News Scrapbook 1969-1971

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to Host 250 Y In umrir1~,c,,~orj~,f.r9gra KEAR~Y MF 'A - A re- tion's youth on an unprPce port<>d :!50 young San Die- dented scale, using ava1l- gans will bP lnvolv<>d in the able expert instruction and federally fundc•ct Summer leadership,'' W o o 1 p e r t Youth Sports program to be stat<>d. held at the University of San "CompetPnt superv1s1on Diego this year and desirable facillties will The national ~ummcr pro- be provided for many young gram for youth between age people> who arc unabll' to ~e- 12 and 18, is sponsor<>d by curc thi,; important exp.cr- the federal government and ience througl1 their own the ::--Jational Collegiate Alh- means." letic Association (NCAA) Woolpc>rt a d d c d, "Thr and conducted by colleges combining of federal funds and univr.rsities across the with collegial(• resources nation. provides an inspiring chal- The l'SD youth sports pro- lenge f o r th c educational gram \lill run from June and athletic Leaders of the 2.3 to July :n, according to nation to perform a needc>d Phil \Voolpcrt, director of service which th<>y are uni- athletics at the university. quely qualified lo provide.'' The 200 boys and 50 girls Variety Availllblo will be transported 1rom Th ra of thre e prog m, one e vanou,; locations through- to be conducted by San Die- out the city of San Diego go colleges and universities, and brought to the USD gymnasium for the activi- will offer track and 1ield, ties.

Top Awards Presented ToStudents J ·.2i' )tJ Lynn Anderson Scherer and Anthony Jungman were honored ror the highest academic achievement at the recent University of San Diego Honors Convocation. Dr. Ned B. Joy, dean or un- dergraduate studies, San Diego State College, was the con- vocation speaker. The con- vocation was the second for the USO coordinate colleges and the 10th for the College for Women. Mrs. Scherer also received the coveted Alcala Award or the faculty as the outstanding senior girl. She earn~d departmental honors. in English. Mrs. Scherer 1s the daughter of Mr. and Mrs R. D. Anderson and the wife o( USO alumnus Richard Scherer. The Scherer's reside at 4787 51st St. Jungmanisthe ·onof 1r.and Mrs. S. A. Jungman of 1175 Paxton Drive, Imperial Beach. He also earned departmental honor· in business ad- ministration. Who's Who Those students selected for the 1969-70 edition of Who's Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges were also recognized. They are Mana Duclie Andrade, Joseph G. Beagm, Thomas E. Brown, Patricia Anne Canova, Deborah Elizabeth Comfort, Kathleen Dunn, Timothy J. Gardner, Mary Geils, Carol Ann Halsey, Dennis Hart and Charles J . Hoch. Also, Janet Frances Howard, Richard T. Iri, Jack H. Kauf- man, Philip L. Keogh, Kathleen Dow Lamb, John A. Mackey, Robert McClure Jr., Mary Patricia McEnroe, Marijane Pollak, Brian A. Riley, Michael F. Taylor and Cheryl Sue Willett. The Kappa Gamma Pi un- dergraduate achievement award for the outstanding sophomore, the St. Catherine Medal, was presented _to Patricia Jean Murphy. M1Ss Murphy is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Murphy, 6223 Radcliff Drive. She also received a diploma from the Instituo de Cultura Hispanic as the outstanding student of Spanish. Miguel Valdez received the scholarship awarded by the Women's Auxiliary of the San Diego Chapter of Califor"!a Society of Cert1f1ed Public Accountants. George Peek of the San Diego Chapter of the National Association of Accountants presented the chapter's annual scholarship to Kenneth Clare. Mrs. Patricia Martin Vreeland and Michael Bujazan received the two awards of the John Francis McGeever Memorial Fund. The two were honored for possessing the characteristics of a good teacher. Salomon Awards The Irving S. Salomon Political Science Awards for the first semester of the 1970-71 academic year went to Margaret Burges, Carol Kristufek, Harvey Schlockman and Richard Courtright. The Priscilla tur~r St. Dfnis Award for the semor woman with the highest academic achievement in history or political science went to Ger- trude Ann Simoes, with a supplemental award to Cheryl Willett William Reed, a graduate student in history, was recognized as author of

Eye Options,· Stans Urges USD Grads 'Don't Be Misled By Radicals,' ' Secretary Of Commerce Advises th~ S· 30 )t? Secretary of Commerce , laurice 11. Stam; last night called on UmverSity of San Diego graduates to •·work within the i;ystem, build on what e have, and you can create the per echo11 l'.htch other generahons have failed to achieve." In a commencement Hddress at Civic Theater, Staru; urged the students to meet the challenges of pollution education, taxation, . tra11Sportation, welfare and housing. He addres ed 379 students who were awarded degrees at the 17th a ual commencement exercise. About 3,000 parents and fnends •attended. The !\lo t Re,•. o T' aher, bi5hop of the Sau Diego Roman Catholic Dioce~e and who pre ·ented the ip oma;,, urged preservation of a God-c;,ntered education."

