News Scrapbook 1969-1971

USD Student Stars As Concert Soloist __J" (1/,,<;AO I 'J.. · ,o · 70 .

~-tJ CuM, I;;.. 10· 7 0 200 Candidates Seek Post of USO President SAN DIEGO - Nearly 200

CAMPU CORNER ,,. .,. ,,, News from orco un1vers1/1es ond Son Diego Stole Co/lega UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA By SUSAN GRAVES A wide vMiety of activities, most of which are free and open to th'° public, have been planned this week before finals. Prof. Seymour Lipsct of Harvard University will speak tonight at 7 30 on "The Politics of Unreason" at a sociology Colloquim, 11 IO Building 2A, Muir College. Lipset is known lo most students for his works in sociology and political science. His book, "The Berkeley Student Revolt, 1965'' has sl!rred considerable interest among students. A noon recital tomorrow will feature John Grimes speaking and demonstrating "Implied

CAMPUS / .CORNER I~.,.

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Saturday, Dec. 12, m the Civic Theatre. Marsha Long, a 19-year-old music major, gained the honor recent1y·by winning the Fourth Annual Young Artists' com- petition for pianists. At the competition Miss Long performed Maurice Ravel's Concerto for Left Hand, which she will also play at the 9:30 and 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. con- certs Saturday. MISS LONG is the second USD student in a row to win the competition. Last year the winner was Nicolas Reveles, a May 1970 graduate of the university. Both are students of Ilana Mysior, a member of the USD music faculty. career at the age of 11 and got her first permanent job at 12 as the organist of St. D1dacus Church, a job she still holds. Besides her musical interests, Miss Long is an accomplished ice skater and a ballet student. Miss Long has been playing the piano since she was seven. She began her professional

southern Cross Reporter

SAN DIEGO - A talented sophomore at the lffi!yersjty pf ~n pjeg,q will ~e e featured soloist for the first of the San Diego Symphony's Young People's Concert Series /.J.. ,/~--) 0 9 Schools Enter USO Invitational Tennis Tourney Three colleges and six junior colleges will be represented in the University of San Diego's In- vitational Tennis Tournament to be held on the Toreros' courts Saturday through next Monday. Playing in the college divi- sion, besides USD, will be San Fernando Valley, Cal Poly of San Luis Obispo and San Diego State. Junior college entries are San Diego City, Mesa, Grossmont, Pierce College of Los Angeles, Los Angeles City and Los Angel- es Valley. A total of more than 50 play- ers, including women entrants from the various schools, will participate in the singles and doubles, Curt Spanis, coach of host USD, announced. · Men's singles competition will be divided into college- and ju- nior college qi gories but doubles will be cooducl!Jd in one open division, as ill the wom- en's and mixed doubles com- petition, Spanis said. Spanis also said he hopes lo make the tournament an annual affair. --------

7,,_.J,.,, t. '1lJ News from area universities and Son o;ego Stole College SAN DIEGO STATE COLLEGE By STEVE KARMAN Health Services has expanded its counseling and medical ser- vices with the addition of two gynecologists to the campus staff. According to Dr. Robert Ray, director of Health Services, the physicians were added to the staff to counsel young women students seeking 'nformation about birth control. Ray said that in the past such counseling took the doctors away from the regular stream of patients they must treat each day. . The question of a child care center on the campus received a positive vote last week, when the student council allocated

universities today. Others are impressed with the USD School of Law, now the fourth-ranking law school in the state." NARROWING THE number of candidates "will be a happy problem," he said. "We intend to do it with thoughtful care and take into full consideration the fine distinctions of ability." Father Shipley did not say when the search committee would arrive at a decision. The new president will be the chief officer of the academically coordinaled colleges for men and women, known as the USD Coordinate Colleges. The two schools are now corporately independent, but their merger is underway.

candidates, including several women are being considered for pr~ident of the Univers$'., of San Diego. They come lrom 32 §tares, Lllhada and England. Number of candidates was reported by Father William L. Shipley, chairman of the Presidential Search Com- mittee. Many of the applicants are now college presidents, vice presidents or deans of s~hools. Others are lawyers, engineers, physicians, military officers, or hold high government jobs. Many are involved in com- prehensive academic planning. THE CHALLENGE of a newly unified campus is at- tracting many of the can- didates, Father Shipley said. "They are impressed with USD as a university that is ready for academic changes and see here an opportunity for real leadership," he said. "Many are interested in the emphasis at USD on un- dergraduate education, something they find rare m

