News Scrapbook 1964-1967

Published Weekly By The Diocese of So n Diago, Ca li f .

THURSDA ,

Entered A, Second Class Motte r a t the Post Office of Son Diego under the Act of Morch 3, l B79

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THE SAN DIEGO UNION

(i)

Father JOhn Quinn Appointed Auxiliary Bishop of San Diego

ollege Welcomes • ge I ress

Stage Gtoups In Four Schools T p Get Serious

Pope's Delegate Will Consecrate Semi.nary Rector Very Rev. John R. Quinn, rector or Immaculate Heart Semin• ary here, has been named by his lloliness Pope Paul VI Auxil- iary Bishop of San Diego. Announcement of the appointment was made Wednesday by His Excellency, the Most Rev. Luigi Raimondi, Apostolic Dele- gate in the United tates. Archbishop Haimondi will consecra te the new bishop on a date to be fixed later. "The appointment of Bishop-elect Quinn pays tribute to the Diocese of San Diego, to its priests and people, and to the semin ary of which he is rector," Most Rev. Francis J. Furey said. "His many admirable qualities of mind and heart assure us that he will wear well the episcopal dignity and discharge competently its responsibilities." Hopes to LightenH.eavy Burden The Bi ·hop-elect said, "I hope my assistance may lighten the heavy burden borne by Bishop Furey in his pastoral 'concern for all the churches' of this rapidly ~rowing diocese." A native Californian, Bishop- feet Quinn was born Ill River side on March 28, 1929, the son of th late Ralph .J,. Quinn and Elizabeth Carroll Quinn presently residing in La Mesa. He is the first native to be raised to the piscopal dignity in this jurisdiction and the second auxiliary named to serve it. Most Rev. Richard II. Ackerman, CSSp, served here from 1956 to 1960. He is now Bishop of Covington, Kentucky. While hNt>, he was auxiliary to the late Most Rev. Charles F. Buddy, Bishop-elect Quinn attended St Francis de Sales elementary school in Riverside, Sacred Hearl Preparatory High School in Watertown, Wis., and entered St Francis College, El CaJon, to study for the priesthood. Completes Studies inRome The Bishop-elect completed his philosophical and theological studies at the North American College and Gregorian l'niver sily m Rome. He was ordained in Rome on July 19, 1953. After a term a, assistant pastor in St. George's parish, Ontario, he was appointed professor or dogmatic theology at lmmaculatc Heart Seminary. The new bishop also is a diocesan consullor. chairman oftht· ~lu~ic Commis ion of the Diocese of San Diego and a member of the Diocesan Liturgical Commis ·ion. Hr holds membership in the Canon Law Society of America and in the Catholic Theologi cal Society of America As soon as his appointment was announced, Bishop Furey also named him vicar general. This is in accord with the direc tives of the Second Vatican Council m its Decree on the Pastoral Office of Bishot,s. Until now there has been only one vicar gen erat in the San Diego Diocese, Right Rev. Msgr John F. Purcell, PA, pastor ofSacred Heart Church, Coronado. Msgr. Purcell will continue to serve as vicar general, Bishop Furey said. Other members of the new bishop's immediate family are Anthony G. Quinn, brother, of Studio City, Mrs. William Bush of Riverside and Mrs. ·oet DeJarnett of Victorville, sisters. When notified of his new appointment, the bishop-elect is• sued the following statement: "I am deeply grateful to His Holiness. Pope Paul VI, for the un merited honor he has bestowed on m . To Serve Bishop, Priests, People I eagerly look forward to assisting Bishop Furey in serving the priests and people of the San Diego Diocese. I pray that my appointment may bring glory to God and His Church, grace and blessing to His people. And in some small way, I hope my assistance may lighten the heavy burden borne by Bishop Furey in his pastoral 'concern for all the churches' of this rapidly growing Diocese I welcome the challenge ofsharing,under Bishop Furey's lead ership,in the vast, far reaching program of renewal inaugurated by the Second Vatican Council. It is a great grace to live in these times, when, as Pope John told the bishops of the world as he opened the council, 'Our duty is not only lo guard the precious heritage of the past, as if we were concerned only with antiquity, but to dedicate our. selves with an earnest will and ·without fear to that work which our era demands ofus'." A pectoral cross willed to the Diocese of San Diego by Bishop Buddy and released only Tuesday by the executors was pre sented to the new bishop by Bishop Furey. Expresses Heartfelt Gratitude Expressing his heartfelt gratitude to Pope Paul for the assist ance and support of an auxiliary bishop, Bishop r'urey said: "Because of the great number of souls to be saved in our vast territory, our Holy Father has seen fit to send another bishop to assist m caring for the People of God Ill the Diocese of San Diego. I am sure the clergy and laity of our diocese join with me in an expression of appreciation and thanks. "In a leller to me, announcing the appointment of Bishop elect Quinn, His Excellency, Most Rev. Luigi Raimondi, Apostolic Delegate to the United States, wrote: "May he be blessed as he works more intimately with Your Excellency for the good of souls in San Diego." On this hapJ>Y occasion, we make these sentiments our very own God bless and prosper our new Auxiliary Bishop."

