News Scrapbook 1969-1971

tudents

On uppor ing . 1

fl'!

'f!.E_r

. . t

Ei Ann

'Honorary Prelates'

1

1

ho

A leading Democratic con-iidation for the Senate seat c.riminals. tend er now held by Repub!Jcan · n. George 11urphy - scheduled

was held fro ' midnight to 6

vi>r itv of San D:ego and :\1esa

about

<.-<>nctrned

St udents

n ed For Dio

a.m.

(.:o le

the \'ietn m war massed 01 t e area· carrpuscs today for

s,udents

lege

• fesa

Some high school students v.orP black arm band and held c assroom di ct1 ans of the 11ar in Viet am. Students at the 1..mvernitv of San D ego held an all-nigh!. candlelight vigil on campus. ames of the 40,000 war dead were read at the gathering. It Candlelight \ igil

Tunney is on th e House In-

called th rvance "Cele-- brabon of L re," ratrcr th· n r ob

and

demonstrations

ra.l't?S

Insular Affairs

an d

l DI\ ersity of terior

to sp ea). at th San Diego Frida y.

Committee, and on the sub• .John V Tunnr1·. rn. commit tees lo Indian Aff airs, ! po.n~orrrl ~:_ a member

memorial ser1 ices. At the same tim a counter- demonstration led mostly b} v c t c r a n s' organization . owed evidepce of support f President ·1xon's \'ictnam war policy Thousands of mo- torists, heeding the call of th • 1ghts-on'' campaign, drove o work or school this morning w th their automobile head- I ghts tur1ed on. One Out of 6 A vehicle count by Evening 'l'noune repo1ters at nme loca- Uors m th county this morn- ing bowed that one out of ev- er; six dnvers had turned 'O. their headlights. Of 2,140 ,ehicles counted, 317 had their headlights on. Campus :Moratorium Day 1.1 •1,1t1es ,,ere carried out · peacefully at the Un1vers1ty o[ t allfornia at San Diego. U.S. In. rnat1onal University's Cal- 1'orn1a \ 'estern campus, an Diego State Co1lcge, the l:m-

:\!orator um.

Rep.

iarme ut-

Paul Seaman a

Ri\ e,:·side , 11:h p.m Tu nnr~ ta ' k

cran of the \'ietnam war and an organizer of the Mesa Col- lege -program said it was f It

. tu11Pnts

the

observance

the

that

there

on the Far Ea st and t hr Pa• fnl'a ~nd f<'omgn Rr-

.

en cP ,Clul~.

!Continued Next Page, Col. 5)

:'lla.1 or issues, 111clucl 111;:: thP cifi c dl e East rns1~. \\ 1l1 bi> topics 1 coH rerl h\· Tunrie • Th e r on - ec "ressman "1ecentl return ed J fro m a fatt-l111ihn" \'isit to th~ Far and :\lid~le East Tun ne\' has take,1 a stand in opposition to the AU\I system. He advoca' cs a lot:.J.111,l;.alcrn draf t, \'•rtnam a1_1d hr :'Yl! d· onn ' ·

bcnmmil-

Policy

cc Antiwar Trial About 300 per~ons wa tched a mock anti ; ar ial outside the library. In Aztec Center, an anti11 ar film ran a poor econd to a packed roomful of studests watching the World Serles on color telev i wn. n the Greek T eater on the C a J. W e s t er n Univ sity pus, 300 tudents met at 11 a .m. to hear brief talks by ree professor . Dr. Sidney Warren chairman of the Department of Political Science ; Dr. John Somer ville, professor of philo ophy, d Dr . Warren Briggs , professor of religion, were the speakers. Warren said that the policy of the United States govern- ment in the Vietnam war since 1961 is no longer ac<:ept- ahle. Dr. Somerville said that un- less the United States can solve the problem of war - not just Vietnam, but war in general - there 1s no use in talking about anything. • •o Cla ses Canceled About 25o" students sat on the mall lawn at Grossmont College to h~ten to speeches and songs by members of the Open Forum Club whi h is sponsoring the moratorium activities there There were no signs. Classes were not can- celed AP estimated 2 500 per ns - students, faculty and area res dents - attended an anti- war rally at the Revelle Col- lege plaza at the University of California at San Diego.

he Uni• (' pnter l 1rban

ere

Gro ps

1fe•'wtwa5\ a

tery for the draft.

