News Scrapbook 1968-1969

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"'t,(, Jz « f Bishop Furey Holds Mass For Tribe Near M nila S•e<101 to The son o;e,o union and vitality is that of a pcrsonlChuan Kang, . in ti sect10n o~ the I land. an a!1:base Francis W. Furey. bishop of the, Also in the group was Lt. Ra- rarely v1S1ted by non-military • San Diego Catholic Diocese, Mon O Duplou, who persooally personnel. . vesterda,· began the next 1o last accounted for •·many, many _of, Sunday, the bi hop conhrmed , · ,- . the enemy"' as he led . 'egnto,282. by far the highest numl5er lap of his nearly 25,000-mile tour troop" in after-dark forays into I thus far during hi~ three-week of Far East air bases with _an the mountains. 'lour. shortly af1er his arrival a1 early morning mass for a tnbe Prior to arriving at Clark Sun- Clark field. of pygmy-like •·egrito inhablt- day aft~n_1oon, Bishop Furey Originally, Bi hop Furey was ants who make their homes. on I had admm1stered the s~crament to have flown from here lo Clark Alf Force Base, 75 miles of confirmation o_n Air Force Guam on a military transport. north of _here. . ,personnel and their dependents ,but the plane wa grounded in The bishop, who was leavmg· 0 n bases at Naha, Okinawa. and India because of mechanical for Guam later m the day, cele-,Taipei, Formosa. problems. Instead he flew lo brated the mass at the request HIT BY RAlN Guam aboard an vacuallon of Lt. ~ol. ~·rank Gilchrist, ofl Th ceremonv at Naha was plane which 11as filled with Watervliet, '.Yh, 1'.'l·ho hhead 1 s .a.cond~cted Friday and delayed wounded being returned from four-man Cat o 1c c ap am . f · h \... t team at Cl.irk home of the u.s.145 minutes bfe 1c 1 ause otha 5- 1mcd 1e nam. 13 th A' F ; 1 ram which e over e 1s an GOING TO HAWAII ir ore · and for a while threatened to • · t CHAPEL J!',;CLUOEO d I th ·t for another' Following ceremonies a . , e ~y e n es Guam today and tomorro,1 . the Because ,ol the pa, l the~ day. . , _ . bishop was to continue to Hono- played m helpmrto _attam v1~to- The bi shops visit. to Formosa lulu. He is scheduled to return r); in the Ph1hpp1~es . durmg was at ~e mstallahon m Chmg to San Diego late S1¥1day \\orld war JI , the p)gm1es, un- afternoon der direct order of Gen. Douglas · . . . . Mac"r1hur were granlPd per- The laryng1t1s _11h1ch 81. hop petu;l rights to a section of the Furey contract~ m the_ opening Clark facility in which to make stages of h trip continued to th · h e plague htm, but has not damp- e1r om ,. d h' f th · Included in their area is a ene 1s ~rvor or en us1asm crude chapel made from sal· as he c_o~tmues h15 20-hour-per- vaged material, and the nearly day acln 1ty• _ . 500 natives practically tilled it J?esp1te the .ailment, he 1s to capacit for vesterday's serv- gomg ahead 111th plans to ad- - minister confirmation al St. Jude·s Church in San Diego ~fonday. following completion of his half-way-round-the-world military tour. ---- -- h SOl!lhcrn :\IAXILA - The most Rev. many years youngtr.

USD Student Group Elects Officers 5,, ei;_.;;;; Sft>;i_r The Associated sfud~nts of the University of San Diego have elected new officers for the coming year, the first academic year the s tudent groups of the two un- dergraduate colleges are united U D students also approved an extra fee of $5 lo be assessed for the planning a nd eventual construction of a student union and a revised constitution for the merged organization. Brian Riley of Salt Lake City, Utah, won a close race for the presidency. Riley out-polled Jeffrey H. Comm.! of San Francisco by nine votes out of a total balloting of 588 students John Mackey of Yuma. Ariz. a biology major, won the runoff for vice president, out-polling

