News Scrapbook 1962-1964

Cal Western Qualifies to Pay or NA/A District Hoop Ber ·Cal WPstt•rn has qualified lands, Southern California Athletics for postscason hnskPtball Intercollegiate play, San Diego City Col• tournam nt. offs al :11:t. San Antonio Col- 1,,ge.

a-4 EVENING TRIBUNE

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SAN DIEGO, CALIFOltNIA Tue day, Feb. 21>, 19.U

EINSTEIN

By Jay Heavilin

M EANWHILE., WITCH HAZEL. GLOATS. 1--~-...., HEE-HEE-HEEi EINSTEJN IS GETTIN& SMALLER AND SMALLER!

Wm; voup:_ C!

San Diego Stale closed out if8 California Collegiate Ath- letic Association season Sat- urday night with an 82-72 tri- umph over San Fernando Valley ~tale at Norlhridge. That left the Aztecs out of the playoll picture, In third place behind runner-up Los Angeles State and champion Fre~no Slate. The Aztecs travel to Pas- adena J<'riday night for their :;eason finale. Univer ·ity o! San Di<:go, fresh from a 97-78 conquest of Orange State College Sat- urday night in the Torero gym , elosC's out 11s home season tonight agai t La Salle University of Mexico City. Game time Is 7·?.0.

lege hopes to make it, hut San Diego State CollPge and Univ •rsity of San Dieg_ are just playing out the string The Westerners, who wh.pped WPstrnont, 79-57, hPrc Saturday night to even their home-and-home series with the y uriors, will meet the Santa Barbara team in

!=INSTEll'-1 TO STAND ON.

If Westmont Is unable to play, Cal Western would face Redlands"in a best-of•

to determine

three ~C'nes

who would advance to Kan-

sas City

San Diego City College nipped Bakersfield, 75-70, Saturday night to retain a

rubber match

decisive

a

USD Publishes First Law Review Students Lauded by Deon For Ambitious Undertaking

editor; Edna Barber, law

board for 1963-64 are:

two

!rad with

one.game

Saturday at Pomona Col-

Renshaw, Gerald L. McMa- notes; Edward J. Philbin, hon, law notes editor; and James C. Rothwell book article editor; Robert C. Bax-------------~ ley, recent cases editor; Bet- Charles S. Wickersham, lead reviews.

games left in the Metropol•

ii Westmont can

!Pgc - maf

ilan Conference.

to

The Knights are 10-2

a

have

The Warriors

game scheduled with Cal Cerritos College s 9-3 in con- Poly of Pomona that night :! rence play. 111c Knights and would have to cancel or JJlay Long Beach CC and East Los Angeles on their

ty Evans Boone, book review editor; Fred Tschopp, manag- ing editor; Albert A.H. I

ti e match

re chedule

home court this weekend. The Metro champion enters h<' state junior coll<'ge play-

to

make thr pla off date. The

,.-----

lnr>••t Reel-

ould

winner

!~~;~;~d~:-0~~ 0

• aRsi st · editorial

r h

•t

t 1

Members of mvers1 Y board for 1964-65 are· the

th U •

b

P bl - u

irs

t

e

aw review Y

1ca 10n o

o( San. Die~g_ _is an important step. in the evolution of 1ti university s law school, the acting dean of the law managing editor; James w. school said today. Branningan, Jr., lead article Maj. Gen. George W. Hickman Jr., USA, rct., acting -;;;;========:::.I dean said hours of resean:h and writing by students were involved in the publi- cation of the 156-page re- dcmic leader in hi~ clas~ last view. yl'ar. "The publication, by a The secon,t volume of the new, relatively small law review proba' ly will be puh- hool, of a law review Is nn lished In the Call, Hickman ambltiou, u n rt ('rt n kl n g," said. The current review !n- llirkman said, cludc-s a speech by Labor Sec- "Pionerrlng ls never !'asy, rctary W. w:uard Wirtz, and but our tud<'nts met each articles and r<'Vl<'ws by U.S nrw crl ls with both energy District Court Judge James d b M. Carter, state Atty. Gen. and Imagination, an a ove Stanley Mosk and William B all, cooperative tramwork." Enright, n San D I e g o at: 101 J:arn D e~ torney. . Faculty advisers are Jo- Roche, David R. · Pitkin,

ece

triotism wards ashington ayBan uet

Sons of Revolution Present Medals Keynote Speaker Cites Courage Shown by Father of Country George Washington's courage and sense of re- sponsibility should serv~ as an example to today's Americans, investment counselor Edward S. H ope said last night. He was keynote speaker at a Washington Day banquet in the Crystal Room of U. S. Grant Hotel. About 100 persons saw 10 San Diego County m en receive silver medals and certificates for "patriotism

