News Scrapbook 1964-1967

-Paul NOdtn Pl\o1o th Convent of th Sacred Heart by lnrtha Van Pecnen, 5, a kindergart- n r at the conve"'n._._t,,;::-:~:;:::::;_;: red I

son OJego UnTon ~tatf Ptio_,-. Caddl't1, p,-e,ident of Unh e1·si1) of .S,m Di<'go Col- lege for M<'n, abou1 its ne" -wimming pool.

Senior Dennis \Vibon, 011 di,i11g hoard, tulk with ,Pnior .Toe Thimes /lnrl the VPr_, Re, . .Tohn P. BIGGER ENROLLMENT EXPECTED

Bishop Furev Going To Rome for Council Bishop Francis ,J Furey, apostolic administralor of the Catholic diocese of San Diego, I leaves today for the third ses- 1 sion of the Vatican Ecumenical l Council in Rome. Bishop Furey will depart for Rome by air at 11:30 a.m. He will have a day's slay in New York. Bishop Furey will hr gone until December. lie has at- tended each of the previous two Ecumenical Council sessions, first convoked Jn 19r.2 by Pope John XXIll. All 2,400 bishops of the Ro- man Catholic Church through- out the world are ~chedul~d tol meet in St. Peter's Basilic~. IMPORTANT SESSIO. Experts say this session C'OU Id set the tone of Roman Catholic _relations with the rest of the world for decades lo co1;ic. One topic on the agenda is the nature of the church, including the sharing of power between Pope and bishops. Other problems facing the council are world overpopula- tion, birth control and mar-. riage. The bishops will vote on mat- ters before them this time. The voting may set the gi.;idclines for future council discussionq on Christian unity and modern world problems. VATICAN APPROACH Earlier this year, many Cath- olics urged a reappraisal of tne church's traditional attitude against artificial birth control Some experts felt that the Pope took birth control out of (C'ontinu\'d on a-?.1, Col. I)

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SD Has More Course ' ew By CHARLES DA VIS The San Diego Union'< F.ducation Writer Members Of !\ew courses. new faculty acuity

;ft.~ acozy uneral Set; USO Aide

C. Ri Ser day i

Philip a four'h degree for C man of the division of humani 'member of Cabrillo Co u n c i I, 2320 ties at the University of San Di- Knights of Columbus He is sur- who ___...,...,,., ego College for vived by his widow, Jean; two Inter ;'vten smce its sons, including Paul. of San 01- Pet opening m 1954 ego a daughte• and six grand- dent died Monday at children. owne his home. 52 4 The Most Rev. Charle. F. Bud- com~ Prosper It y dy, bishop of the San Diego Sur Lane , acozy, Catholic Diacese, ,,., ill preside Lois· horn in Mame, at a Requiem Mass at 9:30 a.m. ter, ' also was profes- tomorrow in the Immaculata at of S or of mod"rn the university. and 1 langt:ages and The Rosary will be at 8 o'clock -- philosophy a t tonight in Ryan-Sullivan & Brad- It . ·acoz) the university. ley Woolman )tortuary. Inter- decic He had taught languages at St. ment "ill be in Holy Cr o s , tisin1 Charil's College in . laryland, the Cemetery your University of Cahfornia at Ber- • ---- keley and the Univernt} ,>[ Bil- hos in Lebanon. acozy, 60. chair- • ·acozy wa

members and more students are expected in the 1964-6) !!'rm al trn- University of San Diego, two of whose components will begin a landmark year. If projections materialize.

USD's separately organized Col- lege for Women , College r or 1en and School of Law could have about 200 more students h\.~~:'.i}Ci ihan the l,065 last fall lll'l'H AI\MVERSARIES The men college and a w rchool begin their 10th lull aca- demic years of operation , and, for he men's college. it marks ___ ..;..;..;:=.:;~..t, the 15th year since its charter was issued, in 1949. Registrat on will be Sept. 15 j at the women's eollege w1thl classes beginning the next day. About 6.S0 students are PX- •~,..:.-~: pected. the same as a year ago. I• The college-the first academ-, • ic institution on the Alcala Pari< :......-.........: campus when it opened Feb. 11, •m!-ft.,,,,·-r">• 1952-will have 10 new mem- bers on il~ religious and lay ' Starting this fall will be a library science program under Roy Holleman. formerly California facult/ The f i r s t tra new on the Universit , of Southern par,ncc.'. in:o a , ., piece ,~ atche,: Mrs. G. . . -, . faculty of 63 this year. LIBRARY SCIE, ·cE

The educator received a bach- or's degree from the Universi- ty of fontreal and a master' degree m French at the Uni- versity of California at Los An• geles. lie was studying for a philosophy doctora~e at the Uni- versity of Southern California.

