News Scrapbook 1970-1972

Wilson savors victory, credits work CONTINUED FRO~ PAGE l He will go to Sacramento Monday for swearing in.

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California Polytechnic College, gradu- atfag in 1965, and then while attending law school here. He worked as a clerk in his father's grocery store, was a bus boy in a restaurant, worked as a custodian and, while he was going to law school here, worked for three years as a clerk in a liquor store in Mission Beach. "I didn't have money for books in my last year and it made it pretty rough," he said. "I graduated right in the middle of my class -1 was exactly the middle man." Wilson said he had found success in the law. "In a short time we have acquired several pieces of properly and a good law practice," he said. His first political venture was a race for the school board of the Cajon Valley Elementary School District last April. He lost by 41 votes in a recount,

One of his first goals will be to work for property tax relief and he wants to be appointed as a member of the As- sembly Revenue and Taxation Com- mittee, he·said. "Mother and dad get $233 a month Social Security and they are paying property taxes and they can't pay them," Wi1<;0n said. Another priority will be a limitation on campaign spending, he said. When his campaign expenditure statement is made public, he said, it will contain the full names of all con- tributors along with the amount con- tributed by each contributor, regard- less of the amount. He specifically mentioned the strong support of organized· labor as being a factor in his victory but said it was not a victory of any one group but was "a victory of the people over money and power. "

\Assemblyman Dixon Arn('lt, Declaring he could never bP-- R-San Mateo, which calls for : Ji eve government should pro- ' state college twtion, 0 when h_P , vide presilgious wucation at\told the delegates Tl wont , the taxpayers' expense, Gov. even get out of con,rnittee.'' I Reagan yesterday said state OPEN TO ALLL college student~ should he\ C liforrua 's public c<'llle~es , charged $150 tuition a yPar. a . . "T believe in tui!lnn,,, the I and un1vers1ty ari> open In any- governor told delegates at a one with the academic- qaah- meeting of the State College fications, even if_ they are Academic Senate. "It meets the wealthy, Reagan si-.1d. fundamental principle of a good "How do you reconcile pro- tax policy." viding a prestige level of educa- Responding to questions in an t10n - and doing this at the tax• hour-long session, the governor payers expense - with no re- said the state education pro- gard to the economic needs of gram was "out of balance" be- individual student?" be asked. cause the University of Cali- Reagan also said it was fornia charges tuition while the "highly unlikely" the 7_.~ per state colleges do not. cent pay increas~ m h1, pro- $ 150 AYEAR posed budget would m- creased for facalty m~ r, of "~ tlunk S150 would b~ a good the st~te colleges and Uni- twt1on for a nme-mo~ih year ~t versity of Califorma. the statt colle2es, RP~1ian I - --- said.

Friday, March 3, 1972 NEW SHAKESPEARE COMPANY 'As You Like It' Vital, Youthful

Assembly Speaker Bnh More- t!l, D-Van Nuys, told the aca- i demic senate members Thurs• day tuition woald nol be im- L (t TI posed on state college students "as Jong as T am speaker or the I I Moretti apparently was re- · 1 ferring to a bill introduced by Assembly.' _

. · , v LEGISLATOR-Democrat Bob Wilso:r:i g~ts a con~ratu;~- rv kiss from his wife, Sharman, after wmnmg the 76~h DJ:,• tric'-t Assembly seat-Tribune Staff Photo by Jerry Rife Wilson savors victory at .polls after lifetime of hard work -.;::z,,_~ ~- /, ::;1.:Z.., By MIKE RICHMOND "l consider myself a per-on who be- lieves strongly in work," As em- blyman-elect Bob Wilson, D-La Mesa, said toda~ rigors of the campaign. Mrs. Wilson, a pretty brunet who was a legal secre• tary before her marriage. sat with he! husband in the gold-carpeted Jaw li- brary of hts El Cajon office.