Divided in War

educa on . Y c m gr, 7 and _r

· su s

ived the

In

On

Tunney a tudents should W. Averell Harnman a.n~ual be given a greater role in the , award m 1968 He partic1_pat- shaping of th e campus en ir- ed m the !)glo · American onment and curriculum. ~ntari an _Conferences However, he asserts t hat stu· on Afri ca hel d 1n Wa shmg- rlents who u se force or i:_-n_t::i.:.:m:...•..:.t.:.o::.n:____________;

otest CO>ITINUED FROM PAGE 1

'sho11,• a l'ommitment

should

ii lion

6.9

for ure, r ather

than destruc-

tion of life through war." Memorial Service A memorial i ervice attend• ed by an estimated 400 stu- dents was held outside the San Diego State College 11ampus li- brary today. Speakers urged support for the nrove t o with- draw U.S. lrl)Ops from Vi t- nam. Members of the Student Mobilization Committee m- pleted reading 21,000 names of Amencans killed in Vietnam. Committee members apolo- gized for not having time to read the names of '5,000 oth- ers killed in the war. A coffin draped with a U.S. flag was placed adjacent o a icrophone at the rally. Th re w e ive crosses on the la , ur of them to commemorate n Diego State studen illed in the war, a nd the fifth marked "Class of 1970'' wi1 h a question mark on it. Classes Di missed J) Leonard Frey, chairman e college's English De- partment. said he was dis- nnssing his two classes for the day. It could not be deter- mined how many other faculty members dismissed classes, although Frey said a number of other professors had told him they planned to do so. Leaflets supporting the mo- ratorium were passed out thr

USO Alumni To Celebrate Homecoming j o via-,,, 10 J] ( f University of San Diego alumni will celebrate Home- coming on Saturday, No- vember 1, by competing_ with the new club football team. The game at 1 :30 p.m . at Hoover High Stadium will be followed in the evening with a reception for the USD executive committee. Guests to be honored are Most Rev . Leo T . Maher, chancellor of USD and Most Rev. John R. Quinn, auxiliary bishop and provost of the coon.:inate university. Others are Mother Frances Danz., chairman of e USD College for Women oard of trustees; Msgr. John E. Baer, president of the USD College for Men ; Sister Nancy Morris, president of the USD College for Women, and Joseph A. Sin- clitico Jr. , dean of the School of Law. The reception will begin at 5 :30 p.m. in the Faculty Dining Room, De Sales Hall. The alumni dinner will be at 7:30 p.m . A Folk Mass will be celebrated at 10 a.m. Sunday, November 2, in the Chapel of the College for Women, for alumni and their families . Brunch will follow at 10 :45 a .m . in the Faculty Dinning Room. Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Walker are co-chairmen of the Homecoming weekend. Mr. and Mrs . Dan Wachowiak were in charge of invitations, with Mr. and Mrs. Charles King . Mr. and Mrs. Don Gilmore are taking reservations. The Homecoming events will be preceedea by a business meeting at 11 a.m. November 1 of the College for Men Alumni Association.

$£"'1/4 /0 /y Most Going For Student Aid, Scholarshi , Faculty Gains 6f $16 9 m1lhon educational development pro11ram - mcluding maJor increa s In student aid, ol rship and faculty develop- ment will be announced Monday as part of the 20th Anniversary c cbrallon at the ruversity of San Diego. The Most H.ev Leo T 1 her bLshop of the Catholic Diocese of San Diego will be a, principal concelebrant at a Pontifical :\lass at noon onda) 'l'h c are the two major event~ honoring the signing of the Uni-

war1 ~of est y PlansCenter On Campuses Campus pea<.-e was urged e•- tcrdav by student leader· plan- ning today's nrotests ol the con- tinuallon of the warm Vietnam. Programs for the observanee~ were disclosed yesterday by most schools al ng with pleas to students to avoid situallons which coul result in violence and mar 11rotest plans. At San Dl<'go State, where in- structors are under a d1rective to not dismi s classes. leaders of the war moratorium ohsen ance asked that students attend as many e1·cnts as po· b and for professors lo devote some of their discussions to the peace movement. The l'niver 1tv of San Diego has given permission to instruc- tors to dismiss classes and noted that even if classe are held, students who attend the vanous functions are not to be penalized for missmg class. A :\1ass for Peace will be cele- brated at noon. During the day there will be speakers both in protest to the continuation of the war and in support of President • 'ixon's policy in Vietn~. Black arm bands will be avail- able at most of the colleges and univer. ities where speakers, panels and discussions are slated in ob~ervance or the pro- test against the war's contin- uation. At San Diego Stale the princi- pal speaker will be Mrs. Jea- nette Reisbord, executive secre- tary of the Commit! e of Re- spons1 ility, who wiil discuss "the appalling la of medical facilities available to il- dren of Vietnam ' at 1: O Va9ous activitie (Continued 011 b-5, Col. 1)

