News Scrapbook 1969-1971

OAY MORNING, JANUARY 21, 1971 DAILY 10 CENTS C I eges Here Report Crisis In Job Outlook 0 72 PAGES

Counsultor to Clergy Congregation Bishop Quinn Appointed To Key Rome Position Southern Cross Reporter

the future of the priesthood and the Congregation responsible for the clergy will be at the center of ac- tivities. Bishop Quinn, who was ordained priest in 1953, was the youngest Bishop in th{:\ United States when he was consecrated in December, 1967. He has been rector of Immaculate Heart Seminary and provost of the University of San Diego. IN ADDITION to serving as auxiliary to' the Bishop he is pastor of St. Therese of the Child Jesus parish in San Diego. The Congregation for the Clergy has three main departments : the first studies, proposes and urges means by which priests strive for sanctity. The second promotes the preaching of the Word of God and the third is responsible for the preservation and administration of the tem- poral goods of the Church.

of the world, in keeping with the Pope's wish to make the government of the Church more in- terna tiona I. Prefect of the Congregation is Cardinal John Wright, also from the United States. THE CONGREGATION was formerly known as the Congregation for the Council, set up in 1564 to implement the decisions of the Council of Trent. Later it was given by Pope Sixtus V the task of revising the activities and functions of provincial councils, and further implementation of the reforms from the Council ofTrent. Its functions decreased with the years and in 1967 the Congr egation was renamed and given its new respon- sibili ties connec ted with the priesthood. THIS YEAR is one of the mos t important in the history of the Church rega rding the pries thood. In the fall, the Synod of Bishops will meet in Rome to discuss

SAN DIEGO - Most Rev. John R . Quinn, Auxiliary Bishop of San Diego diocese, has been appointed consultor to the Sacred Congregation for the Clergy. This makes Bishop Quinn one of seven consultors in the world to the central Church authority responsible for matters connected with priests and their apos tola te within dioceses. THE BISHOP, who is noted as a La tin scholar, linguist and theologian, was informed of his appointment by a message fr om Cardinal Jea n Villot, Secretary of State, in Rome. This appointment will not r esu lt in Bishop Quinn moving from the diocese, but he will be called lo Rome several times a year to act as consultor . He is the only consultor from the United States. The seven princ ipal con- suitors to the Congregation are situated in various parts

Sharp Dip In Hiring Disclosed By PETER H. BROWN

THE SAN DIEGO UNION I·) 'I-@/ I Colleg sHere Cite Job Outlook Crisis (Continued from Page a-1) can get the jobs. And we are favorable for new education having to go out and get lhe re- graduates," he said. "Stabilized cruiters to come to us.'' enrollment is a big factor. I can At UC.SD - which has been a almost gua rantee that we will specialized school and little af- have many fewer leaching posi- fected by the job pinch - lions next fa ll than last. counselors there said last night ·'The teachers we hnvc been that students are beginning to used to losing from year to year feel the crisis. arc more likely to stay with us, "I feel it is becoming a major creating even fewer oprnings. worry," said counselor Robert "Some of the young women Cavanaugh. "A lot of students teachers used to changing loca- are going to stay in graduate tions every year can't find jobs school. They ordinarily would and have to stay here, and it is not have done this. Some people my guess that some married are worried about switching ma- teachers will have to continue jors just so they can get a job. working because of the econom- "I think some of this may be a ic and job situation facing their myth. But at the same time, it is husbands." a thought running through the Webb said San Diego State is minds of most students right working quickly on counseling now." programs to help students find PERSONAL TRAGEDIES the jobs. . "The best ones will definitely Placement directors at all be the ones who get the jobs " three_ sch~ols are begmnmg to he said. ' comptle hsls_ of ~ersonal tra- Webb also said that much gedtes m th_e Job cr1s1s. work will be done to counsel st11- At San Diego State, Webb has dents into taking majors and had to find gas statwn_ Jobs for fields of study that will help history graduates;. office work them get jobs. for ltberal arts maiors and Jobs at drive-in hamburger stands NATIONAL OUTLOOK for political science majors. After surveying 916 major em- " A lot of these people are just ployers. the College Placement taking what they can get right Council reported that nationally now and this is it," said Webb. employers are making 21 per "There is one case of a man cent fewer campus recruiting who worked eight years driying visits this year than last and arc a taxi to get his education and planning to hire 23 per cent few- complete a master's degree. er college graduates. ;'\ow he has it and is going to The council, a nonprofit orga- have to go back to driving the nizalion in Bethlehem, Pa., said cab." business majors were expected At the University of San to be least affected, with open- Diego, Sprague has had educa- ings down 18 per cent. The tion majors taking secretarial sharpest drop was in science, jobs and "some graduates doing mathematics and other techni- janitorial work." cal categories - 31 per cent be- "Another crisis for us, is that low last year. many of our students who have Accoupting and merchandis- prepared to stay and work here ing firms p nned the smallest and became educated toward decrease in campus visits, down that end are having to move to 2.5 per cent and 8.6 per cent. wherever they can get a job. Government, the biggest em- This is a complete reyersal." ployer of new graduates, pre- TEACHING OUTLOOK dieted a 16 per cent dip; bank- The crisis had even begun to ing: finance and insurance firms h ·t I ch· ad t h d ant1c1pated a 26 per cent dcclme 1 ea mg gr ua es ar . in visits "These were people who were,_,,,__.._·~~------ once guaranteed a job for their diploma," said Webb. ", ·ow

