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April 1972 BEAR FACTS- PUBLI5HED BY OCEANIDS - UCSD ~OMEN Vol. X, No. 7 . I I_. Editor - Betty Shor, 2655 Ellentown Road, La Jolla (453-0334). 0 Calendar Editor - Cynthia Travis, 61~ Avenida Cresta, La Jolla (459-2195). Subscti.D.tions and circulation - Sue Brune, 2505 Ellen town Road, La ·Jol~a J.._453-§.§36) __ Staff - Sally Spiess, Adelaide Boo~L F·rieda !Jrey ~ Clara Green, Donna Hawkins, Helen Raitt; ·. Polly Wooster, Barbara James, JBe!ty Goldberg, Rhgd? Stultz. -- Oceanid m~mb~rship which incl~des BEAR FACTS $s ~--· BEAR FACTS- subscription $3 .for non-members. Deadlines: news items, 15th; calendar items, 20th of each month. ;.

ANNUAL LUNCHEON AND MEMBERSHIP MEETING BY-LAW REQUESTED The Oceanids annual spring luncheon meeting A revision in the Oceanids By-Laws has will he held at the International Center on been suggested by the Board to be submitted Matthews Campus on Thursday, May 16. This is to the membership at the May luncheon meeting. our opportunity to view and use this beautiful The change would enable the board to begin new building at UCSD. collecting dues at the May membership meeting Free babysitting will· be provided in the as well as through the summer. The revised nursery school in the International Center. By-Law would read: Please indicate on the reservation form if you ARTICLE IV - Dues plan to use the babysitting service and the Annual dues shall be determined by the number of children to be cared for. membership. Dues are payable June 1 and Lunch will consist of a buffet salad shall be considered delinquent December 1. bar, rolls, coffee and crepes for dessert. This will be followed by election and instal­ lation of officers, and a talk by Dr. Ann Peters, CAMPUS CHILD CARE - THE STEP CHILD FULL OF WOES pediatric consultant at Children's Health (AND WHOAS) Center and clinical associate professor of Ann DeHuff Peters and Mary Decker pediatrics at UCSD. Joan Jacobs is luncheon The articles in the March issue of BEAR chairman. FACTS describing the programs on the UCSD campus lnterest group chairmen are reminded for preschool-age children have prompted us that annual reports of each group are no longer to outline for the membership of Oceanids presented at the luncheon, but should appear some of the problems facing young parents and in the May 1 issue of BEAR FACTS. Please college administrations all over the United deliver to Betty Shor by April 15. Reports States. Child care needs of University students should summarize the year's activities briefly are not new, but the upsurge of requests for but thoroughly. They may be written by a child care on the campus has been increasingly member other than the chairman. Typed or felt during the past 10 years and seems, like neatly handwritten copies are fine. many other things, to be moving westward. Luncheon reservations are being accepted A few eastern campuses have had successful now. Mark the date on your calendar and child care programs operating as student- send your check with the tear-off sheet below. parent cooperatives since the days qf World We hope to see you on May 16. War II, but they have not been widely publicized and have always had to scrape along on pitifully small budgets. The UCSD Campus has had several "beginnings" REMINDER in child care, the first being the International The Children's Easter Party and Egg Hunt Nursery School, which serves a need for part­ will be held April 1st, from 10 a.m. to 12 m. time care and is essentially an enrichment on the south lawn of the Humanities (Cluster) experience for the child. The second is the Library on Revelle campus (not the ~ew Central Mesa Housing nursery, which has been active University Library). Children from ages 3 for about three years as a parent-cooperative to 10 are welcome; each should bring 6 colored service. The third campus effort resulted eggs. (continued on page S)

Name Phone

Number of reservations at $3.00 each;

Babysitter needed? ~~~~~~no. Number of children

Mail, with your check made out to Oceanids, to Mrs. B. Zweifach, 8811 Nottingham Place, La Jolla, CA 92037,

