News Scrapbook 1968-1969

USO Names Ex-Student As Trus·tee

¥f'/6f - SD Student Le der Elected In the minds of student voters, ley said in an mterview. "We union (students in May voted to1sa!s. students, often clairnmg according to Brian Riley, it was on't want to run the campus. tax them elves $5 each tor plan-l privileges . for themselves, a choice betwten "a clean-cut We w_ant to be ltste~ed to a~d ning and eventual construction ) should hkew1se accept respons 1• Joe College" and an opponent ?ur views_~hould weigh heavily and a student-run club football lbilities.

EVENING TRIBUNE

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"Everybody get hung up on

program S\IPPOrted by i.eason

who "wa the long-hair and nev- m the decism~s.

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"We are going to push at any added, point for the statur~. that the ticket sales.

er wore a necktie ,, Philosophically;

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. Riley, who hopes to- contmuelsa1d. But !hey don t go along

there wasn't that much differ- students_should hav~.

The ku:id of_ pusl)mg_th_at R 1·1into law school and also become with assummg the correspond-

ence between himself and Jef-

Irey Conine. Although approach- ler has m m_m d . he in d icated. a certified public accountant, ing duties." ·

es might vary he said they both , will be done firmly and earnest- favored many' of the same ends. ly. It's in keepin~ with another The fact is that Riley, a 21- aura he sugge. l wa created year-old accounting and busi- among the 1,257-student electo, ne s admintstration major, re- rate. ceived nine more v9tes than " Po ibly they voted for me," Conme and is the new student he said, •·because they _feel I president a~ the University of will work m ore closely with the San Diego. e tablishnient and maybe better 0 'E OF GOALS nnplement the ideas of the stu- . d •nts '' Riley volunteered the Joe 1- · lcge term for his " image.' But CO~CEPT TO SE, ATE , _ the points he advocates r ad The concept_ of a umvei:s1ty at varying decibel I s, enate, accordmg to Riley, 1sn t around the country and (lra lit- necessarily approac)led as a tie from th goldfish wallowing criticism IQ.. the way things are era now. He points out that student One of his goals at U D. he- already are on several policy :,aid, is to pres tor a ype of committees university go~ernment, or sen- What'S'needed he ays. i for ate broadly repre. eotative them to be on all the commit- students, faculty and admin· tees. · trator ·. Though the Alcala Park cam- Another is tuderlt evalua pus has been untouched by the of cour es and the teacher ho tumultuou types of activity at teach them. He favOI'!! t I , larger universities, Riley notes though also saying that the i- that, in their own v.ay, the stu- versity, as a v,hole. has a 'tre- dents have demonstrated, mendous faculty." Once, in April, 3.50 boys. DO. "'T WA 'T TO RL, joined by some coeds, marched , ., l f througlJ the College for Women We pa) an a ,,u lot o ~o~- dormitories. Riley said. It was a try to come to school here, Rt· test to serted administra- ley said. " re s no rea. on we p_ro .. t II' a ;, t 11 g should not try to do what we tive s a mg on a w~o e e can to get money's worth.•• merger plan. Riley is •from Salt Lake City. LO:\G·RA 'GE He was AS vice president under Riley acknowledges that pro- a previous form of student gov- posals for evaluating teachers ernment whose constitution also and a university senate are fun- was changed at the .'.\fay 7 elec- damentally long-range. Though tion to unite both the men' and I.he pressure should be kept up, v.omen·s colleges. be says there are also immedi- •·This campus is here for JU St·ate problems. one reason-the students." Ri- These include a new -tudent

l''ERSITY OF SAN DIEGO lly ,IOll'.-1 KE ' EDY

USD Pa Has First Woman Chief Editor A girl has been elected editor-in-chief of the University of San Diego news paper, the Vista . Rosemary Masterson, 20, a history and English major. will be the first woman editor of the university newspape r m its 11-year history. Mi s Ma ste rson, dau ghter of Mr and Mrs. Frank T. Masterson, o f Pasad ena, is a 1966 graduate , of t Andrews' High School.

ml nls on the USD campus this w ck as , arc mad b •fnro l av ng for a month on Cl,1 c for th m ter arc officially only £1n<1l remain when stud nts return to the campus Jan 16. '!'he already rn

long v·tcallon was lengthened by a week to allow USD's sec- o n d semester to correspond with . tale educational Institu- tion . About 250 high . chool seniors visit d lh c:impus for college d:1y last week. Student from 1, h1 h sch o o I s were givl'I tours and at in on classes dur- ln the day. A noon lolk Mass \la c lPbratrd in the Univer i• ty' lmmaculata Chapel. USD's ~chool of Law wa ho- nored this week by Gov. Re- agan'. appointment of Robert Cooney, a 1958 graduate. to a municipal judge hip. Cooney is the cond USD g r a d u a t e named to the municipal bench.

