News Scrapbook 1962-1964

Busy Week Marks Start Of School San o, ,;o Colle e f o r Women will greet !re hrncn Rncl returning student" with a whirlwind or opening we k a tlv1t1es.• ew Rtud nt~ will be welcomed this Sunday l\!ternoon by Big Sisters at ·ill be d ncing on the Patio from 7 until 10 p.m. The Sopho- more c IL!ls under pre !dent Tien Doyle will be in charge. The Bill Black Combo will provide the music. Fre~hmen orlentat1on on :Monday, S ptember 10, Will be followed by the annual tudent council picnic at La Jolla Shores at • p.m. Norma Peck, 11tudent body pr~ldent, 1s In charge. R gistratlon will be h Id from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. and l to 3 p.m. Tuesday. A I<'a hlon Revue Jn three actR will b presented at 7 :30 p.m for the Colleges for Men and Women In the College for Women theatre. l'Jntertainment will b pro• video by two college tdos and Michaele Flaherty, soprano olol5t. Refreshments will be erved In the patio. The event IA sponsored by the College tio la! Council. La Delle W11lelt . oclal 1·hatrman, is in char e. Com- mittee chairmen are Marga- ret Morgan, refreshments; Betty Ann Barrett, music; Margaret Trud ii, us he r R; Victoria. Stra.Bsler, Ku.re n Graham, and Mary Olive Chambe , program ; and !ary Bemardette Schof'n and Ad le chroeder, lighting. Scott Gavin, College for Men social chai11nan, and llli W11letl 'ill nar1-ate. Fa hlons wlll be coordinated by Clll!re Stuard or La Jolla. Formnl conv0<·atlon and in• nstlture will be held at 9 a.m. \Vedncsday. TI1e ~opho• more clu will host the tra• ditlonnl Big Slstere Luncheon t noon Thursctay in the lanai. Big BroU1ers from the Col• lege ror !en will entertain th ir Little Sister at a dance Jo'rltlay evening in More Hall. TI1e senior cl s will close the week with dancing on the Palm Patio from 9 p.m. to l a.M. Saturday. General chair- man 1s clas~ president, Kath- leen Day. The <·o nonautical theme wut be carried out by rlecorat10ns chair:men Mary Jo Rogers and Barbara Bre- velcr!. Other committee chairmen a1·e Mary Olive Chambers and Marie Oddo. refre~hments; Frances Oldak, Invitations, and Carole Lowney, hoAtesses. Vine 'alerno's orchestra will piay (J / . the college and airport. Sunday evening there

• • Talk Slated !At College /Bre ego Auxiliary will sponsor an evening with Rev. Robert I. GaMon, SJ , al 8 p.m. Tues• day. October 9, in the College for Women theater, it was announced. by Mt's. Harry Collins, auxiliary president. A noted author, educator, and lecturer, Father Gannon was president of New York'R Fordham University for 13 years. Last March Father Gan• non publlshed "The Cardinal Spellman Story," a biography of one of the world's leading church prelates. Other liter• ary efforts include "The Technique of the One-Act Play," "After Black Coffee," and "The Poor Old Liberal Arts," published in Septem- ber, 1961. Born al SL Georg!', Staten Island, New York, i.n 1893, Father Cannon is a graduate of Loyola High School and Georgetown University. Fol• lowing his ordination in 1926, he pursued a course of "spe• cial study" in England, re- ceiving his M.A. degree from Cam b rid g e Univ e rs t- ty (Christ's College). He ls the recipient of more than 20 honorary degrees from col- leges and universities, includ- ing Bowdoin, Rutgers. Holy Cross, Columbia, Colgate, and many others. During World War II, Father Gannon served on ad- visory committees for the Pentagon, the United States Navy, Stale Department, and the Department of Defense. Among his many public service committments, Father Gannon is a regional director of the Boy Scouts of Ameri- ca, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts (England), trustee of New York's Town Hall and Zoological Society of the Netherland$. .l addi• tion, he has served presi- dent of the Association of Colleges and Universities of the State of New York and as president of the New York Academy of Public Educa- tion. Father Gannon is the i-e- cipient of numerous awards and decorations including tile Freedoms Foundation Award Valley Forge, 1960. ' The University Auxiliary will bring prominent guest speakers to the San Diego area throughout the year, Mrs. Collins said

blue dome have become glorious beaeons for all to see-on land or sea. The Innnaculata not only serves university students and seminarian~ of the adjoining Immiwulate Heart Seminary, it also serves as a parif>h church.