1 ' FIELD DAY AT THE GARDENS For prese-rvfr1g-wllderness Gardens, c.ontri­ Betty Shor butions to SWAP are welcome, in lump sums or Field day is Sunday, April 16 for Wilder­ in pledges for periodic payment. Contributions ness Gardens -- a day to walk through a north­ are tax-deductible. Checks may be sent to county garden gone wild. Almost doomed last SWAP P. 0. Box 104, La Jolla, CA 92037, or year to become a trailer park, this beautiful to SWAP, P. O. Box 880, Escondido, CA 92025. tract is on the verge of rescue, and its friends are appealing for funds. The 584-acre parcel of unique beauty is located on state highway 76, ten rr1 iles east of Interstate 15 (U. S. 395), in the San Luis Rey River Valley, NEW SCHOOL OPENS two miles from Pala. Betty Shor Wilderness Gardens is a remarkable combin­ The members of People to People are ation of native and exotic plants. The pro­ busily mailing letters, for money. During perty was developed in the 1950's by Manchester April they will send letters to the many Boddy, who intended it as a second to his throughout the University and city who have lovely Descanso Gardens. Planted by him and shown interest in one of this interest now adapted to the live-oak countryside are group's favorite exchange projects -- Escuela Superior de Ciencias Marinas, which is part thou~ands of tall camellias, almost trees themselves, and holly, ornamental roses, of Universidad Aut~noma de Baja . Clivia, Pittosporum, Pyracantha, Oleander, (If you can say all that without a slip, you are probably on their mailing list!). Bot: t lebrush, pampa~; grass, and, of course, eucaJyotus. All have blended and tangled The purpose of the project is to cele­ brate the inauguration of the Punta Morro with the native :;hrubs and flowers, at their campus of the Ensenada school, officially best ln early spring. Deer, raccoons, bobcats, dedicated on February 24. The new campus, on foxe and other mammals, as well as doves, a piece of unspoiled seacoast just north of m,,iL:, 'uucks and other water birds, and infinite Ensenada, provides to the ocean-oriented smaller birds flnci this site a choice haven. students a much more pleasant and expandable 'i'he corn3ervati on group that is working valiantly to orcscrvc Wilderness Gardens is setting than their former downtown site. Mary Carol Isaacs, chairman of People to s0AP, Sm~ll W~lderness Area Preserves, a tate­ People, and Richard Schwartzlose, representing wide citizens' or~anization founded in February, 1971. Among Oceanid members who Scripps Institution, attended the dedication program. arP involved arP Rally Spiess, Frieda Urey, Mary Carol Isaac~, and Betty Shor .. As its participation in celebrating the SWAP's record at the Gardens, its first school's new location, People to People wants orri~Pr:t jn San !JiPt:n County, is remarl-rnb1e, to contribute generously to the oceanography but' ju:::;t a beginning. 'I'he group executed ~n library there, especially toward acquiring option to buy the charming plot last yea~_in sets of recent volumes of pertinent scientific time to prevent it being sold for a trai~er journals. Donations of cash and of technical park and has successfully met several option journals for the Punta Morro campus may be deadlines. The ite has recently been added made to People to People, c/o Richard Schwartz­ to the county regional park plan. SWAP hopes lose, 1267 Ritter Hall, Scripps Institution to acquire the land outright, in part with match­ of Oceanography, P. O. Box 109, La Jolla, CA ing funds from county, state, and federal 92037. Donations are tax-deductible. sources. Their intent is to deed the land to Members of People to People are also the County of as a limited-access shaping plans and looking forward to the nature preserve for educational and scientific annual visit of students and staff of Escuela use. To hold their option and to obtain Superior de Ciencias Marinas on Cinco de Mayo matching funds, SWAP must acquire $250,000 by (May 5), when old friends and new are expecte~ August 31. for a day of talking shop and matching skill The purpose of the field day on April 16 at soccer. is to widen the circle of supporters of Wilder­ ness Gardens, by showing this remarkable parcel of garden and history to others who will INTERNATIONAL CENTER FURNISHINGS help in the drive to save it. The International Center proudly announces that they have received money from the 'The bits of history surviving there Student Center to carpet the living room and span all of Caljfornia's Jays, from Indian lounge areas. Decorators Joan Bernstein and petroglyphs, to the stone remains of a commer­ Deborah Swaifler have picked out a smashing cial flour mill, to early farm ponds that have design. All are invited to inspect the new bl~nded into the landscape as natural lakes, addition next month. to inexolicable Japanese charact~rs on ome Plans are under way to carpet one of the of the live oaks, to the startling camellias bedrooms, thanks to a donation to the Center that find the site congenial. Only the rush from People to People. This bedroom will also of city frenzy is lacking, and that is what need two beds, desk, chest, wardrobe and lamp. SWAP hopes to spare the Gardens. If any of these can be donated, please call the Wilderness Gardens will be open from Center (ext. 1940) and arrangements will be 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on April 16, with friends made to collect the items. of SWAP on hand to welcome visitors. You may Colorful perennials of all kinds would enioy a on the several trails through st~'oll be gratefully accepted to plant now in the th~ ~rees and over the hills, and picnic space Center entrance. will be available.