Bcdy Movement m Works [or Multiple percussion.·• Grimes, a graduate student in music, savs that there is a relationship to ·body motions and solo per- formance on several percussion instruments. He has somewhat choreographed the movements. The recital will be held in Bmlding 409, Matthews Campus. The same building is a !so the localton for an oboe recital to- morrow at 8:30 p.m., featuring Nrra Posl, Muir College ;unior, performing Telemann's A· minor Oboe Concerto, "Cin- que Frammcnti" by Donald Martino and "Casta Nora" by

$11,846 for the center. The prob- lem now is to find a place for the center. The former Campus Laboratory School was pro- posed but the question arose as to whether or not it would make a suitable location. In the latest development in the beer and wine issue, the student senate executive com- mittee has refused to take a stand, voting only to take an opinion poll of Senate mem- bers. The annual performance of Handel's "Messiah" will be held this weekend with per- formances at 3: 15 p.m. Satur- day and again at 3: 15 p.m. and 8:15 p.m. Sunday. Proceeds will go to the college music de-

SUSAN GRAVES Ben Johnston . The Anomaly Factory, the experimental theater on campus, will preview a January production of "IYE" on Matthews Campus, Friday and Saturday at 8·30 p.m . A Christmas concert will be presented m the Cluster Library, Humanities-Library Building, Revelle College, Saturday at 8 p.m. Both Choral and instrumental works will be performed. SAN DIEGO STATE COLLEGE By STEVE KARMAN The activities on campus came to a virtual standstill last week duf' to the Thanksgiving holi_days. The h~ppenin_gs will pick up again until Dec. 18 when Christmas vacalion begins. The Associated Students Council has approved a meaure that would give members from one lo three units of credit in their major for work on the council. JI a member does get approval to take unit credit for work, he will be required to spend additional time outside of council meetings working for better communications between the coun-

STEVE KARMAN partment scholarship fund. U.S. INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY By NANCY BURROWS- Exams and term papers will wrap up USIU's fall quarter at all three San Diego campuses this ~eek. . The School of Performing Arts will be on vacat10n from Satur- day until Jan. 4. The regular "Theater for Children" also will take a Christmas break until Jan. 9, and then resume perform· ances throu,gh Jan. 23. Performances of "The Red Shoes," a children's play, are on Saturdays at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. The Cal Western campus is bustling with last-minute details ~f the quarter. A special Yuletide dinner was followed by the tradi-

tional Christmas tree lighting Sunday evening. Actually, the "tree" is comprised of thou- sands of lights that form ~he shape of a gigantic Christmas tree , which can be seen bright- ening the San Diego skyline. Classes end Friday and Cal Westerners will disperse in all directions for the holiday break. They will return on Jan. 3 when the residence halls open for the winter term. Christmas is not the only cause for excitement at the El- , liott Campus. Dr. Roger A. Kaufman. professor of Educa- tion and Communication in the Graduate. School of Hwnan Behavior, will be attending a week-long White House Confer-

cil and his major department. The new library opened Mon- day for classroom use even though the building is not yet finished. Some 40 classes met for the first time in the new fa. cility, after holding classes in other buildings on campus dur- ing the first part of the semes- ter. The campus AM radio sta- tion, KCR, has started live re- mote broadcasts from Zura Hall, a campus dormitory. The weekly broadcasts will be in additipn to the station's regular prog amming. Air re,, ROTC will see the addition pf women to its pro- am be mg I the Jail of ,971, 3\::Cordmg to Lt. Col. Fred

THE SOUTHERN CROSS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1970 BJ M~Alllllflt4MI Heritage From Across the Border