ch ·e Service Jnfor- kend will begin at aturday with an m- t:ilk on lhe se1 vice

talk, giv-

t m Th

law anti

:vers1ty charter 20 years ago. The mass will be at noon fol- Jov.ed by a luncheon where the n w bl hop v.ill 'meet the USD faculty. The expa1 10n program calls for little m the ay of capital expenditure and bwldings. ·i:·.yE R PLA . "The SIX year plan enables the campus community to set new goats and pre ent then to the commurnty.' .\l1chael ewman, director of development and public re ahons said "Funds needed are expected to come from private gifts and govern- ment ources " The six-year plan includes $3.3 million for the school of law. Part bl this will be an expansion of the law building to hold more tudents, a larger Jibrar,, a stu- dent hou ·e and a court center Programs tor the under- graduate and gra<11111te d1v1sions v.ill total $13.7 m11lion. Student aid, scholarshi~ faculty de- velopment are k o this pro- gram. STUDENT HOCSI Other increa es are expected to be in studen bou ing, cur- riculum, a universtty center and graduate program development Also to be added at USD under the plan are: an institute for special ethnic studies and envi- ronmental studies: an ecume- nical center, center for the studv of communicative dis- orders and an educalional re- earch center. The expans10n plan primarily ~els goals through 1975. Among other duties, Bishop ',!aher i chancellor of the unt- vers1ty and chaUlllan of ii board of trustees. The umver ity was started b} the first bi hop of the diocese of San Diego, the Most Rev Charles F. Buddy. to open a center on thP the Reli- gious Order of the Sacred Heart. The an Diego College for Wom- en's cla s of 1954 v.as the fir t to hilltop campus was Fir

en by Wllliam nuth, Los An- geles dra t attorney, will cov- er exemptions and proce- dures. The problem of the con- scientious obJt>Ctor will be the subjec of the ftrsl par of the afternoon program Saturday. Alexander Landon, second ye·1r law student :ti U 'D and a con~cient10 s objector, will lead the d~ cus on. Law profe ~r Kendall Wood, a practici g attorney in San Diego, will moderate a panel discu~sion on the draft at 3 p.m. P,mel members will include Smith ahd Landon; David H. Hayworth. govern• ment appeal agent for Local Board 141. Dr George Abbot, M.D.; Lance Beizer coordina- tor of Selective Service Af- fairs, University of California; Paul P. Dinant chairman of Local Board 139, and Carol Smith, a draft attorney. The Sunday ~s,5ions will be- gin at noon and consist of a workshop for draft counselors. The two-

l,lv,,,. • 6 '/ Teens Invited To Take Part In Dialogues tudents have ted to take part m the second e sion of an mter- di c1phoa ry dialogue series. "Educatio in Transition," at 8 p.m Thursday in the College for :\le11 !,[mversity of San Diego, Alcala Park. The Rev. :'wlelvm H • Harter, e cuh\e director of the San Diego County o(mc1l of Churches, coordinator of the er1es, said purp e of the dia- logu is to allo men of various profe ions to ·ome , cquamt-, ed and develop m !hods of coop- erative erv1ce Directing the I cusS1ons are Ronald Green, a social worker, Donald Clark, an attorney; Dr. Rob rt Ontell and William Lyons, educat rs lergymen, p ycluatri t d ychologt:;ts also are part1c1pating. First of the dia logue ses ion, wa I t Thursday. Another will be at 8 p.m. Oct 16 at the col- lege I O • j

Plans Focus On Campus (Continued)}iuui,, /0 15 6 9 at San Diego State beginning as students will be permitted to at- early as 8 a.m. with movies. At tend if they _desire. . 2 p.m. student leaders have _Most Jumor colleges m San . . Diego County also have planned asked for a campus-wide mo- programs in free-spe~ch and ment of silence to honor the war student center areas. dead. Some high school students Teach-ins and speakers have were attempting to join the been scheduled at UCSD's Rev- movement, with some urging elle Plaza free-speech area. that students refuse to attend Speakers will include Law- classes. rcnc~ Ferlinghetti and ;\Ilario Some high schools were per- Savio. who have been active in, milling lunch time speakers on other student dissent programs; the war protest movement, but at Berkeley. none announced plans to dismiss Several faculty speakers also classes. are scheduled, including Dr. Meanwhile. a UCSD student. Paul Saltman, provost of Rev- Robert J . Hudson, 19, publicly etle College; Dr. Herbert Mar- burned what he said was his Air cuse. controversial professor of Force identification card yester- philosophy and a Marxist; Dr. day. He said he iLs resigning Richard Popkins, also of the from the Air Force because he philosophy department, and Dr. is opposed to the war in Viet- Francis Hal pern of the physics nam. department. Hudson said he has been ab- UCSD professors have resche- sent wi out leave from the Air d'uted classes in some cases to Force for 37 days. allow students to take part in Hudson, a form~r Chula Vista the program. resident, said he Joined the Air A forum is planned for the Force in the summer of 1968. He United States International Uni- spoke at a rally organized by a versity's Greek Theater on the group called the Friends of the California Western ampu and Resistance.

