News Scrapbooks 1977-1979

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TING WELLNESS

2½ Million USO Nursing School Dedicat d

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ew The University of San Diego yes- terday dedicated a new $2½ million campus faciUty designed to respond to changing educational needs of the health care profession. It IS the .M Uriel )tarsh Hahn Pa VI· lion, housing the Philip Y. Hahn School of Nurs1n_g, a project dating back to 1972 in preliminary planning and made possible by matching grants from the Hahn Foundation and the US Department of Health, Education and Welfare. Hahn spoke briefly, calling the pavilion a memo- rial to Philip, her late husband. Public demand for more high- quality health services will lead the nursmg profession to higher levels of learning, the audience attending the afternoon ceremony was told. In a dedicatory address, the school's dean, Dr. Irene Sabelberg Palmer, predicted a 568 .re nt m-

caring ,-or healthy 'clients' When Catherine Schafer land- ed her first job as a registered nurse in 1935, she worked 12 hours a day and was paid 50 cents an hour. She pent most of her lime cleaning. TOday, Schafer, 65, is a full- time student at th Phillp Y Hahn School of 'ur. ing at the health, yet several she becomes Schafer s 'ell nt." "f'm learning how to convel"S(' With the elderly and what their problems are,'' Schafer explained. "You could call th sort of an in-the-field cornrnun1- cat10ns skills class • Schafer said he and Over- beck discus · everything from diet and blood pre ure to po i•

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There is a shortage of nurses with advanced degrees and Congress should support nurse education pro- grams, he said. Distinguished service awards were presented to Rosella M. Schlot· feldt, preofessor of nursing at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, and to Jessie M. Scott, assistant surgeon general and director of nursing for the Health Resources Administration, U.S. Pub- lic Health Service, Washington, D.C. Honorary doctorates of humane letters were conferred upon Mary Ann Garrigan, professor of nursing at Boston University, and Martha E. Rogers, professor of nursing at New York University. The dedicatory program continues today at USD with a forum on nursing Issues getting under way at 9:30 a.m.

care decis1on-maJdng areas, analyz- ing and counseling as well as han- d] ing administration. Palmer characterized the School of Nursing approach at USD, where the first class of mu-sing students was admitted in 1975 in former quar• ters, as "non-traditional" and capa- ble of leading to health services provided "in ways unthought of before." USD President Author Hughes noted that the new building - blessed by Bishop Leo T. Maher - "is the first major structural addi- tion to the campus since the early 1960s." Rep. Bob WilsOn, R-San Diego, called the occasion "a very import• ant dedication," complementing "one of the most successful nursing ' school programs in the West if not In the entire Umted States."

crease In health services degrees at the master's and doctoral levels in the next decade, based on results of a panel study commissioned by Con• gress. She said the study also indicated a 300 percent increase in nursing or health care careerists at the bac- calaureate level, with four years' college education, and a 48 percent increase in registered nurses, With at least two years of training She noted a Labor Department prediction that 240,000 additional jobs In nursing would open up by 1985. ' We are trying to develop an Intellectual acumen within the (nursing) student," Palmer said. _This would suggest, she said, that students who begin as nurses and pursue advanced education could move mto high professional health

ble emotional prob! ms The talks, said Schafer, keep Over• beck physically and emotionally healthy In a world where health care costs are nsing daily, and where 40-mlllion Americans are not protected by any type or health Insurance, many people stay away from doctors until they are experiencmg serious health problems. Accordmg to one offlcial at the Hahn School, it's what makes the health care system in our country "a stc ·ne s system" But it's a system that muses like Schafer are in the p of trying to Change. In her words, " ·ursmg today 1s preventative medicine."

Unlverslty of San Diego. She is working toward a bachelor':; de• gree in nursing - and dreams of the day he will set up her own private nursing practic . "Today nursing means getting out Into the public and promot- ing a f eling of wellness," Schafer ·aid. "It means looking at human beings from :;ocio- psycho-physiological points of view " urse today call people who they deal with clients - because many of them aren't s1 k. Our function is teaching them lo take care of th mselv so they don't get sick." Like most students working toward a d gree, Schafer is re- quired to get practical expen- ence In the field.

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Prize-Winning Student Artwork Will Be Displayed An exhibit of student artwork will be on display at the University of San Diego's Founder's Gallery at 7 p.m. Monday. Some 35 pieces have been selected for the exhibit which is to run through March 2. The gallery 1s open free of charge weekdays from IO a.m. to 4 p.m. a/7? MC•w>i>'l.;.,,l:..;4 mvers,ty of San Oiegolilm forum for ~ eb-' ruary: 7lh, Low ond Disorder; 14th, Freebie and The Bean_; 21st, And Now for Something Completely Different; 28th, Em igronts. Salo- mon Lecture llall . DeSa lcs Ha ll. 7:30 p.m. General admission: $1; students , soc. Info/ 291-6480 ext. 429fl. U . .

