News Scrapbooks 1977-1979

1 ~o national sorority chapters are being added at " ~eta c~n;ipuse~ this. month. Zeta Pi Chapter of 0 .P Ma Pi was installed at University of San C~~g~e~noihe weekend and Satu~day Lambda Iota ucfo. Alpha Omicron P1 w111 be installed for Alpbha Delta Pi is the first sorority for us. D and a num er of natio 1 d the . na an state officers were here for s·ce~emom~s _a~d a banquet at El Cortez Hotel. Alp~~i1i f~slivities_ are planned for the initiation of Saturda micro~ P1 at Sea Lodge in La Jolla for al Ymormng. There will be a 1 p.m. luncheon Berke~:;mae from _use, University of Arizona, UC· and Cal~o• U~-Dsav1s, California State-Long Beach rma • tatP-Northridge de:r~/t~guS t Ac~el of ~ncin~oi international presi- . Mrs J h s~or!tY, will officiate at ceremonies.

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DAILY 15 CENTS

52 PAGE5

TUESDAY MOIININO, NOVEMIER 8, 1977

Election Doy

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SAN DIEGO, CALIFOINIA

HOthY

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ilhland of La Jolla will be IUJ1Cheon

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Art ' C party~~n;arles Bragg will be honored at a dinner his ks ay by Ms. Janet Disraeli after a show of wor at her gallery in Old Town.

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Court Here For Suit On Billboards

chool Foci ity

.~~iYOf'\t"'-° f~ If/ City welcomes court THE STATE Supreme Court 1s a highly mobile body, meeting frequently m Los Angeles, most consistently in San Francisco and occasionally in its headquar- t rs city, Sacramento. 1• /11

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SPENDING, MONEY SUPPLY F ie an Says Government Fue s Inflation Polit,col, economic freedoms linked - Page 8-1 By DO!'olALD C. BAUDER F nanctal Editor, The San Die90 Union The undul ng. tructural rate of Inflation m the United States I now to 9 percent. What's behind th s miserable 1,tate of affairs? ''The gov.!mment Is spending too much and pnnting tco much (money)," said rnton Friedman, , -obel Prize winmng economist who spoke at the l.iniversity ol San Diego yesterday Friedman the economist who more than anybody else rr a cu the branch kno\\n as monetarism (although e

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replica of chambers used C'arly in the 19th century by the Supreme Court of the United States. It may be premature to specu- late that the faint link between the billboard question and the nat10n's highest court is proph t- ic - but it could be 7he d 11 bate centers on local control of safety matters and esthetics pitted against free speech rights and, according to some claims, survival of the sign industry - the sort of substance of which U.S. Supreme Court cases are made. St..ite court officials anticipate a ruling in about three months. Our city's welcome to the state justices recognized the signifi- cance of the testimony they heard here.

Ry MITCH Hl'.\IAKA srott wrner, The Son Dit9o Union

The high court ruled m the case that failure to appoint counsel was unconsututiona: and a demal of th rights of representation. " !though it s a case of v1nd.cat1on of attorneys, 1t also is a case that villf1 them for allow1ng 1t to happen," :.\1orris said. "The courtroom.' :\!orris said, "presents with the opportunity to educate young attorneys on the func- uonlng and the ethical duties of lawyers "The courtroom imposes on us the duty to do a better job of educating "I pray we are worthy of The new courtroom facili- ty is named after the late Joseph P Grace, rather of USO trustee, Charles Mac- Donald Grace, a major donor to the courtroom facil- ity Sister Sally Furay, USO academic vice president and provost, deli ered the invo- cation. Law School Dean Donald T Weckstein, currently on sabbatical leave, welcomed and introduced special guests attending the pro- gram. Msgr. I. Brent Eagen, diocesan chancellor and sec- retary of the USD board, delivered the benediction. that challenge." MAJOR DO:-IOR