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UC Santa Cruz Eliminates All Course Failures Advantages Cited With Pass-No Credit System; Written Evaluation Given BY WTLLL\:1-l Tno,rnL.EY T1m!!S Educ.alion Writer S..\. ·T.\ CRUZ-A ~tudent can,10· fail a cour,e al t:C 'anta Cruz. Thi<: winter the even-year-old campus abolished its "pass-fail" grad• ing system and replaced it with •pass--no credit." If a student does unsatisfactory work in a cour,e, no record appears on his transcript. Otherwise he re- ceives a ''pa~•,'' with a detailed writ- ten eya]uation of hb wol'k. In a rP-cen1 ,-ampP, inter~ip"- Frank C. \ ndre,n, aFo<'iate pro f,- rnr of chemi,tn· r!lld former d1, 1 - man of thi" fan lty s eciuc·8tional pc in- committeP. cxplainC'tl 1h p· rnn, for the change. "Le,; than 2c;, or our grade-< 1H:l P 'fail' t,nJer the old ,v,tem." \ 11 rll'eV\":S :aid. ''It appears the lacu 11 • wa~ verv relurtant 1.o brand a ~tu- dent with a 'fail' c·oupled v;ith written evaluation whkh ,-;i~ a:,n pretty sour '' Ludent•Centered Facult~- •·The ~anta Cruz facultv i, ,t 11 Much more ~tudent- centered than most." he continued. '\\-e know 1.hu-e , Li.· ,t, anrl ,\·e're rell·c•··n to fail them.'' ln,tead, profc-,~or, wer,' gn HH? '"incomplete'' graJes to mc1,1_v ,tt.o- clent~. .\ndt"'·:; :-:aid. ''trlt~th·g ,, hoping somehow the •udcnt ,wuld come up with a chunk of work tha• w·ould enable you lo give him a grade." But few student-, did. The "incon, pletcs" rose to more than 7 c;, of tota 1 grades and, as they were carried over from quarter to quarter, the registrar's office was 'breaking down from the paperwork," Andrews ~aid t.;nder the nelV sy,iem a studeht must pass at least "even c·ourses as a freshman and at lca•t eight in otl1e•· • vear, to avoid academic clisqualifica- tion. (Succe,sful completion o[ ,u cour,e, i, reouire>d •or g"aduano1 1 In uppc-1' clid-ior• <1111ior :ind ,,,_ niori :cience cour,e, fl\lde,--~ m ·:· re,_uc,t lette · grade, b ..·, l. ~t \ ea·· only one in 20 c}id ,o. · Adva11tages Cited The pa,s-no credit ;ystem ha, ,e, - eral advan age,, according to A 1- drews. "\Ve really expect an ·ncrea,e in the ,-a.Jue of the 'pas~. he said "The debate you ha\ e with your,elf over a student's grade will take a different cast. You will be more will- ing to gh-e 'no credit' and re,e:·ve the 'pass' for reall~· •atisfactor work." . The new ~ystem al1 whose h'g 1 1 I• , 1~- p to ar'miL th•m Said Andre\\;: •·nur l>1:-ge;:;t rnn v :i!l\ay- has l.>e,·n ho1v , e I tl1e 0-1\- ~icle world would treat oLl'- tudcn " Some , ery 1 wi~ht ,tudent; 1\ h,, rould e getting all ,L ha e ,aid they ame to Santa Cti.1z to get away from tha ktnd o motivation. 'They want to •tay with it, even if it.hurt• heir graduate school possibilities, but so far they don't ,eem to be ~ul PleaH Turn to Page 20. Col. 1

were rarely rnissPcf. 'ni most telling comment on suc!fi mat- ters, perhaps, came when the

Robert Pregentek played a traditional Touchstone with great poise, Susan Sabatino was a juicy Celia, Darryl Woodson doubled as Duke Frederick and . the exiled Duke Senior with mature presence and Jock Scowcroft, though denied some of Jac- ques' most useful lines, did som-, interesting things sub- stituting dourness for melan- cholia. Sweat- man, Ken Wilkinson and es• pecially Andrew Callah?Jl, as Le Beau, contributed st1 ong, blithe support. There was a minimdrn. of straining after relev;mcy, though opportunities. of dis- playing peace signs, ihove- ment handshakes and_ lhe like Thomas Johnson, John Tan- Woodbridge, Anna nenbaum, William

By WELTON JONES There ought to be troupes such as the New Shakespeare Company going up and down the land constantly. playing shows like the "As You Like It" presented last night in the I Iniversity of San_ Diego's Camino Tbeate[. be crowded with vans full of I young people sewing rough costurn.es a n d storing up energy to smg their poetry at I the next stop. For this Shake- speare - chopped up ex- p€diently, saited with a hand- ful of topicalities and mixing wisdom with exuberant youth - may be some of the most relevant theater possible to- day. I Well, this is at least one such company, alive and well in San Francisco, where it borrows techniques from the late. lamented San 1''rancisco Mime Troupe, with casual shows high on energy de- signed to play anywhere but · most at home in .a sunny park. The c sur- roundings Camino The- at did ittle fa the show last n·i:J: ut e g com- pany "! •~ ij- • be, of it by workmg m t aud.i-ence area as often as not and enerally The roads should

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arch. Much hacking of scenes had taken place and a few· minor characters were miss- ing but not missed. General• ly, the scenes in court were pushed to the first of the eve- .ning and the Forest of Arden occupied the rest, with no in- termission. The set was only a single platform and the lights mostly ran at two speeds - off and on. The 19 actors, under the easy direction of Margrit Roma, fairly romped through the play. Kevin Gardiner was an exceptionally physical Or- lando with a tendency to shout but Connie West was a thoroughly satisfactory Ro- salind, within the context of this production, slim, intense, mobile and adorable.