don't set• why we haven't been ahlc to wear bcrmudas be- fore . nyway. I like to wear horts." Th r arc some . tudents "ho do want the "freedom of dres •· pressed further, for fl'ar or repurcu ·ions. John Daubney, a Sophomore, stat- t>d, "I think the protesters are Juv nile What do they want? We have enough now" S1m1larly, Bill Sink, :enior da. s . or1al chairman. feels the protesters' angl'r is being was\\•d "While I favor the change in dress regulations, I ll11nk the tudents hould in t re t thems<•lve in acadcm• 1c problem· - the extension of the library hour:. or a cha ng in the bookstore ad nun stration." A mor realist- ic tlitude mu t be taken than th!' petty obiection to attire" Father William Phillips, deu of tudcnts, i a member of' tht> univer 1ty's adminislra- tion that favored the changes "I feel the new code ba ·ically 1 r asonably liberal provid,, mg that our tudent body will have freedom of dress, while t the ame time ensuring they will he neat and well• groom d" Commenling on the new pro- tests again. t the code's fair ne s, ~·other Phillips said, "Th :tudents are immature and Ill advised when they pur . uc their views outside the ofl1c111l channels of commun ication Student advisory Councll, Lcgi-Counc1l. and the Stud nt Affairs Committee." Reflects Power The new code reflect tbe an Diego It marks one of th first time that the • tudent: have act d through the proper channels in obtaining a long.sought. afh'r privilege. Rick Marque, a sophomore, po ibly expressed the stu- dent body's attitude best when he said "It's the !Jr ·t major victory Ill stud nt appeals. Now the students have an in- centive, and we feel we can work for more " the most honest was Sam Contmo's freshman "You don't have to iron bermudas or T-shirts" favors Chan11es power the tudent now has in the n1vers1ty of Hea ons for the changes were many, but perhap

Ft 1 ur area schools get seri 0 • this week with produc- lion of pla) notable for their sombernc Californ a \\ c tern Uni\ er- • pecch and drama de- partment opens the week llllh Arthur , II!ler's ".\II My Son" TucsdaJ, ; :\IiraCo la Colle c in Oceanside follows \\ l'dnesday 111th .\filler's adaptation of Henrik Jb,en·s "The Pn oner· op 'IIS Thur day at Cai I\ e ter School of Per- orm no- Ar and the Univer- t) of an Diego opens Lil- a laugh among them, the four pla)s fill represent important tcps m 20th Century drama. Jb en, of course, helped lead the theater Into the 20th Cen- tury with his early nnturah m and Arthur liller's adapta- tion add poY.er for contem- porary Americans. "Sons" is .\filler's fir t important plai· including clue to his late; poy, er. and ..Foxe ·" is one of the best American ph1y- \H1ghts dealing with a native SUbJect. ltj •. Enemy of the People·'' Bridget Bo nd's lian llcllman·s r day. ' ·The Little Foxes' Tholi ll1cre's hardly