Page 4

• Years Old, doesn't leak - and parish will celebrate." Msgr. Purcell hasn't stopped laughing yet. We're still trying to live it down. I am heartened to see that these things happen in other Catholic newspapers. A recent issue of the Monterey diocesan paper The Observer, over a story about the Castroville parish of Our Lady of Refuge had the bold headline which read: "Our Lady of Refuse." Castroville, incidentally, claims to be the artichoke capital of the world. There's a lot of refuse in an ar- tichoke. As we say in the newspaper business, surgeons bury their mistakes, but we proclaim ours to the world. Weirdos and Words It was rather imprudent, I think, that Bishop Russell McVinney of Providence, R.I., was so vehement in his opposition to Communion in the hand at the bishops' conference. He was quoted as describing it as putting the Church on the downward path to destruction. What really was unnecessary, I thought, was his remark that he thought the practice would "attract a lot of weirdos." It seems to me that Christ had a lot of "weirdos" around Him and managed to love them just the same. Another Bishop - Other Words I liked the phrase our own Bishop Maher used at one of the recent investitures. Talking of priests - for whom, incidentally, he has a very deep concern- he said: "A priest is not a Monday morning quarterback who tells the world what it should have done yesterday. He has to be ready with answers to problems every day as they happen." Talking of quarterbacks, the bishop, among others, was involved in that wet afternoon in Los Angeles around Thanksgiving when the Fighting Irish took a trouncing from the Trojans. , I'm not quite sure whether it was that they weren't praying hard enough or playing hard enough. Proving His Church Credit It was football, believe it or not, which enabled some visiting Irish priests to celebrate Mass in St. Peter's Basilica in Rome. Father Peter Mimnagh, who did an outstanding job of emceeing the dinner held after Msgr. Edward Creighton's investiture, told the story of how he and the new .Monsignor were in Rome together on a vacation and inquired about saying Mass. .They were, as is usual on these occasions, asked by the St. Peter's sacristan for their official faculties stating that they were priests and entitled to celebrate Mass. Although they were dressed as priests they had nothing on them to prove it. Suddenly Msgr. Creighton went into a huddle with the sacristan, showing him a small document, and Father Mimnagh watched with interest. It worked, and the sacristan allowed them to proceed with Mass. Afterwards Father Mimnagh asked the monsignor what he had used as evidence. It was a credit card written in Gaelic which would allow the bearer to All- Ireland football games. The quickest change in priestly allegiance I have seen in years is shown on a pamphlet called "Marriage and the Vatican Council," pu lished by Abbey Press. On the cover it is "by Rev, Charles Poller" but on the first page it is "by Charles Dollen, SJ." And you never told me, Father, after all our radio programs together! I can report that the librarian at USD and Southern Cross book r viewer has not become a Quick Change Artist

We are entering what might rightly be called the Mexican-American period. The feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe and the many activities connected with it focus attention on the wonderful heritage from across the border. It will be interesting to meet Bishop Patrick Flores who is coming from San Antonio to play a principal part in several parishes of our diocese over the neYt few days. He is the bishop rightly claimed by our old friend, Arch- bishop Francis J. Furey, as his special auxiliary. Bishop Flores has the distinction of being the first Mexican-American episcopal appointment in the United States. I was really surprised to learn this. He must have a touch of the Irish somewhere, or else how did he get that Christian name? Straight From the Shoulder Bishop Flores is a man of direct and incisive words. I liked what he told the Knights of Columbus 88th Supreme

NANCY BURROWS

ence on Childre11, bcg,nning Sunday. The conferenc~ is held every 10 years to discuss problems of learning which confron' children from birt until age 13. UNIV RS/TY OF SAN DIEGO By OSCAR RODRIGUEZ The annua' USD Winter Concert will be presented at 8: 15 p.m. Tuesday at Camino Hall Theater. Dr. Henry Kolar. chairman of the music department, will lead the USD chamber orchestra in the performance of "Offertur" by Vejvanovsky to open the program. This probably will be the first performance on the West Coast of a work by the 17th century Czech comE)OSer, Kolar said. The concert will conclude the USD semester series. The music programs will resume in February with a series of three Mon-

STEVE KARMA1'1

Schwab, commandant of AF . Singer Ray Charles, will appear in Peterson Gym Sunday at 8 p.m. US INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY By A 'CY BURROWS Excitement, coupled with hopeful anticipation, has been the mood on the Cal Western campus. And it will continue until final plans for the proposed university student center and recreation area are made public. For years, Cal Westerners have been pleading for a student uni'on, and now it seems it may become a reality in the near future.

day evening concerts. There will also be a recital in March, two opera workshop perform- ances in April and the annual spring concert in May. · The Spanish club will sponsor its annual "Posada" Monday, which is a traditional Mexican event. It will start at 7 p.m. al the Rose Room and head for the Student Union at Serra Hall. Mariachi music and pinatas will be featured. The Board of Trustees voted to end student-sponsored open dances held in the Student Sport Center because of what Msgr. John E. Baer, president of the College for Men, called

The new complex: calls for the remodeling of Cabrillo Hall and the construction of two new facilities in the same area. The center would cater to both stu- dents and faculty, and possibly provide an area for study, socializing and recreation. The second project, a recrea- tion center, would be localed on the north side of Golden Gym- nasium, and include an extend- ed snack bar and game room. President William C. Rust is working on obtaining the neces- sary funds for the long-overdue projectr Tonight is another opening night al USIU's School of Per- forming Arts. "The Devils," the

Council meeting in Houston, Tex., a month or two back when he said: "In the past we used to gauge the spirituality of Catholics by the fact that they abstained from meat on Fridays, received the sa- craments on first Fridays, re- ceived ashes on Ash Wednesday, be wearing five scapulars and go- ing to Mass on Sundays. "While these are good in them- selves, they are incomplete com- mitments of those who have the Gospel as theirphilosophyoflife."

