News Scrapbook 1969-1971

New ecology group takes shape here -,-;.,. '3 ,m'-'1 .:J. I/. "f I By HERB LAWRENCE explored much and not that EVENING TRIBUNE much is known about it. Environment Writer "The aim of our group is to An energetic new environ- develop expertise and to ment organization which will gather data such as court d~ use the law as its weapon is cisions and available laws so taking shape in San Diego. they can be used when need• Attorneys aid unit The group will be modeled ed." to some extent after the Envi- ronmental • Defense Fund Hahn said the CLEAR

Large Representation From Diocese Expected At CCD Region Congress .,.,,.11 Southern Cross Reporter chairman, assisted by SAN DIEGO - The San Diego diocese will be represented by a large contingent among the 10,000 delegates participating in the Confraternity of Father Denis Ryan of San Diego, Father Thomas Kleinhans of Fresno and Father Ted Brown of Monterey.

San Diego,

A-14

I USD st11dents sponsor camp~~ 1 ar~ f~i.f i ~~st1val Arts and crafts by students I Committee of Sacred Heart and friends of students wru IChurch. Food and game booths are a.m. at a spring festival antl to. be set up around the pool arts fai r to be held at the Ci- "!yard. J\Ius1c will be, of. University of San Diego Stu- terco,, by t,:\ o groups. '}'er 1 dent Sport center on Linda Mmd_ and Corporation. In Vista Road jus,t east of the ad~1t1on, several local folk University. gmtar1sts will perform dur- Sponsor of the event ls the mg the day. Associated student Body of Kites and heliwn-filled bal- USD. loons are to be provided for Festival boq,ths are to fea- youngsters. ~hort films fea- ture leather goods. jewelry, turing W. C. Fields and Lau- candles, photography. paint- rel and Hardy are to be mgs drawings and banners. sho1rn during the event. Participating in the event I The spring fcs JVal and e to be the USD art and arts fair 1s free and op n to holography departments, the public. In charge of ar- an Diego State Experimen- / rangements are Greg Dalton., l College. Grossmont Col- Peter Mano, Thomas Beck- ge photography depart- man and the Rev. Benjamm ment and the Social Action I Carrier. · he on display and for sale Saturday from noon until 1 ,

CAMPUS CORNER .3- / 0,1/

ws Iron area ur>rversr•res and San D,ego State College. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA By SUSA, (;KAVES t' the \H~k belore llnals, and ·prmg vacation seems such !I ng Wd) off For many graduate students doing research, th e I no spr ng vacal1011. Stu1hes become a continual proc- es m working tov. ant a goal with ~eemmgly no time-out. v.o seniors at UCSD are lllUORg 305 semors nationwide who re iHd Woodrow Wilson • 'ational Fellowships in the 25th 3 nual fellowship compe1Jt1011 They are Gary G. Matthews, H elle senior trorr 'I •acy, a p ychology ma1or. and David B. Jlo rl, Ju1r s •111or f om San D1"go, an English htcrature

A highlight will be con- celebration of a Pontifical Mass Saturday evening in convention hall by Arch- bishop Timothy Manning, Bishop Leo T. Maher, Bishop Hugh A. Donohoe, and Bishop Harry A. Clinch, Ordinaries of the four Sees. Congress leaders from San Diego include, Father Francis Wieser of the University of San Diego's Religious Studies Depart- ment; Father Neal Dolan diocesan director of voe a tions; Father Peter' Orlando, a Maryknoll priest currently residing in San Diego, and James D. Blazi, prominent parishioner of St. Catherine Laboure Church in Clairemont. FATHER WIESER will speak and lead workshops on "Formation of Conscience," Father Dolan has organized the special congress youth rally, Father Orlando speaks on "Fostering Christian Leadership," and Blazi conducts a session on CCD organizational ways and means. is "Youth Looks to the Future - Through CCD." It will be held March 26 at 1 p.m. in the huge convention hall. Featured will be the Dameans, a folk singing group from Notre Dame Seminary, New Orleans which includes priests and seminarians. The Northern and Southern CCD regional of- fices of the diocese will sponsor "hospitality rooms" ro1a2uued cH, JJ

