News Scrapbook 1964-1967

San Diego, Wedne,d~y, September 14, 1966

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EVENING TRIBUNE

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Unlverslty of California at Riverside a.nd Riverside Col• lege Call Rev. Robert Mc- Ginn, 684-8500. San Bernardino Valley Col- lege. San Bernardino· Call Rev. John Wagner, 82:1-2104. Vlctorvllle Valley College: Call Rev. Joseph D,ezel, 59043. Univer11ity of California. at San Diego: For Information cal! Rev. Charles Patron, 278-6939. Chaffey College: Call Rev. William Harl, 982-•i060. Bus Trip Set By Altar Society The bazaar benefit bus trip sponsored by the Altar Socl• ety of Christ the King parl h has be n postponed to Mon- day, S ptember 2 . The highlight of the trip will be the TV how "Let'~ Make a Deal," when four In• dlviduals from the group will be chos n to participate. This program Is televised daily on Channel 10 from noon to 12;30 p.m Othrr points will be Knott's Berry Farm Ble se

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RESH FISH Offshore Sea Food 117 Hi9hlond Aq TU 3-0131 Son l1m•"'I••• Catll

. Coeds to Serve Community Under University Proj d

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Redlands Shcpper

SACRED HEART

B) PHEBE BROWN IVE~ING TRIBUNE Slaff Wr11tr When a young worn grad- uates from University of San Diego .s Coll ge for Women she has gamed more than a degree-she has learned to b<' a mature Chri tian woman who realizes the power of h r heart, says the college's m w pre ident. lotl11 r , ·ancy Morris has just a• urned the po t at the college, replacing Mother Anne J<'arrahcr, who had been president since !Vfi3. 'Our functJOn, as Is that of all Catholic schools, 1 to edu- cate toward the total h rac- ier• formation," Mother for- ns atd of her new office thi v.eek. "If our young women can learn to exprc s them Ins and work for the community a. well as their fa1ml cs, giv- ing of them Ives through their hearts, th n we will be •uccessful m helping th m prepare as mature Christian women to ta~c their place in life and ocicty." Former Principal A native Californian, !he young pre 1dcnt com to San Diego from 'ian Franci co. where she wa principal of the Convcnl of the Sacre Heart for five vcar . She formerly taught Engh h at the conven of th Sacred Heart in :".lcnlu Park and ·an Franci ·co Majoring in Engli. h she re- ceived her B.A. from the lJm- versity of California a Berk eley, her M • from San Franci co Colicge for Worren, and was ,,orking toward her P.h.D. at Stanford University when she was called to be pr1!1cipal at the high . hool he says her first few "'eeks rn this city-she ar- rived Aug. 16-have b en very "pleasan ." (It Is h r first t me here) B<'coming Acqua tcd "I was very quick madr lo feel at home here. San Diego is a community v.hich is very sensilive and warm to higher education and its aims," she said m an inter• view. • So far I ve been kept very busy becol\'lmg acquamted with the coll ge, but the real- ly bu

the dilfcrences this year aid, will be an aug- in lather

Among emphasis Morris

mcntalton o( the community apo,tolic work done by the students. Want to Contribute "Previously college v.ru; thought of as preparation for things to do later, but uow 1t is clearly being demonstrated !hat students want to con- trihule to society WJIJL8 they're in college,·• she cx- plai1wd So lhe ci>llcge will he en• !'0uraging the young women to volunteer their alter-class hours to such acliv1lics as tutoring underprivileged chil• second scat to boys in school," she said. Offers Freedom "By vITtue of her psycholo- gical nature. women arc more reticent than men, and thus u ually tep aside and Jct the men t:ike the important posi- tion .'' '1'111s is not the case at a university $UCh ns San Die- go"s College for Women, she said. There the young women hold all the student govern- ment positions and learn to stand up and express them- elves as v. e)l a to make d(' 1sions without the aid of a an in a s p rior position. or co rse, this isn't the answer for f'\ eryone. but for many it off rs a freedom they never befor enJoyed-to ex- th msclves without 1r. imidation," she

CENTRAL DRUG CO. W I Thornton, r,ep ,hen, TU 6,7136 o, NA 1-2163 Hours • to •

You 1•• the lte1t w'1er- v•v "" fro"' .,,•• reth ond Sfllloked M•ott, '11h ontl '•ultry O•IIHtHHft REDLANDS

Sunday, • to 2. 4 to t Ha..,• Yov, Oocto, Coll We 01U..-e, IMme otely 5396 Rl't'ersldt Or