She said her husband and she had talked over his candidacy before he en• tered the race. "He was verv enthusiastic about it and consequently I was too," she .said. "It was my first campaign in any form and it's quite an experience.'' ,;We're pretty happy, I goes$ you could quote both of us on that," lier husband said. Wilson. the youngest of four children of a retired San Luis Obispo grocer, describes him as "moderate'' or ''con- servative" Democrat. He came to San Diego "six years ago to attend the Qniyerstty._of. San.Toego.... law school and entered private practice of law in 1968. Wilson said he always had work, to put Jumself through college, first in San Luis Obispo where he attended ( Continued on page A-8, col. 1l

"I've never been one who say~ you ought to just sit down on the weekend and have nothing to do." In an interview in his El Cajon law office, the attorney, 28, said he h~d not had much time to practice law m the last two months. He said he had worked some lo to 17 hours a day campaigning f?r the office which he won yesterday m a special election ln the 76th Assembly D1stnct. He esti he had walked six to sev- en crday knocking on doors to get ~Ut b, tQte. Wil on sitd t!e wed his victory to the "thou ana and ousands" of suppor- ters- who worked on his campaign. One 6f strongest supporters was his bnde o four months, Sharman, 23. The Wilson live in an apartment at 5365 Marengo Ave., La Mesa. They were unwinding today from the

A three-member faculty com- mittee al San Diego State added its Yoice yesterday to those recommending that Peter Bohmer, the controversial assistant professor of econo ics. be rehired next year. After three weeks of deliber- ation. the committee unam- rnously agreed there is ·':n- sufficient evidence" to 1ustify Bohmer's firing, according to. its chairman, Dr. Burt l\el- son. Nelson said the committee heard testimony from "every- body who had anything to con-' tribute" but refused to release \ details of the 19-page report he forwarded to Donald E. Walk- er, actmg president. Walker will issue an an- nouncement on the report to- \ day, said Dr. George Gross, as- sociate dean for faculty person- I nel handling the case. Gross said the recommenda- tion now will be forwarded to Glenn S. Dumke. chancellor of the California State University and Colleges, who has assumed responsibility for Bohmer's case. cused last fall of discriminating against some of his students _be- cause they opposed his radical political and economic yiew_s._ Both of the earlier mqmnes _ one conducted by an attor- ney appointed by the college and the other by an independ- ent committee from the Ameri- can Association of University Professors agreed the charges were unfounded. The in- 'vestigation was the third con- 1 ducted since Bohmer was ac- committee's "I feel great," was Bohrner's reaction yesterday. "This was the third investigation and ev- eryone ruled in my favor. I hope Chancellor Dumke sees the error of his ways and reappoints me." I Dumke's intervention, a rar- ity in matters of campus dis- cipline. ca after \\;alke~ re- versed his own a 1e1 dec1S1on and recommended the proba- tionary~her be rehired.

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\ Toreros Sweep Pair, 6-5, 8-0M·~f~'-- university of San Dieg6 yes- terday swept a doubleheader from Cal Bantist College, 6-5 and 8-0, on the Toreros' dia- mond. Steve Archambault, who went the route for the eight-inning victory in the opener, scored the winning run on a single b, Kerry Dineen after leading off I with a walk. Dineen and Mel Arnerich, who went two for three, each knocked in two runs in the opener. In the nightcap Phil Bajo got the victory although he was taken out in lavor of Dub Ru- berts when his arm stiffened in the fifth inn:ng. Dineen went two for four, including a horner, and batted in two runs in the second game. al Baptist .. ~ 1-~. 5 .: ~1~Mf20 00-5 6 1 USD O® 122 01----' 8 3 Chothom, Gamez (6), Womack (7) Armstrong; Arctiomboult and Klnsm HR - Gamez (CB), 2nd, none on. SECOND GAME • 5i1c,saptlst ........... fgg 2fil tj : . 0 ~J't!{ri'(s't~'~~ ~ln~~~trai;:~~~gls,~~~ Dineer (USDJ, 6th, none on.

