News Scrapbook 1964-1967

Legislative Pa 1 rley Set Assemblyman Leon Di Ralph, 55th District (Watts, W1llo- brouk. Compton), will be the keynot<> speaker at the Novem- ber 3 ... egislative Con\~ren~e, "Peopt<' to L gislators. which is open to \htl public. The con- ference will be from 8:30 a m. to 4 p.m 1\1 the Scottish Rite Temple, 1895 So. Camino de! Rio, Mission Valley. Assemblyman Ralph, who will speak at the luncheon ses- sion is vice chairman of the Social Welfare Committee, member of Election and Re- apportionment, Government Organization and Ways an~ Means. A graduate of the Um- versity of Colorado and Los Angeles State College, he is a professional government ad- ministrator The Legislative Conference is being co-sponsored by the Community Welfare Council, League of women Voters, Economic Opportunity Com- mission, County Labor Coun cil, Legal Aid Society, and University of California at San Diego Extension The purpose of the Confer- ence is to give the public an opportunity to hear directly from legislators about new laws which concern San Diego and give them a chance ~o learn how to be effective in getting the laws wanted and opposing those laws not wanted. Further information may be obtained and reservations made by calling the Commu- nity Welfare Conncil, 239-2071.

A'f L I J l~R~/'I'} Of' Graduate Studie Are Being Extended

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cause the st ident demand 1s o hl·av, • 'l he expan 10n of the grad n will be rcq uired

\lc(,eeHr also no rd Plans '01 expan~ion of the Lduca- tion Departments summer program. a~ part of a 'urther 1mpro\'ement of the depart- ment. •·we are C'ons1dering ex- pansion rnto two sessions to accommodate people now m the

program Dr

.John \I •(,eever 1·ha1rman of the Teathcr Ed 11cation pro 0 ram commented •·we have hop for an \l \ rngrarn 1n the future hP F

Id( arc , JarJ SParQ, Linda lillo and :Sean :\kC:111lr.,

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USD Records Gain In Graduate Students Enrollment of graduate students m the UmversJ1} of San Diego College for Men Education Department has shown a marked increase over last vear. Extensive recruitmg efforts, improvement III faculty anct' la, 'er course offPrings raised thp

.Campus Notes

3 Universities Join in Program Aiming to upgrade the cultural climate of the college com- munity, student representatives from California Western Uni- versity, the University of California at San Diego, and the University of San Diego College for Men and Women met to discuss joint sponsorship of speakers and performers.

IVERSITY OF AN DIEGO Gr ups Combine For terreligious Meet

number from 26 Lo 90 students The College's education de- partment, headed by Dr John F. McGeever, Ed.D., offers in- struction leading to a Californ ia state teaching credential and a Master of Arts in Teach- ing degree. Qualification The teaching credential is granted after the successful completion of 30 units beyond the undergraduate bachelor's degree. The :',,l.A.T. requires the completion of 30 addi- tional units after fulfilling the requirements for the teach ing credential. The faculty of the education department is composed of full time faculty members of various departments of the college and four part-lime lecturers in education. Lecturers Named Lecturers in education are Dr. John MacDonald , presi- dent of MiraCosta Junior College; Dr. Roland K. Phelps, director of psychological serv- ices and child development at Palomar Junior College; Dr. Stephan lsacc. guidance co- ordinator of the Department of Education, San Diego County; and Dr. E. Romayne Hertweck, professor of psych· ology at Mira Costa Junior College. The Master of Arts in Teach- ing degree is granted in Eng- lish, history, biology, econom- ics, interde)Jartmental social sciences. psychology a nd poli- tical science.

Plans for future expansion of the college's graduate di- \'ision rnclude the establish ment of a Master of Arts pro gram in particular academic offerings of the College. Dr. McGeever, chairman of the Teacher Education program, commented, "WP have hopes of having an M.A. program in the future bec&,use the stu- dent demand for the program is so heavy " McGecv.er also noted plans for expansion of the Educa- tion Department's summer program, "We arc considering expansion of the summer program into two sessions to accommodate people now in the teaching field in the par- ochial schools and seeking their teaching credential A teacher could conceivably begin work towards a teach- ing credential in the summer of 1968 and finish 111 the summer of 1969."