B rstow Shopper St. Joseph's, 312 N. Second St. Sunday Mosses: 6:30, 8, 10 A.M., Noon

Brand Engin Rebuild rs Co Pl•tt A tun l H

Theae Ad1•ertl er• Merit J-'our upport TRL THEM YOU SAW iTHEIR AD IN JHE SOUTH RN CROSS

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ST. JOSEPH'S 877 N . Compus Ave. - Upland 9,

DEL MAR ST. JAMES' 16 • !Sib ST. Sunday Ma 1, 8. 9, 10, Jl, noon, 7:80 p.m. ENCINITAS LUMBER CO. Everythtng an

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UP( "IJ Stone Funeral llforn Oi,r O Y ar, of 1ruc1 in th, Upland ZELLA H. STONE 355 E 9th St. t!plan 1,

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John Griffith MOBILE SERVICE Del . lar

Qr C "TEI>-El"anor ophomore at the Uni- n Diego College for

Women, strolls through patio with 11other Nancy :'llorris, new presi- dent of the school.-Staff Photo

JJCation cour.ag pohc1e time h thing y kc

TACK UP

Other factors examined but found less significant included such things as the number of hours of student help, periodi- cals subscribed lo and budget for rebind- in books. To determine the key factors and their relative i m por tan ce, McDonough_ and statistician Henrik Arnesen used a com- puter lo find significant differences be, tween all of the colleges in the survey and a control group of 70 colieges rated In another tudy as excellent on the basis of factors other than their libraries. Weighing and combining the three factors gave ~1cDonough an "excellence quotient" for each library. ON THE BAS rs of the excellence quotient. Oberlin college, Ohio, has the best college library in the country. Following Oberlin in the top 10 were Wesleyan university of Connecticut, Fort Hays of Kansas, Trinity of Connecticut, Smith, Amherst, Vassar, Haverford, Wellesley, and Bryn Mawr of Philadel- p 1rn. Only institutions considered by the Office of Education as liberal arts colleges were included in the study. The group includes some seminaries and institutions designat- w Slated y Guild

ing themselves universities. Of !he 666 college libraries ranked, 184 are Catholic; 86 in the top half of the rat- ings and 98 in the bottom half. In the top 10 per cent (67 libraries), 5 are Catholic, and of the boltom 10 per cent, 17 are Catholic. 1n the top and bottom 20 per cenls there were 19 and 35 Catholic colleges respectively. The highe t ranked Catholic college li- brary was al St. \Ii n cc n t' s college, Latrobe, Pa .. a Benedictine school, which ranked 31st. lls excellence quotient was 635 on a list that ran from Oberlin':; 864 to Edwards Walers' (.Jacksonville, Fla.) 242. McDonough noted: "\\'hile in general the better the college tjie better the library, this report is in no ·ense whatsoever to be understood as a ranking of the colleges concerned, merely lheu libraries." He added that a difference of a few places on the list one way or another is probably insignificant, and that the study does not take into account changes since 1962-63 wh n the origina 1 survey "'" made. THE \'ALl E of the survey for col- leges, he said, is to how how far they have lo go to reach u specific percentile under present standards. He said that somewhere between the 80th and 90th percentile on the current rankings would be a reasonable place for the average college to .shoot for. \lcDonough undertook th stud partly to prove II point to the St. .Joseph 's col- lege administration. He b a member of the sch ol's library board, and found It diffi ull lo mak a cm, for more funds for lhc library in the absence of objective te ts for how goad the library was. St. J eph 's has an excellence quotl f 410, putting it in the botlom IO per cent. ~1cDonough, who earned his Ph.D. in cl;,i,ssks at Columbia university, first usl'd I computer on a humaniti s problem 19 1961 when he analyzed the meter and S¥l)ahles of the Iliad to show thut it was \lfritten by one man, not several <1s I9th century scholars contended. In additio1i to his planned rankings of other kinds of edu1:ational institutions' Ii braries, McDonough 1s d ·eloping plans for a follow-up study by teams of perts of some of the coll gc librarieh to