'2 25 YEARS WITH UC except employees of the University Hospital. Campus Business Manager, Mr. Joseph W. It has payroll deduction for persons paid by (Joe) Hutchison, will retire officially from the State Controller and the SDSC Foundation, University service as of May 19, 1972 with his but not for those paid by UCSD. University last working day at the office being March 9, Hospital employees are eligible to join the 1972. A native of Kentucky, he served in the San Diego County Employees Credit Union, Navy during World War II. He came to California which also has offices at 5555 Mildred Street in 1946. Joe joined the Scripps Institution (phone 296-2126). of Oceanography on March 1, 1961 as the Administrator of Central Services, having The Newcomers are honoring Ellen Revelle previously served the University on the wife of Harvard Prof. Roger Revelle, long-time Berkeley Campus in a variety of capacities, Director of Scripps and namesake of Revelle including Principal Superintendent in charge College, at a Coffee April 14 (see calendar). of all campus Physical Plant activities. From September, 1958 until May, 1960 Joe was granted special Leave of Absence from the LEST WE FORGET University by President Clark Kerr to serve Flip-flop! Flip-flop! Can you imagine as Director of Physical Plant for the Eighth or do you remember -- a trio of bea~tiful Olympic Games at Squaw Valley, California. girls, clad in swimsuits and swimfins It was UCSD's good fortune to have Joe pirouetting, unbelievably gracefully, across aboard when development 6f the undergraduate the Sumner Auditorium stage? (Sumner was camous commenced. January 1, 1966 his title so new that we hadn't learned not to wear was· officially changed to Campus Business certain shades that clashed with its orange Manager and through the years he has seats.) successfully guided the campus affairs In 1960, 1961, and 1962, Oceanids sponsored through many delicate and difficult business annual performances of FLIP, original musical maneuvers. revues that satirized Scripps events and Over 250 friends and associates at UCSD personalities while underscoring Roger honored Joe, his wife Mildred, and daughter Revelle's motto: Oceanography is fun! Nancy at a reception on Friday, March 10 Nothing was sacred, as audience and performers at the La Jolla Holiday Inn. Among those in well knew, for almost everyone in the cast attendance were Assistant Vice President and production was a Scrippsian, or related. John Stanford; Assistant University Materiel Madeleine (Miller) Mahnken, then at Scripps Manager Miss Mary Ann Johnson; Mr. Sernard and who has recently returned to it, wrote Sisco, Vice Chancellor - Administration; Dr. the revues, which were designed to use the Paul Saltman, Vice Chancellor - Academic varied talents of Scrippsians, designed the Affairs; Mr. H. D. Johnson, Vice Chancellor - scenery and costumes, and was general director. Business and Finance; Dr. Roy Harvey' Pearce, Lorayne Buck did almost everything else. Acting Dean of Graduate Studies and Research. A well qualifi~d musician, who had played The Hutchison s were presented with a portable cello with the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra, color TV and Joe was given a 25-year service Lcrayne wrote the musical arrangements for pin and Certificate of Appreciation s~gned two of the FLIP performances, was the pianist by President Hitch and Chancellor McElroy and for all of them, and arranged and supervised a bound book containing 172 testimonial letters all rehearsals -- a five-month schedule for of appreciation for his service and friendship. a cast up to 50, while she was working full­ Joining in this tribute was the Office of time. It was an all-family involvement for The Regents of the University, the President Lorayne, who had long been accompanist for of the University, past President Kerr, and her husband, Fred's, classes of voice students, the present and past Chancellors of UCSD. some of whom were also cast in FLIP. Fred himself was the musical director of the performances. The Bucks' daughter, son-in-law, CREDIT UNION ON CAMPUS and grandson were all in the cast, and Lorayne's The Oceanographers' Credit Union has father ("80 years young") was a favorite of moved onto the campus, and is now located in all with his old-time banjo soloes. Room 7, International Center, Matthews Lorayne herself began work at Scripps Campus. The new phone number is 453-2380. in 1951 and was secretary in the Marine Life Office hours are 12:15 -- 1:00 PM, Monday Research Group just before she entered the through Friday, and 5:15 -- 6:30 PM, Monday hospital in mid-January of this year. She through Thursday. The Oceanographers' Credit died on February 10. A fund for purchase Union is open to all UCSD employees and their of books for the Scripps library and a fund families, except employees of the University to plant a tree on the Scripps campus have Hospital, and to all federal employees on been established in Ld.rayne's name. Contri­ campus (including the NMFS Fisheries-Oceano­ butions for either may be sent to Ann Tokar, graphy Center). Payroll deduction is available Bldg. T-6, Scripps Institution, P. 0. Box 109, for both savings and for loan payments by La Jolla, CA 92037. UCSD employees. Two other credit unions offer lending and saving services to some UCSD people. Sloan Fellowships were awarded to two mem­ The USE (University and State Employees) bers of the Chemistry Department: Dr. John Credit Union has its main office at 5555 c. Wheeler and Robert L. Vold. These fellow­ Mildred Street, San Diego (phone 297-1838). ships are a two-year grant given to a young It is ooen to UCSD and State of Californi~ scientist to be used any way he chooses to employees (including San Diego State College further his research. and the SDSC Foundation) and their families, 3 AFRICA IN SAN DIEGO sponsors animal-oriented tours to Africa and Betty Shor to the Gal~pagos, and offers summer classes Just beyond the rise stood six ungainly for children. tattletail-gray rhinos, two chocolate ones, Now is the time to join or to extend your and one piebald -- though to zoologists membership in the Zoological Society, for on they were all white rhinoceroses. Dust and May 1 the rates will increase. Present cost waterhole mud had done the rest. On the is $12 a year for dual membership (children slopes beyond were several white-tailed under age 16 are always admitted free), gnus and zebras, and under the live oak $10 for single membership. The increased tree were a number of Thomson's gazelles. rates from May 1 will be $16 for dual and Live oak tree? In Africa? No, in San $14 for single membership. Prompt renewals Diego Wild Animal Park, the conservation each year reduce the rate $2. What you get project of the San Diego Zoological Society, for your money is (are): unlimited free to be opened to the public May 10. It's admission to the Balboa Park Zoo -- and after well worth a visit this spring before the May 10 to the Nairobi Village complex of the official opening, because many of the animals Wild Animal Park; five passes each year for in the park are readily visible from the friends and visitors; a subscription to the 11 sidewalk superintendent 11 overlook. monthly magazine Zoonooz; and an annual The Wild Animal Park is located on picnic in September for the membership meeting. Highway 78, in San Pasqual Valley between Phone the Zoo (234-5151) -- or better yet, Escondido and Ramona, well marked from visit it -- to get your membership applica­ Interstate 5 for all turns. Already adjusting tion. to their new home there are more than 550 Handy hints: zoophilic San Diegans enjoy exotic animals and birds. their Zoo the most by visiting often, but The emphasis at the Wild Animal Park outside the peak tourist seasons of summer is conservation, especially for the reproduc­ and spring vacation. Small children enjoy tion of endange~ed forms of wildlife. But short, frequent visits to the Zoo much more animah; still common in their native lands, than a wearing all-day one. Birthday parties ucli as lions and elephants, will also be there are great fun. It's a novel experience included to complete the habitats (can you to drop in on the Zoo on a rainy day to see imagine a zoo without those?). The theme how the animals react to the rain. L~ largely Afr L ca, and is emphasized by the Nairobi Villafe visitor center, still under construction. Alongside the village is an THE DOCENTS ARE GOIN_(). PLACES enormous flight cage, more than twice the Since its beginning in 1965, the docent ize of the Balboa Park Zoo's rain forest, program at the Aquarium-Museum has grown from and exhibits of animals not suited to the 4 docents and 16,000 school students to the extensive open plains areas, such as gorillas. present 82 docents and 41,000 students. This When the park opens in May, visitors year, over 100 people attended the eight will tour the plains by monorail, completed lectures and examination given in October, in February with the placing of the final rail 1971. The opening weeks were spent in becoming bolt, a golden one, by Mayor Pete Wilson e~ucated to the ways of fishes, going on tours and Zoological Society president, Anderson with the Senior Docents, and getting acquainted Borthwick. Not all of the park's 1800-acre with each other. Sixty-two of the newcomers expanse of rolling hills will be visible from decided this was their "thing" and with 20 the monorail ride, but certainly more than Senior Docents are engaged in imparting enough to absorb your interest at one time. knowledge to an average of 250 students daily. Having seen some of the African national For the third consecutive year we parks myself last year, I was surprised on exchanged behind-the-scenes tours with the a recent visit to San Diego's Wild Animal Museum of Man Docents. After a fascinating Park at the similarities in landscape. It loo~ at their "bone room 11 in February, we is like a small piece of African plains set reciprocated in March with a slide talk by Don down in southern California, though I cer­ Wilkie on collecting fishes in the Socorro tainly didn't see that many rhinos, white or Islands. Leighton Taylor explained briefly black, in one place in Africa. The Wild the operation of the scanning electron Animal Park has a herd of twenty of the endan­ microscope, and escorted a group to Sverdrup gered white or square-lipped rhinoceroses, Hall where the instrument was seen in opera~ now recovering from the brink of extinction tion. We also entertained "The Covey" from in southern Africa through dedicated conser­ the Museum of Natural History in February on vation efforts there. As with other endan­ their annual trip here, and will visit the gered animals in the Wild Animal Park, the La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art Docents rhino herd, expected to increase naturally, after Spring vacation. will provide a nucleus for specimens for Our first "fund raising and getting to other zoos and possible even for populating know each other" party was a huge success. areas where the animal has been extinguished. Many husbands, who couldn 1 t understand their The San Diego Zoo, world-renowned for wife's interest in things marine, were heard its numbers and variety of animals (to say to express such deep thoughts as "Wow" and nothing of its visitors!), is quite an "How about that?". The verdict was to have establishment in many ways. Besides its more such gatherings, and one is in the unique hummingbird display, and its walk­ planning stage for June. through flight cage and rain forest, its Janet McNeill skyride and humorous bus drivers, the Zoo operates an extensive animal research program, 4 '