CAMPOS NOTES

This second meeting was held at the College for Men on Saturday, October 22. The next one will be hosted by the University of California on November 4. Initiated by Cal- ifornis Western University, the students hope to develop an inter-collegial council for discussion of mutual problems and interests. • • • On Wednesday evening, Oc- tober 25, the College for Women Theatre Arts Depart- ment presented readings from Robert Frost's dramatic poems. Mrs. Ann Kern, new to the college, directed. • • • Joseph Ghougassian, assist• ant professor of philosophy at the women's college, will be- gin a series of lecture-sem• inars on contemporary phi!• osophers, Thursday evening, October 26, at 7:30 p.m. To be held in the C. W. lounge, the lecture is open to any- one wishing to attend, partic- ularly students from the Col- lege for Men and College for Wome n. This Thursday's sub- ject will be: 'Gabriel Marcel - The Ontological Mystery' . • • • Tbis Friday eve ning, the junior class at the College for Women will p resent its Autumn Informal at Vacation Village. Mary Ellen Easter- ling, junior class president, notes "enthusiastic support." • • • Dr. Ray Brandes, professor of history at the College for

Yarbrough Show Slated On Campus purl of I plunnPd enter tainment progr.. m. the oc1 at •d Stud nt: of the niv r 1 ty San 1>1e1o:o will prt'sent The

Men. has received notice that his book titled Frank Hamil- ton Cushi ng. Pioneer Ameri- canist has been accepted for publication, and should ap- pear in the spring of 1968. The Western Postal History Asso• ciation also has begun pub- licatwn of Dr Brandes' trans- lation of the Hi.storia Del Cor- reo en America, a study of Spanish communication and mail service in :'lfexico during the Colonial period. • • Two San Diego artists will exhibit a selection of their works in a joint showmg in the Knights of Columbus Li- brary on the campus from October 25 to November 17. William Noonan will pre- sent paintings of the First World War in the air and a number of genre graphic works. Jane Fletcher will show works in various media with a concentration of water- colors. The gallery in the Knights of Columbus Library is open from 8 a.m. until 9 p.m. weekdays and from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. on Saturdays. The English Department of the Coll ege for :'lien is sponsor- ing the exhibition. • • • The Pequod, College for :\ten's literary society, will present a dramatic reading December 6 of various one• act plays. The presentation is being produced by William Irish of the college's English department. Tryouts for the dramatic reading will be Fri- day, October 27 from noon to 1:30 p.m. People interested are urged to contact Irish at the College for Men.

A "l n,wrsit~ Day" ror high school s(•niors will be held on the University of San Diego eampu,. Thursday. :-;ovcmbcr lb from 9 a.m to 2:30 p.111 Facllilics of the cntin• Alcala Park campus will be> at the dis- po,al , f the seniors. who will al l'ncl classes at the Collcg<> for Women and the College for Men. Both col- leges arc hosting the event. which will include a special folk :\lass in the Immaculala. Fmanc1al aid officers will discuss scholarships, grants. loans and work opportunitie,. • cw.CM chemist!'} departments v.;111 offer a joint seminar pro gram for faculty and students. The first lecture in the scncs will be given by Dr. Hobert Met1ger from the Chemistry clc>partment of San Diego State College and an associate of the California Metabolic Research Founda lion in La Jolla Dr. Metzger will speak on "Carbohydrate Metabolism in Animals - An Alternative to Glucose Phosphorylation" at 4 p.m. Wednesday. November 8, 1n Room 11 at CW. The December seminar will be given by Wayne Wheeler, senior chemistry maJor at the College for Men Or. Diana Stiggal. assistant pro fessor of chemistry. and Moth- er Agnes Schmit. chairman of the department at the College for Women. will give seminars in Ja,mary and February. Science teachers and their students from area high schools are welcome to at- tend The public aho is in- vited . ... On November 11. regular religious' instruction classes for the teaching of deaf chil drcn will begin at the Col- lege for Women. Moira Leas. a senior. will hold an organ1za tJonal meeting to invite uni- versity students lo partici- patt' in this special cate- chelical work. Moira helped initiate the program last year. ••• Twenty students from Lin- coln High School have been invited to a .pre-performance discussion by the cast of"The Little Foxes" November 7. CW students who will provide transportation for the high ,ch.,olers arc part of "Proj- ect lipllft". a community serv- ice program first conceived by \!other Irene, Lawrence. chair man of the sociology depart- ment. They are Christine Brooke, :\lary Ann Schultz and June Quirk. Alan Fay 1Chcm1stry. 1967) has passed all of the quali- J~· ing exams at L'CSB when• he is a first.year graduate stu dent in chemistry. Since only a relatively small JJCrcentage ,,r <'n tering students pass all of the qualifying exams, his 1 nd'ormance is a si~nificant personal achievement and an excellent refkcl ion upon the chemistry department at the College for Men. Alan. who was first string forward for the Toreros last year. is at- tending UCSB on fellowship Fr G•·orgc Hardv has ini uated c1 cnmg d1sc~ssions on religious and moral topics J'or Umvcrsi :y students. Th<• first discussion was held in Fr llctnly s residence and the .second was held in thP Col- ll•gt• for :\!en. moderated bv Ft !\!pal Dolan, member ~f the Chancery staff Th e dis- cussions will continue to be hPld on an available time basts.

