News Scrapbook 1969-1971

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THE SAN DIEGO UNION

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things going on clothmg fads, I it will be reassuring to know that clothmg codes are being liberalized on all San Diego campuses. San Diego State "suggests" simplicity and dignity . in dres , but last year the stu- dents had a "miniest mini- dr ss" contest. Girls may wear shorts and capris on campus; in fact, the only hard-and-fast rule seems to be that bare feet are not allowed in dining area . "Ab olutely no guide lines" in women's fashiuns are sug- gcst~d at UCSD. a;r1s may \.\ear Jeans, sarong . flowing 'tlo\\er child'' garments, or 11hateHr appeals to t em at the minute. Clothmg seems more con- sen alive, by contra t, at Cal Western, which has had an- nual ''best-dressed coed" con•

SOLAR THEATERPLAY .S

the spokesman.

tests Girls arc not allowed to wear blue jeans or sweat ~hirls. or to appear in bare feet, on the ''upper campus" where classrooms and admin- istrative offices are located. Separated skirts and sandals are a current favorite. Even at the USD College for Women, a Roman Catholic college which is run by the Or- der of the Religious of the Sa- cred Heart, clothing standards are liberal. "Even the nuns arc raising ti1cir skirts to the ·o JEANS C1ting to be di r1 ult t the lay faculty from thL girls, but skirts ar enough that "We have a good crop of girl watchers," said ort tell - knc ,' report a cam us spok man ·ir and bluu

By contrast, San Diego State expects Lo have in ttendance 15 257 men, 7,929 women enroll about 2,040 students; 60 per c nt y,'.IJ be men. PERCf•.\"fAGt: P the enrollment will be close to 3,435 m the un- dergraduate school; two-thirds of that number will be men. The percentage of men to women increases dramatically in the l:CSD graduate school - there, men outnumber \1omen eight too e. 'at1onal academic ocial so- urc on campus only ,11 San Diego Slate l u h Week bcgm • londay All other campu ·cs kn organiLat1ons for \.\omen that are oriented tow,ird spel I mt r sts, ser-1 \ ICC and faiths. For g.rls who h ve special Ca I We ern will At UCSD, rvrlt1

of marri.iges that began with campu court hips. F r and awa the largest 11umber of men will be en• rol nt San Diego State. ore than 15,250 men con- 1tute a happy hunt111g ground Certainly and admittedly, nil tho e statements are su- perficialities. But all women, even dedicated scholars, do hnve moment when men. ro- mance, marriage and clothe se m to acquire a certain im- the 1r- tlt11tions nr Sept 8 at LSD; Sept. 23, , DS ' pt 2.5, al \\ c tern, and pt. 29, CSD. At l SD, enrollment IS CX· pectc

marriages generated us contacts, Cal West- ern ceps no records, although the campus, v;ith views of ocean cliffs, sea and surf, is considered to be one of the most romantically beautiful in the country. San Diego Stale reports 300 name changes among coeds last year, and tbe dean of ad- missions, Dean June Warren, by c many more marry, but drop out of school without reporting believes that probably that UCSD has no idea whether imtiatcs mar• but U SD points with pr1ae to 50 marriages between 1 r 1 ate a name change.

To Peek Tbrough oon Curtain Today

Thi ge .gan. will

me as close as 'they will ever come in the fu. ,iJ. .....,...,,,,

urc lo viewing a total eclipse of the sun tomorrow when the -moon moves between the •earth and the sun • Al 10;40 a.m. the moon will approach the rim of the sun. By 12:09 p.m., three quarters of the un will be obscured by the moon, leaving a crescent- shaped sun in the sky. The ~haQow starts lo recede at 12;30 p.rn,. .and the eclipse will nd at I· m. LAST 1067

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go, girls!

Alcala Park Cam us f-,.).J. 6/ Schools Enter New Era Soc~

signed, an event whicn will be commemorated In Ol'lober the campus has grown lrom hterallv nottung to an academic commumtv ol scholars which 111cludes a";orc than 60 per cent ol PhD's among the fai.:ully. Through a new and expanded department ol relig10us studies the university will even more clearly enter into the ecumenical spirit which has always guided university policies. Never restricted to Catholics alone, the university has been the alma mater of many of various faiths. the forefront of ecumenism, the university has a rabbi and many other non- Catholtcs on its faculty. It is also the home ol the Diocesan Ecumenical Center which has done so much lo promote in- terfaith understanding. With greater emphasis on state education constantly being heard, the role of the private university becomes · even more important. The livmg, vibrant, dynamic and , dedicated air or learning at the -c C'-- ,, ___ _ Always to

