News Scrapbook 1968-1969

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E-2 ---------------- ·------------------------------------------ ' ALMANAC From March 23 To March 30 Drama Carson :'.\lcCullers drama will be presented by the University of San Diego al 8 p.m. Fri- day and Saturday in the College for Woml'll Theater, Alcala Parle THE SAN DIEGO UNION Sunday, March 23, 1969

1 Mulva11ey To Be Bride In Augt1st Rit By ElLE J CKSON • and Mrs. James F. l\lulvaney announce the engagement their daughter, :\Iehnda, to James M. :\lcCabe, son of Mr. d Mrs. John J• .McCabe of Whittier. The engagement was ounc d at a family dinn party in the home of :Mr. and 1 !rs. Mulvaney. llss Mulvaney 1s the grand-

•\ TASTE OF HO. EY -The Shelagh Delaney piay will be presented b) Palomar College, San Marcos, in the school's Drama Lab at 8

HIGH SCHOOL ORA:'.\1A FES- TIVAL - The eighth annual competition at San Diego State w, II be presented Thursday through Saturd y in the school s Dramatic Arts Build- ing with the three II inning productions scheduled £or 8: 30 p.m Saturdav.

NEW THIS WEEK

daughter of )Ir. and )!rs. Ray- mond W. Rinderer of Chicago and San Diego and Mr. and .Mrs. Chari s S. ulvaney of Chicago. Tbe brid tect was graduated from the Academy o Our Lady of Peace and the University of Santa Clara. She i domg graduate work in edu- <·ation at the University or San Diego.

ST. PACL'S EPI,'COPAL CHCRCH - The church at 2725 Fifth Ave., will pre cnt two plays - c. e. cummings' "Santa Claus'' and the medieval "E,·eryman" plus a group reading of the prologue to Chaucer's "Canter- The Patricia Jourdy play will be presented by the Van- guard Players m the Westminster Pre byte- rian Church, 3598 Talbot St , Point Loma, at 8 p.m. today. 'TWEEDLEDEE \:\0 TWEEDLEDU:\1' - Actors Quarter, 480 Elm St., will present the new play by Josh Tobin at 7 30 p.m Thurs- days through Sat rda) except Apr'l 4. bury Tales" at 8:30 p.m. today. 'TEACH :\IE HOW TO CRY' -

Mr. )lcCabe was graduated with a degree in journalism from University of Washing- ton, where he was a member of Sigma Nu Fraternity. He is now studying law at the Uni- versity of San Diego, where he is a member of Phi Delta Phi law fraternity. Ir. l\lcCabc 1s the grand on of 11r. and .Mrs. L. T McCabe ot Arc d1a and )!rs. M. A. Phillips of Alhambra. An Aug!! t weddin is b ing planned. .u.,.J;;.J , MARCH 2.7, 1969

p.m. Wednesda) Greg Krueger a d lichelle Craig. 'BLITHE SPIRIT - The . ·oel Coward come- dy about the dear departed will be performed m the Old Globe Theater, Balboa Park at 2 and 8 p.m. toda) 'BUGAtRY' ThC; origmal musical written and directed by Bill Virchis. Frank Coppens and :\lary Abrahams, subtitled '"Look Out, the Sky Is Falling" \1 ill be presented at 8 p.m. .Friday and Saturday in )layan Hall at South- western College. 5400 Olay Lakes Road, Chula Vista 'H.\:\SEL .\. 0 GRETEL'-A musical \'ersion of the children's tory will be presented in Actor's Quarter, 480 Elm St.. at 2 p.m. Satur- day and Sundays through April 6. Jut: Mft'1BER Qf THE ,,.EDDI. ·c~ The aturday The ca ·t includes

PLAN CRUISE - University of San Diego Auxiliary will host a cocktail gala cruise aboard the showboat Bahia Belle tonight (Thursday). Pictured aboard the Belle are hostesses for the event, Mmes. Edwin C. Ferguson, Leo J. Durkin and John M. Murphy.

