News Scrapbook 1969-1971

Top U D Coed Honored or Ac i tin tion

Com e retary Stan_s To Talk At USD ~.1.a~yp/tion Univers1

U.S. INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY By DO'CG BOWER Cal Western s1Udents are aet1\el} suoocrt1 g the l,mted States 111thdra11al u lruops from Southeast A ia. They ha\e proposed goals of running an ant11rnr ad n ti e . ew York Time:;, renting e;eral bUlb~irc. •o prole t t e 11 r and c1rcu- lating pet1l1ons suppo11ing Ser George l\kGo\ern·~ antiwar bill

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--: ~4. }u U.S. Commerce Chief To Speak At SD Rites (Continued) · omorc 'cla , and Karnr Doylt>. lr~shman class. Highest scholastic t1onors in the College for len go to Antho- ny Jungman, . ~mor , Raymond Wood, junior; a tie between Paul J . Ponganis and ponald W. Stol.:, [or the sophomore class. and Thomas P. Baumann, fresh- man. Stans \\~s appointed to his Cabinet post in 1969 by Presi- dent Nixon To accept, he re signed as pr_c!!lident of the Los Angeles investment bank i n company or Glore Forgan. Wil· liain R. Staal~, Inc. Stans also is past president o U1e American In ·titute of Certi• lied Public Accountants. a member of the. National Associ- ation of Postmasters and the American Society for Public Ad: ministration. Grads' Ri.te Set AtUSD 2)0 .:r-J..r• ? o More than 350 graduates will receive diplomas at University of San Diego's 17th annual graduation ceremonies starting at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Friday, in the Civic Theater, Com· munity Conco11rse. Most Rev. Leo T. Maher will preside. The ceremonies, at which Auxiliary Bishop John R. Quinn also will be present, are expected to be attended by some 3,000 persons. The · exercises will be preceded by a 3:30 p.m. Bac- calaureateMass in Immaculata Chapel on the USD campu_s, Alcala Park. Bishop Maher will be principal concelebrant. The address at the Mass will be given by Father John R. Portman, chairman of the Diocesan Ecumenical Com- mission and of the USD Department of Religious Studies. Stans to Speak Major speaker. at . the graduation ceremorues will be Maurice H. Stans, Secretary of Commerce, who also will be awarded an honorary Doctor of Laws degree. He was officially responsible for the 1970 census questionnaire sent to some 60 million homes. USD's coordinate Colleges for Men and Women have become unified academically during the past two years, corp~rate unification is envisioned within a short time. Students from the two undergraduate colleges and the School of Law will be graduating together.

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DOl:G BO\H:R ar UNIVERSITY OF SAN DIEGO By BELITA TAYLOrt

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TRA\VS /1 r 'ff IE \VIND Mi s Cl1ctm )crs, Lt. Dornstctter To 1 arrv LJunc 13 /{,,,zM-A'- B} EILEE.' ;ACKSON ,l J ? Dr. and :\!rs John Sharpe Chambers Jr. announce lhe engage- ment of their daughter, Susan Jane, lo Lt. John Michael Dorn- stetter, U , ', on oi Fran Carl Dornstetter of Youngstown, Ohio, and the Int Mrs. Dornsteltcr. Miss Chambers is the grand- daugh er of fr. and Mrs. Alvin Beal of El Cajon and Dr. and .1rs. Jann Sha p ( hambers of Lexington, Ky. She was graduated from Pomt Lorn High School and has a degree in English from San Diego State !rt June she will rere1V\! her elementary teach- mg credential Al an Diego State she joined Alpha Gamma Delta .,_,_,,,_~---... Soronty. She was a Viennese

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Ball flower girl, a member of the Assembly and a charter member •of Madcaps. She be- longs lo Zlac Rowing Club. Last summer after graduation from college she toured Europe with four companions. Lt. Dornstetter is the grand- son of the late Mr. and Mrs. John S. Dornstetter.of Youngs- town, Ohio, and the late Mr. and Mrs. Michael Kearns of Titus- ville, Pa. · The bridegroom-to-be is a 1967 graduate of the Naval Academy. At Flight School at Pensacola, Fla., Lt. Dornstetter was desig- nated a naval aviator and he remained .there as a flight in- structor. He is en route to Bar- ber's Point, Hawaii, where the young couple will make their home after their marriage June