the importance of fatlors mea~ured in numbers, such as ··open'' ver~us "dosed" stack . ystems, operating hours and the attitude of librarians. l'athollc ln11tltutions with Hbnlrics in the top 20 per cent were St Vincent's. San Francisco CoUege for \\'omen (43rd), Benedictine Height 1. Tulsa Okla. (46th ), Mar..hattanvllle College· of the Sarred Hee rt (49th), St. Henedict'•• Atchison, Kansas (62nd), St. .bhn'1 1 ('ollegevllle, Minnesota (71st), St. Francia 1eminary, Milwaukee (83rd), f.oras, Dubuque. Iowa (85th J, Immaculate Hean. Los Ang,•l. ( J 27th) aml College- of ·ew Rochelle. Y (129th ). In the bottom 20 per cent WC'rc: Provide ( H I. ); Salve Ht"glna. 'ewpor1, H I.~ l niver ity of Oallas; !-it. ,.b!Wph. Emmitsburg, ~1d.; ~lerc:yhurst, Jo;ric, Pa.; \fount !\.la.rt}, Yankton, S.D.; .\1Rrian, Indianapolis; Bellarmine, Louisvlllr-; nomlnican, Hadnl'", \\'is.; :i.tount i\'lcrcy, Cedar Hap1Q ; 1ount St. ,Jol4(•ph no\r11iate, Orangcvale, Calif. S1 M:lry or the Plain 11, l>odg~ City, Kan .: Mount 8t. ~1nry, Hooksett, _:\;,H . (.'aldwell Col- lege for \\. 1 omen, New ,.le~ey; Horrom<'o minar}', Columbus, Ohlo; Xotre Uame collC'ge '-itaten Island, · Y.; Marymount, -''ew York; Vllla :\1aria, Erie, Pa. the bottom 10 ~r ~nt: M. Franci!!I, Biddeford, ~1e,; Our !.a~ nf ~Cincinn~tl :ocph'• l'hllad•Jph· ; •)u Ladv of the ElniB, Chicopee, Mes~ ; St Mld1at:1'11, Sa!)tll Ft", Ntw l\1ex.; Cardinal Cushing, Brookline. Mass.: st. h's, ~- \\'indham, .\Je.; Alvemia, Heading, Pa.; C !\min de, Honolulu; Anna Maria, Paxton, Mass.; tn-tmack, ~- Andover, \1ass.; Molloy Catholic Col N! t for \\'omen, Bockville ( ·entre, N. \' .; Notre Oame, Manchester, • · ll , and Our Lady or the Snows SC'ho- lasticate, Pass Christian, Miss.

PHILADELPHIA-A classicist at St. Joseph's college has developed a method of mathematically rating college libraries. His own school library ranks near the bottom of the list. The top rating was achieved by Oberlin college, Ohio. Catholic colleges in general ran behind other schools in the rankings developed in a study of 666 liberal arts college li- braries by James T. McDonough Jr., di- rector of the college's office of humanistic research. The study was designed to show where a college's library stands in relation to compar ble colleges in the country, ac- cording to McDonough. "It also attempts for the first time to compute an objective over-all excellence quotient for liberal arts college libraries." The sludy ranks college libraries ac- cording to their number of books, num- ber of books per student, and salary bud- get. These were found to be the three key factors otit of 20 ItJeasurable factors re- ported by the colleges in a survey by the U.S. Office of Education, which financ th stugy. - Anr • 1ual SaturdaY.

USD Enroll"''° 1 1U" Rises 329 To 1, 4

The seventh annual fast,10n uncheon sponsored by the Al I Guild of the University of San Diego College for Men wil~ab a held th1 Saturday, October 8. in the Boundary Room of th Hilton Inn . A social hour at 11:30 a.m. will be followed b un eon at 12:30 p.m. ___________,;__:Y :i.The "Pyramid of Fashion"' Stoflet, Frank J. o·con11or · II e will be carried out in Eric Woods. and turquoise decora- Area ticket chairmen u •• tions. Fa hions will be shown the direction of Mrs. Wilber by Haft -Haggerty. Designer Hildreth include Mmes Ralph Sidney North also will be Q. Heintz, Point Loma; Michael present lo preview his collec- DeTuri, North Park and tion. Entertainment will be Burlingame; Frank Helkenn provided by vocalist Libbey North Shores; H.F. Bilbray: Eldridge. South Bay; Vesco, Mission Mrs. John L. Wilper, chair- Hills, and Carl F . Lengel, of man,_ will be assisted by co- LaJolla. chairman Mrs. Dominic Proceeds of the show will DePietri, and Mmes. Paul A. benefit the scholarship and Vesco, William H. Murphy, memorial grant philanthropy Elliott M. Brown, Harold N. oftheGuild.

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dent: Staph De Sales, president; Tom Ward, treasurer; Dennis Vice, secretary; Paul Tuomainen, social chairman. 'and Richard llittbenner, ch11f justice.

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