CAMPUS NOTES

"Gets to You" Ofh1 Inst performnm·e here, J . D Lily of th• San D1 go ~;venmg Tnhun • said, ''To . ay hi mu 11 'gets to yoll' is a pitiful under tutem nt Two pontaneou st<1nd ,ng ovations attested to th1 ." De cribing his voice, Lily said, "111 voice I o urnqu ly tender, it almost hurt. to hear htm ing anything. He mgs a blUl'. funn), bouncy und pain ful kind ol poetry that. at the . ame time, make your feet stamp and turns your emotion inside out" Not a Folk Sineer Glenn doe n't Iike to be branded as a folk ingcr "I JU t try to do good ong. . I don't car wher • they came from The melody isn't vnpor tant, 1t' got to be o good that 1t tay In the background What 1s important is the words. It's like slngmg poetry," pp ·armg with Yarbrough on the two-hour how will be '!'he ~·n•d Hamn , Trio The group, which travels with Glenn on hi concert tours. plays a variety of music and will share the first half of the how with the musical comedy team ofMafhtt and Davis. Special Ii htmg, a concert sound system. and seatmg will be installed In the gymnasium for the show '!'he concert is b ing pro- due d by the James C. Pagrn Company of San Lhego as a rvic to the As 1ated Stu i nt . For furth r informa- t·all John Bradley, 291 AUXl[.JARY OFU DTO I/OLD MEET do nt tour of the Fine Ar Gallery at 11 a.m. will precede a noon luncheon meeting of the University of S n Die"o Auxiliary Thursday !n the Moorish Room of the Cafe del R~y Morro. Mother Nancy Morris, pres- ident or the USD College for Worn n and a 1967 recipient of th Women of Valor award, \\Ill h r gue I honors with the Very Rev. John K Baer, pre tdent of the University'~ Coilege for Men. Both will • ac pt l!C"holarship checks, awarded annually by the aux- ltary. Mrs. J05eph ~: Bennett Is cha!l'man. A I ting as host- e e3 are Mme.,_ John Don- ald Arm trong, Leo J. Durkin and Edwin C. 1-'ergu on. Re ervations are bemg ac- cepttd by Mmes. Harold }'. Febbett., and G1'or11e W. Wolfe.

The Umvcrs,ty ·of San Die- go debate and forensics squad scored four victories in the novice div ision and two in the intermediate division of de- bate competition at the re. cent Pacific Southwest Tour- nament at El Cammo College. l.<'resh111en Jim Staunton and Dick Walton compiled a per. feet reo'h·d and received Su- perior Awards by defeating the University of Redlands, East Los Angele , and Fuller. ton College in debate com.pe- tition. Sophomores Brian Thomp- son and Everett Harry defeat- ed the University of Califor- nia. Santa Barbara and River- side before losing to Clare- mont Mc>n's College and San Diego State. Mr. de Malignon of the Math- ematics Department of the College for Men is partici- pating in " weekly seminar in recursive function theory being held at San Diego State College. • The Athletic Department recently hired Dorothy Knod, a graduate student at the Col- lege for Women, as USD's new tenrns coach. She was a top- flight amateur and will be re- placing Dr. ()ddo of the Col- lege of Men, whose team won two matches last year and dropped six. . .. Still being worked on is a plan by Coach Phil Wool- pert to have the USO-San Diego State game played in the Sports Arena as a double- header. The students would be able to see both their own game and the Rockets' game for $1. Prospects are good. ••• Zolton Roygnai, director of the San Diego Symphony, spoke on the work of the San Diego Symphony Association and this season's musical of- ferings, in the Rose Room al the College for Women last (Wednesday) night. He fol- lowed a faculty concert presented by Henry Kolar, also of the S.D. Symphony, Mrs. Marjorie Hart, and Miss Ilana Mysior. • • • C Alexander Peloquin of Boston College D~partment of Music, will take time off from the diocesan liturgical workshop to address students, faculty, and the general pub- lic, on new developments in Church music. He will speak in Room 11 at the College for Women at 7:30 tonight (Thurb- day) .