Woolpert said Jn announc- iny the new youth pro- gram, "The University of San Diego is h:ippy to be a participant in the National SummPr Youth Sports pro- grnm "We feel athletic activity s<·rv<>s as a heal1t1y outlet for young boys and girls nncl are In complete agree- ment with the thinking o! t h o s e administrators in NCAA and the tederal gov- ernment for sponsoring the program as a community service." Tht• athlt>tic dir!'ctor con- cludPcl, •·we at the Univer- sity feel that thP availability of our staff amt facilities during the summer months can certainly be of assist- ance in helping youngsters develop both. mentally and phsically."

basketball, swimming, hand- ball, volleyball, touch foot. ball an cl tennis. LunchPs will also be provided during the five • hour sports pro- gram. Wool pert w i 11 hPad the prog1 am as direclol", with fiv<> professional instructors and six studPnt instructors. Some or the ins1ru~tors will be ! r om the univPrsi!y's Educational Opportunity Program, Jw added.

Povprty Program The program will be con- ducted Monday's anJ he explained. '"The national program will provide sports training and competition to the na-

"Religion to America. for if very principles come from re:; 0 1011," he said. 'A democracy that forgets God is a democracy that shall per- ish." An honorary doctor of laM degree wa confmed on Stans, who said. • Problems o our SOCiety haH1 the omi.Rous pote1 1al of a time bomb. OPTIO, ·s OF ERED "On th~ o e ha we can build an anthill society, let the prol>- lems fe•ter, and wait for the ex- plosion of an unlivable exis- tence. •·But on tbe other hand, they offer Wlprecedented opportuni• ty. The poS'lbility of achieve- ments m plaruJing, m buildmg, in creating a quality of life are unlimited. · "No generation has ever had a chance to do so much in so hort a time for so many." 'APOSTLES OF' VIOLENCE' On the problems n the na- tion's college campuses, Stans said· "The apostle of violeace would have you believe that 110\hing is right with America, and everything is wrong. They · would move our political pro- cess out of the Jaw, out of the legislatw·es aad into the street..~. "They would substitute vio- lence for voting and would re- placE' institutions with anarchy. '"They would sweep aside knowledge, order and decency. They would destroy iJI the name of liberalism and in the style of Hitler. 'NOTIUNG TO OFFER' "But those who loose riot ud violence in our cities and our colleges do not say what kind of an America they would try tt1 build in place of the one they abuse. They won't admit that they have nothing to offer in place of the system we have to- day. "The pages of history are strewn with the 11,Teckage of l!.a- tions where such meR have had Jbeirway. "The overwhelming majority of my generation knows these men represent a small minority of yours. 'VIOLENCE UNNECESSARY' "The age of dissent has taught us that violence is not necessary to achieve solutions. It cannot achieve them - it can only achieve chaos and destruction." Stans offered three sugges- tions to the students to "help you seize the future with the op- timism it deserves." First he said, "don't be dis- couraged by things as they may seem from lime to time. An un• (Continued on b-3, Col. 1) 1s e enual

Eye Options, Sta·ns _Urges USO Grads (Continued} behevably better world is com- 1and il ofters Just inccnh~~s to ing, which you will help to build, those who contribute most . and it can hold the promise of Stans noted that "the p~1ce ol realizing man·s deepest aspira- [reedom always comes h1~h. It lions. begins wi_th e(ernal v1g1la~ce , GE CRITICS' and sometimes includes the nsk CHALLE ' even of death. 'Second. don't do"".ngr_ad~ th e •'Do not be misled bv the hrc- United States or !ts mshtuhons. brands of your own generation Challenge. the cntics a nd your- who would destrov th11 future for ~elves to improve them but do , • not let them be destroyed, be- you. . cause there are none better in "Extremists are always over- the world. whelmed m time by the commo_n "Third, don't let others under- sense of those who know there 1s mine our competitive system of no future m destruchon. industry and enterprise. It is s_u- 'DENY EXTREMISM' perior. it is eflective, it is fair·

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"The destroyers of today will not survive any more than the witch burners of colonial New England or the book burners of Hitler's Germany. ' "The flag burners of 1970 will be held in history's conte,mpt with the cross burners of the Ku Klux Klan. "If you will deny the ex- tremists - if you will have faith in yourself and America's in- stitutions - then in the days ahead you will get the greatest , possible reward from the educa- tion you have now completed and from the great opportunities which are ahead for you." Jn a press conterence earlier in the day, Stans described the recent decrease in the, stock market as part of a controlled slowdown in the economy "for the purpose of keeping down in- flaton." . "The strength of our economy is solid," he said. "We are in line for an mcrease now and there is no recession despite what some economists say.'' Stans said although the st()Ck market fell 33 per cent, the na- tion's overall economy dropped only 2 or 3 per cen l. DENtES HE'LL QUJT Stans denied reports that he is unhappy with the Nixon admin- istration or that he was consid- ering resigning. He said. '·l am totally satisfied and J have had no diffculty in reach- 1 ing the President on any mat- ters of importance. "There has been a tendency on the part of the press to exag- gerate stories like this. It was first rumored eight months ago I was going to leave the Cabinet, and I denied it them "I have no intention of quill- mg f hone~11 don't knov. how Ihese ~lori<>s g,,t startt'd.''

outstanding book of the year m Western American History by the National Cowboy Hall of Fame. His book was on western artist Olaf Wieghorst of El • Cajon. The 1969-70 Chemical Rubber Company Freshman Chemistry Achievement Award went to Steven Pelfce.

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bv Rick. McCorthv- 1 he .Most Rev. Leo T. Maher, while Bolles' wife, Linda, watche» ana son snooze . r- I J

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