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San Diego Union Stall Photo

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Stucknt Nicholas:

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new hiolof:) laboratory at Univcrsit) of San Diego. Other new tadliti<':-; have bef'n providf'd there,

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Th~ roll, e's phy,ic:il ard life , Al sciencPs departments are coop- 'S,ril o:i

the College fo;· l\len. reg-

The ,·ollege will have 12 ne, 1

1 • II_ be S~pt. 9 and faculty members. includmg doc- el emen!ary l?. Cl_a~scs will begm Sept. 11. tors of psychology, phyFic, and JOO from a ypar ago.' USD's law school expects un- . The \ er~· R ,·. .J ··hn P. Cad-Jprecedented growth. There 11ill aen , president. said the curn- be 90 returnmg upperclassmen. to be•chemistry. amon~ 35 o. up

Also new this vear will be a craunc; 1:1

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special educatio~ series start- teache_r preparation _curnculum :~nrol:rnen' 1, cxp,,~ted

ing in September with a course st ressmg for elementary teachers on cur- th e sciences. riculum development for men- TELESCOPE SHED relatrnnships

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the 1:r,f culum will __be cxp_anded

tally retarded pupils.

lrom In addition, 100 freshman ap-

philosoph!' de- time will be a 9-by8-foot ·'cold two ac~demic di_viswns to four. plications have arrived for the for conduct of biochem- They ai e humanities, _social sci- school's ?ay program and 70 for

Spanish and

partment majors will be devet-1room· oped A political science course istry experiments. The

room, ences. n at u r a I sci~nce and the e\'enmg program.

•·Public Opinion and Propagan• with

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tempera- mat?~?1a_tics, a nd busmess ad-

Registration will be tomorrow! 111d cl.asses will start Sept. 8. Superior Court Judge Robert

da," will he offered for the first lures. was financed in part by mmis,i ation.

time.

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Creativity will be

tressed in t,on.

Added this year will be a be- O. Stan,lorth will take over the

three new workshops-one moot court program. playwriting, one in acting and,about six weeks is a shed with faculty member< n the psy- handled in the pa~, by U.S. Dis- one in theater. The college's a sliding roof to house a 10-inch chology department. There w. ill trict Cour·t .Judge James M. ~Iring ensemble will be ex- reflector telescope which will be he a new bi9logy laboratory, a Caner. in Planned for ccmpletion in havioral laborawry and two school'

THE SAN DIEGO UNION F"riday. Sept.11, 1964 Ci) A SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - 27 Classes Open At 2 Colleges The 1964-65 school term be- gins today for two of the coun- ty's higher education institu- tions. They are the L'nivers1ty of San Diego's College for Men where registration has been un'. der way since Wednesday, and Palomar College. near San Marcos, which has conducted preliminary activities since Tuesday.

C ,rPUS TOUR-Marsha Adkins, right, a senior at University of San Diego College for Women,

shows the university's campus to freshmen Connie Salovitch, left and Patty Hughes.

STUDENTS COME FROM FAR AND WIDE USD Expects Enrollment Record Ry DO, COL ,MA, country and from areas of the F'or the first

time, courses pects a 100 per cent increase

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. _ . nen an frrst-.i,ear -students. Joseph Th , U?iversity of San Diego Mother Ros~i, college dean, ther Cadden said. They are the A. Sinclit.ico ,Jr., dean of the 1111 hcgin 8 • n w chool year said new course~ will be of- philosophy of art, history and school, anticipates a total en- thi nonth wllh an enrollment fered in education, philosophy, appreciation of art and history roilment of 240, representing 90 of 1 290 . Spanish, political science, phys- and appreciation of music. returning upper classmen and This will be the largcsl tu- 1cs and life sciences, speech, Existing building space has 150 first-year students. Classes d nt body sm the university music, and library techniques. been converted to provide more begin Sept. 8. w s founded in 1949 In Alcala cl b' bo · · · P k h I ho . The College for Men expects assrooms, a 1ology la ra- Smchtico said this will be the ar 1g 1 a ve hsslon Val- . · ley. It Is an increa e or 230 an enrollment of 350, an .Ill- tory, _a semmar room, .and a school's largest student hody ov r ,a t year crease of 100 over last year. behavioral laboratory m the since it opened in 1954. The large t rollment Is ex- Clas es begin Sept. l 1. P s Y c h O logy department. he He said the faculty includes pe ted at th College for Worn- The Very Rev John Paul said. . . graduates from such law en wh n cla ses beg n there Cadden, college president said New maJors will be offered schools a H d M 11 Sept IS for 700 tudents an 12 f I be • . in Latin and Spanish Addition- s arvar ' ' arque e, mer as of 50 over last year. join": s:r/~·h! :ue~! :1ll al ~ourses will be pr~sented in Stanfor~, _Geor_getown, ~niversi- loth r 1''arr , co 11 cg e have four divisions, covering ?usm_ess administration cover- ty. of Caltforma, North 1~stern, pre id nt, said m t of the stu- humanities, social ciences nat mg finance. Chicago, l\hch1gan and the dents are local, but 200 r ex- ural science and matherr:atJcs, The School , 1 Law, the third Univcr ity.. nf Southern Cali- ct d from throughout the and bu lncss admml !ration division of hP unives itv PX- fornia ,a m mer1ca w1 e o ere m me arts, Fa- m

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