But the appearance of the jus- tices m San Diego this week was rare, Jf not unprecedented The session was particularly appro- pnate, Since the court took up the 1s ue of San Diego's controver- sial billboard ordmance The law has been declared unconstitution- al by a lower court. The court did not cross the state simply for the convenience of w1tnesse in the billboard case appeal, of rourse. The occasion was the ded1cat10n of the new courtroom rac1lity at the Univer- sity of San Diego Law School, a

dislikes the term), used an old rule-0!-tllumb to reach the 7 to 9 percent inflation estimate :'112 (cash plus bank demand and time depoSJts) is growing at a rate of 10 percent a year, wh· the long- rm real (inllation-adJU ted) grov.th e of he eco nom IS Ju 3 per- cent The subtraction process - 10 minus 3 - leaves 7 percent, but underlying inflation may be even tugher than that, h aid. "These relationships don t work out perfectly," Friedman said. (Other economists, who do not pay as much attention to monetary aggregates, also reac about 7 per- . cent by their own rule of thumb, to wit· wage gains 10 per cent)

, rum Will Debate ~ U.S. Justice System The American justice system will b debated by crunmal Justice experts, including San Diego County District_ Attorney Ed Miller and California Director of Correct10ns Jerry Enomoto, at a free community forum on Tuesdav. Other panelists m the forum, to be held at the Third Colleg~ Lecture Hall on tile UCSD campus beginning at 7 P:m., mclude Jerome Skolnick, professor; of law and director of the Center for the Study of Law and Society at UC_ Berkeley, and Bill Ott, a reporter for t e San Diego Umon. The panelists will be cross-examined by Municipal Court Judge Janet Kin_tner, attorney David Herring and Richard Arenson, assistant professor of philosophy at UCSD. Moderator will be Bruce Johnson a$Sistant professor of sociology at UCSD. 1 The forum is sponsored by the University of San Diego Conference Center; UCSD Extension, the San Diego County Bar Association; and The San Di o Union in '.:°nJunction with. Co~ses by Newspaper's fall series, Cr~e and Justice 1n America." Financial support is provided_ by .a grant from the California Council for the Humamt1es m Public Policy. . For additional information about the forum and direc- t10ns to the Third College Lecture Hall, contact Courses by Newspaper at 452-3405. Those u~able to attend can hear the discussion Jive on publi~ radio stat10n KPBS-FM. Listeners will be able to question ~~rum participants via a telephone hookup. .In add1t1on, several forum participants will be inter- viewed by host Helen Hawkins on today's "Crosstalk" program on public television station KPBS, Channel 15. Listeners may phone in questions during the live broad- cast that begins at 10 p.m. . The Courses by Newspaper fall series appears weekly m the Sunday edition of Ther San Diego Union. Courses by Newspaper is a project of UCSD Extension funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities v(,,t't,,. ll/t,/77 .

real economic growth.)