The Jaw school wa 5 t 5t ab- seph A. Sinclitico, Jr., Gay- l!sh<'d In 1954 primarily as a lord L. Henry, and John Junk- night school. Since then 100 er. mC'n and one woman have • Members of the editorial

carn<'d degrees. The ~chool received full acrr!'ditatlon by the Aml!Tiran Bar A sociation la t August. "Most o! our studPnts are night students - about two- thirds and Jes~ than 60 arr day students," Hickman said. "Neverthel ss, a delrgation or night and day student• pe- titioned the faculty last year to permit publication or the review." The faculty and students ai::rced to publish only one 15- sue a year. A large, well-es- tablished ch o o 1 publishes tour to six Is ue~ a Hickman ~aid. Content Told year, Law reviews con i t of ,. rticles and reviews written by leading attorney~, and re- ports on recent legal cases and Jaw notes wrlttrn by stu- dents. "The writing done by stu- dt-nt'I Indicates their ability to do intensive re earch and write 1n a learned fa. hlon," Hickman said. "Writing for the law r('vlew Is the same thing a lawyer has to do In preparing ]('gal brie!s." Aside from providing law 11tudcnt!'I with an opportunity for research, the law review also serves as a reference work. Coples of the Unlver- 11 ity o! San Dlego':1 review have been purchased by the Los Angl'les County Law Li- brary and the Library of Congrcs~. ,vrltlnK Vafur , 'lrl'sqrd The review al. o crrates an awarness among law stu- dents not on the editorial staff of the value o! legal writing, Hickman said. The review ls supported through subscrlptlons, advN• tiRing and unlver. lty funds. Hickman aid. Financing i. the responsibility of thl' man- aging rdltor. "Some reviews arc sup- ported partly by grants," Hickman '.'!ald. The editor o! the currrnt review and next year's editor are typical of the student. who participated in prepar- lng the review II i c km a n 1mld. Orf!N,r <>f :Firm Charles C. Renshaw, th " current C'ditor, I.~ a night stu. !lent and will br. graduated this spring. He is ln thr top 5 per cent of his cla and i 11 vice presid!'nt of a . avings ' and loan as oclation. Renshaw was th!' y o u n g man or th!' year sciectl'd by the San Diego Junior C'ham- brr of Commerce and hclp(•d s!'t up a loan program for i;tudents. John L. Ro!'h<', who will ech t nl'xt year'. n•vi('W, was ('ll'cted Saturday. He I. a ni,..ht i1turient and w 1 1 I bC' gracluat!'d n1•xt yc•ar. IIe is,• County P r o b a l i o n D1• t• mcnt Pmploye and

ZTECS TOPPLE Westerners Bid For Playoff Spot . C'nl \\ r,t!'rn Unlrnr,tty•~ ba~ketball team want~ a berth In the postseason playoffs and tonight will be the night It can do something about it. The w,. ·terners entertain Westmont, to which t h c y lost, 81-66, In an earlier game, at 8 in Golden Gym. Westmont is undefeated in National Association of Inter- collegiate Athletics district 3 competition. CW has lost twice. ?.feanwhlle, University of San Diego will play host to range State. San "Diego State College, which dropped n 89-82 deelsion· last night to Los Angeles State College in the North, closes its California Collegiate Athletic As- sociation season in Northrldge against San Fernando Valley State. San Diego City College, its lead pared to a. half game In the Metropolitan Conference chase after losing to Cer- ritos, 70-62, goes to Bakersfield. Gros mont, 95.74 loser to Citrus, meets Fullerton In an Eastern Conference game at Monte Vista High, and Southwestern, which lost to Fullerton, 64-60, plays host to Citrus in another East- ern loop outing. North-county clubs will . eek an all-victorious weekend. Oceanside-Carlsbad, 74-71 winner over San Diego State College's frosh, play host to Imperial Valley in a South Central Conference tilt, and Palomar, which ·ended its sec slate with a 58-47 win over the Imperial entry, meets College of the Desert in San 1\.arcos. San Diego State trailed most of the way, but almost caught L.A. State in the final minutes when it closed the gap to 77-76. A technic!l! foul on Aztec Forrest Gli- thero, however, led to a tour-point play for the Diablos, who pulled out of reach. Caldwell Black scored 2;s points for the winners and Clarence Wilson 20. Jack Shawcroft had 20 for San Di- ego, which will finish third in the conference behind Fresno and L.A. State. The Aztecs are 5-4 in league play and 14-10 on the year. San Diego City College trailed, 38-26, at he half, fought lts way 'back to a 43-45 deadlock with 11 :36 to go, then saw Cerritos spurt to a 61-33 lead with only six minutes Jett. The Knights ronvcrted 21 of 43 shots from the floor but surrendered the ball 15 times on floor violations without getting of! shot.. Cerritos con,·erted 26 of 64 ef- forts. San Diego al o connected only six times in 26 triC's from the free -throw line while Cerritos hit on 18 of 21.