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EVENING TRIBUNE

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post recordi ng secretary was won by Debbi Comfort of Des Moines, Ia., Miss Comfort, a freshman, defeated Richard Iri of Los Angeles: of

CAMPUS .CORNER

Board Honors Drt.,S~rqzto The chairmaef.,"tr f the University of San Diego College for Men psychology depart- ment, Dr. Gerald Sperrazzo, has been named a Diploma le m Clinical Psychology. Dr. Sperrazzo was honored by the American Board of Examiners of Professional Psychology. The Diplomate i held by less than 2,000 of th1• 28,000 psychologists in the United States. Dr. Sperrazzo 1s president. elect of the San Diego County Psychological Association. A member of the association's executive board, Dr, Sperrazzo will take office as president in January 1970. The psychologist wa~ at Geor~etown Univer lty, Washington, D.C., re coming to the University of s n D1eg . He earned his BA at he University of Idaho his MA at St. Louis lln,vnsity and his PhD at the Univcrslty of Ott" wa.

News f om Sal" D,090 Stafa College and area univemties. UNIVERSITY OF SAN DIEGO By JOH:-. KEN~EDY net as or pre-final examination steam and a u_mfication of d vergent tudent p)c·ments after a close A.S. elechon w~re ac- complish •d m a top-secret tudent coup called "Operation -~e- birth" J,,st Thur day. A meeting closed lo faculty and admllll:s- tration wa held at 6 p.m. m

the College for Worn n 1;heater at which students unveiled a plan for t.JSD 's first pant raid. Some 3 men gathered at 11:30 p.m. on the campu for a march from the College for Yen Library to th College for Women dormitories. Planning was smooth as the doors of the College for women swung open anil the men filed in carefully y.atched by student officers and hired security guards. The coeds. who had also been in- volved in the plan, greeted the men. A dance followed the suc- ce sful completion of the oper• ation in the univer~ity's Lark Cafeteria.

JOH, · KE: "NEDY The first Joint Honors Con- vocation will take place at 11 a.m. Friday on the "-lcala Park campus. The faculty of the College for Woi:nen and the College for Men will be drcs ·cd in their academic robes and confer var~us a 11 ards and honors upon graduating seniors. Cla~ses w be shortened to accommodate the ceremomcs.

Alcala Guild observes S.c...~ spring installation 0,/,9. . .

3 Summer Sessi6rls 11 •f Scheduled by USD Theologies of Hope in the 20th Century or on the site diggings at the Mission San Diego de Alcala are among the range of courses at the University of San Diego's three summer sessions. The regular session will run six weeks betwe~n June 23 and August l, preceeded by a three-week pre-session, June 2-20. followed by a three-week post session August 4-23. credential, school librarianship and those for teachers of the mentally retarded.

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School and Youth Notes

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New Wisdom Needed, USD Sfudenf s Told Today's students live in a changing world which calls for a different wisdom than that re- quired of their parents, Dr. Ani- ta Figueredo told University of San Diego students yesterday. Dr. Figueredo, a member of the board of trustees of the uni- versity's College for Women, was guest speaker at the first joint annual honors convocation following the merger of the col- leges for men and women ear- lier this year. She paraphrased the ancient prayer in urging students to have the courage to change the things they could, the strength to hear the things they could not, and the wisdom to recog- nize the difference. FIRST JOINT ASSEMBLY The convocation was the ninth annual such ceremony for the women undergraduates but the first for the men students who joined the women in full aca- demic dress for their first ma- jor assembly. Presentations were made by Sister Sally Furay, academic dean of the College for Women, and Henry J. Martin, academic dean of the College for Men. The top Alcala Award for the most outstanding woman stu- dent was presented by Sister Nancy Morris, president of the College for Women, to Mary El• Jen Easterling, editor of the stu- dent literary magazine Unum, and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Easterling of 8120 Jeffer- son St., Lemon Grove. The Charles E. Franklin Award for the most outstanding man student was won by Nor- man Eric Johnson, the immedi- ate past president of the newly merged Associated Students. filGHEST RANKING Highest ranking senior woman was Patricia Baker who was presented with the Priscilla Turner St. Denis Award for the senior woman and was nominat- ed for membership in the Na- tional Women's Honor Society for Catholic Colleges. She is the daughter of Mrs. Elizabeth Bak- er of La Puente. Top man student with the highest average in the senior class was Edwin C. Iliff, anoth- er student to receive depart- mental honors in biology. He is the son of Mrs. Paul Datford of Washington, D.C. Annual awards also .were made by the French govern- ment to outstanding French stu- dents and to outstanding Span- ish students by the In 'lute of Spanish Culture in Mexico City and the National Spanish Hon- ors Society.