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA

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Students go to offi cers for th Revelle Col!e 6e lions must go on The AS i ope a comm1ss10nc.r

USD Students Hear Warning On Civil Debate U > .!l cJ -'O If rr ric8ns cannot learn to d ag cements. t~e sy tern under which they live will be destroy d speaker yesterday told the a dience at the second annual n versity of San Diego honors con· ocation. Dr. :-ied V. Joy, p ofessor of political science at San Diego State, spoke o studen , facult,,1 admini •rator5 and parents · i~ the College for Women audito- rium. Jo) I d the students he · oped thev are acquiring 1r coll e, ' the habit of c \11 discours • Under our system, he aid. thcrr is a constant readjustment of power positwns to keep a bal-• ance most citizens can ac t which in t 1rn makes law efYec'. foe LA;\,GU \GE DEBASED · Bui th E'nghsh laITguage is being deba d." he said '·The most o f \e epithe~~ are the language of the da)." Joy aid he hopes_ the students are acqulri g a sense of awe' Bbout the unity of living thmgs. . He also hoped they are acqu1r- mg a love of beauty. /'·We have complete!} surrounded our- e[ves with uglmess. Given con- temporary values, ) ou would not ha\e Balboa Park.''I FORE\fOST SE_ "IOR Top honors wi11ner wa. :\!rs. ynn Anderson Scherer, 21. na- tive an Dicgan wife of a USD graduate She won the Alcala Award for character sen1ce scholarship and leade;ship. ' he had the highest academic average of all seniors in the Col- lege fo1 Women, war depart- mental honors m English and was.nominated for membership JQ Kappa Gamma Pi. national women's honor sociel} for Cath- olic colleges. Anthony .Jungman, 21. Impe- rial Beach, heac1ed for the avy and then law chool, was hon- ored for the highest academic verage in the semor class of the College for ).fen an won de- partmental honC'rs m business administration. their

r a ne\\ conslltutrnn \\hich employs t m instead of the old .. S enate" or- ganization . There arc ·ix commissioners as \\ell as the offices of AS president z.nd vice p esident up for grabs, with half of them uncontested Revelle 's elections \\ ill fill 1p

MISS C u ,\MBERS t u • 13 in Point Loma Community Church chapel. The Rev. Louis E. Vick will perform the cere- mony in the presence of family members. The father or the bridegroom-to-be and his daughter, Mary Kay, a student at Ohio University, and.liis son, Frank, a recent graduate of Youngstown University, will arrive for the ceremony. Attend \Vedding In Santa Monica Of social interest here is the scMduled marriage tonight of Miss Lynda Powers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Morris Powers III of Pacific Palisades, and Craig Lee Leslie, son of Mr. and Mrs. Meldon Eugene Leslie of Tahoka, Tex. The bride-to-he is the great-granddaughter of the late Dr. Robert Morris Powers, pioneer industrialist, banker and civic leader of San Diego, al'ld Mrs. Powers. Her great aunts, Mrs. Lorenze W. Barney and Mrs. Joseph M. Spimng of San Diego, and a cousin, Mrs. Ralph T. Close of Alpine, will attend the ceremony. The wedding will be at 7 o'clock in Mount Olive Lutheran Church, Santa Monica, and the reception will follow al the home of the bride's parents. Her father was born in San Diego. The bride is a graduate of USC, where she joined Alpha Gam- ma Delta Sorority, Fr~hman Forum, Spurs and Amazons. She will be attended by her sister, Mrs. Larry Alan Baxter of Ramona, and four bridesmaids. The bridegroom-to-be was graduated from Texas Tech where he joined Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity. The young couple will live in Lubbock, TPx. Tea Follows Gift Presentation Mrs. Marian Longstreth was hostess yesterday. at tea hour to those who, like herself, participated in the handsome gift of art books to the Helen Palmer Geisel art reference library at La Jolla Museum of Art in affectionate memory to their friend, the late Mrs. Geisel. The tea followed the gift presentation· at the library. Those who contributed to the memorial and who were invited to the tea were Mmes. Nikolai Sokoloff, Lynn Fayman, John N. Jeffers, J. Alphonso Koenig, Roy Munger, Mr. and Mrs. Armistead B. Carter, Mr. and Mrs. Philip L. Gildred, Mr. and Mrs. Bert L. Huff and Drs. and Mmes. Francis M. Smith, Francis P. Shepard and Fred Phleger. 'Best Western Book Of Year' Artist Olaf Wieghorst and Mrs. Wieghorst have returned from a four-month trip that took them as far as Florida. They were at the Cowboy Hall of Fame in Oklahoma City recently, when the Wrangler Award was presented to those involved with the publishing of the biography of Mr. Wieghorst, a painter noted for western scenes. The book, written by Willjam Rsf.11 of ~n ~and published by Paul Weaver of F'Togstalf, was named The best western book of the year by the Cowboy H;all of Fame and American Heritage. Six hundred guests attended the black- tie awards dinner at the Cowboy Hall of Fame. Mr. and Mr~. Wieghorst will leave in July to attend a recep- tion at the exhibition of 24 paintings by Mr. Wieghorst at the Charles Russell Museum m Great Falls, Mont. The paintings are owned by Malcom Mackay, collector of western art.