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Students graduating from col- lege here this spring and sum- mer face probably the worst employment crisis in at least 15 years, local college officials said yesterday. The placement situation for graduates is "dismal and dis- astrous" according to officia ls at UCSD, San Diego State and , the University of San Diego. "I don't think there has been as pessimistic an employment condition fo r college graduates since .the depression." said Dean Spraiue, director of placement lor the University of San Diego. Liberal arts graduates tHls January are 'accepting jobs as hamburger cooks, political sci- ence graduates have taken jani- torial ·jobs. and girls with teach- ing diplomas are doing secretar- ial work, a survey disclosed. FEWER VISITS 'v!ajor corporations - prime 1 employers of gr arluate~ in the last five years - are dechrung to visit San Diego. and those who do are hiring from . to to per cent fewer graduates than in the last three years. "We contacted 300 national companies lo come on the campus this year. The majority of them were cool," Sprague said. "Of the 300 only 40 will come to USD this year to interview graduates." At San Diego Slate - which will put an estimated 4,000 grad- uates into the job market this year - the number of employ- ment recruiters coming to the campus has dropped from 40 to 50 per cent. Dr. Edward Webb, director of placement there, said "job op- portunities are off in just about every area. "We will have 4,000 graduates in estimated numbers. I don't know how many of those will come to us for jobs. Of the ones who come to as for job place- ment and counseling, I doubt if we will be able to find jobs for half of them. :VIA Y BE OPTIMISTIC "And that may be very opti• mistic considering the place- ment picture. "The joh supply and demand jis completely reversed. It used to be recruiters who came lo us and asked 'how do we get the students.'

APPOINTMENT FROM ROME - Most Rev. John R. Quinn, Auxiliary Bishop of San Diego, has been appointed a consultor of the Sacred Congregation for the Clergy in Rome. One of only seven principal consultors in the world, Bishop Quinn will be called to Rome several times a year. - Victor Avila photo Southern Cross

$4 Yearly

THURSDAY, JANUARY 28, 1971

Publi1hed Weekly By The Diocese of San Diego, California Entere d As Second Closs Motter ot the Post Office

PROVINCE MEETING OPENS Alumnae Leader Honore Mrs. Victor Hillenbrand of ternoon will concern oornmu- 1alumnae groups. Birmingham, Mich., national nicati_ons, fund raising, student

The meeting will adjourn after

of the Associated r~tment and the needs of M_a~s_s_a~t _5.:..p_.m_. ______

president

Alumnae of the Sacred Hearl is an honored guest at the provi~ce meeting of the alumnae whic,h opened yesterday and continues today I Sessions this morning will be held at the Convent of the Sa- cred Heart in El Cajon. After luncheon, delegates will return to the USD campus for after- noon roundtable discussions. ' Featured speakers this morn- I ing will include Mrs. Thomas Gray of San Francisco, first vice president of the national or- 1 ganization and delegate-at-large j from the San Francisco prov- ince. and Sister Sallv Furay, academic dean of USD. The opening remarks were made yesterday by Sister Bessie Chambers, a faculty member at Boston State College, who de- scribed the changing role of the religious. The changing roles of the alumnae were explored in a panel discussion last night fol- lowing dinner in Founders' Hall. Participants were Miss Gina Gwynn, a teacher at the Con- vent of the Sacred Heart in El Cajon; Mrs. Thomas B. Arm·- istead Ill of Los Angeles and Dr. Anita Furneredo of La J olla. A series of workshops this af-

L.. 11~T......i.,. I• JJ. )/ Gd t J b would not have d(Jle this. ra ua e O Some people ~re worried about ,wttchmg maJ • t'S 0 ti kP JU~t so they can get a Job." Stories of graduates ac- U 00 oor crpting jobs as hamburger cooks and cab driYers are

in San Diego SAN DIEGO opportuni- ties for students graduat- ing from San Diego rolle- ge~ am! unh·ersities are at a crisis level, according to a sun ey completed Thurs- da). Officials at UC San Die- go. San Diego Stale Col- lege and the Uni\·ersitv of San Diego ralled the situa- tion 1 'dlsmal and disas- trous. • M aJor corporations are declining to visit the area and are promising fewer jobs to graduate~. r:mploy- ment of teac hers is down. Dr. Edwarcl Webb, di- recto r of placement at San Diego State. said the num- ber of employment recrui- ters dotting the 1:ampus dropped almost 50"~. About -1.000 students are st heduled lo be graduated from the slate college. Dean Sprague,

common "I don't think there has been as pessimistic an em- ploymen l condition f o r college graduates since the depression." Spnigue Faid.