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Two F's of Texas Bistrop Flores asked the Knights: "Are you among the silent majority who are silent, not because it is prudent, but silent because you find it convenient - it's comfortable ...because you are lazy ...do not care to proclaim the Good News where it needs to be proclaimed?" I could go on with extracts from what was a direct and timely speech to the Knights. I hope we shall have the pleasure Qf hearing Bishop Flores speak as clearly here. Visit to Remember These words were not intended to be an obituary piece. But they have become so. George Tasch, well known for his work as a leading member of the Knights of Columbus, visited with me in The Southern Cross office and I had planned to write about him and his work. However, within a week of the visit he died as the result of another of the heart attacks which had plagued him for 20 year;;. Sacred Heart parish in Ocean Beach has long known his untiring work as a lay leader, while many fraternal societies apart from the Knights will miss his pleasant and cheerful manner. I only met him that time he called here. I am sorry our acquaintance was so short. His brothers include two priests and a doctor. He proudly told me about his eight brothers and sisters, all around three score and ten years, and his wife Polly, all of whom survive him. Hail and farewell, George. (See page 2) Occupational Hazard One of the occupational hazards for newspaper people _ ___ is the typo, or printing error. However careful the proof reading, something always gets through. But there's another, and that's the hazard of the un- ning to a headline. We were just aflout to outhern Cross a few weeks ago with the headline: "Holy Trinity Celebrates Golden Jubilee." There's enough theological argument without adding to One did get by two weeks ago, though, in our story about the Coronado celebrations. Our headline, written above a picture of Msgr. John Purcell, exclaimed: "50 suspect~ m, print The it.

11. l

near-riots.

OSCAR RODRIGUEZ These open dances, which at- tracted many high school students, were predicted to bring in $6,000 in revenue this winter. To compensate for this de_ficit, the board will allow the entire Associated Student fees paid by all students to go into the budget. In the past, $10 of every $25 paid by students went to support athletic programs. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA By SUSAN GRAVES It is finals week and there's a look of tension on most faces around the campus - that is, if you can see a face. Students who would usually be found strolling leioorely across campus or sitting on the grass in the plaza now are seen with notebook in hand or writing their term papers in some nook in the library. The quarter ends Saturday, just in time for holi- days. UCSD is no longer accepting freshman applications for fall, 1971. All applications received will be referred to the campus of the stu enj;'s econd choice. One thousand e freshmen

!\A. CY BURROWS first student production of the year ~gins in Theater West and runs through Saturday. Curtain time is 8·30. UNIVERSITY OF SAN DIEGO By OSCAR RODRIGUEZ "Purlie Victorious," written by Ozzie Davis, will be present- ed at 8 p.m. Fnday and Saturday at Camino Hall Theater. The play ts sponsored by the Black Sludent Alliance under manager Jack Brownie. in cooperation with the Black Student Union. ;\fore than 50 law students have joined the Environmental Law Society, according to David Diehl, the group's president. The society's purposes include research, investigation and analysis of the legal considerations surrounding environmental and ecological problems in San Diego. "Our community needs a

pool of specialized legal talent to aid citizens in their efforts to preserve a livable, health(. en- vironment." said Diehl. ' As a first step, we are establishing a central depository for environ- mental publications. These pub- licallons will be available to in- terested groups and individ- uals." "Legal action groups also will be 'formed to research vari- ous problems aff~tmg San Diego. Areas to be covered are zoning, population growth, open space, air and water pollution and other related areas." l\'ext Wednesday will mark thP first of the 1970-71 Spectal Education Lecture series spon-

and 500 new advanced-standing students will be enrolled in the fall to bring undergraduate en- rollment to 4,575. The graduate division expects to enroll 1,225 students and the School of Medicine and University Hospi- tal expect to ~roll 496 stu- dents. "Wearable sculpture" can now be seen in the UCSD Art Gallery, Matthews c;ampus, through December 24. The sculpture is by San Diego artist Karen Kozlow and will also be used in a series of activities on and off campus. Upcoming events include a

OSCAR RODRIGUEZ

sored by the department of education The first guest speaker will be Dr. Virgil Ward, past national president of The Association for thl' Gifted /( TAG), who will present "Programs for the Gifted; A Look intG the Seventies." Ward, professor of educat10nal psychology, 1s the chairman of tbe education department at the University or Vjrginia. The lecture v. ill tart at 8 p.m. at De S'ales Hall auditorium.

SUSAN GRAVES children's party Dec. 18 at 3:30 p.m. in front of the gallery, and a Christmas Jubilee at 2:30 p.m. Christmas Day on Revelle Plaza. Folk-singer Sam Hinton will present a concert of children's songs Sa!Jurday, at 10 a.m. in the UCSD Gym.

Jes'iflt, however.

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