Arthur 10 n reduced the number of act, and focused the plays mes- sabe to such good effrct that it enJoyed a com, rtable Broad11 ay run m the 19.50 I as a te!e\ i• Pn ucce The .\11rnCo ta College pro- auct1on. 11 h1ch y, 11! be d,,. pla: ed at 8 15 p.m Wcdne • day through Saturda1 in the school's lheakr, is · directed b) Joe . as\1av. The cast includes Walter T l'arrcn, Da1id L Forre r• Robert Rogers, Bill \ an Ant' 1 1erp, Wendell • 1chols, Ru ty Redmond, Carol Thomas •·e1a Wish , :\lark Sa 11ai· and · _Dr.. Ahin S. Kaufman 1• directmg "The Pn oner , which I a lengthy psychologl- ca I ex c h a n g e between a prince of the Catholic church impnsonl'd bv the Communi i go_vernment of h1 Iron Cur- tam country on trumped-up charges, and Ills interrogator, a former ari tocrat assigned the Job of dra,ving forth a conlcss1on' from the cardi- nal .\filler's adapt and Ro: Gardiner. The bulk of ti e plav 1s an- exc/1ange between th h 0 - the cardi11al pla)ed by Dennis G Turner and the in- terrogator pla) ed b Denni Ra: Turner - 111th Billy Jean Ro s as a cell y, • fer fllhng the only oth r mportan t speakrng roJ,, ( ) nthia Gar- fl on round out th e cast for the product n \\ h1ch will be seen at 8:30 p.m. Thursda\' !~rough Saturda) rn the Cal \\ e tern School of Performing Aris headquarters a• 350 Ced - ar SI. ''The Little Foxes." a story of a decaying ari tocratlc southern fa!llliY in 1900, l cur:ently being successfu!Jy revived at • 'ew York·s Lin- coln Center for the Perfor. ming Arts, where it star l\largaret Rutherford, George C. Scott, Anne Bancroft and E . G. Marshall, directed by Mike ~ichois. Jame Taimdage. James lcllugh and

USO Cagers Start Drills, 20 Report By PATRICK MCCARTNEY Twenty varsity basketball candidates were greeted with conditioning and fundamen- tals drills October 16 as the Toreros of USO started pre- paring for their roughest schedule ever. USD has added five new teams to its schedule, with only one team owning a losing record last year. The West- mont Warriors (Jan. 12) had a 9-15 record last year. Other new teams the Toreros play include University of Idaho, (Jan. 26) with a 14-12 record last year; Gonzaga (Jan. 27) accumulated 21 wins l~st year against only six losses: Redlands (Feb. 8) collected 16 wins in 23 contests, and. Ne- vada Southern (Feb. 16, closed last season with a 21•7 reC()rd. "Gonzaga and Idaho will certainly be our roughest op- ponents; and, of course, Ne• vada Southern will be rough. San Diego State figures to be real tough," Coach Phil Wool- pert said, "and Cal Western is always a dog-eat•dog game." In preparing for the new season, Coach Woolpert is stressing conditioning and fundamentals. A new addition to training methods this ;-ear 1s the_ u_se of exer.genies, cond1tionmg devices that allow the athlete to use both isometric (static) and isotonic (active) stress. The use of the exer-genie will permit the team to eliminate the tradi- tional calisthenics which are time-wasting and not as effec. tive.