and outstanding commu- nity and public services." San Diego's chapter of the Sons of the American Revolution presented the citations were Rep. Bob Wilson, R- San Diego; the Most Rev. Charles F. Buddy, bishop of the San Diego Catholic Diocese; H op e; Evening Tribune columnist Neil Mor- gan; Robert Elsinger, Vis- ta avocado rancher; U.S. District Court Jurlge J acob Weinberger; bank I J oh n D. Schroeder of Coronado ; Earl Van Dusen. industrial engineer and past president of the local Sons of the American Revolution; Dr. Harvey Co x , optometrist and also past SAR president, and Ltjg. D. Lance Mann of Coronado, a Navy frog- man. Judge Absent Judge Weinberger, who is ill, was unable to attend. His award was accepted by Dr. Ralph S. Roberts, past trustee of the National SAR, who made the presentations. Wilson's brother, Di-ck, ac- cepted his award. In his tall<, Hope asked, "Is it true that many Amer• icans face the world today bereft of their old courage? "I won't say that they definitely do," he said, ''but there appears to be a trend in this direction." Pr ayer R uling~ Cited He said that the cha in of school prayer decisions, be- ginning with that of the June 26, 1962, prayer reversal in New York, was a good in- dication of Americans sll p- ping away from the princi- ples of Washington and oth- er founders. Mann's award was a spe- cial one. It was given to him for his rescue Feb. 5 of two enlisted men from a capsized boat off Silver Strand. Bishop Buddy was cited for his work in assisting the construction of the Univer- si ty o! San Diego at Alcala Park. Weinberger wa8 com• mended for hls handling of awards. Receiving t h e

in

meetings

citizenship

which the SAR assists. Elsinger was praised for his civic leadership and his work in 1927 as the fl st commercial avocado g ow- er in Vista. M o r g a n, Hop , Wilson, Van Dusen, Schroeder and Cox were commended for civic, soclal and pa triotic w o r k s. Mo1·gan's book, "Westward Tilt," was rec• ommended by Lloyd M. Har- mon, SAR chapter presi• dent, as excellent reading for Americans interested in their history and future .

HONORED-The Most Rev. Charles F. Buddy, left, bishop of the San Di- ego Catholic Diocese, and Ltjg. D.

awards from the San Diego chapter, Sons of the American Revolution. The

awards were presented last night af ::-L_a_n_c_e_l.\_'l_a_n_n_c_h_a_t_a=-=f=-=te,....r=--_re_c_e_iv_i_n-=g;___S_A_R_b_a_n...:q_u_et---=-in= th~e U. S. Grant Hotel:.. _

I l I

College Students To Honor Pianist

Pianist Byron Janis will be honored by Student As- sociates of the San Diego Symphony Association at a reception Tuesday night. It will be held after his fea- tured appearance with the symphony in Rus Auditor- ium. Mrs. Karl E. Verhoye is coordinating the rec ption for the young people. It will be held in the University Club. Students serving as hosts at the event will be J udy Sinclair and Warren Carnie of San Diego State College, Joan Karpinski and Barry McGee of the Unive sity of San Diego, Charles Lamb ot California Western Uni- versity, Jeanne Cartwright of Mesa Junior College, Don- ald Gardiner of the Univer- sity of California, and Bon- nie Stau!enbeil and Joyce Van Harten of San Diego City College. Adults assisting Mrs. Ver

hoye with the arrangements are Mmes. Ralph S. Russell Jr., F. Raymond Silliman Francisco P. Marty and Le~ R. Petillon. Open to alJ college stu- dents, reservations may be J:?ade at the symphony of- fice.

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