News Scrapbook 1970-1972

UC INSTALLS CH.INCELLOR California chancellor Alb<'rt H. Bow- ker was installed yesterday at the Berkeley campus in a charter day ceremony. Bowker, the fifth chancel- lor at Berkeley. said there is a tendency to "b<'come preoccupied with crises." Surveying the campus scene durmg the past months. he said, "Issues which divided the campus have been resolved or have been greatly reduced." He said that, along with the cri. es of the past 20 years, there lja b n "spectacular scholarly and physical growth" at the university. BE;RKELEY (1 lJ - L'ruversl1 of

'i/19}, 1. THE SAN DIEGO ..::U.:...:N.:...:10:..:N.....:...,.....,...___:

- N W S.D. STATE PRESIDENT

San Diego, Friday, April 7, 1972

High Court Rules States Can Deny Church School Aid

rage Golding Called 'Smooth And Unflappable'

)(hibit now showing at g

appc 1rs that two thlng hap- pened: Mrs. Thomas became an ry wh n a promised pro- moll n did not come through, and he was fired for accus- in , h •r while superiors of ruci. m. Mrs. Thomas then took her ca e to the Negro udents and prec1ptated a ten confrontation with ome administrators, and this act formed the ba Is of her being fired for Insubordination. Golding wa willing to re- tract th first ftring, haVJng belat dly concluded he had been treated unfairly by her immediate supervisor on the qu ti n of pro!llotio_n. But Golding i tmldmg firm on ht de islon to fire her for es- calating the conflict Into a campu wide Issue. DIF IDtENT REASO.' Thus, HEWs' finding of dls- crimmaUon (which Golding d not concede) is not ad- dr d to th rea 0113 for which Golding ultimately !ired Mrs. Thoma . "You t lt wa an educ~; tonal expnience for me, Golding aid thts w k. Golding said th Thomas Incident h resulted m a "h ghtened awaren " by him of th cone rns of 'egro- and other mlnoritle . "But it's rong to say you can't h Ip th m Ju ·t becau e you're white," Golding insl t- d He I peel Uy proud of the dmml ration's ..af- fhmaliv action" program wWch h began, partially m re pon e to iederal pressure on all coll g In the country. Under the con erned guid- ance of a retlr d f d ral per- onn I director, S1i ' pro- ram tr1 aggrc si vely to s k out and correct lneqm- Ue In univers1ty dcahng with minority staff, faculty and studcrits STATF.l\lE, S , F.. iT 1 Goldin was fummg this w k nf r learnJng that Mrs. Thom.i nt statements re- garding hcr finng to the Daily rt c, the tudent newsp per at San Diego State. He feels uch one-sided pubh 1ty is bound to h mper his effort: to wm student and faculty confid nc at San D1Pgo, and was mlldly critl• eal of th 1 ent editors for not having sought the WSU admlnl ration's view of the incident. Golding, ret rrlng to Mrs. Thomas' corre pondence with the San Diego State student newspaper, said she Is "a very bitter and vindictive woman, unremitting In her attacks on me." described Mrs. Thomas' chief act of in- subordination as leading 40 militant Negro youth into a vice pre ident's staff meeting and holdmg the officials cap- tive mthe room for two and a Golding

h If hours while shouting and cursing at them. •·I'd fire anyone who be- haved that way," be snapped. CO\fPETITION CITED There are an estimated 400 Negroes out of the nearly 12.000 student~ at Wright Sate, and only four ·egroes on the faculty of 4.50. (An ad- mlnistration spokesman. ked about effort~ by WSU to htre :,.; egro instructors re- plied, "It's not a cop-out_ to ay we're in stiff competition with better known schools for qualified black instruc- tors.") A faculty member who Is close to students commented anonymou ly, about Golding in general: ''Brage Golding thmks he's always being fair, but he lacks 1ns1ght Into the con- cerns of young people.'' "He bell v in a firm ap- proach to disruptions, and he's consistent in his philose>- phy of administration. But is it relevant to young people to- day? "I'd have to say he's leav- ing Wright State just in time (to avoid tougher and more frequent confrontations with students.)" INTIMIDATIO BELIEVED Over coffee in the tudent center, two young instructors said it IS commonly believed by many on the faculty that they are intimidated by Gold- ing. They suggested that the faculty members on the Aca- demic Council pull their punches for fear of Jo:;mg ten- ure or getting fired. There Is a growing move- ment at w ·u toward collec- tive bargaining led by the American A. sociation of Uni- ersity Profe~sor , , which claim a WSU membership of 200 now. One high-ranking profe sor suggested that fac- ulty talk of lnthnldation by Golding might be intended to pur membership in the AAUP. Golding is accused by so~e activist students of dis- criminating against women on the WSU staff, a charge Golding ays "simply isn't true." Data provided by the administration shows 65 w en out of the 375 full-time y members, and only one of the women is a full profe sor. Of the 150 part- tlme faculty members, 40 are women. When the legislature in 1969 proposed that facul~ _mem- bers should work a :rrununum ith 15 of them in contact with stu- dents Goldin publicly op- , posed' the ldea Be said "fac- 40 hours a week, sional people,'' and noted that their work do not lend itself to a limeclock. Join the tho ands who u:ie Clas lfied ds daily. Phone 233- ; 8080. ulty mem are profes-