By MICHAELNEWMAN The U111n•rs1ty of San Diego, ac<'la 111wd us Olll' ol the !llosl h aulllul urnvcrc1ty campust•s 111 lh(• enllre rnted Stal1·s 1•ntPrs .i 1ww at·adt·m1cyt'ar and 1 rn•w t·rn next mu11th 'rht• Ulll\l'l'Sll}, whOSl' magnificent bu1ld111g ar · a maJor fratun· ot S,tll llll'!,\O s landscape, WIii ·11l(•r the l\!ills reaping tht• lx.•111'11 ts ol u1111Jca hon ol th • two undergraduate colleges and Sdu~,, ol Law wluch has bt• •n brought about over the past two eilr5 • \\ 1th an est11nated enrollment Inch ct t•a l<·s new n•<:ords l SI> l.H' •s the luturc bouvcd With lht· t·arly SUl'CCSS ol. 1L':; 1.11111pa1g11 to provide 1.0 'dui.:at1011al, coo1d111atc cducat1on 111 place or the prcv10us ~t•paration of collt•ge t~IUl'UIIOII lor men and for WOllll'll « :.1 in ol lOO per cent /\ppili.:al1ons for the 1\16~·70 ,H·.1d1•m1c year were 100 per c ·ut lll)Ove last year and hnal Ul'l'l'Pl.llll'('S 1ncltca ti.' a fresh• man 1111.ak •about :;o per cent up. 1111. 1 111 l'Ont.-ast to stones 11 Tos the nat10n ol attendances lalhng at many Catholic lut•,l11mml ct·nters. The ne\\ air which p<.•rvadt-s th, unnv lulb1d · of /\lcala !'ark, \\:here the Spamsh lkm11 sa11cc buildings follow llll' pallt·rn ol /\lea la in Spam, is a sp1nt ol rt·newed endeavor to pro\ 1d' h1ghPr education Ill kt'<'1>1ug with the needs of mod<•rn ) oung /\mcr1c·ans. IS JUSt w years SlllCC the d1artcr for the university was ~1g1l!'d and the bare hills1dc . tartt·in·d b) First Bishop lnspm-d by the late Most Hev. ( ilarles ,,._ Buddy, llrst H1shop ol S;in Diego. the idea of a u111ver 1ty dedicated to Chnst1an ,deals was turned mto rcahl) 1-lr t the Hchgious of the :s.i1:r1.'<1 lil'arl, whose tradition ot teal'l1111g over four continents gue hack Hi~ years, started tlH•1 r l'ollege for Women. On tl11•1r .illot!t>d p.irt ol the campus the) built a complex which 1m:lude~ 1101 only classrooms ,1111J rcs1dc•ncc~. but a 1,000 seat thea 11'1, l'Xct'llcn( laboraloncs, u l1bran noted for its trad1t1onai' decor, and a chapel ot singular beauty Oth1•1· lluilding, In lullow111g years other bulid1ng · on the campus, the llall ol Science, presently known as the College for Men, thc .Sd1ool ol Law, De Sales Hall, the Kmghts of Columbus L1lm1ry, and the central land- mark ol 11,t. lmmaculata Chapel with its blue domes, brought to lh<• L111da V1sla hillside not only outstanding educational butldlllgs bul a center of study and kanu ng to prov1ile for the m·1·d ol all Catholic and non- athol1c alike The ma;t rel'ent <1dd1t101i wus the gymna 1um aud pool area which has become a niaJm l'ommunity facility. I• or th ·flr,t tune this year the I l

-Stoff Photo Rudo}ph Lippe1t demonstrates the simplest way of lookmg at a ~olar eclip ·e 10 his granddaughter I3cvel'ly Akers, 9, at his La Mesa home. '

sern in the United States in 1963. Two hundred forty-three persons were reported to have sustained permanrnl loss of vision. Lippert echoed the same warning "'.\lany

white cardboard and a large needle,'' Lippert said. "Heat the point of the needle until it 1s very hot then push it through one of the pieces of cardboard and leave it there a few minutes. The needle burns the fuzz off the edges of the hole in the card boat d insuring a sharp image. "During the eclipse, hold the piece with the hole up to 1he sun and the other beneath it. The size of the image can be changed by altering the di lane~ bet en the pieces of cardboard. Never look directly al the sun-even through the hole."