: Study Urges Dropping Colle e Loan Prog ~m J - Ar June. 1969. the government dis-I bursed nearlv 3.3 billion m di°- rect loans t~. colleges. 11nh:er- s1ties and teaching hospitals for housing. independent study sharply criti- zes tJ1e 20-year-old federal col- lege housirg Juan program and 1 ec-omrnends that it be tenm• >, lie comings of ·the program are. Amencar Enter_prne Institute sa,ings pas.,ed on to the resi- for Public Policy Re,earch dential students are in- " as \\ntten b} John J Agna. significant; it arbitrarily subsi- <'h'!1rman of the Pohtlcal Sci- dizes the Jiving expenses of res- rnce Department of Alma Co]. idential students but not com- Jege, Alma, Michigan. muting students; it is passed on, 'WASTEFUL WAY' to all residential students and The program, Agria writes. not _Just_low income; and ~he achieved its onginal purpose of substitution _of debt-service helpin colleges and univer- grants for dtrect loans has 1ties provide student hous- made the program _even !ess II' but:has made "only a mini- helpful to needy mshtuhons al contn ution to reducing that. cannot fmd_ adequate_ fi- t re c uf education" to stu- n_ancmg even \\1th subs1d1za- clents nd i an "e1Tatic and hon . wa~tef,.11 wav·• of aiding low-in- Agna suggest_s several al- come students. ternatives including: F om April. 1950, through A.llocatmg more funds for, -----2loans and debt-se.i oe_grants to 1ssist all erts, establish fund p 11•ies or institutions serving a high proportion of' neeu; Ullents; determine aid , ,TA.JOR FAUTS n,1ied. 'l'h d bl· h l I 15 ec I Agria Sa\~ nrnJor sho1t- e stu ': flll

Women's Week at University of San Diego ends Saturday March 18, with dance, Student Lounge. March 17, Dr. Ani~ Figueredo speaks on "A Doctor Talks to Women" noon De Sales auditorium. •

USD to host lnterreligious Institute UNIVERSITY of San U.S. bishops' Secretariat for Diego will host and co- Catholic-Jewish Relations.

Melvin H. Hart.er, executive director, San Diego County Ecumenical Conference, a co-sponsor. Msgr. John R. Portman, head of the Diocesan Ecumenical Commission wiJl be chairman of workshop session. He has urged a wide Catholic representation at the in- st(tut.e by priests, nuns and laity. National Conference and- Jews' San Diego Region, San Diego Rabbinical Association and American Jewish Com- mittee. par- ticipants will be Dr. Author E. Hughes, USD president· the Rev. Ralph Johnson' president of the ecumenical conference; Father Theodore Phillips, pastor, S t. Spyridon Greek Orthodox church; Rabbi Joel s. Goor, Temple Beth Israel, and Dr. Jacob H. Cunningham NCCJ. ' of Christians . AMONG OTHER 0 ther sponsors are

sponsor an Interreligious Institute on "Understanding Our Differences" Tuesday, April 11, 3-9 p.m. in More Hall, Alcala Park. Major presentation will be made by Father Edward H. Flannery of New York executive secretary of th~

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. A panel response to his talk will be moderated by Msgr. I. Brent Eagen diocesan chancellor wh~ will be chairman of the in- stitu te's opening session. THE CLOSING session will be chaired by the Rev.

to 111s ilutmns on the basis of fi-1 nanc1al need. and consolidate' the ho1mni:: and the academic facilities programs.

USD names new dean of law school Donald T. Weckstein, law professor at the University of Connecticut, has been appointed dean of the University of San Diego's School of Law. His appointment, suc- ceeding acting dean Joseph Brock, was announced this week by ·Dr. Author E. Hughes, USD president. Dean Weckstein ·received his BBA from the University . of Wisco,11;in in 1954, his Lt.B from the University of Texas in 1958 and his LLM from Yale School of Law in 1959. He is education editor in the Professional Respon- sibilities of the Lawyer and contributor to legal publications. Active in community, he was a member of Temple Anshe Sholom and Jewish Com- munity Center in Hartford, Conn.

COLLEGE TENNIS fff. Grout, 6-2, 0--0; Kellogg ... ~hnson, 6-0, 5-7, 6-0; Fritz lm,,-7. 7.J. p 6. COLORADO J Roe .JUSD) ~ys~ -·

1 000 grant --' ,4,. 7"..z_..

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Unit tales nternational Univer- sity has received a $107,000 grant from the National Institute for Mental Health for a 2-year graduate program in community environment manage- ment. Dr. Thomas A. MacCalla, vice presi- dent of USIU, said the grant is to the university's Center for Urban and Hu- man Development. The mental health institute is part of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. MacCalla said the city of Escondido and its surrounding area have been designated as one of two project study areas for the program. The other will involve the Imperial Valley border communities of Mexic~li and Calexico. Dr Douglas X. Patino of USIU will coordinate the project which will have its headquarters on the university's El- liott campus.

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