News Scrapbook 1969-1971

T~ II~ //. -2.). 'f Sea floor ownership corts~dered international organization." SAN DIEGO - Shipping Code is already a preserving certain

Coining

evenis --- • gr l m

Baptist

Progressive

Church, National Avenue. 22 "The Beauty of Blac ess," presented by Voices, Inc., at Univ. of California Gymnasi- um, 8:30 p.m.

2-22 San Di go Youth Crusade, Thirty-fir t S reet Youth Hall, 31st & Franklin; 7:30 p .m. nightly, except Monday and Thur day.

rationalization and restatement are needed desperately ." says Hiller 8. Zobel in the law review. Zobel is professor o[ law . Boston College Law School. His artide is tilled , " Admiralt.v Jurisdiction . Unifica tion, and the American Law Institute." Law notes and comments by student contributors discuss the seizures of United States fishing vessel, fluctuating shoreline and tidal boundaries, and jurisdictional problems of maritime tort actions. Recent cases riled concern the proprietary interest of the United States in the continental s helf. and admiralty jurisdiction as a matter of procedure.

Wilkes says this i a mojor dilemma in framing rules for seashore development ··Existing users have ·vested' expectations. prospective use rs have at best hopeful ones. How. then, can fulu re uses be accommodated when coastal decisions are madc' 1 " He cites as examples the problems cau sed by the shrinkage of San Francisco Bay by piecemeal filling over the decades and the laking of fre sh waler from Florida 's Everglades National Park. which threatens lo destroy entirely the ecology of th~ Everglades. "The mairtime laws and statutes of the United States are in such a confused stale that

socialist features," Butler and Quigley conclude. Butl er is a re se ar ch associate, Harvard Law School : associate, Russian Research Center. Harvard University . and a member of the District of Columbia Bar. Quigley is adjunct assistant professor of law at Ohio State University, College of Law, and a member of the Massa chusetts Bar " Consideration of Anticipatory Uses in Decisions on Coastal Development,'' was contributed by Daniel \'ltlkes, associate professor of political science, Law of the Sea Institute, University of Rhoade Island

Common ownership of the ocean floor by the nations of the world i·s advocated in the lead article of a special edition of the San Diego Law Review on the Law of the Seas. executive director. Commission lo Study the Organization of Peace, says, "For common ownership of this vast area lo be recognized, and for it to be internat;onally administered , would be one of the greatest advances in the history of world organization. " Instead of national rivalry, a power struggle and a colonial race , this concept would enable mankind , working together, to develop new form s of Clark M Eichelberger ,

document fundament al importance for anyone involved in martime transport and will become even more significa nt in the years lo come," William E Buller and John B. Quigley J;. say. Butler and Quigley in their analysis of the Soviet code note that no translation of the code has yet been made into of

The Law of the Seas edition was published by the Law Review Board of the University of San Diego School of La.,.; . Richard Peter Sax, a June 1969 graduate, was editor-in-chief. The Law of the Seas edition is probably the first student law journal to be published on this specialized area of the law, Sax said. Other articles in the review concern legal implications of coastal development, admiralty law and the new Soviet Maritime Code . tremendous growth of the Soviet merchant fleet during the past decade and the planned growth for the 1970s, the I Soviet I Merchant " Given the

12 PTA Bake Sale, Gompers Jun- 23 San Diego Council on Family lor Ulgh School, 7 , 30 p.m. Relations Invitational Confer-

ence on "Sensitivity Training: Its Role in Preparing People for the Helping Professions," Univ. of San Diego Student

13 Harl y Knox Elementary Open

, 7:30 to 9 p.m. Knox PTA

II

ou

s •rvlng a haste e .

14 Clay Shaw, accused or plotting to kill Pre ident John F. Ken-

Lounge, 1 to 5 p .m.

English

code leaves the much more with the Soviet

"The new foreigner comfortable

necty, wm speak at a pubUc December talk at Unlver It of San Dierto. Starts at7 p .m. in More Hall.

6 The Hf69 Ebony Fashion Fair, 7:30 p .m. at the El Cortez Munecas Auxiliary. Call: 264- 8081 or 264-7365 for informa- Hotel. Sponsored by Las

maritime law than he was with the old code. In a number of respects the 1968, code has brought Soviet legislation mlo still closer con(ormily with the law and practice of noncommunisl stales while

16 Tots and Toddlers Contest,

the San Diego

ponsored by

Section of Colored Women's Club, Inc., 3 to 5 p.m. at Pil-

tion.

e

ENGAGED-Mr. and Mrs. Frank T. Masterson of Pasadena announce the engagement of their daugh- ter, Rosemary Eileen, to Walter Owen Lauer Johnston Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter 0. L. Johnston. Miss Masterson, a ._ graduate of St. Andrew

High School in Pasadena, will receive her degree · next June from the Uni- ..,_ versity of San Diego Col- lege for Women. She is editor-in-chief of the USO newspaper, Vista, and is listed in "Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities.'' Mr. Johnston is a gradu- ate of University High School and USD College for Men. He was affil- iated with Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity.

1()

ltot b p \\ 1•h pla~ mg football on Thank-;gl\ in;;

Th

hm en't healed yet.

h' t la t \\ •pk',._ bru1~e

Da • "It tak befor

o I tup in p1 ct1ce near the end of the ,, eek ,ou . tart fe hng good again. ' say Ron l\Ii "You et rid or the p in just in time to start hurting again." . ViolenC'c I the ha 1c appeal of football, e ·pec1ally pro football Yet even the big, t-tr~ng_ ?ne · such a .;\lix d ,ote little thought to the p11n11hve aspect or the game.