Enrollment Of ~ets 1 imited By SDS (Continued) I to register protests with Gov. college admissions plan, explain 1 Reagan and Dr. Maxwell Raf- tbat "applications rei;eived from 1 ferty, a college system trustee. veterans who have completed 60 I Mrs. Warren and others at the or more units exceeds the num- college have said SOS will re- ber of new students who can be < duce its spring enrollment from accepted." 23,000 at present to 21,000 to fit "We regret the necessity of C budge y limits. these steps caused by over-en- l Veterans who lack 60 academ- rollment for the fall semester " ic units in presenting t;heir ap- the letters say. ' c plications receive an undated "It is anticipated that the col- t form le er signed by admis- lege, although still unable to ac- 1 sions officer R. E. Downen re- cept all qualified students will turning their $10 fees. be able to accept subsbntial 1 The letters containing no ref- numbers in all categories in erences to the revised junior Sept., 1969," the letter says.

1 SOS Curbs\ Enrollment Of Veterans - t , Must Now Have 60 Units Of

RICHARD A\D JOH.. CO TIGLGLI \ -The 1den1i al-twin duo pianists '\\Ill perform at 4 and 8 p.m. Tuesday in Pilgnm Hall, Escon- dido, for the Philharmonic Artists Association. VIRGI1 "IA COX-The organist, assi tcd by violinU Karen Moe Dirks, will play a concert at 4 .m. next Sunday in the First Presby- terian Church, 320 Date St. L----•--•••-------------------------------

USDwomen play 'tricks' ' Dirty Iruh Tricks" wa, be theme of the Univers- ty of n Diego Women'• u Uiacy luncheon meeting eld 'Ihursday at the )..iarine R 1, La Jolla Beach and n Club.

Colleges Set Ball April 13 For Spanish Midshipm{ri 6 ?. Ninety-nine S p a n i sh Navy! for the dance, which will begin midshipmen will be guests at a at 8:30 p.m. Midshipman's Ball to be cospon-' The New Orleans and VS-38 sored by six of the_ city'~ col-lair anti-submarine squadro~ leg~s on Sunday, _April 13, m the based at NAS, North Island, are patio at the t:mvers1ty of San host units for the de Elcano's Diego College for Women. visit. . The midshipmen are in tr~in- Coordinating arrangements mg aboard the .Juan Sebast(an for the party are Mrs. Alvaro de Elcano, w h 1 will .arnve Lizano, member of the Spanish Apnl 12 to participate m the Re I a ti o n s committee of the citfs 200th Anniversary cele- 200th; Mrs. John G r a v e s of ralton. . . . . L"SD, Howard Thomas of the The colleges _parhcipatmg m Windjammers and Lt. Dimity the ball are USO College for Gn1ichen, USN, of the 11th ~a- Worrren, C1~y, Grossmont, San val District staff. Diego Evenmg, Mesa and South-P--- ~ ~-- -----

Prior College Credit By CHARLES DAVIS The San Diego Union Education Writer San Diego State, after first announcing it will admit Viet- nam and other v e t e r a n s to spring c I a s s e s, has set new curbs on the ex-servicemen it will accept, it was learned yes-J terday. Veterans applying for the se- mester beginning Feb. 3, and who do not meet recently imple- mented criteria, are receiving letters that "it now appears im- possible" for the college to ac- cept them. Mrs. June Warren, admissions dean, said 64 r e c e n t I y dis- c h a r g e d veterans have been tu r n e d away under the new rules. They have been advised to enroll in Junior colleges or other institutions. LIMIT EXPLAINED The change limits admission of veterans not now attending SOS to those who have complet- ed 60 or more academic units, on grounds that veterans lack- ing these units can earn them in a local junior college. On Oct. 31, President Malcolm Love a n n o u n c e d the space- .t:ramped, financially strapped ·ollege would accept recent vet- erans without reference to unus- al adm· sions criteria. Mrs. Warren said the limita- t ion was approved by the col- lege's Senate Nov. 12, the same •ime that the Senate agreed to easing Love's Oct. 31 announce- ment banning spring admission of junior college transfer stu- dC'nts. ':'.\IORE LOGICAL' She s a i d the modification eems "more logical" in that veterans can gain transfer cred- t in junior college and that it will help SOS accept 270 junior college transfer students prohib- ed under the initial rules. Although the college views the 1.:hanges as broadening the ac- cess to higher education, an Es- condido mother of one of the turned-away veterans has asked Assemblyman John S t u 11, R- Leucadia, to investigate. Mrs. Jacqueline S. Veen, in a I e t t e r to Stull lamenting the rejection of her son, Lloyd Ran- dall Veen, said there is "quite a discrepancy in the various state- ments c o m i n g from the col- lege." She said Veen, a state schol- a r s h i p winner, attended UC- Berkeley one year before enlist- ing in the Army. He was dis- charged Oct. 15 after receiving two Bronze Stars for merito- rious service as an 18-month in- fantryman in Vietnam. PROTESTS ACTION In her letter, Mrs. Veen told Stull: "I cannot believe it is the in-

