News Scrapbook 1962-1964

Singer Cole, 3San Diegans ' Win Honors Praise Received For Contributions To Brotherhood San Di<>go's busin<>ss, social and rrllglous leadrrs gathered last night to honor three !oral m<'n and singei· Nat {King) Colr for lhei,r contributions to 'the cause of brothel'hood. 11ie second annual Brother- hood Testimonial Dinner, at- tended by about 225, was held in the Palm Room o! the U. S. Grant Hotel. Regional Brotherhood Cita- tions were received by l h e Most Rev. Charles Francis Buddy, bishop o! the San Di- ego Catholic Diocese, U.S. Dis- trict Court Judge Jacob Wein, berg,•r, and Janws S. Copl<•y, chairman of the corporation publishing the Copley Nrws- papers. Colp was presented a Na- tional Brotherhood Awa.I'd. Wekomed by Curran Thc> event was sponsored by the San Diego region of the National Conference ol Chris-I tians and Jews. James F. Mulvaney served as master of ceremonies as a replacement for ailing for- mer Mayor Charles C. Dail. A moml'nt of silent prayer was observf>d for Dall who is ln critical condition at Sharp Memorial Hospital. Cole was welcome] hy May- or Curran, who prci;ented the entertainer with a kPy to the city, Walker N. Marks, South- ern California chairman of the conference, present,•d the na, tional award to Col~. Responds to Tribute Marks lauded the isinger as a great ambassador of good will. "There is a ring of sincPri- ty in everything he does," Marks said. Cole said he was vny proud to receive the award. "I hope to be able to live up to this honor," he added. Regional awards w<'re !)re- sented by District At1y. Don Keller. Bishop Buddy accepted his plaque and then praised Cole as "a father of five children who has set a beautiful exam- ple for them to follow." The bishop's brotherhood plaque commends him as a "spiritual leader and humani- tarian.'' Copley's award was for "ad- vancement of good human re- lations among all people." Contributions Cited Copley was praised by Kell· er for his contributions to the YMCA, the Boys Clubs of San Diego, Inc., and to Operation Amigo, sponsored by the Eve- ning Tribune and The San ·Di- ego Union to bring Latin American students to San Di- ego annually. "I am extremely honored," Copley said in accepting the award. Judge Weinberger has "pre- sided with dignity and impar- tiality," Keller said in pre- senting his award. The judge accepted the hon- or with a wish for the confer. ence to "have many m ore years of dedication to human dignity and equality." Murray D. Goodrich, chair- man of the conference San Di• ego chapter, spoke. ''This or- ganization," he said, "is a unique creation of the Amer- group "is a platform for un- de-rstanding . . . to solve the problems that plague our be- wildered generation." The invocation was offered by Rev. E. Major Shavers. A midway prayer was said by Rabhi Melvin Weinman and the benediction was given by the Rev. E. Walshe Murray. Cole joined a group of stu• dents in singing "Let There Be Peace On Earth" to close ican dream. Cole Leads Singing He said the brotherhood

THE SOUTHERN CROSS, T.HURSDAY, APRIL 2, 1964

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Law Students Stage Alcala Park Parley The Univer,;ity of San Diego School of Law was host recently ~ninth cit'Ctrit conference of the American Law students Association. The two-day conference was held on the Alcala Park campus. Attending the conference were some 100 students from

acozy Gets Post at Yale Paul E. ·a,·ozy, 22. a for• mer student at lhe College Fm· Men, University of San Diego, has been accepted by Yale University, for admis• sion to its Graduate School with an offer of an assistant- ship hy the Department of Astronomy for the school \'ear 1964-65 which carries a ;tipend of $3,'100 for th,! nine- month per i'o d, beginning September 15. He is the son of Philip N. Nacozy, associate professor of modern languages at the University of San Di<'go, fllld Mt-s. Nacozy of 5264 Prosper- ity Lane. Nacozy took his major un- dergraduate studies at lhe College for •. [en from 1960 to the fall of 1963. He trans- ferred to San Diego Stlite CoJlege in his final semester for special scienc·e cours<' and was gr a d II a t c d with the bachelor of science degree , last January. :--:'acozv is a\ ll'nding the t"nlvcr,ity of California at Los ngeles ,\'here he is maj- oring In ae, ospace phy iCJ at the Grad µ P t e School of Science.