5 (from page .5) In spite of all these problems, campus WORKSHOP FQR TUTORS IN "AMERICAN ENGLISH" child-care programs are becoming part of A two-day intensive workshop will be American university and college life today, and h~ld April 11th and 12th in La Jolla for any­ I suspect that they are here to stay. On some one interested in tutoring foreign scholars campuses, the faculty wives' clubs have provided and ~heir wives in conversational English in significant help. While respecting the right Aetion program, which has been a function of the participating parents to determine of the Office of International Education at educational policy that affects their children, UCSD since 1965. Currently, approximately faculty ~ives have professional, volunteer, 30 students from eleven different countries and fundraising capabilities available to offer. are being tutored. The major requirements All three UCSD campus efforts have demonstrated for tutors are sensitivity to the needs of need for help. With the range of talents anf visitors to this country, an articulate use interests among the faculty wives of UCSD, of standard English, and the time to give two or three hours ·a week to tutoring. perhaps an "Interest Group in Ch.ild Care" would Knowledge of a foreign language is not not be amiss. required, although it is sometimes helpful, as is a background of travel outside the u. s. . SLATE OF CANDIDATES Dr. Robert Kaplan and Dr. Charles W. The Oceanids nominating committee, chaired Gay, who direct the English Communication by Mary Watson, announces the following slate Program for Foreign Students at the Univer- of candidates for next year. sity of Southern California and who are regional President - Jane Gibson (Mrs. Carl H.) officers of the National Association for Vice-president - Pat Austin (Mrs. Roswell Foreign Student Affairs, will be guest speakers w.) at the workshop. Also on the agenda will Secretary - Rose Baily (Mrs. Norman A.) be demonstrations and discussions of individual Treasurer - Isobel Wheeler (Mrs. Henry O.) and group tutoring.· Nominating committee - If you are interested in the program, Marjorie Bradner (Mrs. Hugh), chairman call the American English in Action Office Irma Gusfield (Mrs. Joseph R.) at the International Center Building on Cynthia Chandler (Mrs. James G.) Matthews Campus, 453-2000, Ext. 1940, for fur­ Additional nominations may be made at the thur information or for a registration blank annual luncheon. Election and installation of for the workshop. Registrations should be new officers also occurs at the luncheon. in by Monday, April 3rd.