which is headquartered in the East. It will file various court ac- tions to stop pollution and other environmental degrada• lions on behalf of the public - the people of San Diego. Student cites peril The nucleus of the group al- ready has been formed and it soon hopes lo expand. Taking a major part in helping bring about the group is Tom Hahn, a second-year student at U.S. International University's California West- ern School of Law. become aware of the earth's growini environmental problems while attending Stanford Uni• versity. He was in a popu- lation biology class taught by Dr. Paul Ehrlich, well-known ecologist and author of "The Population Bomb." None in West "It was an eye-opening ex- perience," Hahn said. "It really got me involved." Because of his intense in- terest in preserving the envi- ronment he and some other California Western law stu- dents organized a group called CLEAR or the Com- mittee for Legal Environmen• tal Action and Research. "Our aim was to form some type of group which could utilize the law in fight- ing environmental degrada- tion,'' he said. "In the East the Environmental Defense Fund is such an organization. But thefe is none in the West." Law major weapon Hahn said the law is a ma- jor weapon which can be used by citizens in preventing pol- lution or getting it stopped. "But it isn't much of a weapon if il isn 't used," he said. "Also the area of envi- l'Qnmental law hasn't been Hahn says he

Christian Doctrine regional congress at the Anaheim Convention Center, March 26-28. The Church's religious education apostolate among youths and adults will be studied, evaluated and new ideas formulated through lectures, workshops exhibits and personal en'. counters. The three-day event- packed meeting is being held under auspices of the CCD offices of -the Los Angeles archdiocese and the San Diego, Fresno and Monterey dioceses. MSGR. LELAND J. Boyer of Los Ang~les is general

group is being aided by a group of 15 attorneys in San Diego. "These attorneys would be the ones to file the actions which may come up," he said. One suit already has been filed against the city of San Diego. It charges the city with allowing a developer to create a private park in a subdivision which dis• criminates against outsiders. Five seminars due Hahn said that a meeting will be held soon to expand CLEAR. The meeting will be with a group of law students from the University of San Diego who also have formed an environment organization. "The aim will be to merge with them so we can set up one environmental law group that will be real effective in San Diego," he said. One of CLEAR's first ma- jor projects will be a series of five seminars for the public on "Ecology and the Law." They will be held on con· secutive Saturdays at Boney Hall on the university's Point Loma campus. Topic of jlrogram The series will begin at 9:30 a.m. Saturday with the topic being air pollution. One of the key speakers will be George J. Taylor, chief of air sani- tation for the stale Air Re-- sources Board. Other environmental areas to be covered in succeeding seminars are water pollution, noise, radiation and land use planning. Hahn said the seminars are being put on with 2,500 pro- vided by the S&H Foundation and the Law Student Division of the American Bar Associa- tion. its introduction into parish life can only enhance this sacred occasion. Two editions of this volume are available, one more colorful and better bound, but the text is the same. In both are included the new rite, alternative prayers and readings, com- mentaries for parents and godparents, a guide for the priest and pastor and a basic text for discussion groups. very well illustrated with both actual baptismal scenes and in- spirational pictures in modern photography. It could be used as a suitable gift to all concerned in a bap- tism, and it includes a handy page for the record of that all- important event. The book is

maior. Fellows are supported by fhe Woodrow Wilson , 'ational Fellowship FOUJ'ldation for the first year of study at the graduate s ch oo l of their choice. A Women's Liberation poet- ry reading will be held Thurs- da at 8:30 p.m. m the Art (,allery, Matthews. and will leature readings and music by local collf'ge and univer- it} women Ric Masten, poet, guitarist and folk singer. will give a co11ccrt in the Revelle cafe- t.,ria Saturday at 8:30 p.m. He has appeared at more than 100 colleges in 41 states within the last year and a half.

~

\M·ass Scheduled For C. L. Steber The Most Rev. Leo T. Maher, bishop of the San Diego Roman Catholie Dioce e, will offer a Memorial Mass at noon Mon- day in Immaculata Chapel for Clarence L. Steber, a benefac- tor and trustee of the University of San Diego. Steber, 78, of 2585 Calle de! Oro, La ,Jolla, died Feb. 15 in a hospital. He was elected Oct. 18, 1968, as the first Jay trustee of the USD board. He financed establishment of the Clarence L. Steber Educational Devel- , opment Center at the school. In the so-called "Month's" Memorial Mass, ceiebrated ex- actly a month af er the retired Chicago manufactur«>r's death, Bishop Maher will be the chief concelebrant. Other priests of the campus community will participate. UK,<.,,_'\ 3 !J...ll..

