PUBLISHED BY OCEANIDS - UCSD WOMEN February 1975 REAR F .(1\C TS Vol. XIII, No. 5 Editors - Judith Wesling, 5649 Beaumont Ave., La Jolla 92037 454-8336 Marie Pearce, 7858 Esterel Drive, La Jolla 92037 453-4897 Calendar Editor - Nora Atlas, 3087 Cranbrook Court La Jolla 92037 453-6444 Subscript~ons/Cir~ulation - Isabel Wheeler, 1594 C~espo Drive, La Jolla 92037 459-7461 Staff Artist - Elibet Ma~shall, 2767 Hidden Valley Road, La Jolla 92037 459-5246 Staff - Barbara Asmus, Diane D•Andrade, Adelaide Booker, D. Ann Fanestil, Anne Lampert, Elibet Marshall, Gifford Menard, Jeanette Mok Christine Nyhan, Julie Olfe, Helen Raitt, Frieda Urey, Isab~l Wheeler. OCEANIDS membership fee is $5 and includes BEAR FACTS. BEAR FACTS subscription for non-members is $5. Deadlines - news and calendar items, the 15th of each month. WHITHER SAN DI EGO? AN EVENING WITH THE OWENS "Temporary Paradise - A Look at the Special Nan and Ben Owen (he•s with SI01 s Marine Landscape of the San Diego Region." Another Research Institute) and the Oceanids invite Planning Report? Yes, but so different and so you to "An Evening With The Owens". Nan and interestingly told that I urge everyone who Ben have put together some extremely interes­ has chosen this area for their home to get a ting wildlife photography from areas they copy - read it, loan it to your neighbors have visited. We are fortunate that they have and work for it. It is called the Appleyard consented to share with us some of their film Report because it has been prepared by Kelvin on Kalahari (South Central Africa), Iceland, Lynch and Donald Appleyard through a grant and elsewhere at no charge. So - mark your from the civic-minded Marston family. calendar for Friday evening, February 14 from The report is a survey of where San Diego 8 to 10 PM in Sumner Auditorium (SIO) and has been and where it mig2t go. The format plan to spend a delightful "Evening With The is a tabloid newspaper - 6 pages - the final Owens". page a blank one for your comments and sugges­ Eila Haubrich tions. It is chock full of line drawings, maps, photographs, and a topographical map showing what San Diego was before man came. PEOPLE TO PEOPLE An ingenious idea is a set of 4 line drawings of San Diego as conceived by a La Jolla High Anyone interested in donating baked goods student, a Logan Heights resident, a Univer­ to a Valentine's Day Bake Sale on campus sity City resident and a San Diego Cal State should call 454-6858 in the PM only. The student. Growth is discussed - where and sale is a fund-raising event for People to what kind with everyone in mind down to the People's worth-while projects. Brownies and hikers and bicyclists. It envisions a real chocolate-chip cookies will be especially union with Tiajuana - planning the two cities welcome, but anything will be appreciated! as one large international port. The authors stress this is just a sugges­ Liz Wills tion and does not reflect adopted city plans. The City Planning Commission has had 5,000 copies printed; you can pick up a free copy NEW EDITOR FOR ~ FACTS at City Hall. Later they may be obtainable at local centers. The League of Women Voters has discussed the report and copies mailed to We are happy to announce that Judith Wesling its members. has agreed to serve as co-editor with Marie Frieda Urey Pearce for the remainder of this year. A loyal staff member for several years, Judith has much experience with Bear Facts and many good ideas. Please rememoer-to send your information and articles to her at 5649 ATTENTION ALL ARTISTS Beaumont Ave., La Jolla 92037 before the 15th of each month. Plans are being made for the Spring Art I have learned a great deal and met some Show and Sale that Oceanids is sponsoring. wonderful people during my two years as co­ Start preparing the works of art you would editor, and I thank all our staff and contri­ like to submit. Further details will be butors for their work and cooperation. announced next month in Bear Facts. Art Show Chairman - Marie Fillius--=--291-7981. Julie Olfe 1 A DIFFERENT KIND OF FOOTBALL CARL HUBBS Anyone caught up in Super Bowl fever will Professor Carl Hubbs was honored by the find it hard to believe that soccer is the San Diego Press Club by being elected as one most popular sport in the world - and will of their "Headliners of the Year". He is perhaps not have noticed the existance of the professor Emeritas of Icthiology at Scripps; San Diego Youth Soccer Federation. But in during his 40 years on campus, he has done the past four years boys and now girls in San research in all kinds of marine biology. Diego