they face an uncertain futu e." This was confirmed I.is' , hl by the San Diego Unified S( ol District- which expects to ·re fewer teachers than last year Lest.er Wahrenbrock, c.hrector of teacher hiring at the huge dis- trict, said the leveling off of growth in the schools, the great- ly increased number of educa- tion gradljates looking for jobs and the decrease in turnover are changing the picture. "These facts do not make it

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"Now the students are coming to us and asking how do we im- press the recruiters so that we (Continued on a-8, Col. 1) --=-----"

~- b Jy, b u 11,e,, ' 1,, t,,.'7/ New Sex Attitudes Stressed in Talk

Group Programs Proposed S-o Ct..,. /, ~,.')I Sisters Plan More Action by Senate

elected Sister Catherine Lett, CPPS, Senate co-chairman, to represent them at NAWR's convention in Denver, April 1-4.

would meet for discussion , liturgical celebrations, and recreation. They would choose a representative to join the elected senators as members of the Senate. "This plan would give greater representation to the diocesan Sis ters at the grass roots level," Sister said, "and would assure that their views are heard ." IN ADDITION, Sisters of other religious denominations will be invited to become ob- servers at the Senate. Sister Bremner also an- nounced that the Senate had elected Sister Assunta High- baugh, OSB to the diocesan school board. Sisters in the diocese who are members of the National Association of Women Religious

A plan to

SAN DIEGO -

culminated the Second Vatican Council's affirmation that marital sex is good and noble. in

by the world. "Sex is not something you do. It's some- thing you are," said the priest. He said that although sex was designed to express hu- man love, be procreative and pleasurable, it also has liini- tations. Unless sexuality is inte- grated into a value system in- corporating man's ideals, it can cause him to deviate from them, Father Imbiorski said. He said that wile children in today's rapidly changing world can not be given clear- cut guides to action, they can be taught general principles and how to make judgments. He said that in the early centuries of the church people often were told that sex was little more than an evil to be tolerated. Thomas Aquinas, Francis DeSales, Alphonsus Liguori and other theologians, he sug- gested, laid the foundations I~ contrary view which

lie D'r.ccse in 1967. It is based on 26 key concepts or "under- standings" integrated into re- ligion, literature, biology, so- cial science, music, mathe- matics and other courses. In his talk here Father Im- biorski defined sexuality as the way one sees and is seen

Three character- istics of the new attitude to- ward sex are the realizations that sex is good, it is part of the human persone.lity and that it has its limitations, says the Rev. Walter Im- biorski. Father Imbiorski, director of the Cana Conference of the Chicago Roman Catholic Archdiocese, addressed some 75 San Diego Diocese Con- fraternity of Christian Doc- trine (CCD) teachers this week at the University of San Diego. The talk was one on a series designed to prepare CCD teachers for the sex edu- cation program due to start next fall in parochial schools and CCD classes. CCD conducts religion classes for school children and adults in the four-county San Diego diocese. The Cana Conference is the Chicago diocese's marriage and family life counseling' agency. Father Imbiorski also is administrator of the Chicago diocese sex educa- tion program and co-author of its syllabus, "Becoming a Person." The program to be used in San Diego Diocese schools, grades 1-12, is the "Education in Love" program developed l by the Rochester, N.Y. Catho- m11jor

the

involve more Sisters in

isters ' Senate

actiVJties of the

was announced by · Mariella Bremner. RSCJ , Sena le chairman. She presented the plan at a recent meeting of the Senate whwe the Sisters discussed the proposal to divide themselves in to geographic groups. Each group, she explained,

.r".c...,.•• .f..•. .Jt- , . ,,.,, Racial prejudice study planned by SD groups SAN DIEGO-A program which will focus on racial stereotypes created by

"Some of My Best Friends are ... (whites, blacks, chicanos, Catholics, Jews, hippies, policemen, Indians, the aged, Italians, Chinese, etc.)" Included in the program will be members of Project Vanguard , Westminister Presbyterian Church, who will perform during the Feb. 7 meeting. The dancers will show how individuals express themselves, many times unconsciously, through physical actions. · For information call 232- 6113.

prejudicial attitudes will be presented on consecutive Sundays, Jan. 31 and Feb. 7,;l't 7:30 p.m. in De Sales Hall at the University of San Diego. The event is being spon• sored by the National Con- ference of Christians and Jews, the Chicano Federation, the Urban League, Christian Family Movement, Had- dassah, YWCA , Church Women United and other civic and church organizations. Title of the program is

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