6

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INTEREST GROUPS

BEAR FACTS: Editor, Betty Shor, 453-0334. NEWCOMERS: Ch. Sally Gilbert, 755-9287. Meeting Aprll 25, 1:30 pm at Betty Spring Coffee for first and second year Shor's, 2655 Ellentown Road, La Jolla. Newcomers will be held at the home of Mrs. Harold Urey, 7890 Torrey Lane, La Jolla, Friday, April 14, 10 am. Guest of honor will be Mrs. Roger Revelle. Toddlers BOOK GROUP (Day): Co-ch., Lorri Roth, are welcome. 755-3207 and Janet Goff, 753-3472. Tues., April 11 at 9:45 am at Lori Roth's, OCEANID BOARD: Ch. Marie Pearce, 453-4897. 461 Hidden Pines Lane, Del Mar (take Old Thursday, April 6 at 10 am at Barbara 101 North, turn right at 4th St. or Del James', 5060 San Aquaria Drive, San Mar Heights Road, one block; right on Nob; Diego. left at Ocean View; right at Pine Needles Drive; left on Hidden Pines Lane). Book: PEOPLE TO PEOPLE: Ch. Mary Carol Isaacs, Max-JameGon by Wilfrid Sheed (available 755-2308. Friday, April 14 at 12:30 pm at UCSD Bookstore). in the International Center on Matthews Campus, UCSD. BOOK GROUP (Evening): Ch. Ann Van Atta, 453-2668. Thurs., April 20 at 7:30 pm SEWING: Ch. Bee McAlister, 454-7605. Thursday, at Ruth Simons', 527 11th Avenue, Del Mar. April 20 at 10 am at Susie Voigt's home, Book: 11 lum Plum Pickers by Raymond Bario. 1209 Crest Road, Del Mar. Call 454-7607 or 454-6002. COMMUNITY CO~CER~S: Thursday, April 28 at 10 am. Topic: Population Explosion in WINE TASTING: Ch. Leandra Holland, 276-5053. School Planning. Call Marion Ryan, No meeting scheduled for April. However, 459-8845, for place. last wine tasting was great success. Five Cabernet Savignon wines were tasted with the following result: First choice -­ Sebastiani, Bin.35 ($2.75); second -­ CONTEMPORARY ISSUES: Ch. Janet Johnson, Chateau Ducru Beaucaillou 1 66 ($6.00); 488-7836. Wed., April 19 at 8 pm at third -- Freemark Abbey 1 67 ($6.00). Ilse Warschawski's, 8902 Nottingham Pl., La Jolla, Dr. Robert Tschirgi, WOMEN'S LIBERATION STUDY GROUP: Co-ch. Judith Professor of Neurosciences, UCSD School Wesling, 459-9429, and Mary Watson, of Medicine, will speak on "New Dimen­ 453-2226, Wednesday, April 12, 8 pm at sions for Man." Trudy Thompson's, 2337 Calle Carta, La Jolla. Guest: Judy DiGennario, second DAY BRIDGE: Co-ch., Audrey Swartz, 453-6652, year law student at USD. Topic: "After and Rose Bailey, 453-2637. Tues., the divorce, what are women's rights? April 4 at Audrey Swartz's, 8552 Nottingham Things your lawyer never told you." Pl., La Jolla. Tues., April 18 at Nettie Gardiner's, 12685 Epica Court, Rancho Bernardo, 487-7584. Anyone who would like to play, call Audrey or Rose.

EVENING BRIDGE: Ch. Pat Austin, 222-5819. Friday, April 21 at 8:00 pm at home of Dena and Walter Schmitt, 427 Palomar, La Jolla, Call Pat by April 17th if you plan to attend.

FLOWER ARRANGEMENT: Ch. Rose Itano, 453-5329. Friday, April 7 at 10 am in the Blake Conference Room in Revelle Commons, UCSD.

MADRIGALS: Ch. Connie Mullin, 454-6871. Every Monday at 8 PM. Call Connie for the place. THE AR. T WOR.LD THc· CURJ\.cNT CINcMA

through "The Crook" (France, 1971) with P:l'JE ARTS GALLEHY - 11 Out of Sight" paintings, April 4 Trintignant and "That Man from Rio" sculpture and graphics from San Diego (France, 1964) with Belmondo. lenders. Balboa Park through April 23. Unicorn Cinema, 7456 La Jolla Blvd. Indian Folk Art Paintings product of 459-4341. contemporary East India, April 1 - May 14. 232-7931. April 5 "Two Daughters" (1961) India. -7 Directed by . "Sunrise" (1927) USA, directed by F. W. Murnau, TJ .TJLLA MU;)EIJM OF CONTEMPORARY ART - Jose Unicorn Cinema, 7456 La Jolla Blvd. DeRivera Retrospective Exhibition through 459-4341. April 16. Synchronetics by Fletcher Benton. A variety of moving sculpture by April 8 "Ugetsu" (1953) Japan directed by Kenji the nationally-known Los Angeles artist. -11 Mi zoguchi, "Ut amaro and His Five April 22 through May 28. Ceramic Women" (1946) Japan directed by Kenji Sculpture :by Clark Rost. Recent work by Mizoguchi, Unicorn Cinema, 7456 the museum's Ceramist-in-Residence. La Jolla Blvd. 459-4341. April 22 through May 28. April 12 "Hospital" (1970) USA, "Basic Training" -18 (1971) USA, Unicorn Cinema, 7456 La : 1,\RY MOORE AH'I' GALLERY - Paintings of Howard Warshaw, the one who did the mural in Jolla Blvd. 459-4341. UCSD cafeteria I believe. Most of April 12 The Films of Frederick Wiseman. J\prll, 459-6301. -25 Unicorn Cinema, 7456 La Jolla Blvd. 4594341. 21\~ DIEGO ART TNSTITUTE - Lawrence Brullo and Vic !lerman, mixed media, March 28-April 30. 459-4341. Exhibjtors will be in the Gallery on April 14 "Sweet Charity" with Shirley McLaine. April 9 from 2 to 4 pm. Balboa Park. Tues.-Sat. 10-5, Sun. 12:30-5. 23l+-5946. 2722 USB, UCSD, 50¢, 453-3362. April 19 Films of "High School" (1969) USA and UCSD VISUAL ARTS GALLERY - Paintings on Paper "Law and Order" (1969) USA, Unicorn by Pat Patterson and Laurie Stokes, -25 Cinema, 7456 La Jolla Blvd., 459-4341. through April 17, Revelle Campus, first floor of the Humanities Library 11 am to April 21 "Thomas Crown Affair" with Steve 3 pm daily. McQueen. 2722 USB, UCSD, 453-3362, SAN DIEGO STATE ART GALLERY - National Small 50¢ Sculpture & Drawing Exhibit, through April April 26 "Double Suicide" (1970) Japan directed 14, daily 8 am to 4:30 pm. 286-5204. through by Masahiro Shinoda, "Sanjuro" (1962) May 2 Japan directed by Akira Kurosawa. USD FOUNDERS GALLERY - Frank Papworth, Ceramics, Unicorn Cinema, 7456 La Jolla Blvd. April 7 - May 5, Alcala Park. 459-4341. THACKERAY GALLERY - Bruce McCracken Art Exhibit, through April 26, 9-5 Mon-Sat, 298-0171, April 28 "Owl and the Pussy Cat" with Barbra 321 Robinson Ave. Streisand. 2722 USB, UCSD, 50¢, 453- 3362. KESLER ART GALLERY - Collectors' paintings by Charles Fries, Otto Schneider, Elliott t(lrough "Civilization", a film on the cultural Torrey,Edward Payne and Howard Little. April 25 life of Western man narrated by Mexican Primitives by Labios, April 1-30, Kenneth Clark, Camino Hall Theatre, daily 10:30 to 5, 291-0119, 2521 San Diego Univ. of San Diego, 11 am and 7 pm. Ve free, 291-6480, x355. Ave.