FRANCISCO P. MARTY Fills vaca nl' y us Boa!,d ints Me Fran 1 co P. Marty, stock brok~rage , has been a poirted to the hoard of truste of the Cnivernty of San Diego. The ppoantment of Marty, resident manager of Demp- sey-T e g I er Co. Inc., was made y the ;',lost Rev. Fran- cis J . rey, bishop of the San Diego tholic Diocese and chan llor of the university. .\!arty was appointed to fill a v a c a n c y on the board caused by the death of the Rt. Rev. Msgr Luke Deignan. There now are six laymen on th~ JS-member board. M a r I y, of 4211 Ridgeway Drive was born in Mexico and came to San Diego in 1948. He was the first student body president of the Univer- sity of San Diego in 1954, and has been president of the USD Alumni Association. anag- er of

Miss Masterson plans to teach either American his tory and literature rn high school on graduation or enter the jour- na lism profession . r'illrng other staff positions a rc Behta Taylor of Pacoima, associate editor ; Janet l;lowa rd of San Diego, news editor ; Jan Gerbaz of La Mesa , fea ture editor ; Patrick K. McCartney of La Ca nada , sports editor, and J on Connor of San Diego, la yout editor. ~1,. .c,i.._.,. 4 _¼

A 3uni or , she is president of U1e USD honor society, and has been feature editor, news editor and reporter for the Vista , as well as cha ir ma n of U1e student- run weekly campus newsletter , SPEED. The editor , who will be a senior in September at the College for Women, is also listed in Who's Who Among Studen ts in Amer ica n Univers1lles and Colleges.

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Girl Editor A First

Fr nch Club ho tcd a group of Frcn h chol- h h <'hools last w ek for its annu:il Chri mas of the hi h chools presented a skit or songs in

~/:i/67 VENING TRIIUNE

LABOR NOTES -r.-~- By VI. CENT DUNNE EVENING TRIBUNE Labor Writer

rs sMari es By TI;\l WIIM>N

Win

A historic milestone in San Diego labor relations will be reached next Thursday night with the chartering here of a chapter of the national Industrial Relations Research Associa- tion. The dinner meetmg will be held at 7:30 p.m. in More Hall of The University of San Diego School of Law, with W. Willard Wirtz, immediate past secretary of labor, as speaker. Labor Secretary George P. Shultz, successor to Wirtz in the presidential cabinet post, is past president of the national er labor, management, law and related agency leaders.

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Ander n As~igned s!:f Editor Emeritus Title ifi

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two-week work, hop culture will be offered at the l ni- Yersity of San Diego Aug. 4 to 15 for men and women who work with Americans of Mexican de,C'ent. The work~hop was prepar- ed in collaboration with Mex- ican-Americans, said Sister Irene Lawrence, workshop director. She said they had recommended field exper- ience in the barrios of San Diego County Three hours of the 7 1 '2 · hour daily workshop will be devoted to conversational Spanish, offered at three lcv- rls of competence. Back- ground sessions in Mexican culture and history also are scheduled in the four-unit college-credit course. Sisler Lawrence said the program ,1 as developed for teachers, social welfare work- ers, clergymen , city planners and others who "feel a great need to unclerstand the cul• ture better" in Mexican-American

n o t h e r rel rn, nt has b en added lor E. H o b e r t u\ndy I nderson to accompa- n\ h1, avy relir~d title of cuptam He now ha retired a c• ec- to1· of erJ itom I polic) of th 17 d,11ly C'opky , 'ewspapers and a admlmstrntive a~ istant to James S. Copley as the pub It her of The San Diego Union and the Evening Tnbune Iii retirement was an- nounced ) esterda) b) Coplc:, Looking toward this cortm- gcncy, C o p I e ) la t month named Vidor JI Krulak , for mer commanding general of th Marine Corps in the Pal'if- 1c, to ucceed Ander on when Anderson derided to rellre 2 Carc('rs I ntrrtn med AndPr on, ho 1s 74, has i11- tertw1 ed t1H1 careers ,our- naltsm and the avy. lits Fourth Estate career began a II ncv. paper bO) and an apprcn 1cc printer and hi . ·av~ e,xpcr erce had its tart as an enhsted man Emplo)·ment a a ne\\. pa. JJl'rman from r11porttr to edi- tor and to publbhing execu- tive. has involved a soc1ations m San ~'rnncisco, Nevada and San Diego. The . avy car er mcluded enh led service in World War f v.ith advancement to chief p tty officer; aval Reserve inactive and active sen ice beginning with the rank of en~ sign and progressing through succes ive grades to captain; ac-t,~e duty in the National Emergency period of 1939-41, World War JI and the Kon'an conflict. Honored By Mt• it-o \cl1ve erv,ce Inc uded duty aboard Oregon Aroo~tok, Cal- 1fornia1 ~1elville, Estes and Birmingham , m Eleventh Na- val ()1 \net as n intcl11gcnre officer and a Director of In- formation for JO of the d1s- tnct 's commandnnts, and on th(• staffs of Commander. L S. aval Forces Western Padf- w, and Commander, Western Sc., Frontier. II<' also srrved as Liai on Offirn to \lexico's SIXth .\l1htiir~ Hcgion. . lie was award d the N"av1 '. l.<'g1on of ~lerit among other clecor,ihons. In recogn1hon of service a ha1son off!(: ·r to :\Iex1co, he 11 .a " a r d e d lhul oat.ion's

