linQ s1c1 ns Experienced musicians are being sought by the University of San Diego to play in its Chamber Orchestra. Prac- tice begins Sept. 13 in Camino Theater on campus and will continue each Wednesday nightfrom 7:30 to 10 p.rn.

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University of San Diego Aux1hary, one- ay wor s op ·n Indication of the improve- Aug. 24, USD's Admin,stration Board Room, to address nent needed In the offensive 5,000 invitations to its 22nd annual fashion luncheon on line for the Torero' to build Sent ?R

SOUTHERN CROSS, August 3, 1978-3

Bishop-elect Phillip Stroling will be the first ~ishop of the new Catholic Diocese of Son Bernardino. Pope Paul splits Catholic ioce e The counties of San Bernardino and. Ri~ers~e have been separated from the San Diego C~tholi.c Diocese to form the new Diocese of San Bernardino. The Rev. Phillip Straing, pastor of HoJr Ro9:8ry Church in San Bernardino, has been named the flI'st b1Shop of the new diocese. . The official announcement was made last week Washington, D.C. by Archbilhop Jean Ja~ot, apos'?lic delegate, representative of Pope Paul VI m the Umted States. - 1- dire tor According to James Bastis, com~un1ca ions for the San Diego diocese, the okl D10cese of S_an J?iego was separated because of the gro~th in population. 1t has experien::ed since it was formed m 1936. At the tune of its separation from the Archdiocese of Los ~eles, SBJc1 Bastis, it had only 63 parilhes. The total had increased to 172 by 1978. - 1o ger "Because of the growth of popul!tion w~ no,, n . were able to keep up in the area of social services, BastJS sa~1~hip Leo Maher will remain bishop of the Diocese of San Diego which now will consist of San Diego and Imperial counties only. The Diocese of San Bernardino will occupy 27 ~W square miles, with 235,665 Catholics~ a total popu!8~1on f 1258 800 Some 128 diocesan pnests' 43 rel~10us ~~ts ~nd 282 nuns serve a total of 85 par~hes and one mission. Nearly 9,000 childrenattend_Catholic elementary and secondary schools in the new diocese. The Diocese of San Diego nwowwill occupy 8,496 _square miles, with 354,453 Catholics in a to~al population~ of 1,704,700. There are 191 di>cesan pne~ls, 64 relig10us priests and 423 nuns serving in rn panshe~ and thrl:e missions. Almost 13,000studenls attend catholic schools 111 the diocese. - di Bastis said no personnel at the San Diego ocesan office will be fired because of the split. "The staff already was at a skeleton level." . Straling is a native of San Bernardino. A ~aduate of Newman ''il;'.h School in Fontana, he studied for the priesthood at St. Francis Seminary and Immaculate Heart Seminary, both in San Diego. _ . He was ordained by Bishop Charles_ Buddy, fll'St_ b1Shop of the San Diego diocese, in 1959. Stralingalso 1:ce1v~ hlS bachelor's degree in philosophy from the Uruvers1ty of San Diego and master's degree in counseling from San Diego State University. . A fonner campus chaplail !it San Diego State University, Straling as executive . secre~ry or the second dioc an synod for the San Dll!go diocese.

students of"the third age" an opportun- ity to return to campus for a five-week series of courses. At left, William Young is assisted by David Navarro. Galliano, a graduate student. and Navarro, a senior, are among 10 USO interns who are helping with the sessions.-SC

YOU'LL LIKE IT-Jo Anne Galliano, second from right, seems to be reassuring Natalie Goodman about the "University of the Third Age," a pilot program for retired persons which began at the University of San Diego on July 24. The program is giving 55

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: Mrs. Robert t. Ep ten of El Caj~n is se~ng ~s chairman of the University of San Diego Auxiliary s 2nd annual fashion show Sept. 28 at El Cortez Iotel. She was appointed by Mrs. James F . Mulva- • ey auxiliary president. . : The fashion show, "Fashion Flashes," will ?enef1t the USO Fmancial Aid program which assists 56 ( '.percent of the undergraduate students. . : The USD Auxiliary has a membership of 375 women from throughout the co~nty who are mter• ested in projects of the university . Mrs. Mulvaney ,lias been active in the group for some years and her husband serves on the Law School Board of Visitors. Their twin sons, Thomas and Robert, are graduates •of the USO Law School, and a son Larry 1s a student : in the School of Business Administration. Mrs Mulvaney has also served m numerous community organizations including Globe _Gmlders, Women's Association for the Salk Institute and , COMBO.

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PUBLIC-EMPLOYEE BAN

Mayor urges strike initiative Public employees who threat- en to deprive taxpayers of es- sential services such as fire pro- tection are "beneath contempt," and a statewide ballot initiative is needed to stop such practices, Mayor Wilson told a college class yesterday. measure in his unsuccessful bid for the Republican nomination for governor, it failed to win a place on the Qallot.

Unless voters take the issue into their own hands, as they did with tax relief through Proposi- tion 13, public employees even- tually will win the right to strike, Wilson said. The Legislature, influenced by support from labOr, will contin- ue passing laws leading in the direction of compulsory arbitra- tion and legally sanctioned strikes, Wilson said, unless tax- payers demand otherwise. The mayor said Assembly Bill 2744, pending before the state Senate, is an example. It would allow government employers to negotiate with employees for agency shops, whereby employ- ment would be contingent upon payment of fees to a union.

"The people are the only ones who can provide an antidote to the increasing power grab" by public employees' unions, Wil- son said. Add· · mg abOut 45 people at the l ... versity of San Diego's University of the Third Age, Wilson said a statewide initia- tive explicitly prohibiting public employees' strikes, if placed on the ballot, would be approved overwhelmingly. San Diego and San Francisco have such provisions in their charters, Wilson said, but abOut 400 other jurisdictions through- out the state do not. Petitions for a stale initiative

MAYOR WILSON

to ban such strikes were circu- lated last year but, though Wil- son vigorously supported the

, - AUXILIARY LEADERS - Mrs. James F. Mul- vaney, left, and Mrs. Robert M. Epsten head up _ -maj?r activities of the University of San Diego • Auxiliary for the commg year. Mrs. Mulvaney is • auxilia. J president and Mrs. Epsten is chairman .._of the '7~ fashion show to benefit the USO Fin<,r I Aid program(

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