rrunus Ion

l rfortunatelv, Fn an does not hold ut much hope for !Illmed t • mprovement. He does n t think 1t will make much difference whether I den Carter reap- pomt.s Federal Reser. P Board Chairman , hur Bums (once Friedman s professor) when Bums' rm exp· es early next year · ere 1s great misunderstanding on this qJes lon Mr. B· n ' statements are excel ent," said Friedman, but the Fed's act ons are decidedly not "Mr. Burns' record (as fed chairman) 1s not distinguishable from others' recent- ly," said Friedman. noting. "Tile Fed has established targets for slowing down monetary growth. but while the targets are gomg down, actual monetary growth is gomg up." Bo'.h .'.\11 (currency plus demand deposits) and .'.\12 (Ml plu:i certam bank savings deposits) have been rising at double digit rates in recent months. Fed targets for both are far lower. The Fed lowers its targets - but not money growth, Friedman noted sardomcally. And today s depres ed stock market may be a more accuratt reflection of current economic ills than was the stock market crash of 1929, Friedman said. In 1929, the stock market crash "was not a prelude to what happened later (the Depression). Tile stock market crash dtdn'L create the D~pression; the Federal Reserve did,' M id. (In his most famous work. Friedman tracked ho the Federal Reserve Board created and intensified the Great Depression by continuously shrinking the money supply, rather than raising it, as it should have done at the time.) "Today e don't have that problem (a Fed which creates deflation). Today, we have the reverse - a ~·ed which ts promoting inflation," Friedman noted. The stock market not only reflects fear of this excessive more\ creation (causing inexorably high interest rates) but "somethmg more basic and funda tal" - a fear that corporations cannot cope with rapacious government, he said Citing a monumental recent work, "Can the Corporation Survi\'e?" by Michael C. Jensen and William H. :\feckling. The tract by the tv.o professors at the University of Rochester has become widely quoted and respected. Tummg to the international scene, Friedman defended a concept which he took a major role in creating - floating exchange rates, or the process by which international currencie trade against each other in world markets, largely influenced by supply and demand forces. F oatmg exchange rates are supposed to compensate for differing wage rates, inflation rates and trade balances of vanou~ nal!ons. (Friedman had been advocating floating rate for years, and in 1971.the} were ushered in when ~Ile U.S. suspended gold convertibility of the C. S. dollar At the tune, in~ational rates of exchange were based on a fixed, or rigi ly proscribed system tied to the U.S. dollar, which was in turn tied to gold. Floatmg r tes have been f.'.lI' more effective, he said, despite government intervention into the process, known as the 'dirty float." "The question is whether you have a dirty float or a dirty exchange rate. The dirty float is an enonnous improvement, ' d Friedman.

USD seeks 2nd-in row University of San Diego's football team will try to- morrow to do something it hasn't accomplished all season - win two games in a row. It will be the Toreros' final game. · The Toreros will be at Moraga to face the St. Mary's Gaels after raising their record to 3-6 last week with a 13-7 victory over U.S. International University. USIU will be away, too, pla~ing at Northridge State as 1t attempts to improve on a 1-8 record. The West- erners won't wind up their !'eason until next week ~hen they host Azusa Pacif- ic

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t. Mary's Trips oreros, 24-21 MORAGA (AP) - ick oss1 grabbed the ball after a blocked field goal and ran 72 yards with 1:42 left to provide the margin for St. ary's 24-21 football victory ver the University of San Diego yesterday. Bnan Linney blocked the 38-yard field goal attempt by an Diego's Tim Rowan. set- g up the touchdown. St. Mary's, 4-5, scored its touchdown on the firSt lay from scrimmage when erry CotUe threw a 20-yard pass down the middle to Bob l(eiper who outran the Torero defenders near mid- .eld. 'The play covered Tl m;,

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USD plans • tJ,11. sessions ~ 1 "~"'u 11n on prayer day of prayer and learning about prayer will be held at USO next Satur- day under auspice of the Center for Liturgy and Prayer of the San Diego Roman Catholic Diocese The se ions will open at 9 a.m at The Immaculata Church, continue with lec- tures In De Sales Hall and conclude with ve pers at 3· p.m. at The Imrnacula• ta. The Rev. Denn Krouse, center director, Ill speak at 10 m. on tile roots or p y r and at 2:1511,m on th liturgy of the hour.; 'l'alks will also be given by the Rev Stephen Dunn of St. }'ranc nunary at 11 ·15 pm. on the psalms and at I p m by th 'Rev !co a Rev Jes, center as- sociate director, on song as prayer. -~~-

Even~ Tri~ ne "-t 4- 71

USD season ends on blocked kick Umversity of San Diego closed out its football season Saturday on a play which probably was symbolic of the club's frustrations this year. Leading 21-17 over St. Mary's College with less than two minutes remaining mthe game, the Toreros attempt- ed a 38-yard field goal. Brian Linney broke through the USO line to block th kick by Tim Rowan and Gael teammate Nick Rossi grabbed the bouncing ball and ran 72 yards for a touchdown The 24-21 St. Mary's victory left USO with a 3-7 season record in which the Toreros lost five of the games in the final quarter Meanwllile,'U.S. International University closes out its season Saturday at Mesa College against Azusa-Pacific. usru lost 2-0 last Saturday to 'orthridge State to give the Westerners a 1-9 record for the year.

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