S.D. COUNTY MART ASSOCIATION OUTDOOR SHOW - Presented on the lawns at Park Blvd and Presidents Way across from the Naval Hospital. Entertainment 10-5. April 22 UCSD Womens' Concert, 8:30, 408 MC, UCSD.

April 22 Glenn Miller Concert, Convention MUSICAL EVENTS Hall, Community Concourse, 9pm­ lam, 236-6510.

April 23 La Jolla Civic Orchestra and UCSD Artza-Pop in Festival of Music and the Arts at Salk Institute Courtyard. Noon - 4 pm,tickets at gate. 454-0068. April 23 St. Paul's Charisters: Sing the St. George Festival Evensong; The Pipers of the Cameron Seats Assisting. St. April 3 Joel Chadabe, Albany University, Electronic Music Systems and Controls, Paul Episcopal Church, 5th Ave. at Noon, 408 Matthews, U.C.S.D. Nutmeg St., 4 pm, 298-7261. April 24 Electronic Music Presentation by Aprll 4 UCSD Chamber Chorus. Works by Schutz, Mozart, Ides, Chihara, 8:30 pm. The ~~rre~n B_urt, noon, 40 8 MC, UCSD. T~eater 203, Matthews, UCSD. April 25 Woodwind Chamber Music, 8:15 p~, Recital Hall San Diego State, Apri 1 6 UCSD a 1972 version of experimentalist Admission charge. Robert Ashleys explorative, critical commentary on the Institution of April 26 San Diego Opera presents Puccini's Opera for 30 voices and bell like 28,30 "Gianni Schicci" and Menotti's sounds. The Gallery, MC, 8:30 pm. "Help, Help, the Globolinks", Civic Theatre, 8 pm, Sun. 2:30, 236-6510. April 8 Orchestra, Zubin , Conductor; Henri Sigis­ April 27 Concert of Avant Garde Swedish Music monti, French horn, Mozart's Concerto with Barbra Dahlman, pianist, Ulf No. 3 for French Horn. Mendelssahn's Grahn, Composer, 8:30 pm, 409 MC, Symphony No. 5 (Reformation) Civic UCSD. Theater 8 pm, 236-6510. April 29 Third Annual "Evenings with the April 8 Concert by UCSD Student Composers, Jewish Arts"presents "Hadarim" an 8:30 pm 408 MC, UCSD. Israeli Song and Dance Theatre from Los Angeles at Horace Mann April 10 Warren Burt Assemblies Electronic Junior High Auditorium, 8 pm, Music from Illinois, 408 MC, UCSD, Tickets 583-3300. noon. April 29 Folklorico Chorus de Mexico present Apri 1 11 Concert, Program to be "Las Paupers", four men and a woman announced, Civic Theatre, 8:30 pm, whose interpretation of Spanish 236-6510. music is acclaimed in both Mexico and the U.S., John J. Montgomery April 13 San Diego Symphony with Robert Emile, Junior High School Auditorium, 2470 -14 Conductor, Horatio Guitierrez, Ulric St., 8 pm, 297-2300. Pianist, Mozart's Impressario Overture, Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto April 30 The Euterpe Chorus, in Concert in No. 2 and Hindemith's Mathis der the Fine Arts Lecture Hall, Grossmont Mahler. Civic Theater, 8:30, 236-6510. College, 2 pm, 465-1700, ext 321.

April 16 Rock Concert "Deep Purple", Convention Sundays Organ Concert. Organ Pavilion, Hall Community Concourse, 7:00 pm, Balboa Park. 2:30. 236-6510. Sundays Recorders: Ancient and Baroque April 18 Electronic Music assembled by Warren Music. Joinfue Lewins and friends Burt, 8:30, 409 MC, UCSD. at 8481 Paseo del Ocaso, 7-10 pm. For information, call 454-7252 .. April 19 Presentation by UCLA "Gagaku Group" 3:00 pm, 408 MC, UCSD.

April 20 "What Price Conference" Opera by Ernst Erenek at 8:30, 409 MC, UCSD.

April 20 Opera Studio presents "Christopher -21 Sly" and "Socrate", 8:30, 203 MC, UCSD. April 29 San Diego Invitational Rowing Regatta. Santa Clara Point Mission Bay, 9 am all day.

April 30 19th Annual Southern Calif. Jumping Frog Contest at Del Mar Fair Grounds. Main Competition 10 am. S P E C I A L E V E N T S Mondays French Conversation class of "People to People" 7-9 pm led by Georgette Price, 559 Genter St, La Jolla, 459-1734. April 1 1st Annual Chula Vista City Car show Broadway Shopping Center Parking Thursdays SJDanish conversation class of "People Lot, Chula Vista, 10 am to 9 pm to People" 4-6 pm led by Martha 427-3300, x 241. Proano, 559 Genter St., La Jolla, 459-1734. People may join at any f\Cri 1 2 Easter Sunrise services: at the foot time. of Serra Cross in Presidio Park, Sundays Discover San Diego by BUS. All day the Balboa Park Organ Pavilion, Mt. excursion fare for $1. Transfer Helix, at the Mt. Soledad Memorial as many times as you like. Children Cross, Cabrillo National Monument, under 5 free. Call 2 39-8161. for Oceanside Beach Stadium. route information.