NAVY NEWS

Friday, Decemblltl' 6, 1968

C isis At San Diego State; ~ercrowding Delays Opening ' '

western. Women students from these colleges and daughters of Navy officers of host units for the ship and of the Windjam- . mers, boat escort committee of the 200th, will serve as hostess es. Several officers of the train- ing ship will join faculty mem- bers and others as cl;iaperones

EPORT C'ARD School and Youth Notes T~ 6/Gr

~unday, March 23, 1969__

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E umenical Tour To Visit Holy Land· Local leaders of the J ewish . originated the idea for the trip, Catholic and Protestant faiths the tour is open to all San Die- are inviting San Diegans to join gans . Information can be ob- them June 2 on a 21-day ecu- tained by contacting tour lead- menical tour or the Holy Land er~ or attending a meeting April and Europe 10 at 8 p.m: in Temple Emanu- Tour leaders will be Rabbi El. .M o r t o n J. Cohn of Temple The rr,eeting will feature a Emanu-EI; Rev..John R. Port- color film on the Holy Land and man vice rector or lmmacu- will be addressed by the three late 'Heart Seminan" and Rev. leaders and a representative of Heber H. Pitman, pa~tor of Cen- the Is'.areli tourist bureau. tral Christian Church. "This 1s not merely another L O n d O n, Jerusalem, Rome Rlea:~ure_ trip,"_ s~d Rabbi Cohn. and Copenhagen w i 11 be the ~?r 1s 1t a p1lgrunage. main stops on the trip. Religious Its_ purpose 1s to promote ec- highlights O the tour di! in- umemcal understanding and the elude· cause of brotherhood. Still there · . . ,. wil. be a m p I e time for Ecumenical services at City sght ~eeing Road Chapel (John _Wes I e Y :s "We belle his is the first c h u r c h and burial place) m tour of its ki _ members of London. . . 1 hree major faiths joining to vis- Ecwnenical services at thP · the cradle of the Judeo-Chris- Hebrew Union C o 11 e g e in tian tradition." Jerusalem. The tour. endorsed by the San Services at the tomb of Pope Diego County Council of Church- John XXIII iTI Rome and an au- es, the San Diego Roman Catho- dience with Pope Paul XI. lie Diocese, and Temple Eman- S e r v i c e s at the Grundtvig u-El , will return to San Diego Church in Copenhagen. June 23 from Copenhagen, via According to Rabbi Cohn, who 1 London and New York.

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-•'--: --·~.-a:IIIU-::a and Colleges. The School of Law Is fully accre- dited by the State of Califor- nia, the State of New York, American Bar As.soclatlon and the Association of American Law Schools. The undergraduate colleges and the School of Law offer evening classes. The university confers masters of arts d~ grees In education. teaching and history and also a master of science in education. The Jaw school confers a doctor of law degree. The university program em- phasizes the humanities and has a strong program In the sciences, with many grants supporting basic research. keeping the university at the frontiers of science. The. university's Education- al Development Center on campus offers students and the university community, as well as the general public, its specla'lw,d l'kills. Unded the guidance of a clinical psychologist, a coun- seling psychologist, a reading specialist and a communica- tions expert, the center works toward the development of the student's full potential. Increasingly, the university community is extending its concerns to the outer commu- nity. A Community Develop- ent Program provides an ave- nue for students to engage themselves, under guidance, with the concerns of the pover- ty-strlken members of minori- ty groups, through tutoring programs and as Big Brothers and Big Sisters. The students of socllology also work In the community as part of their classwork. Students as lndivl• duals also work In the commu- nity at YMCA's, YWCA "s and as tutors of deaf chttdren. "'Ibe University of San Die- go has a unique and Important part to play In the expanding educational needs of San Die- go and callfomla,'' said the Most Rev. John R. Quinn, Pro- vost of the university. "The colleges at USD- are Ideally sit- uated to continue to provide an essentially Christian educa• tlon :for the young people of today who so earnestly seek truth In knowledge and Identi- fiable moral standards:• Schools