Diocese Represented At CCD Regional Meet < continued from page 1 J J • I I"•) I during the congress. Father Gerald Butler of San Bernardino and two Sisters will staff the Nor- thern room, and Father Ryan and five Sisters the Southern room. The workshops will be held on a multitude of topics at all levels - executive, adult, secon- dary, junior high, elementary , preschool, parents, home visitors, aides , special activities and personal enrichment. Among other main speakers will be Dr. Francoise Darcy, who has wide experience in religious education, and Dr. William Glasser, educator and psychiatrist. OTHER FEATURES will include "share-ins," or small informal discussions between parishes, culminating in one large encounter 8:30-10:30 p.m. Saturday. There also will be a room where films from many distributors will be shown. The congress ends with a concelebrated Mass of Thanksgiving Sunday evening. Concelebrants will be the priest-directors of the CCD offices. Representatives who have not registered may do so at the registration desk in convention hall.

SUSAN GRI\VF,S

SAN DIEGO STATE COLLEGE By sn:v~; KARMA\\.

A'lph 1 10n f ,r the fall •eme,1cr, 1971, are Mot being ac- late colleges. this campus I\ 1ll only ,H'Cept those who have already turned rn the r apphcat1ons Dean ot Admiss10n. June Warren said that about 10,000 nm tudents have applied for admissioR to state, and that about 6.000 will probably enroll next semester. She pointed out that those studeRts who applied during last November stand the b t chance of bei.Rg admitted. The student COU11cil has CPpwd a\ sta L an}mnre. Along with five other

passed a resolution support• ing the credit-no credit ex- periment in the comparative literature program. The department had the ex- perimental program lifted this semester by the under- duate council, and is seek- .ng. a renewal of the pro- ra l r the program, stu- dents had a choice of taking "'"' ; ot the 16 comparative lit- erature courses for a regular grade, or for credit-no credit. If the student passed the class, he received a credit, but 110 grade. If he failed, no credit was recorded.

Book

Reviews 7./r , // the Judaeo-Christian tradition to the status of a fertility cult in his former book, he now faces the difficult task of building up an ethical system on some other basis. Allegro proposes a new humanism in which the measure of all good things is the beauty of the human spirit. Maybe that's what leads him into as cruel a view of the dignity of human life as I have ever reviewed. When man is the measure of all goodness and truth the world is plunged into a new slavery. I wouldn't dignify this volume by calling it obscene since that would presuppose that it had some substance. It is "totally without redeeming social significance."

'J

8 Partll-Thurs.,Mar.4, 1971

Carl Mel nti re Ohtains College at El Cajon Fundamentalist Preacher Will Use School to Relieve One in Trouble in New Jersey BY JOHN DART TimH Relision Writer

STEVE KAR:\tAN Some other state colleges have this prograrr. tn their curiculum, but at SDSC all classes must be taken for a letter grade. U.S. INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY By "ANCY BURROWS Cal We terr s w !lier quarter is coming to a close amid last. minute reports, term papers and exams. I<'riday will mark the final day of classes until March 22. But before the campus is abandoned for the traditional spring break. it will have a famous visitor. Television star Mike Douglas will be filming his show tomorrow at the Greek Theater. His nationwide 'fV program will focus on youth-ori- ented music and discussion. The School of Performing Arts al5'1 will be active these last

It's the time when the call to

RECIPE FOR HOLINESS by Pope St. Pius X. Lumen Christi Press, 125 pages $2.50. An anonymous compiler has gone through the works of St. Pius X to build up a manual of piety for priests. It is notably unsuccessful. the volume will find a few useful exhortations to charity and some pious allusions to prayer that are general enough to be true. On the other hand, in a section titled "Social Apostola te" there occur such gems as, "The priest must keep himself aloof from every lay association even the most useful ones and even if he is moved by the best of in- tentions." Pious pap, served up generously in Recipe for Holiness, is the biggest obstacle to spiritual growth. void this one like the plague! Father Charles Dollen REMEMBER MAN, Charles E. Jones, ed. Ave Maria Press, 96 pages $1.50. During Lent we remember that we are dust, that we suffer and die, that we will rise again. We reflect more seriously on life, where we've been and where we're going. \~c!o~~:t Set At University A concert featuring the University of San Diego's Alcala Trio and Chamber Orchestra, s well as Daniel Magnusson, clarinetist, and B. Jeffrey rown, pianist, will given April at 8: 15 p. . in the Camino Hall Theater at the university. A benefit concert for the uni- versity's Music Scholarship und, the program will include works by Geminiani, Glick, Nendelssohn and Mozart. A careful reading of

little

a

sacrifice penetrates

deeper.