\lerit and

Medal or Naval

Medal of :\lilitary :\lerit. Anderson was placed on the U S :-,'avy retired list June I, 1955, after an aggregate serv- ice of 35 years in the Naval Reserve and regular, ·avJ. To Anderson, bemg editorial policy ad\1ser meant also sup- portmg the . ·av as a free worId force and promoting the advancement of San Diego. Civic Projects Aided He furthered the develop- ment of the port. c-nlargement of Lindoergh Field, the build- mg of the Community Con- course, maintenance of good community relations with the armed service a a factor Jn the cit) ·s economy, and the development of a SPC nd ad - 1.educt lo briPg add hollal wa- ter here. "l',,otle on act ve dut m the Nav} he norked closely with t 1 late Ma)or II a r I e y E. Knox to de\ elop the first aq- ue-f• ct to bring Colorado Riv- er water lo San Diego. A n d c r s o n al. o helped 10 hrmg a l nivers1ly of Calilor- ma campus to San Diego, and to assis San Diego State dur- mg its growth, serving on the college' advi or) board dur- mg 1956-65. And anotMr inter- est v.as the_ci;tablishment of the Cmver,ity qJ San Die o. The unil'erstly awarded him an honorary <[oc or of laws de- gree in 1965. Corporate Titles Retained _De~pite hi retirement, he will continue lo have a voice 111 the councils of the Copley w ganization, as editor emeri- tus of The Copley l\ewspa- pers, and will retain his cor- porate titles as vice president of The Copley Press. Inc.; \tCe chairman of Gopie)· News Service: and vice president and d i rec tor of the Union- Tribune Publi. hing Co. "Andy v. ill continue as a valued adviser and consult- ant ," Copley said. "Ile will never retire completely." And 11 A n d er so n 's wife rlorencc, has an~tlung to say'. he v,ill do some traveling.

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STR \VS IN THE WIND Engagements Of 3 C~uples Are Announced By OPAL CRANDALL (Substituting for Eileen Jackson, who is on ncation) Late summer weddings are in the offing for three young • couples whose engagements are announced today. Dr and l\lrs. Calvin L. Foss announced the engagement o her daughter, Miss Kathleen Louise Keptner, o Lt. Al)en

w. WILLARD WIRTZ To attiress session

JOSEPH A. SINCLITICO Law school dean

Dean Joseph A. Sinclitico Jr., of the USD law school, will preside as interim president. He was a leading founder of the San Diego chapter, along with Jerry Williams, labor lawyer. Other founding members and interim officers include Devon Smith and Al J. Baffone ·ice presidents; David A. Ault, treas- urer, and ~1ilton Wisdom, Superior Court udge James L. Focht Jr., R. R. Richardson, James Barham, Josiah Ne+er, Armon L. Henderson, W. H. M. Swett and Ray Blair, A limited number of charter dinner reservations are open.

Wayne Steele, USNR, at a party Sunday in the Foss home for close friends and relatives. The wedding is set Aug. 23. The bride-€lect was graduated from and took graduate work at the University of San Diego College for Women, where she is a charter member of Sigma Della Pi. Spanish honorary society. During her junior year she studied at Institute of European Stud- ies, University of Madrid. She received her teaching credentials from San Diego College for Women. With her marriage, she will lose membership in Spinsters of San Diego

SUNDAY, JUNE 15, 1969

College grants won by 18 local students Eighteen students from 1

Opal Crandall County. Her fiance, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Steele edenck, !\Id., was graduated from Ball State University, \funcie, Ind., where he also took graduate work. He is a member of Sigma Chi Fraternity and Blue Key, national honor society, and is written up in "Who's Who in American Colleges and Universi- ties." He is now operations officer aboard the USS Raton, a submarine.

Priest To Be t~::> An Observer 6pb/,~ An economics professor from the University of San Diego will have the chance this summer to observe the decision-making processes of industry. Father James F . Hanley, SJ, associate professor of economics, will be one of 20 economists to participate in the industrial experiment at Case Western Reserve· University. The experiment has been developed with the help of Republic Steel Company and the economists will be especially concerned with in- dus tries in the Cleveland- P ittsburgh complex. Father Hanley has published articles and books on industrial relations systems. His academic honors include ap- pointments as a Wenner-Gren Fellow in Stockholm and a Littauer Humanities Scholar at Harvard University.

•Ix North Shores high schools are among the latest recipi- ents of college and unive~ity icholarships, city schools of- ficials have announced. Winner, of majol' four-year • scholarships include: Kearny High's John Gallo, 18, son of Mrs. Arlene Gallo, 3430 Angwin Dr. He will use an Educational Opportunity Grant and an American Leg- Ion Auxiliary Scholarship to I attend the University of San Diego. . ,; T.., T ....11... TU- 1

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