Woolpert Retained, Bickerstaff N med ,;' C (: v > , /<'· l J la 9 Phil Woolpert, director of athletics and varsity basketball coach at the University of San Diego, who announced his resig- nation from both of these posts, reversed himself when he was asked to remain as director of athletics. Woolpert stated that he was delighted that he was going to into his new position with five jobs was his own and that the years of Woolpert training action was taken before the behind him . administration had been given a chance to assess the total situation. Bickerstaff started remain at the university in an official capacity and admitted his request to be relieved of both and 1966 USD teams and steps

I and Youth Notes

his athletic career as an out- standing cager at East Benham High in Kentucky and led his team in scoring and rebounding for two years. He lettered three years and was voted All- Kentucky, All-Regional, and named the third best player in the region. While playing under Woolpert, he not only proved to be a fine floor man but at the same time scored 450 points during his two-year career . Bernie was elected team captain and honored as most valuable player in 1966 when with a 17-11 won-loss record, the best in the school's history, the team received a berth in the NCAA small college regional play-offs . Bickerstaff said one of his objectives this year will be to better that record as he sees no reason that this 1969-70 team s ho\lld not. " go all the way." The new coach is 25 years old and he and his wife, Eugenia,

Sc

/ 0 ·/S • 6/'

gradual .

It also· was announced by Msgr. John E. Baer, president of the College for Men, that Bernie Bickerstaff, assistant to Woolpert, had been named to assume Woolpert ' s coaching role. Woolpert said he was ex- tremely pleased at the an- nouncement that Bickerstaff had been appointed as his successor and added , "Bickerstaff has an excellent knowledge of the fundamentals of the game, is a fine tactician and strategist, enjoys the respect of all the basketball players and most importantly is a fine gentleman. "I look forward to working in an administrative capacity with both Bickerstaff and Coach John Cunningham (freshman basketball and baseball coach ) in enhancing USD 's total athletic program." The new basketball mentor was one of the stars of the 1965

Kathleen Dunn, 46i4 Van

ve , has been awarded

Rotary Foundation f~;I

o a mp fro

undergraduate

/

stud_y abroad ~uring the 1970-71 academJ~ year.

:\liss Du~ 1s a Jllll!Or at_the Umvers1ty of San Diego whe~ she JS_ studymg p~ht_1cal science _and Spanish. Under the grant she will seek adm15s1on to the Uruversity of Concepcion ID Chile.

Black Educators Slate Meeting black educators will meet al 10 a.m. thi s Sa turday, Octa r Ill, in the C111 vers1ty of San Diego College for Men to form a chapter of the Ca l1forn1a Association for At rica n·American ducation. to (;AAA~;, said the formation of the chapter will enable in- form(•d cduca tors to work on s tudent and community protMms. )oUl,.n.o I Cl /1 & Sa n Diego area v,;1111(• Moore o( l 'SD , San Otego area representa live

She was sponsored by the La Jolla Rotary Club. Psychiatrist to Speak at Elliott Campus

,. Dr. Viktor Fr nkl, pS}chiatrist and author, will speak oli The Phenomenology of Learning" at 2:45 p.m. Friday at the Lecture Hall of the l; S. Internationa: lfnh·ersity's Elliott Campus. The lecture 1s open to the public. Hoov r Hig/J o Hoover High School will hold its annual homecomino- on Fri- day honoring the cla ses of 1939, '49 and '59. There ~ill be a rally for students and alumni m the Hoover stadium at l ·30 p.m. foliowed by a reception in the school cafeteria for all alumni. The football gem will.be held at 8 p.m. when Hoover meets Patrick He ry High School. The ho~ored c asses will hold a dinner-dance at 7 p.m. on Saturday m the Caribbean Room of El Cortez Hotel.

duced at the University of San Diego la school. The '" ent. held in San Diego :u1ier i•)r ourt, was judged b. 24 'P acticing local attor- neys.

.... ,moT POI?,;T AT rn-m " KEARNY MESA A j ~ new form o! l<>gal competi- 1 ~":1 t ion called the "atto1n \ • ~~ client moot C'ourt competi- f, tion" was recentl)" intro•

have one daughter.

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