U DWill Open g 0 Se on ith Cal Poly Coar 1 PhJ Woolpcrt's Univer- s ty uf San Diego basketball t am forh IE'd with eight letter- me . Y. 111 launch its season l n g, '. ;iaain I Cal Poly of Po- a m USD gymnasiu·m. 'r pof · scheduled for 8. Four of last year's starting c .ib 111 be ready to go again. 'r e • elude forward Rick Ca- br r I a 6-3 senior, 6-6 junior c n er Gus ::llagee and seniors B1 I Sheridan (6·0) and Ted F ield'° (6•2 I Jim Wilke, a 6-6 Junior for- 1\ard, replaces Alan Fay, who ha graduated. Ready to fit into the lineup are Durel Carpenter, a 6·5 Junior who was the top reboun- , der last ~eason ; Jim Allen, a 6-1 c semor guard, and Dan Wight- • man. a 6-5 junior center who 11 as a letterman two years ago 1 before leaving school for a sea- 1 .son. ... Greg Long, a 6-8 senior, and Bob Mccloskey, a 6-2 junior rol!nd out the club along with ex.-freshmen Jeff Fi!zenger, 6-4; Mike Pradels, 6-1; Jim Usher, 6-6 and Neal Schram, 5-11. They played for a Frosh team which finished with a 19-6 rec- ord.

' The Pri oner'' i an lnter- c tmg oddity that many the- at•1cal ob. ervers bcliel'e has n ver had a decent hearing an)where

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called a modern morality 'et In /JO.! 1-\\ OJ!d War II the consc1en e of a manufacturer "ho has unkno I Jy endJ n- gen'

The production of the I:ni- 1 ersity of San Diego is being directed by Kathleen Zawor. ski for perfonnances at 8 r m. Friday and Saturday in the theater at the College for Women . The cast includes Pauline Carbone, Anthonv Walker Sharon O'Neill, Duke Day: bert, John .Miller, Kathleen Davis, Patrick :\kCartney, Ritchie Ramon, Eileen Kear- ney nd :\like Martens.

'Cockt ii Party' At The Globe

Last year, when the Toreros had a 14-11 record they split with Cal Poly, winning 5~58 and losing 65-83. The Broncos hold a 11-5 series advantage. USO will travel to Los Ange- les tomorrow night to oppose Pepperdine College. These games begin a 25-game ~chcdule that includes partici- pation in 111 o tourney . the Holi- Cla · at Cal Western and L'niver- sity of California at Irving both s ated this month. '

wit in its discovery of analogy in un- likely places " One of the most popular analogies is the comparison of the psychiatrist to God and the old woman to a guardian angel figure putting forth Eliol 's Chris- tian point of view. There are two kinds of life, the psychiatrist tells Edward and Lavinia, the one of ordinary day- to-day duties such as they choose, and the ideal one of sell-dedication and self-sacrifice which Celia chooses as a martyr on a tropical island. St. Thom- as Aquinas himself could hardly have been more high-flown. But JUst as these sort of religious meanings may be read into "Cocktail Party" so, too, may the rest of Eliot's familiar hang-ups: The emotional im- poverishment, boredom and spiritual emptiness he depicted in "Prufrock," "The Waste Land," the Sweeney poems, "The Hollow Men" fairly shout at us in the inane party chatter. Hovr far is the drawing room from Prufrock's haunt where "the women come and go talking of Michaelange- lo?" How far are the conversational charades and singing of "One Eyed Riley" from "Here we go round the prickly pear?" J\ot very. The evening of Eliot's character's, loo, is "spread out against the sky like a patient etherised upon a table," even if they may be measuring out their Ii ves in j i g g e r s instead of coffee spoons. "I should have been a pair of ragged claws scuttling across the floors of silent seas," mourns Prufrock. "There is nothing to escape from and nothing to escape to," the stranger tells Edward at the cocktail party. It is the same old mysterious Eliot painting that same old dehydrated nowhere scene. He gives you the tinlc- ertoys and you have to do your own thing with the construction. "Th• C~ktall Porty/' a thrte-act comedy by ci1l· C~~:!• ~U,:r,~~s at F!1:i:ff sra,e. It ls d1rtcted bv WIiiiam RMSch wHh sets and costumts by PtttY Ktllntr, Tl!E CAST Edward William Irish Jul a JeGn MacKert11• Cella Cassia Besson Ate• !Jurt a. l&lont Ptftr Jim &rock Sir Htnry Cfht unfdent.fltd 1trcuifJerJ