MAJESTIO IMMACULATA A:\--0 SE:\DNARY-One of the great churches of the 'outhland is the Iromaculats. on the University of San Diego'& Alcala Park campu . The cross on the tower and the statue or the Ble sed Mother on the

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SDS Ranks As Cheapest In San Diego Costs or at ending ~an Dir go·· to r-year collegei; this ear will range from ()!)!'; 10 S2 700, accorrling to <"0mp1lat1ons o• the Sta!P. •"cholarship Commission. The $996 Is the expect r1 cost used by thP commis• "ion for a ~an Dirgo State studen• who rtors no• pay rE'sidenrP co ts Tl pc 1rlence costs arp i n c I u cl r cl, the amount rise,; to $1,';06 HIGHES'l' COS'l' ThP $2 700 annual c·ost l.• given for resident students at the University of .S a n Diego's College for Women. The college's cost for com- muter students Is given at $1,800. At USD's ,;e::,aratelv or- ganized College for ·Men, commuter costs for a year are listed by the comm1s- sion as 1,570; for resident students it is $2,020. CAL WESTERN California Western Uni• versity's costs are listed as $1,944 for commuters, $2,264 for resident students. In compilations of Califor- nia colleges by the commis- sion, 1962 co ts are lowest for commuter students at San Jose S t a t e College ($991) and highest ($2,500) at C a 1 i f o r n i a Institute Technology 9-1/-

Ni Added To Faculty At College Nine instructors have been added to the faculty of the College for Men of the Uni• versity of San Diego, it was announced by Very Rev. John P. Cadden, president of the College. Five of the new faculty will be members of the Divi- sion of Mathemntics and Na- tural Sciences. They include Dr. John P. McDermott, as- sociate professor of chemis- try; Miss Patricia J. Don- nelly, assistant professor of biology; Jo'ranklln L. Barnes, instructor in biology and geo- logy; H. Richard Leuchtag, instructor in physics, and El- liott M. Brown, instructor in mathemalics. George P. Biglow and Paul R. Gardner have been added to the Division of Business Administration and Econom- ics. Biglow will be an as- sistant professor of business administration, and Gardner will be a~sistant professor of cconomicR. Rev. Robert A. Merikle, formerly of Seton Hall Uni• versity, New Jersey, ha.~ been named assistant director of counseling and grndance at the college. John Cunnini;ham, a gradu- ate fL St. Augustine High School and the University of San Francisco, will assist athletic director Phil J. Wool- pert as an instructor in phy- sical education and also will coach the freshman basket- ball team. Registration for the Fall semester is being held now. Classes will commence Sep- tember 10.

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Ul'HVE!{:iITY LIBRARY-:-l"";•t de~·eloplng into one of the ~eat libraries in Southern California. ls the Umverslty of S:tn Diego s J_imghts or Columb~ Memorial Library, Aided by the donation oC many books by friend~, the hbrary, under the direct-ion of Rev, Charles Dollen, ts gaining rstature day by day, Special rooms a.re included in the building \I hich feature special editions and art work. 60 udents· Due Legal riefi,ng '

About 60 :freshmen at the· will hear talks on adminlstra- University ot San Diego Lawltlon policies.' ThPV will also I School will be briefed on the get advice on how to study school's operation at the sec- and how to pre_Pare for a law ond annual orientation day examination. Saturday. A tour ot , hi> ~chool is Officers or the Student Bar planned, conducted by the as. Association will address the sociation's officers. They are new ~tudents. During the stu- George Marinos, president; dent-organized p r o gr a m, Mike Witte, vke prP,:ident; l which will begin at 9:1:i a.m. Gayle AndPr~on , ti·easurPr; at th':. school, the newcoroPrs tand Jack Ratelle, secretary.

Campus Story Told In Steel, Concrete ThP h11 dingos on the Urnvers1ty of San D1eg-o's Alcala Pa1·k campus pl'eser! l\n in pmn;:- picture. B11t Just what we- mlo lhe bu,lcling of lhe impressive ~tn1ct11r~=" ... ThNe ts he Tm al'lllale He rt Seminary b11ildrng, the 1 rgest on th~ campus. Th" r,. • J N 1n t em R n Construction ter mains from the two hotter 'nmpaP\' began site grnrtln:,; hn11 ,r.s that •upply he"t for "ot'k In .Nnvemhe1·, 1 .;1. thr h•1llrling-s, Lerg-e trans- .\lorn thnn 4011,00n c11bi,· former moms a1·e localed m yarri3 of cnrl h was movrd 1n r,11 h h11llrlin1r t, d1. t11b11te exr av tin . the elec-tric•;ty neerierl for In }·cbrn 1ry, ui;;;;, the first light and power. eoncrete was ponred in the Might of all is the Im- foundnhons. In July, 195;5, maculata. Basillca in plan the Ninteman company began anrt rruc1form in snape, it is to erect the first part of the 220 feet in length and 148 structui-al steel. feet In width through the fore than 5,000 tons of tran ept. The sanctuary dome steel have been placed in the nscs 105 feet to the statue of 450,000 1quare feet of floor the Immaculate Conception. spar·e in the buildings and The tower is 111 feet high. 115,000 cubic yards of con- Into the church went 8.000 l'l'ele went ,nto the flool's. to n s of concrete, 100,000 Mote than a million bricks bt

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I USD LA\V WIVES PLAN RECEPTION The Law Wives Club of University of San D i e g o School of Law will hold a faculty - student reception from 4 to 6 p.m. Sunday in :Wore Hall at the uni- versity. Mrs. Gerald L. Mc- Mahon is chairman for the event, which will in- troduce incoming fresh- men to faculty members and other students. Assisting her with plans are Mmes. George S. Marinos, Law W iv e s president; Curtis M. Fitz- patrick, invitations; Ron- ald E. Price, refresh-

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ments; Thomas M. Heim and John Pattie, hostesses. Mrs. George Hickman is faculty advisor.

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