Ave Maria Press has just published a paperback to help us get the most from Lent. Called a Lenten coffee table reader, it provides brief meditations on the suffering of Christ and His message for us. con- temporary renditions of the way of the cross, with the most penetrating one for children. The meditations are sup- plemented with graphic photos of the betrayal of prejudice, the agony ofloneliness and the crucifixion of war. Included are fhree THE END OF A ROAD by John M. Allegro. Dial Press, 184 pages $5.95. The author of The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross is at it again, scoring what he thinks is another fatal blow at Christianity. He is an opponent of exceptionally little stature. Having reduced the whole of Sr. M.

settled the mortgage for $85,000. The five-member Linda Vista board of trustees elected :.\Ir. III c I n ti r e Lynn Gray Gordon and Keith J. Bashaw-all Shel- ton trustees-to the board, "then three of the (orig- inal l Li n d a V i st a) trustees resigned, giving majority control to the trustees of Shelton," ac- cording to Mr. :\[cintire. Shelton College, the col- lege in El Cajon and a projected c o 11 e g e near Cape Kennedy will even- tually have "interchan- geable" courses and facul- ty members, M c 1 n ti re said. Plans Confirmed The Rev. Otto Reese, founder-president of Lin- da Vista, Wednesday con- firmed the plans. He said the 25-year-old college has about s;; students, full- time and part-time. Until the 50-acre campus was purchased for $550,000 two years ago from the Catholic-run Universitk of San Dicso, me col cge operated m a building in San Diego. The newly-acquired col- lege "with i t s d e g r e e- granting privileges will co,-cr and protect" Shelton students, Mr. :-.Iclntire said. lloweYer, those students would have to spend some time in California, ;\lr. Reese said. "We require approximately a y e a r' s residence wot·k at our in- stitution for a degree," he said. New Jersey education officials charged that Shel• ton College, in addition to "substantial academic de- ficiencies," lacked "institu- tional integrity and admi• nistratil-e competence" as well as "candor in dealing with the public, students and the state." l\Ir. :McIntire has ap- pealed the revo,•a1iou on behalf of the co lJ e-g e, which has J41 students, but has not :r et filed a brief, an education board ti okcsman said.

Fundamentalist preach- er Carl ~lclntire and his associates have acquired majority control of a small Bible college in El Cajon, it was learned Wednesday. The immediate effect of the action will be to pro- vide students at l\lr. Mcin- tire's Shelton Co 11 e g e, Cape May, N.J., with a place to transfer course credits and receive a de- gree. The New Jersey Board of Higher Education Jan. 15 revoked the four-year college's license, effective at the end of the present semester, citing "substan- tial academic deficiencies" and other reasons. This was the latest of several major transactions in recent months by the ultraconservative r a di o preacher. T h e y include the purchases of a third resort hotel in Cape :vray and a 300-acre complex near Cape Kennedy, which includes a $-1.5 mil- lion Hilton hotel. Majority Control Shelton College trustees acquired majority control of Linda Vista Baptist Bib- le College and Seminary in El Cajon, according to :-.fr. ?.Icintire's announcement in his weekly newspaper, Christian Beacon. The n a me is b e i n g changed to Southern Cali- fornia Reformation Col- lege , but "it may be popu- larly called 'Shelton Col- lege of the West Coast,"' 1\fr. l\lclntire said. The 64-year-old preacher is best known for his win- the-war rallies in Wash- ington, D.C., and his fi\·e- d a y • a - w e e k program, ''20th Century Reforma- tion Hour," carried on about 600 radio stations. Mr. McIntire said inter- ests that held a second mortgage on the college tot a Ii n g $117,000 had threatened lo foreclose and sell the properly, but Shelton College trustees

few days of the winter term. Four more performances of the International Company's "Three Ballets" will be held tonight through Saturday. Dance selections include "Les Sylpides," "Designs" and "Merry Pranka Pranks Till Eulenspiegel." Curtain time for "Three Ballets" will be 8:30 p.m. in the Theater East, 350 Cedar Street. Two students groups have been formed in the past week. To channel student ex- pressions of antiwar senti- ments, a number of students have formed the Cal Western Student Mobilization Committee. Besides coopera-