The crtslS at San Diego State College, the shut-off of incoming freshmen and transfer students, evoked a sympathetic response at one private Institution. The serious problems created for students by the overcrowding at the public Institution caused the University of San Diego to set back by one week the opening date of Its Spring semester. The new Opening date is Feb. 3, instead of the published Jan. 'rt. The change was made to en- able mld•tenn high school gra- duates ;md junior college transfers to enter USD. Com• mencement will continue as planned on May 31. For students accustomed to the hurly.burly of the mega• campus, with thousands of students stampeding for class- rooms, the quiet, Intimate cam- pus of the University of San Diego Is a stunning contrast. Atop a mesa, overlooking the Paclflc Ocean and San DI~ go's Mission Bay, home port for so many ships of the U. S. vy, USD creates a peaceful en ve, 11. shelter from the dy- namic city spread on all sides, yet easily accessible to the c;fty. Richly ornamented white stone buildings line Marian way In Alcala Park. Across Mission Valley, Presidio Park, site of the first Mission in San Diego, can be seen. When San Diego celebrates the 200th anniversary of the coming of the Mission Fathers and the founding ot the city ·fn 1989, the University will celebrate its 20th year. The university, dedicated to tJie Ideals of a Olrlstian edu- ·eatlon, was the dream of the Most. Rev. Charles F.· Buddy, the late Bishop of the Diocese of San Diego. 'I'oda,y, the tll'llverslty, ln small, coeducational classes, offer& students the opportuni- ty tor 1110ral and !ntell jrowth. «nd seeks to its students with a sound educa- tion ln the hwn.anitlcs and a lugh regard tor ethical living. Students from 12 countries are resident and are of all eneds"an4 colon. ',l'lla UDClereraduat.e col- legoes are tlllt)" accredtted by tile Weste,a ~atlon of educat1ona1

Bill ands, ex-<:onvict and one-time cell ate of Carvl Chess- mnn. will . peak on "Toe Seventh Step" to orrow at 8 p.m. in the Kearn ' High School auditorium. 7651 'ellington St. Sa_~ds ha devoted his Ii!e to helping ers. especially ex- com1cts and Juvenile dehnquents. His autobiography, "My Shadf11 Ran Fast", was a best seller, and he is the founder of the . altonal Seventh Step Foundation. T~e odated Students of San Diego Mesa College are spon- soring th lecture. The meeting is open to he public. Valparaiso Honors San Diegan Barbara Lou Bierer, daughter of }Ir. and Mrs. Louis Bierer of 3511 O(tawa Av,e, w . honored at the annual Spring Honors Convocation at \ alpara1so University, Valparaiso, Ind., last ~eek. The p~ogram bonored students who earned a grade aver- age of 2.5 pomts or better under a 3.0 system during the fall se- mester. Miss Bier r is a . cnior in the College of Arts and Sci- ences. SDS Pro# to Analyze War Novel Glendon F. Drake._ assistant professor of English at San Di- ego State Colle~e. will analyze the outline structure of "Catch- 22", a war novel by Jo eph Heller, in a talk at 7 p.m. tonight in Aztec Center on t campus. The lecture is one of a series on "War and American Culture" and is open to the public. USD Bar Group Elects O#licers _Samu~! C. Alhadeff has been elected president of the Univer- sity .of San Diego Student Bar Association. Other officers elect- ed mclude Kenneth Ruderian, vice president; Lynn Schenk Sl·cretary; Robert. 'agata. treasurer, Three new justices elect ed to the Honor Court are herry Eckhardt. William Hitt an Kenneth Ruderian. Kenneth Wassner was selected prelimina examiner, and Henry Casden and Leo Shaw as alternate jus- tices. Jo eph Daty will act as honor court counsel.

• tent of the governor, Legisla- ture, college trustees or the col- lege Senate, that a man should enlist, serve his term with hon- or, and then return, eager to re- turn to his education, only to be refu d entrance to the college of his choice in favor of junior college students who have spent this time in college instead of in the bunkers." She said Veen is "taking it nicely" that he will be going to Pa Io mar (junior) College in- stead of SOS, but that he plans (Continued on b-12, Col. 6)

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