Rrm 1, Area Coaches Name Reina Player Of Year

accredited law schools in Cali- fornia, Arizona, and Nevada. Gen. George W. Hickman, Jr., USA, ret., acting dean of the law school, welcomed the studenta in a keynote address USD Nine Loses Twice _ San Fernando VallE'y State's baseball team swept a douhlehrader w~th University of San Diego, ,-1 and 5-0, here yrslerda) • the wholl' day for USD was sec- ond baseman Dan Wil~el~'s home run in the eighth mnmg of thl' first game, giving the Toreio,, their only run or the afternoon . It wa,; the 11th loss In 16 games for USD First Gome 000 DOD O 0--- 1 T J USD 000 232 OCx- 7 7 l VnJ:rc:'~~d c een, Copka a d Ar ;o. HR-WI1helmx1 \.ISO', 8th, none on. SKOPd :_,gm:x, 0- O 1 1 USO OOO 302 >- • 0 and v I: Greenfi cnrl Silv~rman. '4-J..;;;> Special 1o The Son Diego Union RESEDA Only bright spot ln

Judge Robert Conyers con- ducted a seminar on "War- rantle Revisited," and James l{ervey conducted a. seminar o:i ''Trespass to Personality, a ·ew Tort." DeWitt Higgs a.lso conducted a seminar. Robe1t Casletter, dean of California W e "tern Law School. was moderator. Rep. Lionel Van Deerlin, D· San Diego, was the principal speaker at a banquet in Mis- i;ion Va.lie~· Inn. He spoke on career opportunities for the legal profession in politics. Gene Bambie of the USD Law School reviewed events of the organization since the last annual meeting. Fred Tschopp of the USO Law School, national vice president of the association, was t~t.-- master.

The l' 11 I v e r s I t Y or an Dle~o ba.seba.11 team attempts to get back on the win trail tomorrow {Friday) when the Torero travel to Los An• g les fol" a mgle contest a.gal t p 'ppe1 dme College tarting at 3 p m. Sa.tun.lay, the San f>tegans will play Whittier at the Poets' diamond In a double- header be urning at noon. , Coach John Cunmngham's Toreros dropped two of three contests last weekend on the road, \Vinning from Pt. Mugu :-.avy, 9-1. I\ ti lo mg a twm bill to ·an Femaotlo Valley ·talc, 7-1 and 5-0. Second baseman Dan \\ tl- helm hor:,ered for the only run scored again t the Valley n1n~ C1mnmgham 1s expected to start r:d Grc n at catcher, John B,wmgarten at first, Wilhelm at second Paul Tuo• malnen at third Ron Bennett at liort and Bill Bllbray or Tom Ferrara m left f,eld, ::lteve deSR l~s m center and Ron Cady tn right Velemns John Pear,·e and Pat B 11 have been bandl• mg tlte mound chor for tho Toreros alon • y;, th fr lunen Bob hern and Daye Gold• berr>

Westerners, Az ecs Pace Hoop Team outstand· Ing college basketball play- ers, chosen yesterday' by Sa~ Diego Basketball Coaches Association, wi.1 be honored Apr,! 2 at University o! San Diego. e occasion will be th e San Di<'go County Basketball Appreciation Night. The pub- lic is invited to the banque,t , which will honor t he area s outstanding colle giate a n d prep players. Azt('es, C\V et Pare S Dirgo State Colle_ge an:n Cal Western Uni\·ers1ty each placed two men on the first team of the all-college squad. Aztec guard Jack Shaw- croft and forward L a r r Y Meek made the club along with Westerner guard Jim Hefner and forward Le_muel L e m O n s. Forward Clifford Ashford of San D(ego also was placed on the first team. Second . t e a m positi?ns went to SDSC guard J 1 m Bowers and forward Al ~at- J' University of San Diego ;~~rd Lymond Williams and forward :\lark Teismann and Cal Western forward J O h n Carlyle San Diego's

USD Routs Point Mugu Spe

'Jazz Ole' Progra Slated for Friday

University of San Die-go's More Hall will be jumpine to the tunes of five jazz ex- perts in a special "Jazz Ole" program Friday at 8:30 p.m. Pete Jolly Trio, D f ck Grove and his band, sineer I r e n e Kral, percussionist Frank Capp and Paul Hom will perform in the two- hour show, sponsored by the Phi Kappa Theta Fra- ternity.

