News Scrapbook 1969-1971

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VOLUME XLlll, NUMBER 100 - ----~

Sllulents f eal' for environment Continued from page I .'\Jational City, tha' . ays 'Plani trees. plea e • .' . "ln the midst of smoky tn• du-tnc<, the sign is dismal. "And the whole idea is di · mal. that we're forced to that solution - asking individual lo plant a tree, if they have room."

New Comet Debut Here et Jan. 16 1.t • /)..•J..? l,,'f That newly disc ered comet the am 7 high last November is slowly approachll1~ a point by three Japanese astronomers, where it will be visible from the none of whom knew the others had discovered it until each had San Diego area. reported the find to an astrono- Rudolf Lippert, r mical society. Consequently, the emeritus of astronom he comet has been named after all former San Diego Woman's Col- three. lege, now part of the ni ersity of San Diego, said y erday lliat the Tago-Sato-Kosaka

Nine LawGraduates Joi~ .f o~niY,,.Qffice Nine recent ~ool sion In the U. S. Depart- graduates will become dep- ment of the Interior. He and uties to John W. Witt, city his wife, Sally, presently attorney, in the next few live In Sherman Oaks. weeks, it was announced this Lopes, 25, of 3755 Ocean week. All nine were on the Front Walk, studied at Cal- list of successful bar exam- ifornia State, Los Angeles, inees announced by the before receiving his law de- state bar early this week. gree from Loyola Universi- The nine are George T. ty. He was born and raised Chialtas, George A. Gilhay4 in Hawaii. While in I aw Laureen J. Grai, Rooert . school, Lope• was selected Logan, Conrad J. Lopes,- tor the St. Thomas More Wesley R. Mason, III, Wil- Honor Society. liam D. Mudd, Richard D. Mason, 30, ,received his Muir, and Robert W. Sick- legal education at Calitor- els. nia Western University af- Gilham, Miss Gray and ter graduating from UCLA. Lopes have been serving as A native of Los Angeles, legal interns in the city at- Mason was commissioned in torney's office since Sep- the :Navy through the tember. Witt said, "We R01C program at UCLA. were delighted that all three He erved five years as a interns passed the bar ex- Naval officer before start- amination on their first try. ing law school. Mason was Though we w e re n ' t employed during his l a w surprised. Their work for us s ool years as a law clerk has been outstanding. I know for San Diego Gas and Elec- they'll do well as deputies tric Company. Mason lives in the criminal division." at 1522 Chalcedony St. Chialtas, 30, is a gradu- Mudd, 25, recieved his law ate of Valley State College degree from Hastings Col• and Loyola University Law lege of the Law in San Fran,. School. Born in G re e c e, cisco. He graduated Cu m Chlaltas was raised in Illi- Laude from C a I i for n I a nois. He and his wife, Lynn, Western In 1966 where he now live in Van Nuys with was listed in "Who's Who their four year • old son. Among Students in Ameri• Chialtas served for three can Universities and Col- and a halt years an an offi. leges." cer in the Navy Supp I y Mudd and his wife, Pa. Corps. tricia Ann, live at 517 Glo- Gjjham 26, of 6866 Cas- ver Street in Chula Vista. selberry Way, studied at Muir, 28, 1s a graduate of San Diego State b e f or e Brown University. He also earning his law degree at received his law degree the Universjty of San Die• from Hastmgs. He served gQ,, He was an all • league for two years as a Naval football player at Saint Aug- officer aboard a destroyer. ustine High School h e r e. Muir is single and presently Gilham and his wife, Georg- lives in San Francisco. ia, have three children. Sickels, 33, attended Col- 26, is the gate University as an under- daughter of A. S. Gray, San graduate and obtained his Diego County Recorder. She legal education at the Uni- graduated from La J o 11 a versitf of San Francisco, High School and Vassar se ed as a Naval offi- College. She finished first cer fo six years before en- in her class at the Univer- t rtug ci ilian life as a com- sity of San Diego: .L a w mercial property underwrit- Sch~ where she was a er for an insurance c o m- mem r of the B o a rd of pany. Sickels and llis wife Editors of the San D i e g o Betty and their two c h i 1- Law Review and recipient dr n pre. ently live in San of the Chancellor's Tuition- Francisco. al Scholarship and Law Witt said, "The outstand- Review Scholarship. Ing group of new lawyers Miss Gray, who lives at who will be joining us in the 1064 Skylark Dr., La Jolla, next few weeks is a result served as a student intern of an intensive recruiting with the United States at- program by our office. torney's office before join- While associated with the ing the city attorney's stall. city attorney's office they Logan 25, a native of Ida- provide superior legal serv- ho Falls, Idaho, received his ice to the city administra- legal education at George tion and to the people of our Washington Univ er s i- community. While some of ty, Washington, D.C. His them may eventually leave undergraduate stu_dies _were our service, the vast major. pursued at the University of ity ot them will remain in Utah._ .- p1·actice in San Diego to the While m Law School, Lo- benefit of the entire c o m• 1an was an editor for a dlvi- munity."