MISS :\IASTERSON

The couple will be mar- ried Jan. 10 in St. Brigid's Catholic Church.

"I recognize the importance of , iolenee in keeping the game on top and I recognize ii 's iI?PQf• tam·t• in giving personal .-;aW,fae- llon." sa,·s >lix. "Tht'l'e's '-OITl t pe of animal in all of us tl~a1 enjo~s a good, hard ba!tlP. 1he fans get a vie now, tlmll out of seein" us punish each othel'. . "I can step back .ind look at 11 olJJectiwl~ and ~ay, '. es, It. quite \iolent.' But honestl ·, when I partic-1pate I don't _feel it'· violent. I'm caught up m 1t, I know it's rough and violent, but I don't feel it." :'.Ii. is mm·e intro pec-tive -

ot, at least. more articulate - than most of the physic·al type. tlenuou: game. 111is year he has had an opport,m1t, to b" e\ en more cerel?ral th~n usual b 'l'ause he ha l 11 lamed b) a senes of mJunes. Hi!; trnth , •a · H h the San Diego Chargers ha:- 111 som 11, ) b en hi ha1 dco;t ancl the roaching staff 1s app c.h 1 he 'w ma, 1etll'e. Broach the suo•, cli ec• a 1d he•manru1 er;; .~dr- ottly. "You're not gomg to a k me about that, he respond - laughing. " Ul el)· not now." 'Nothing Heroic About Game' The gen ral manager is eager to keel? hi_m in har- ne,s at Jra:t another season 01· tw~ u!'ltil his replace- ment, Gene Ferguson, is more expeuenced a_nd ma- ture. Sid Gillman directs his appeal to the pride of a vete!'an who ha been an all-league tackle for a dee- ad "I don t tl•ink ;';Ii • will quit on a sour note." say · Gillman. "He' had such a great 1·a 'f'er and he won't want to go out on a sour note after hi. only poor a on. I knO\\ the man and hi:- pndc - we won't Jet him qu1l " Ii k110,, s ht· \ luf ard he ha,: u met' sense or pc p •cthc. II I on,1ders tootball a_ spl~ndid game. (or e. ·,1mpl ', ut he doesn't equate 1t with gom-;; to the moon. •·Ihe1 e'i; nothing pa1 twu aily hern1c bout . '1.e ph) si(·al asped," he .:ay;;. ·•r don't think the ph:,s1c~l thingi; a football pla~e1· goes through are mo~ hero!c than a widowed or divorced woman experiences m trymg to raise children. But I happen -to be a football plaver" ,\ ve1·y good football pla~er who happens to have_ a law degree, an intellectual bent, and a keen social eonseience. Later on he'd like to go into some form of public servke, perhaps as a candi~ate for Congr~ss.,, "Football is my • 'o. 1 interest with one exception. he say1:,. ''Thal is an interest I would hope ever~'body in the C'OUntn and world shared: I would ltke to make the cou1;try and the world a better place to live in, a more just pl.1ce to li\·e in. :.fany ~hoose_ to sup- port the fore-es working for !us caw-_e m thell' spare 1ime and they do a vrry go b o[ 1t. Bui I want to devote full 1imc to it.'' se 1t him back to 'l11is was the moth at10n ~<..:hool a a J;rn . tudent. "It v.a not Y.1th the intent o[ be ·oming a lawyer.'' he explains "but with the intent of becoming a more aw, re and educated mun. This i. eonsnous prepara- tion on mv part for the past six rars. 1 tried one ~-ral" ol haphazard n'arling, hut I idn't lil,e the re- sults. I thought I nerded some re,, lated cour:,;e of stud) " His (IU Jilll'ations~ "The only thmg · I know I h~\·e a ,, cledirnt1pn and honest) and a :en-:e of Justice. That ma, not br enough but I ain willing to try. I ha\'e a ,vol'id-wide inte;·est. I want 10 '-'Ce justice not onh· in ou1 0\\-11 < ountl'v on a ·odal level but other nation have tl'PinCndou. problem,; in the wa) of po- \ erty and hunger. . "I have to find the area I can he,t ser ·c m, when that will p!'e:ent it~elf, I don't truth ully know." · l\Iix has made ome shre ·d m 'Pstmenb and if he has to become rich ·n order to promote social justice hes prepa1wl to make that sacrifice.

"Cnless one is particularly brilliant or ta he . a\'s, ''I don't think he can be a \\ ides for good without power. Perhap ac,·um 1l wealth is the way to do it. I may have io"' •'"''~"'" wealth in order to do ome socially goo l 111-1'""-•-'!'"-·- "I reaJh· don't know what my lirnitat'ons ar . But I can't wait ror the ne..x-t stage of m) life. It'. going to he the most e. ·citing thing r,·e ever done." One of his options is the intriguing possibility of a political contest with hif. close friend. Jae~ K_emp. Kemp's football address is Buffalo but he 1~ mter- rsted in running for Congr~ss from San D1~g_o a,! some future date. "l consider .Tack compeht1on, . ays :'11ix, of his fellow Republican. "But electi\•e of- fire is just one of the alternatives - there are lots of \\·a,·s to sen·e." t'or 1he moment, he has a constituenc~ of two - 1·oaehes Charlie Waller and Joe :.Iadro. They'll be delif{hted if he is able-bodied for the Chargers' final l\\O home games and they hope he'll go on tor ano!h- er \·eal' or t\\·o before he takes up the eau;;e of social justir·e ML· says hr p!a,·s football for two reasons: (1) money, and (2) "the opportunity for elation." The Chargers \\ ill be happy to provide both.

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