LIFE can be beautiful - and students, too. - NC Photo

campus will probably have a student population in excess of 2.0tHJ In recent years the total undcrgradua te. graduate and law school student body has been approx1ma tely 1,700 Coeducation, which came first to the campus illlle more than a year ago, 1s evidently a s1gnilica11l change and a new atlraclion for students. ~V id<• ( ·t10ic.- or Studies In addition the coordinalwn ol the course structure between the formerly separate College 1or Women and College for Men, olfenng the best of both, provides a wide choice of studies Ill classes which remain llll1matc 111 size \\1th a facultv-student ratio around 12 to I the L'SD classes arc small enough to provide Iha I personal and individual treatment so essential to ex- cellence in educat1011. The faculty lor the un- dcrgradua le colleges once pnmanly Religious of the Sacred Heart and diocesan pnests 1s now predominantly lay, with only 25 pcl' cent pncsts and nuns. The um\'Crsity has attracted lay faculty of high call ier by the \'Cry nature of the em ll'Onment in all 11' a peel· In recent years t trusteeship ol U1e umvcr ·1,_ty const1luent corporations has al o seen a change from

rehg10us 10 lay. In particular, the trustees for the universitv·s College for i\len and Law School. which were once the diocesan rchg1ous consultors, now 111clude six lavmen out of 18 members. with two more lay appo111l111ents to be made shortly The chancellor of the un1vcrs1ty is still the Bishop of the diocese Open ,\pproach \\'h1le religion must always be a central thought on a campus which was created by religious inst,tullons. students hnd a breadth of VICWS in all d1sc1pl111e,; wluch indicates the health), open approach to all lt'ar11111g capable within a truly Chnsllan framework. Developing frorn greater student participation in folk mus1i.: at :\lass and guitar style songs with religious and humanitarian appeal has come 1ncrca,ed 1111liallvc by students 111 religious affairs on campus. One result has been the in- sli tuhon last vear of the m- terfa1th "HOSS" weekends which almost defv definition but wluch bnng logc·lher the young members ol the campus t·ommut11t\ m a ,•cekend of rsonal · exchange and reT1~10us and philosophical u sion. Perhaps the t

"H1g Old Sharing Sessio1 Student affairs at U~ year moved ahead wi olflcial union of the t, dergraduate student wluch formerly repre men and women sepa f,.. 1.,,,. The Student Bar AssoJ 6 remains a separ;1te gr' orga111zalton. This year t, Student Center on camp provide a redesigned, fortable meeting place c largely by and for the slt And at the WOI residences there 1s now must be the finest waiting lor young men 111 the sha1~ contem In the planmng stage, to be unveiled during the fall, is a ten- year development program for the 1970s which will provide for the expansion of numbers and fac11ities a USD in tune with the l1111es. Educational develop- ments in the na lion's leading state already lead the world. GSD, as an integral and non- tax-supported scgment of that development, is determined to play its part.

Canyon Protective Associotion ore fighting a bottle to keep out on apartment complex planned here by the Sproul Con- struction Company of Los Angeles. µ~ '1 ~tf

rary design I THIS IS WHAT all the shouting is about in Clairemont and near the ntrance. As ever Lindo Vista. The view is from Tecolote Canyon, looking up keep the boys waiting so ll to the University of Son Diego. Members of the Tecolote now tli e 1s some pleasant or young m and relax in supreme comfort. In Planning Stage

PARTNERSHIP

IN TEACHING

AND LEARNING

In the serenity of the University of San Diego campus, students and professors enjoy the •dialogue of learning. A sound education in the humanities promotes individual moral and intellectual growth of young men and women, while asking for a personal commitment to ethical values.

the acron m

rn

de 1mtt0n 1s

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1tself the _ ___________......,...._..:.....:._charter of the umversity was BOSS, which means In the 20 years since

·- Universit~ of San Diego

VOICE-VIEWPOINT -Aug. 27 Jhru Sept. 2, 1962-A-3 Ne telephone nmher

EFFICIENT READING COURSE OCT. 6 to NOV. 14 REGISTRATION SEPT. 29-OCT. 3 For registration information phone 291-6480, ext. 351

ill SD

SAN DIEGO, Calif. - The University of San Diego now has a single telephone number. The unified system for the USO undergraduate

colleges and School of Law replaces individual numbers for the various departments of the university. The master wifchboard will now handle air incruning calls to the university. The new number is 291-6480. Extensions will serve the various offices and departments. The unification of telephone service is another step in the unification which is uniting the schools at the academic level and creating a joint administration of the coor- • dinate colleges, with the Very ' Rev. John E. Baer as coor- dinator of unification.

Coordinate Undergraduate Colleges Graduate Division

School of Law

it SD

Coeducational Classes

READING EFFICIENCY LABORATORY EDUCATIONAL DEVELOPMENT CENTER ALCALA PARK, SAN DIEGO _ ___.;;-~-.:wi"---------------' '-------~_..,. __ ,_, _

Universit~ of San Dfogo

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