where 90-year•old O~rbeck comes in Overbeck is in good

- Alison DaRosa

!l ART ARENA g: .. .,,. 2 0 '< - _o-

Ceremony and socializing It "".'as a splendid day for ceremony and social occasion at the University of San Diego last Thurs- day First. from 1: 30 to 3 p.m. came the formal dedicati

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*Nurses

BY JA . JENNINGS TRIBUNE Art Writer

Viewers may feel uncom- fortable With fonns of ex- pression running the gamut from the traditional to the avant garde, teeter-totter- ing whimsically back and forth with seemlng)y little direction. In actuality, they are probably the most repre- sen ta live of rounds of creativity and a visit to two local galleries offers a smorgasbord. Founders Gallery of the Univ~rsity of San Diego is showmg an an San Diego student art exhibition the first of what the univ;rsity hopes to be a continuing competitive exhib1tlon The La Jolla Art Associa- tion is presenting works by Matthew C. Haverstroh and Ellen Lucero. The USD student show features 35 rks accepted from 102 v.orks entered bv 90 stuaen neges repre- sented are Point Loma Col- lege, San Diego City Col- lege, San Diego State Uni- versity, USD and also stu- dent works from the San Diego Academy of Fine Art. Juror for the exhibit was Jeri Coates, curator of the Space Gallery in Los Ange- les. In a statement on the exhibit, Coates said that the

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Student art show ,~If Ii SR,~ g,~!~!Y SAN D EGO - The 35 6fec- es of_ art by colle~e and uni- vers1ty students m San D1- ego County selected by a sistant director of the Space Jur~r from 100 entries in the Gallery in Los Angeles. Umvers1ty of_ ~an Diego stu- The first prize winner will d~nt compe~1tive exhibition be given a one-person exhi- w1ll be on display m USD's bition in the gallery in Feb- Founder's Gallery starting ruary 1980. Tues~ay, Feb. 6: The exhibit will be open to Winners of first through the public from 10 a.m. to 4 fourth place awards will be p.m. weekdays through announced at the opening re- March 2. reakfast semmar, to be held r1 ay, Feb. 23 at 7:30 a.m. in the Galle . Ro of La Valencia Hotel. na om The series of twelve meetings runs throu h 4, and is designed to give San D. bg _May P eople iego usmess . an opportunity to mteract . University of San Diego School of B . with the Bob Zelechowski C . ~mess faculty. of accounting at USO~ ~jj !ida:r:tant professor program will focus seminar. The f ~t~rn?l Revenue Code~:n:~:;~i~!3:;y~ 1 ~!e~~ .usmess taxes, such as minimum ta . capital gains, deductions, exclusions anxd, Pcrediltts, taxes. ena y . entire series of seminars mdiv1dual sessions cost $15 costs $150, but For information and d • • . the USD C ti . a V?nce reg1Stration, call on nwng Education Depart t 6480, extension 4318 _ men at 291- ception at 7 p.m. Monday, Feb. 5, in the gallery. The juror was Gerri Coats, as- "TAK~i~-11"1 L~ Jbll~ L~ lr Y11 Changes'~ is ~~vt:::~f San Diego UPDATE b [:Cde al I~com~ Tax on~ Umvers1ty of F "d

SPECIAL

Hlstor; o Nursing' to "CUrrent I ·ues and Social Trend Affecting ur ·ing." As a nurse who talked with h r f1rst patient n arty 35 year. ago, Palmer has exp nenced a bit of the history of nur As dean or the Hahn hool, she's helping detennm the is- sues and trend affedlng nursing today and those that will affect them m the futurr.

'GABRIELLE' BY CORNELIA NEVI1T

criteria of selection was based on technical compe- are _visually exciting and tence, freshness of ap- movmg; others are morose roacn ctnd "personal in· even macabre. ' volvement on the part of This is an inventi·ve the artist." young artist, but hi state- Award winners are Mary ment on his art leaves a bit Ann Avery for "Coffee of maturity to be desired. Break," an aquatint, and Haberstroh writes: "The Cornelia Nevitt for terms of yesterday do not "Gabrielle," an intaglio. apply. llne, form, object, Both are subtle pieces with shape, what do they mean? moods of isolation. They only reflect the atti- ~any of the pieces select- tude of yesterday; the doct- ed for exhibit are photo- rlnes, the theories, the con- graphs, and the juror com- cepts and all the dialectical ments that this is because trash that describes the art there was a predominance of yesterday." of photographic entries. Particularly intriguing So what's wrong with yes- photographs are those of terday, young man? rrom Alan Greenspan who shows ~he~ ~o you think your "Wine Glass" and "Roller mspiratmns came? And the Coaster," both of which frcedam to express them in offer precise clarity and your own way? dimension. Lucero's works are a flip Fun is noted in Steven of the coin_ They are realis- DIe ck ho ff' s untitled tic drawings of San Diego drypoint of nude figures ap- homes and other buildings. pearing to be entranced·in a · These are fmely detailed boogie. Also impressive is works. The artist expresses the untitled ink wash depic- a feelmg for sharing with tlon of a figure by Kimberly San D1egans the architec- Hayward. tural past and present The exhibit continues throughout the county. through Maren 2. depictions on canvas. Many

r1 q "SlC E~ FULI.Y Manag·ng'Change" will be the topic of the first Update breakfast seminar tomorrow at 7:30 a.m in the Galleria Room of the La Valencia Hotel. . The ·eries of 12 meetings runs through May 4, and 1s designed to give San Diego busmess people an opportunity to interact with the University of San Diego School of Business faculty. The entire enes of seminars costs $150, with individual sessions costmg $15. For information, call 291-6480, ext. 4318. ... 1'\ ze nto The Fu ure .! ot i.1e;/..J-'