the Committee on College Af- fairs (RCCA , whicn is con- cerned °\I ith curriculum and s~ c1al activities m Revelle Col- lege The government is made up of six undergraduates. three professors and three adminis- rator . They.allocate funds for student use, review curriculum chang , and govern the pol- icies relating to the use of R velle Plaza, where most noonllme activities at UCSD taJ

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, ROGER SHOWLEY to open in September, should ~e named after former Chancellor John S. Galbraith, who was mstrumental m gettmg the library established at CCSD. Another pro~?sition seeks tudent pinion on U.S. involvement m Cam- bodia Women ·s rights. exi;~ :1Sion of the Associated Students to rnclude graduate stu,icnts. and war-related research are the sub1~cts of the remaming pruposilions Graduate students can vote m this part of Ire election , long with undergrads. SAN DIEGO STATE COLLEGE B} ROBI;', ~IAYDECK After.raUies t1?ach-~ns, .-it-ins, lh ~-ins, meetings, marches and PlCKetmg. the antiwar movement at San Diego State has pretty much settled down into communitv action drives . Resolutions of the Fac~lt Senate, wh°ich could open· alterna- t'.ves to normal cla~ses f?r those students and profe rs who wish to parllc1pate fullume in the movement ea some- dissent on campus. ' No"'.· those who wish may work fulltime and complete class- work m other ways. Those who attend class and do not want to

work full-time have a number of organizations and activities open to them for antiwar ef- forts. Those who do not wish to participate at all may still con- tinue their academic work. In the aftermath of the anti- war activity a number of stu- dent-faculty organizations, op- posed to the ·war but not on strike, have been formed. One group. started by tiidents and faculty in tpe history depart- ment, 1s presen ing weekh· seminars on the hi tory of U.S. mvoh·ement in Indochina. Another group, Responsive Stµdents and Faculty for a Better America, will take their thoughts to the community.

Also getting an honorary degree from USD will be Victor H. Krulak, a newsp_aper executive, who has been an outstanding leader in humanitarian and charitable affairs in the San Dfego com- munity. Msgr. John E ._ _Baer, president of USD, said 1t has become traditional for the university to recognize leadi~g local personalities for their efforts in behalf of the whole community. Krulak retired from the Ma- 1 ine Corps as a lieutenant gen- eral two years ago.

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. ROBI.' _ 1AYDECK Agamst the War, 1s CQ111J)Qsed of som till

00 young veterans most ina, who don't believe wor\d pea~e can

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