1\pri l 7 27th Annual San Diego County Orchid Sundays Model Railroad: one of the largest -9 Society Show. The Conference Bldg. scale model operations in the country. Balboa Park, April 7 10 am to 9 pm, House of Charm, Balboa Park. Open April 9 10-5. house all afternoon. 239-5883. Ar;ri 1 12 16th Annual Greater S.D. Fa.ir. . -16 Science exhibits from schools in S.D. C H I L D R E N ' S E V E .N T S ·~ and Tmperial Counties. Federal Bldg. Balboa Park, Grades 7-12, 9 am - 9 pm. April 1 Easter Party and Egg Hunt 10 to 12 April 12-15, 12 noon to 5 pm April 16. am, ages 3-10, adm. price: 6 colored eggs. South lawn of Humanities Cluster Library Building. AprLl 15 La Jolla Garden Tour, Spons0red by Women of St. James-by-the-Sea April 1 Episcopal Church. Buses leave from La Jolla Easter Egg Hunt Athletic corner of Eads and Silverado 10:30 Field of La Jolla High School, 10 am. am - 5 pm. Tea served at La Jolla Beach and 'rennis Club following tour, April 1 6th Annual Mission Bay Easter Egg 459-3421. Hunt. West Vacation Island, 11 am. through In Old Verona -- Romeo and Juliet; April 15 44th Annual Spring Rose Show, April 15 An adaptation by Paul T. Nolan for -16 Conference, Balboa Park. children from Shakespeare, Quarter, 480 Elm St., Sat. & Sun., April 15 44th Annual Spring Rose Show, 2 pm, 234-9325. -16 Conference Bldg., Balboa Park. through Beauty and the Beast. USIU Children's April 16 Wilderness Gardens Walk-about Day April 22 Theater, 350 Cedar St., San Diego. from 10 - 4 pm. See article in this Sats. at 11 and 2, 239-0391, x 11. issue. April 29 "My Friend the Fox", USIU's Theatre April 21 The Bishop's Schools' annual Parents' -May 27 for Children, 350 Date St., Sat. Association Fashion Show, lunche-on only 2 pm, 239-0391,x41. 12:30 pm at the school. Fashion Show 2:00 pm at the school. For tickets April 30 La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art call Mrs. Kirtland 222-5750 before Parent and Child Workshop 1-4. April 19. For more information, call Museum Studio, 701 South Coast Blvd. Sally Spiess, 453-0373. entrance. Puppets, masks, kites. $1-2.50. Parents Free 453-0183. April 21 "Clown Around" with Ruth Buzzy. Fri. -24 8, Sat. 3 & 8, Sun 3 & 7:30, Mon. Sundays Peter Cottontail and His Friends, 7:30. Tickets 224-4176. marionette performers sing, dance. Balboa Park Puppet Theater, 1:30 and April 22 Annual San Diego Bonsai Club show. 2:30 pm, 50¢ -23 Casa del Prado Garden Center, Balboa Park, 10-10. Wed. Pre-school story time. Children's morns. Room, San Diego Public Library, 820 April 29 9th Annual Spring Iris Show, Casa del E St., and La Jolla branch, Wall St. -30 Prado, 1:30 - 6 pm, Balboa Park. 10:30 am. April 13 Dr. Maurice Friedman will speak L E C T U E R s on "The Partnership of Existence 11 Montezuma Hall, Aztec Center, San Diego State 7:30 pm. April 14 'lli\_L:!:JERY TOUR OF "Out of Sight" Fine Arts Gallery of San Diego ,'.n am, Call Cris Nyhan 459-0085. April 15 Sunrise Program, Channel 8 Presentation April 2 Taboo Topics. The Real "Generation of Electronic Music by Warren Burt GapTT' the senior citizen and his adult and David Gomper. UCSD Graduate Students child. Mrs. Evelyn Herrmann Coordin­ in Music, 8 am. ator. The San Die~o Jewish Community Center, 4079 54th St., 8 pm, 583-3300. April 18 Tuesday Evening Lecture: Professor Tues. Jack Haberstroh, SDS Journalism n Om· Extended H-eal th Horizons", third faculty, talks on the Media. and last of the lecture series "Your Sponsored by San Diego State Faml lies Heal th. Whose Problem?" Extension. 7:30 pm., Council Speakers will be Dr. Reginald G. Bick­ Chambers, Aztec Center , SDS. ford, Dr. Robert A O'Rourke, Dr. MichaeJ B. Shimkin. 9 am through lunch, April 20 Dr. Stephan Thernstrom, UCLA History Phone 454-0042 for reservation. Professor, talks on "Making it in America: My th and Reali tv 11 Casa April 4 S. D. Fine Arts Gallery's Meet the Real, Aztec Center, 7:30 pm. Masters Lecture, Rudy Lurk, Art director . Univ. of Arizona on "An Indian April 28 Professor Miriam S. Balmuth of Tufts Captures Washington" 10:45 am, University will lecture on a topic 232-7931. of Archeological interest. Sherwood Hall, 8 pm, free. April 4 Margaret Mead on '"rhe Human Condition: Man' Immediate Future", UCSD, Basic Saturdays del Coronado historical fuided Science Bldg., Rm. 2100, 8 pm walking tour of the hotel. 2 pm in the lobby. 453-3161. April 4 Lecture: Arline Fisch, Professor Saturdays -Old Town Walkin.g Tou~. ··-Leaves from of Art, SDS talks about "Jewelry and Whaley House and visits historical Body Ornament Design,n sponsored attractions in San Diego's first by San Diego State Extension. 7:30 pm, community. 1:30 pm, 298-2482. Council Chambers, Aztec Center, Public free.