RELIGION BRIEFS

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ans - State 'llnd Local'' Will be the subject of a symposium at 8 p m Lect Thursday at the Salomo~ ure Hall in De Sales Hall of USD, featurin Dartmouth economics J>r!. fessor Colin D Carn bell· Edward Clark, 1978 Lber'. tarian Party candidate for governor; Ralph Flynn Califonua TeaciJers Assocl Uon executive director and Assemblyman Law: re11ce Kapiloff, It Will be sponsored, by the USD law ticlJool .2.r 1::i.1/7'1 '1>1tor..

Expert To G

1 oint Loma.

Local Savoyards will stage "Iolanthe" tonight, tomorrow night and Sunday afternoon at the church (Which means that the congregatio~ will_ worship Sur,day morning in a settmg that suggests the British Houses of Parliament.) The production benefits the church's music fund. .,,,,.,,., • • • More than 50,000 hours of volun- teer servic_e were logged by the UCSD M~d1cal Center in 1978, and ~he_ Medical Center- Auxiliary has mvited nearly 700 volunteers to a Recognition Brunch March 1 at Va- cation Village. A special nod will go to the 244 men and women who gave 100 hours (or more) each. Top volunteer is Jo Zolezzi, who has ra~ked up somet.1ling like 4,000 hours m the past eight years.

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The Rabe ob works at the La Jolla Art Association include wood sculptured forms and heavily textured works, as well as imagery

.. S.D-u.,,;,,. • :1. , .2,1/,..1 Disco Dimensions,' dance with built-in dancing lessons, 1s ready to roll tonight in Serra Hall at the University of San Diego. (The party was originally sched- uled for Founders Hall; the new location is in the Student Union area.) . USD Auxiliary members are put- ting the party together, and cochair- women Colleen Yancey and Marilyn Pavel have booked Don Benjamin to teach the fancy footwork. DJ Jim Nolan will supply the music It's Gilbert & SUllivan time again at All Souls' Episcopal Church in a supper

Friday, February 9, I 979

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THE SAN DIEGO UNION

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SAN DIEGO OBITUARIES Ida Mercado Dies; Taug~t At USD ~rs. Ida L. Mercado, 69, of North Park a native San Diegan, died Tue day in a hospital. '

\' And, It's "Disco Dimensions" Friday for mem- bers of the University of San Diego Auxiliary and guests at Founders Hall on the campus. Don Benjamin will instruct dancing and Jim Nolan will provide the music. Mrs. Charles W. Melville Jr. is taking reservations. " · 2. /y/77 1;,. u11 ,e. D1sco-D1mens1ons" Is the name of the su dance the University oJ San Diego Auxiliary :rm~ for Feb. 23 at Founders Hall on the USD cam And on hand to teach disco steps to the uninitif with be dance mstructo Donald Bemjamin. ti~- Charles W. Me1ville Jr. is taking reserva- ,,_ • . EVENING TllllUNE

~vemment Fi nance Sympoaium, including panel members Ralph Flynn of the California Teachers Associarion, \'I~ Dartmouth economics professor Colin Campbell, Libertarian attorney Ed Clarie, and Assemblyman Larry Kapiloff, will debate "Financing of State and Local Government: How Much and What Kind ofTaxes Arc Needed!" Thursday, February l5, 8 p.m.. Salomon Lecture Hall, USO, Alcala Parle. 291-6480 x4296. 20 T 1 ell

Mrs. Mercado was a graduate of Our Lady of Peace Academy and at the age of 50 was graduated from the University of San Diego. She was the ,head of the physical education department at USD for 15 years. She retired in 1974. Her survivors, all of San Diego, Include her husband, Manuel; two sons, Hilbert and Raymond; two sisters Mrs. Angelina Mendoza and Mrs. Madeline Hall, and tw~ grandchildren, A requiem Mass will be celebrated at 9 a.m. today at Our Lady.of Angels Roma olic Church. Entomb ent will be in the Ho! Cross ausol m.

February 20, 1979

I~ e der- u And Now for Somethin1.t Completely Diffen,nt," , film featuring Monty Python, w,11 be rcened Wcdne.day, FebruJry 21. ?· \O p.m., Salomon Lectur HRII, DcSalcs llall, U 0, Al .,la r~rk. 291-64 0 x429

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