MCN

Father Charles Dollen

TOGETHER AT BAPTISM By Joseph E. Payne, SCS. Ave Maria Press, 75 cents and $1.50. The new Baptismal rite for children is very beautiful and

' "ANCY BURROWS tion with local and national antiv.ar groups, the committee will be distributing antiwar literature and bumper stickers on campus. EleetioJI of officers will be held next quarter. UNIVERSITY OF SAN DIEG-0 By OSCAR RODRIGUEZ Seeking to change certain policies of the San Diego Police Department. several USD and Mesa College students have formed the Soc.al Action Group. Founder Richard Vega, junior at USD, said the group is seeking a code for law enforcement and prisoner treatment that is more in keeping with "current thinking." The group is seeking re community control of police, along with reforms irl the judicial system. The group proposes the community have more say in training, evaluation and

So~ 'J,.J.J-•J/ USD Parents' Weekend Features Brunch, Art W ork SAN DIEGO - Two days of with the Associated Students activities are planned for the and faculty. Parents' Weekend at the University of San Diego Saturday and Sunday, Mardi 27-28. Sunday's activities begin with 10 and 11 a.m. Masses in

Founders Hall Chapel, fol- lowed by brunch in the students' dining hall and a tour of the campus. Msgr. John E. Baer, USD president, and Sister Nancy Morris, USD College for Women president, will join faculty in greeting parents at 2 p.m. in Founders Hall. At 3 p.m. the USD Glee Club will perform in Camino Hall Theater.

On Saturday there will be a Spring Festival with art work and game and food booths - all at the Student Sport Center on Linda Vista Road. Dancing to the music of the Checkerboard Square starts in the gym at 8 p.m. THE FESTIVAL was organized by Father Benjamin Carrier, university chaplain,

selection of police, and the grading and selection of offi• cers. It also proposes thera- peutic treatment of offenders by a joint professional-com- munity committee, diagnos- ing and redirecting offenders rather than locking them up. The group also wants more ethnically proportional repre- sentation on the county Grand Jury. A new student constitution was approved by a vote of 230 to 7 last week in the wake of a controversy over manage- ment of funds by student of- ficers. The new constitution is ex- pected to clear up, or at least

CLUB \A/ORLD

"Parents' Weekend" will be observed at the Universitv of San Diego during a spring festi- val from noon Saturday

brunch in the students' dining I

{Continued frnm d-1)

OSCAR RODRIGUEZ tighten, the relationship be- tween the officers and the f9rmer Legi-Council, now called the .student Senate under the new charter. Un er tre old con ·t1tulion, the Legi-Council had no control of the officers' use of tudent money. The matter erupted into a controversy at a recent meeting when council members questioned the officers on the loss of $5,000 on a rock music concert. In reply, ofl1ccrs denounced the Legi-Council's au- thority to q on the matter, and claimed that their actions were protected under the con titutiOR.

through Sunday. Miss Kathy Kerr refreshment The parents w\11 be honored hall, tour~ of the campus and a booths; Thomas Beckman art guests at the festlval when ,tu- recept1.0n m Founders' Hall at 2 d . 1 . ' dents present games, booths, p.m. The Glee Club will pre.sent ~ 00 s,, _Mi_ss Margaret Cough. art work, sail boat racing, kite a concert at 3 p.m. in Camino Im, p~bhcity: a nd Mrs. Terrr flying contests and foods. Hall Theater. Han~fm, chairman of the uni- . vers1ty art department, coor- '.l'he ~heckerb?ard Squ~re _The festival bas bee~ orga- dinat.or of art works. Hosts and Will provide music !or dancing mzed hr R~v. BenJa!Dm Car- hostesses will be :l'liss Sandee at s. p.m. Saturday m the Yf!l• rler, umvers1ty chaplain, ass,s\- Walton, Miss Janet Howard, nasmm. Faculty members will ed by Gregory D~ulton, :Assoc•- Daniel Brennan, Miss Sallijo 'be hosts and hostesse~. . ated Students social chairman; Alioto and Barry Lyons. Sunday events will mcluder------------•--..,,,,...---~--~- (Continued on d-2, Col. 6)

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