Jazz Concert Slated for USO Campus Pete Jolly, Diclc Gl'O\'e, ll'ene Ifral, Frank Capp. and Paul Horn, five of the mo~t jazz world, will be headlining the return of J.AZZ oJ:.Ei)to the campus of the University of exciting names in the

Christianity Lectures Due At Parishes 2-Hour Programs Sc.heduled by l.ay-Theolog ian A lecture series the O 1 d Testament to recent Biblical discoveries such as th" D_ead Sea Scrolls will start tonight at Holy Family Parish, 1975 Coolidge St. --+ F. Leon Edlefsen, former attorney and a lay-theologi- an, will give the lectures. The series will cover 14 two-hour programs. "This Is the very time 1n which Christianity is sorely tested and there are tho s e forces which would destroy everything Godlike In the orld today," Edlefsen said. Ile said, "these lectures are iarticularly meaningful at his time and can do much to further better Interfaith un- derstanding." Edlefsen will speak e a ch Tuesday at Holy Family Par- ish at 2 and 7:30 p.m. Each Wednesday, he wlll lecture at St. Brigid's Parish, 4735 Cass St., at 2 and 7:30 p.m. Thursday's, he will lecture al the Immaculata Churc~ at the University of San Diego at 2 and 7:~ p'm. l{--7 covering Christianity from

,Toerndt, G lithero Tabbed Receiving honorable men• tion were Steve Crowell and Ashley Joerndt of Cal West- ern, Mark Yavorsky and 7\Iatt Malerich of USD and Grala Nettles and Forrest Glith'1ro of SDSC.

ley State.

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L(-l( College Arranges Summer Session

concert is presented by Phi Kappa Theta Fraternity and will be held at 8:30 p.m. to-

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Leading off the show wlll be Pete Jolly Trio. currently billed as Hollywood's Exclt- ing New Sound. This trio has I appeared on the Steve Allen , Show a number of times and is a jazz favorite at Shelly's

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The College For :.\[en, University of San Diego. has re- leased the schedule for its Summer Sessiun which will run six weeks. Registration will be on June !9, with classes starting June 22. Final examinations on July 31. The general curriculum wilJ embrace the humanities, the sciences, business adn1inistra- .~,----- tion and education. The facul• ness administration, educa- ty will be comprised of pro- tion, EnglU1, history, mathe- fessors from the regular full- matics, ph!losophy and polit- time staff for the academic ical science. year.

Man Hole.

the pro~ram.

The featured attraction of the evening is Dick Grove's 16-piece jazz O r ch est r a. Grove's contemporary styling a.nd works as a composer-ar- ranger are evidenced in his new album, "Little Bird r Sweet" for Pacific Jazz Rec- ords. Irene Kral •~ an exceptional jazz vocalist from New York who has appeared a number of times on t.l1e Johnny Car- son Show and is well known in New York jazz cirrles. Completing this program wilJ be the stylings of Frank Capp, the percussionist who has gained fame as a mem- ber of the Andre Previn Trio, and fluUst Paul Horn will present his talents in a dis- play of jazz artistry which will verify his rating as one of the top five reedlsts il1 the nation, a c c o r di n g to the "Playboy'• Musicians PoJJ. Tickets may be obtained from any member ol the Phi Kappa Theta Fraternity, at Ratner's Music Store, 745 Broadway, and at the door. D o n a t i o n s are $3./50 for adults and $2.75 for those presenting a student body ca.rd from any college or high school.

Dr. J. H. Cunningham, Los Angeles, executivL director of lhe National Confe,rence of Christians and Jews, attend-

ed.

An advance placement pro• gram is open to qualified high school students who have completed the junior year and ha\'e the recommendation of their principal, and to pre• college students. Such stu- dents will be admitted to low• er division courses in philoso- ph , mathematics, English and history. The College for Men will issue transcripts of credit for work completed. Student; interested in the advanced placement program and guidance personnel who wish to place high school stu- dents are requested to con- tact the summer session direc- t , Irving W. Parker.

This group of profeHsors, 1nanv of whom are chairmen of departments, w i I 1 hold smaJI classes. planned to give the summer students more in- dividual attention and coun- seling. Courses of instruction will be given in biology, busi• --

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