comet will be high enough in the sky by Jan. 16 to be seen easily. By then, he explained, the comet will be about 20 degrees above the horizon, in the South- west. It will have a magnitude of 2.9, bright enough to be seen without a telescope or binocu- lars. At present, he said, it is about two or three degrees above the horizon. It should continue to be visible from Jan. 16 into February, Lippert said, but its intensity will gradually diminish. The comet was discovered on

f the most to do with It, aided by m te;it theo- lonians m I 1 ng, men and women religmu , ' h said. Althocgh the I ent "as te med a co lecliYe pastoral 1 et• er of ny ,, e tern l .S. b i h o p s, Bishop .\laher sllid the letter originated with a Jbcomm1ttee of the • a- t'onal Council of Catholic Bi hop ' liai on committee to the Conference of ~lajor Supenor of Women. Bishop • Ia her said the Jetter was meant to be u ed hy indh 1dual bishops a they WL,h. He said orders have been received for 10,000 copies of the e ter.

He' Re p ns·b e Letter, Bishop ay Pastoral Note Giving Advice on Religious Life of Nuns Criticized by Two Sister r

USD SCHOLAR'S ANALYSIS Religious Literature Seen Changing Sin e Vatican f·I /;).,:;}?.er By CHARLES HULL Another article by Father Religion Writer ~ollen. ''The ~.arish and Le~- The San Diego L'nion dmg Library, appeared m . . . the Cath()!ic ~ibrary World Conte~po_rary rchg1ous ht- recently. Stressing the impor- C'rature_ indicates that recom- tnnce of ~electing books on me~dal!ons 0 ~ th e S_ec~ nd many social subjects he ap- V~bcan Council are w~ng pend.ed to the article a bib- w1?e.spread accept~nce, !n the Wl~Ji~t'l/;I~ liography compiled for St. _op1ruon of a San Diego hbrar- f'aul's Methodist Church here ian and author. by . ·e~ro scholars :in the field The Rev. Charles J. Dollen, or racism and Af1;9-American founding librarian of the life Knights of Columbus Me,. : morial Library at the Univer- 01',; RACIAL TOPICS sity of San Diego, wrote in a Among the titles are "Pio- recent issue of "The Califor- neers in Protest," by Lerone nia Librarian:" Bennett Jr., senior editor of "To say that Christianity Ebony Magazine; "American has not been the same since :'iegro Folklore," by J. Mason Vatican II is gross under- Brewer, "Black Power," by statement. The ideals lfii"••.~•- Charles Carmichael. Stokely (dreams, if you will) of the ~~~~~~~~~...i,,,...t.J and Hamilton; ''The Auto- council met greater accept- biography of Malcom X;'' ance at the grassroots level in ... cites new trend '·Black Like Mc," by John H. most denominations than hie- Griffin; "Where Do We Go rarchical leaders realize even as apt to be treated by th eo- From Here?" and "The Trum- logians as by social scien- pet of C nsc· ce " both by today. This is certainly re- tists... o 1cn . fleeted in the literature that the late Rev. Martin Luther Premise of the Roman ,.."th• King·, "Soul On Ice," by El- has been published in the last '-"' decade. olic scholar's article, "Vatican dridge Cleaver, and "Civil II in the Library," is that the Rights: a Source Book," by MATURI 'G TONE current trend toward ecumen- Father Dollen. "Pious religious pap has ism has resulted in books on The University of San Diego disappeared from the trade religious subjects crosi;ing librarian. who holds a mas- lists and sugary hagiography denominational lines - with, ter's degree in library science has gone with it. The tone of for instance, a Roman Catho- from the L'niversity of South- theological works directed at lie priest dealing with Luther- ern Calirorn· , is the author of popular audiences has ma- ism and a fundamentalist min- many ot er books, including tured and, in many instances, ister discus ·mg Mariology - the first bibliography ever is addressed to all Christians and_ that libr:iries of religious compiled on the Marine Corps, or to all religious leaders. It is literature can no long r be de- ",\ Vqice Said Ave!" and two serious, sophisticated and nommativnall)' exclu 1ve. works for juveniles, "Ma- positive in nature and it defi- Father Dollen, who last year demoiselle Louise," written nitely considers problems in was appointed book reviewer for children of St. Louise de the world of man. Questions of for The Priest magazine, is Marillac Roman Catholic social justice, war and peace, the author of the first com- Church, El Cajon, of which the bomb, the pill and con- plete bibliography in English Father Dollen formerly was scientious objection as well as on Vatican II, recently pub- pastor, and "The Life of Ken- guaranteed annual income are lished. nedy," for teenagers.

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