Julia, Cassia Besson as Celia, Dennis G. Turner as the stranger, Lee Chme- lik as Lavinia, Burt B. Belant as Alex and Jim Brock as Peter. Through their chatter at the party we learn that Edward and Celia are lovers but Edward does not want to divorce his wife because the stranger has warned him that lt will set in motion events he may not be able to control. Lavmia returns. The couple visits a psvchiatrist (who turns out to be the stranger at the party) and is reconciled. Two )ears later the identi- cal characters, minus Celia, who has been mar yred on a tropical i land, convene for another cocktail party. But, of cour e, no one let Eliot get a,rny with anything quite that neat, anything so unmistakeable West End. "T1ie cocktail party can be the secu- lar counterpart of the Communion Ser- vice If given in the right spirit, the tidbits and the short drinks the equiva- lent of the bread and wme," says David F, Jones, profe or of literature at the University of Minnesota. "The play I almost a piece of metaphy 1cal

Cabrera Sparks USO To Victory

The college team, like the high school team, does not con. centrate on polish during early workouts. "Every.year we finatly get to the same thing, fundamen- tals," Coach Woolpert said. "Of course, we'd like to start right out on patterns, but we have to start with the basics first. The name of the game is 'team sport,' so we're stressing cohesiveness. We're always looking for groups of players who work best together." In assessing last year's Torero squad, which was 14- 11, Coac!i Woolpert stated "Our strong point last year wa; definitely that we were a good- shooting team; and, overall, we were a little better re. bounding team than we've been in the past. "Our major weakness last year was inconsistency, a fault I hope to work on this year. One game we'd be great, and the next - well, not so great." USO will have a Junior Var. sity team for the first time this season, rather than the Frosh team they've had in the past. The reason for this move is a supe rabundance of varsity materia l. The ,Toreros only gradu a ted th ree members of last year's · varsity team and with nine candidates up' from last year's frosh, Coach Wool- pert is starti ng with an un.

The University of. San _Diego jumped off to an early lea(! anc was never headed lI1 wmmng its basketball opener in a (i5-q( conquest of Cal Poly of Pomona last ni ht at the Toreros' gym About 1,500 fans watched as Rick Cabrera led the Torero

IN 'COCKTAIL PARTY' William Irish i's Edwar Chamberlayne, Cassi a Besson is Celia Copple~ stone .

attack with 22 points. Jim Wilke added 12 despite getting into foul trouble and having to sit out much of the game. U~ led by 10 points most of the way before Charlie Buchanan, a former La Jolla High and San Diego City Col- lege star, hit five straight points for Cal Poly to cut its deficit to 55-50 with 3½ minutes to play. But that was the last of the scoring for the visitors as Ca- brera and his teammates added 1 the final 10 points of the game. j Cabrera hit 17 of his total in the second half. Buchanan led Cal Poly's at- tack with 10 points. , USO travels to Los Angeles I , for a game tonight with Pepper- 1 I dine College. I ; i~~d,('5> Ga t1 i Sheridon 3 t- 2 Magee J ,i., Cabrera a 6-12 WIike 4 tll-6 1 1 Totals 2, 17.29 6 Halftime ,core: USO 34, Cal Poly 24.

Alexander Gibbs ...

wieldy 20 varsity candidates. Woolpert decided to form the JV team in order to alle- viate the the awkward number of varsity personnel and to give some of the players an op- portu~ity to play a nd gain experience.

FoulPd out. Col Polv: J. Brown. Toro! foul,:· USO 15, Cal Poiy 24.

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