April 6 Ron Keefe Talk on "Peru" illustrated with colored slides, Sumner Auditorium, at Scripps, 12:00 noon to 1 pm.

April 6 Dr. Thomas A. Metzger, assistant professor of history at UCSD, ~ill speak on TT Imperaia speak on Imperialism and the Third 11 World: The Case of Modern • Sponsored by San Diego State Dept. · of History and Phi Alpha Theta. 7:30 pm, Casa Real, Aztec Center SDS, 286-5204.

April 9 San Diego Open Forum~ Dr. Willis Harman will speak on non Choosing Our Future Environment" First Unitarian Church, 4190 Front St., S.D. 8 pm, 298-9978.

April 12 Henry Gardiner "Kinetics and Sculpture" Sherwood Hall, 8 pm. public donation $1.50, members and students $1.00. THE. THEATltE

April 1 Extra performance by demand of Lysis­ through Rosencrantz and Gilderstern Are Dead, trata by Aristophanes and A Comedy April 30 a comedy by Tom Stoppard. Hamlet 1 s of Errors by Shakespeare by UCSD Drama schoolmates discover they will assume Dept. under the direction of Eric new importance when they are murdered Chri tmas. Tickets available only along with their Prince. Old Globe at Theatre Office, Bldg. 203 Matthews Theatre, Balboa Park., Tues, Thurs. Campu;3, 8 pm. at 8, Fri., Sat., at 8:30, Sun. 2 and 8. 239-2255. through Beginner's Luck, a comedy about Aprjl 2 marriage and divorce. Off-Broadway April 27, San Diego State Drama Dept. presents Theatre, 314 F St., San Diego, 2 8' 29' Euripedes "The Trojan Wornenn in the Sat. 2 and 8:30. Sun. 2 and 5, 30 Experimental Theatre Dramatic Arts 23:)-6535. Bldg. S.D.S. 8 pm. ticket information 286-6933. nA Cry of Players" by Willj_am Gibson Mis3ion Playhouse, 8:30 pm. April 11 Guys and Dolls, a mu$ical based on -May 7 a Damon Runyon story. Off-Broadway Theatre, 314 F St., San Diego. Sat. "Horne:" by David Storey, Mission Pla.yhouse 2-8:30, Sun. 2 and 5. 8:30 pm, 295-6453. April 13 Caucasian Chalk Circle, by Brecht through Raoc of the Belt: Stage play, about -30 at the Carter Centre Stage. Balboa April 14 th~ story of Hercules ~nd his feat Park. Tues Thurs. and Sun 8 pm. to capture the belt from Antiope, Fri and Sat. 8:30 pm. Sun matinees Queen of the warlike Amazons. 2 pm, 239-2255. Actors Quarter Theatre, 480 Elm St., Fri. & Sat., 8: 30 pm, 234-9325. April 26, "How to Succeed in Business without 27, 28, Really Trying" the 1962 Pulitzer f-1.priJ Jl~ San Diego State Drama Dept presents 29 Prizewinning play by USIU School of l~), 19, Guy and Dolls, Main Stage, Dramatic Performing Arts at 8:30, USIU Center 20' 21, Art~, ticket information, 286-6033. for the Performing Arts, 239-0391, 22 x41.

A TRIBUTE TO MARIA MAYER relating to the concentration of uranium 235 by Harold and Frieda Urey for the Manhattan project. Maria Goepert Mayer spent her youth in After the war the Mayers went to Chicago G5ttingen, where her father was Professor of as professors in the university and in the En­ Pediatrics at the University. She was known rico Fermi Institute. There Maria developed as the beauty of G5ttingen, and her old friends the shell theory for which she and Hans Jensen remember her vivaciousness and her verve for received the Nobel prize (working independently). Hving. She studied in Cambridge, England, The prize was awarded in 1963, by which time but received her Ph.D. at the University of the Mayers had come to UCSD. Here she has been GBttingen. She took her degree with Professor a popular teacher, a researcher, and a con­ Max Born one of the brilliant physicists scientious working member of the physics depart­ of Germa~y. There she met and married Joseph ment. At the time of her death she was in Mayer, who was studying there on a Rockefeller charge of the Physics Department Colloquium. Fellowship. They chose to go to Johns Professor Walter Kohn said of that: "Maria Hopkins in Baltimore. Maria became a natur­ frequently introduced the speaker she had a:J_ized citizen. invited. Her introductions were always prepared with great care and feeling. She gave a The Mayers have been successively at picture of that corner of Science in which the Johns Hopkins, Columbia, Chicago and UC San speaker worked and his research in it. They Diego. While at Johns Hopkins they wrote a were interesting, outstanding, and beautiful.n book together on Statistical Mechanics, which Maria received many honorary degrees. has been a most widely read and admired book Of many other honors, one was unique, from in physics and chemistry. Joe was professor Japan. The Commissioner of Labor annually of chemistry there and Maria lectured in physics. proclaims Women's Week, a celebration of the When the new experimental college, Sarah franchising of women in 1946. He invites one Lawrence, asked her to teach a science course woman from another country to be guest of honor with some new approach, she ingeniously developed for the week. Maria was selected in 1969. one weaving together all the disciplines to Maria Mayer was an esteemed colleague of explain basic concepts of the physical sciences. all the leading scientists of the day, and a This may have been the first basic science friend to all who met her. She cannot be course. During the war Maria worked on theories replaced. Bear Facts Month: April Year: 1972

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