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The Theologies of Hope in the 20th Century will be given in the regular session by Dr. Richard Comstock, noted Protestant theologian, currently associa le professor of religious studies at the University of California at Santa Barbara. The philosophy course, Freedom vs. Authority?, will be team-taught by Father Wil· liam Shipley and Dr. John W Swanke. interacting between themselves and students on the apparent conflict. The course will be given in the regular session. A two-week workshop in Mexican-American Culture will be held August 4-15. Planned with members of the Mexican• American community, the workshop includes Spanish lessons and a sociological analysis of Mexican history and Mexican-American culture, supplemented by actual field -study. The historic site methods course, graduate and un- dergraduate, will be held at Mission San Diego de Alcala by Professor James Moriarty III during the postsession. The· summer session will be the first joint session involving the university's two coordinate colleges, the College for Men and the College for Women. Programs offered include those 'Jeadrng to the standard secondary teaching credential, 'standard elementary teaching

The courses offered in the pre-session are cultural an- thropology, principles and

Mount Miguel High Groups to Present Concert Th Mount M "U I H1gt- School C'.oncert II ill prr cnt a corc-crt at IJ-c F1r~t C'!lr"r < hurch 2770 GkbP Road. I rmon r.ro\e unda\ a 3 il 'TI <'ntirc ~ocal dcp.:irtment 11111 givr ,ts a 11' i mr and Girl' F,- s, mblc a ior 'f r r' , nc~ • at

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San Diegan to Get Music Education Degree Ke reth rock, son of Mr and Ir R. L B.:ireelora O ve w II receive a bachelo ' gre u I C'du- cat1on at commencement ceremonies at Berklee School of )lu• 1c, Bos1on. aturday LOC L BRIEFS State Will Buy Freeway and Th<:> City Council has approved the sale of about 53 acres of surplus, city-owned property to the sta e for 750,000 for use as nghl-of-way for InterstatP 805 Thr land 1~ m F, P ,orrPl• ~~,., •~ ·Salral;on Army L1. Col. Leonard Adams, w~o recent!y re• turned from Vietnam, will sp~ak at ~e Salvatmn Army s an• naal lunchron at noon Friday m the Stardust Hotel. " ,;, "To,1ard a l\lorc Hurn..:n Educatfor." 1s the theme of a one• dav conk encc 1, du ed :\lay 30 at the_ Le_B~ron Hote1 under sponsor hip of the l ruver 1ty of Cahlorma Extension. The con- fere~cc 1 u e m fmdmgs of Or Carl R. Rogers and Dr. Wi harr. Coulson of La Jolla Center for Studies of the Person dunng two years of s ud of t t S<>n Diego and Los Angeles ed- ucational S)'$lems. A fode1 ally tunded Summer Youth Sports proii:.am will b conduc cd at the Unhcrsity of San Diego June 23-.,1 for 250 boy and girl~ ages 12 to 18. '!'he prog_ram is also sponsored by the at.ional Colll'giate Athletic Assoc1alion. . ock of 1165

On View Now Major ort shows in the city this week range from the Fine Arts Gallery's Mexican Colo- nial Art through a one-man show ct the University of Son Diego to the La Jello Museum's iconoclastic 'Affect/Effect' show.

'IN THE BEGINNING GOD CREATED,' o 24 x 30-inch oil, is in USD's show of works by the Rev, Pat r 77'kx. Nidarf.

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inch oil by on unknown 18th Century Mexi- can, is in the Fine Arts Ga 11 er y show.

va riable dimensions by Geo, ii part of the La Jolla Museum's 'touchable' show.

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