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THE RUUJ\G The three-judge lower court rleclarrd howevrr· "A parrnt's right to choose a rrlig1ous pri- vate school for his children may not he equated with a right to insist that the state 1s compellr.d to finance his child's/ nonpublic· school education in wholr or in part in order that he may obtain a religious edu- cation ." The court also rejected with- out comment ;in appeal by a group of Negro parents that a desegregation plan for Dade County, Fl11., did not go far enough because it left one• fourth of the pupils in all-Negro The action left standin,:: a rul- ing by a fl>deral district court that he system- meets the Su- preme Court's stan er for a racially "unitary" operation-. OTHER ACTIONS Among other actions, the court : - Agreed to hold hearings next term and issue a written opinion on whether states can enact broader oil spill laws than the federal governmPnt now has on the books. At i sue is a Florida law which was in- validated by a special three- judge federal panel last year on grounds it invaded the federal government's authority over maritimP matters. · - Refused again to stay tem- porarily the errect of a recent California Supreme Court deci- sion abolishing the death penal- )ty under the state constitution. - Declined to rescind an or- der it first issued in 1964 requir• ing the giant El Paso Natural Gas Co. to divest itself of the Pacific Northwest Pipeline Co., whjch was cquired in 1957. - 4greecl to hear an appeal of a Dallas wom:in •eeking to require father o~ lleg1timate 1 chiJdren to pay for their sup- port. The ap!l(1al claims Texas law di r.imina~a.i;:-ainst these children b · holding only fathers of legitimate children respon- sible for support. / 'schools.

Lines On ta J ollans Mr and Mrs Thomas W. Keelin or La Jolla will i e a buffet supper April 29 in honor of Dr Author Hughes, fir lay chancellor of Umver ity of &11 Otego Mr _H,;ighes, neighbors of the ho TjJ party will intr duce Dr. and Mrs. Hughes to several fr1 nds of the L,-c!i II ho live in the Muir- land area. ~1r. and Mrs. E.dward .J Mn77" ,., , l' - T "

an exhibit Cniver

ulpturcs which he de- utilizmg four dunen- rather than three. Ben- tm 1s currently an a ociate professor al San Jose State College. Clark Rost, a master of fine arts graduate of Otis Art In- stitute, will exhibit his ce- ramic sculptures. Rost is cur- rently ceramist-in-residence at the La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art. The Jose de Rivera retro- spective exhibition wiU con- tmue at the museum through April 16 after which it will travel to the Whitney Mu- seum of American Art. Local artist James Hubbell will have a one-man show at Fo er's Galler at the ' n!- versity or San Diego, begin- ning Ma 9. Hubbell works in sculpture, wood carving and stained glass. Several of his works are on view now in Old Town. A tour of the Hubbell home near Santa Ysabel wiJI be held May 21 to benefit the San Diego Youth Symphony and Contemporary Arts Com- mittee of the Fine Arts Society. Art Students of Theresa Hanafin and Myrna Xobile of the Uni\'ersity of San Diego will open a show of drawings and sculpture at the Univer- sity·s Knights of Columbus Library April 11 and will ru11 through the end of the month. Cont:numg through April is- the exhibit of paintings on plexigla s by Lilli Hill in USD's Founders' Gallery. sio

eet Marine Col. Irving Salomon, retired , lecturer in political science at the University of San Diego, is leaving Saturda:( to lecture at a four-day semmar at the University of Costa Rica at the invitation of President Jose Figueras. Both men have known each other since the 1950's when they represented their respective governments at the United Nations. Salomon ' s government service began with his military career in the Marine Corps. He has served as a consultant to the War Department, the Fund for Adult Education and numerous committees of the United Nations. Salomon served as the United States delegate to the 13th General Assembly of the United Nations. He has since worked in the area of education and contributing articles to magazines and newspapers.

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To 1u~1ng .USD i/•/_t· /'11- Nine Bedten Special to Th, snn Diego Union CEDAR CITY. Utah - Uni- versity of San l)Jcgo gavr up five unearned runs to Southern Utah University here yesterday and they were enough to ruin th~ Toreros in a 7-4 defeat. t:SD started fast with three runs in the tirst inning, ohly 10 1 have southern Utah come ba,.k with four of its own in the bj)t tom of the inning. 'I'hr errors, three walks and two hm: helped the wmners to the1r lour runs. I 300 000 ··~ ' S USO ••.. •• •·• •• •' 4 op Olx-7 8 2 S. Utah h.. CallailJri (7) and Kinsman; Ll~~~ts~rid Culllmore. HR Bowd.en (Utah} 5th, none on.

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C, (\., USOBows, 5-4, On Costly Walks Southern l ta,h walk d away with a 5-4 win over US last night al El Toyon Park in Na- tional City as the visitors I scored th'ii r fi rst three runs on bases-lo~ded walks in the first and fourth innings. USD's Gary Pri and Kerry Dineen eilt·h hacr 1iree hits in Toreros Jo ing eff rt S. Utah .... .. . .. .. 26G 108 001 1-5 7 3 USD .... , ., •••.• 220 000 000 0-4 11 3 Buf1er, CJork (7) ond Cullimore; .s Baio. Brf'fsch (4, Caligiuri (10) and Km man.

Undefeated Uni vecsity of San Diego's tennis team will leave Sunday for eight malches on the road. The Toreros will play Cali- fornia, San Jose State, UC- Davis, Santa Clara San Francisco, Cal Po (SLO ), UC-Santa Barbara afld Hay- ward State USD Is '1-0 m in- tercolleg at m

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