County have taken to soccer in ever­ His reputation is world-wide; he has had increasing numbers, and from 1972 to 1974, fossil fishes, mammals and a dry lake in the number of players and teams doubled. Nevada named for him. Dr. Hubbs became There are six geographical leagues in the interested in ancient Indian culture in this county, with a total of 3,500 players from area and he found the first "midden" on the ages 8-19. Forty-five high schools in the bluff at Scripps. He worked with Carbon 14 county have formed teams in the past four to date the Indian culture by the shells in years - 3000-4000 boys are involved in soccer the middens. there - a total of about 8000 players. Los Carl Hubbs has served the community well Angeles has 50,000 Youth Soccer players and - for years as a scientific advisor on the other cities like St. Louis have booming pro­ Boardsof the San Diego Zoo and the San Diego grams. La Jolla High School, benefiting Museum of Natural History. He is on the from the experience players received in the Board of the Protection and Coastal Environ­ Youth Soccer program, has an undefeated team. ment Commission set up by Proposition 20 - They won their own invitational tournament remember how hard we worked to pass it? which was held in La Jolla Christmas week - We who know Dr. Hubbs 1 wife Laura and it drew teams from as far away as Sacramento her close association with his work, think and attracted 2000 spectators. La Jolla the San Diego Press Club went amiss in not High players will be playing next year for naming her a "Headliner" too. such schools as Pomona, UCLA (ranked 2nd in Frieda Urey the nation in soccer), Michigan, UCB, UC Davis and Stanford. Some of these are soccer schol~rships. This season Yale has indicated interest in the soccer players. The San Diego Youth Soccer Federation has never really had to advertise; boys and girls are drawn to the game when they talk to others who have played. Each league is divided into divisions by age (under 8 1 s, under 12•s, etc.) and each team has 15 players - with 11 players on the field, there are four subs. But every player plays in every game;.no one sits o~t a game on the bench. Soccer i~ a fast? active game with all 22 players moving continuously COOKING CLASSES around the ball. But soccer to me has an even greater advantage over baseball and foot- The gourmet cooking classes sponsored by ball. In the words of Mr. Rodriguez, the the Friends of the International Center under soccer coach at La Jolla High, "At this school, the direction of talented Anne Otterson, will boys who want a thinking sport choose soccer." continue during the month of February. Because A coach teaches a soccer team everything he many people have asked permission to enroll in knows - then they get out on the field and play. the course by signing up for individual sessions He can't call the shots; the game is too fast the Friends have decided on the following fee for that. schedule. For $13 per session, $11 for Friends• This is n?w the ~nd of the Youth Soccer . members, students may participate in the r~- season; President Jim McEvoy and league off~cials)maining classes to be held in the International (volunteers - only the re~erees are professionals Center kitchen from 7-10 PM. Enrollment is are working hard to coordinate 207 teams from limited· all participants will have a chance the 6 leagues into the County Cup Playoffs. to sampie the meal prepared by them and their The final championship games will be.played teacher. in Balboa Stadium - boys teams and girls teams On February 3 Roland Chassang chef at La - all day, Februa~y 22. Children's tickets Chaumine, will p~esent the Art of'Fr~nch are free, adu~t tick~ts.are $1.00. The pub~ic Cooking. On February 12, Teddie Lewis and is enthusiastically invited. You could.invite Anne Otterson will offer Jewish Love and a forei£n student or family to attend with you; Knishes. On February 19, Lily Lin and Anne after all, the whole.world knows how.to play Otterson will demonstrate the Chinese Manner. soccer and now San Diegans are learning as Proceeds from this exciting experience in well. international cuisine will benefit the Inter- Judith Wesling national Center, permitting part of the enroll- COMING EVENTS ment fee to be tax-deductible. Class reserva­ tions may be made by mailing your check, payable Tour of ·university H~spital March 19 to the Friends of the International Center, to the Center or by calling the Friends' office Children's Spring Holiday Party March 22 at 452-3731.
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