By . DR~W :"IIAKARUSRKA Glenn Yarbrough, appearing without the it of psychede- lic II his, long hair or odd clothes, charmed two audiences at th Um\e sity of San Diego gymn wm Saturday mghl. The singer, who ended a 60-day concert tour with a dou- ble-Mader here, f1tled the gym with ht mooth voice, thrilling the crowd. Ya brou h, accompanied by the Fred Ramirez Trio and two supe b gu1tansts, sang songs rangll:lg from "Frankie and Johnnl " to Phil Och's "Cruci- fixion " WELL ORGA IZED Tlit concert, put on without the frills common U1ese days to cover a lack of musical ability, was very well org ized. It Jet the former Limeliter use every lllipect of his unique voice. One of the concert's highlights was Yarbrough's rendition of 1 Charles inavour·s tragic nar- ' rative of a teenager who runs away and dies for love. . The bal~d, "A Young Girl," moved the audience to silence. When Yarbrough finished the song, it was as if the crowd were holding its breath, hoping Och's "Crucifixion," which is very hard to understand after just one hearing, was a long, Gregorian chant-like lament de- - I crying the killing of love in lhe world. Yarbrough, who hasn't had much luck with his singles, / might try shortening Och 's composition and Jllllling 1I out at 45 r.p.m. The teenagers ' wou Id love it The Fred Banurez Trio gave Yarbrough a quality of backing rare on the concert circuit. Ramirez h 1 j11 got to be one of lhe best pia ,,ts around. WARM-UP A !';faffitt and DavJS, the two J!Uitarist~. de ribed themselves s "the warm-up act," but they were a lot more than just that. Their rendition of the "Uni- com Song" had the audience laughing and clapping for its entire five minutes. They also played II marvelous, long in trumrnlal in which they made their guitars sound like everything from banJos to harp- sichord . ----- the ong wa n't over. DIFFICULT WORK

IN THE CLUB WORLD

15 Women Of Valor Are Honored At Luncheon

By ELAINE HUBBARD

commemorative gold charms by

A revision to the adage that George A. Scott. "woman's place is in the home" Mrs. Marvin Jacobs presided was made yesterday during the as general chairman of the 10th annual "Women of Valor" luncheon. She is a past pres- awards presented by Temple ident of the Sisterhood and a Beth Israel Sisterhood. It should past Woman of Valor. now read "in the home and in This year's women and the the community." fields in which they made out- The enormous impact by San standing contributions are Mrs. Diego area women on almost C. Rankin Barnes, Protestant every aspect of community life fail~; Mrs. David A. Block, was symbolized by the specific JewJSh faith; Mrs Walter J. deeds of 15 women honored at DeBrunner, labor; Mrs. Ernest the luncheon at El Cortez Hotel. Ellis, international affairs; Mrs. A tragic note was added this Theodor Geisel, education; Mrs. year to the awards presenta- John Hancock, business; Mrs. !ions in a verbal and silent Arthur Heilbron, community a/- tribute to one of this year's fairs; Mrs. Bruno Hochmuth, women - the late Mrs. Theodor military; Mrs. James H. Knox, Geisel who died last month in humanitarian; Mrs. Ron Mix, her La Jolla home. Mrs. David sports; Mrs. Catherine Lewis Garfield, a past Woman of Va- Montgomery, youth activities; lor and this year's awards·com- Mother :'fancy :\1orris, profes- mentator, paid a posthumous sional; Mrs. Hanford T. Olsen, tribute to Mrs. Geisel for her culture; Mrs. Roderick S. outstanding contributions to the Patch, Catholic faith, and Mrs. field of education and "for Donald C. Rickman, interfaith. creating a literary world in The judges for this year's which we have all spent many event were Mrs. Gertrude Al- happy hours." caraz, Mason Bowen Edward An estimated 600 women and Butler, Carl Esenoff, Judge Roy men attended the luncheon Fitzgerald, David Garfield, which included a listing of each Mrs. :\fichael Jbs Gonzalez, woman's contributions to San Murray D. Goodrich, Albert Di~go and its residents, presen- Harutunian Jr., George A. tahon of the traditional bouquet Scott, Mrs. Pearl Slayen and of red carnations by Rabbi Joel Msgr. John L. Storm.

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-Staff Photo bv Thane McIntosh Participants in the 10th annual \Vomen of Valor awards luncheon yes- teday at El Cote::; Hotel inclueded Mother i ancy Morris, a Wamen of VCllor and president of Univer ity of San Diego College for Women; Rabbi Joel Coor, spiritual lead.er o/ Temple Beth Israel, whose Sister- hood sponsors the luncheon, and Mrs. 1\'larvin Jacobs, geneal chaiman.

Goor, spiritual leader of Temple Beth Israel; a personal tribute by Mayor Frank Curran, and presentation of Woman of Valor

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