News Scrapbook 1969-1971

CAMPUS .CORNER

/ -"l<.L~ f News from area univers,lies and Son Diego Stole College. UNIVERSITY OF SAN DIEGO By BELITA TAYLOR The committee on Student Code of Conduct, which includes ·tudent, faculty and administration representatives, has ap- proved a dress cod for the coordinate colleges of USO, accord- ing to Sister Domini Collins, acting Dean of Women at the College for Women. The following is the state- I O,/J-,

ment on personal appearance and dress: Personal styles of dress and hair shall be left to the discretion of the individual student; however, students are expected to adhere to accept- able standards of neatness and cleanliness. Shoes should be worn in all buildings on campus. * • • The first B.O.S.S. weekend (Big Old Sharing Session), will take place this weekend, begin- ning at 6:30 p.m. Friday at the Convent of the Sacred Heart in El Cajon. Father ;l;eal Dolan directs the program. Danny Forgeron, a senior at the Col- lege for Men, is responsible for

BELIT TAYLOR this weekend's activities. Approximately 40 students will be attending. According to Terry Hanten, a participant In the program, the activity allows students to get to know each other better through discussion and fun gatherings. U.S. INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY By LANCE CLEM Moratorium Day activities at the Cal Western Campus today included a forum held in the Greek Theatre in which several facuhy members discussed and reviewed U.S. involvement in Vietnam. Last week the College Council approved a suggestion

hands with Richard Kl'aus, and at offers his 1·ing to young students. ·c Bishop dividualism Installation Rites Held at St. Joseph's By ROBERT DiVEROLT JI,'. 1/ 6 f EVENING TRIBUNE Rellg1an Writer

on his arrival in San Diego at Lindbergh Field. At left, Bishop Maher shakes

ll'ELCO~E-Students from Our Lady Of Angels chool greet Bishop Leo T. Maher

from Sean Griffin, Cal West- ern M-Day organizer, that all 11 a.m. classes provide stu- dents with the option of attend- ing the forum (or classes) without penalty. Tonight, an anti-war Iilm is ~cheduled to be shown at 7 p.m. in Boney Hall. The 1969 Homecoming com- mittee has announced this year's homecoming plans. The theme wlll be "A Tribute to Walt Disney." Homecoming week begins . ov. 17. Individ- ual men's and women's dorms have now begun to plan for an• nual competition against each other in homecoming "house decs," or floats. During home- coming, house decs will be

The new Catholic bishop of San Diego today reaffirmed the Christian principle ol individualism and pledged always to treat people as persons instead of things. It will be his goal as bishop, said the Mo t Rev. Leo T. Maher, to help people develop self-reliance and to "convert help- lessness, self-distrust and conscious incapacity into courage, power and initiative." "My care," Bishop Maher said, "will be devoted not to pro- viding crutches for the crippled but to providing ways in which the weak shall be able to obey the command: 'rise up and walk.'" Christ's primary concern was the individual, said the prelate, who was installed today as third Bishop of the four-county San Diego Diocese in St. Joseph's Cathedral "It is rather significant that Christ never healed in great beggar, the Bishop said. It was Christ's approach, he said, to give people what they needed, not always what they wanted and to reach the root causes of distress rather than merely provide temporary relief. "In other words," Bishop Maher said, "the teaching of Christ considers primarily not a man'.s apparent needs, but the man himself" Speaking on the 200th anniversar} of the founding of Mission San Diego by the Franciscan riar Junipero Serra, Bishop 11a- her said: "Serra knew, as we must know 200 years later, that the mis- sion of the chw·ch is not fundamentally a social apostolate. Its Bishop Maher, 54, said it would be his purpose here to lift up his people and raise their goals, not to the ··satisfymg of tempo- rary relief." The Bishop said he will always view people as persons- not as IBM cards, social security numbers or sociological cases - whether rich or poor, white or black, intelligent or otherwise. Bishop Maher, who said today was the feast day of St. Francis, said the 12th century founder of the Franciscan order of priests more than any other man fulfilled Christ's call to universal brotherly love. Christian Love Urged to Overcome Disunity He urged that Christian hope and love be combined to over- come the disunity which he said is the hallmark of our times. Bishop Maher, since 1962 head of the Santa Rosa Diocese, was installed by Archbishop Luigi Raimondi, Apostle Delegate to the United Slates. James Francis Cardinal McIntyre of Los Angeles presided over the installation ceremony and concelebrated Mass that followed. The Marine Corps Recruit Depot color guard led a procession of priests and bishops into the Cathedral for the installation. After a reading of the Pope's letter appointing him bishop of San Diego, Bishop Maher took the episcopal chair and crosier, symbols of his authority and responsibility. Bi~hop Maher then received a priest, nun and layman repre- senting the community who pledged their support to the new bishop. Parts of the Mass, sung by the La Jolla Civic Chorus, were in Spanish. A uniformed policeman, nurse, and fireman carried the water, wine and bread used in the' service to the altar. Children Carry Agricultural l'roducfs Children took up California agricultural products and teen- agers carried a model sur.fboard, a book on social justice and other items. The 20 concelebrants included former San Diego Bishop and at present Archbishop of San Antonio, the Most Rev. Francis J. Furey; San Diego Auxiliary Bishop John R. Quinn; Archbishop Joseph McGucken of San Francisco; the Rev. Raymond Maher of San Rafael, the new bishop's brother; Coadjutor Bishop Tim• othy J. Manning of Los Angeles; and the 12 San Diego Diocesan Consuitors. More than 1,000 children, religious and lay people, greeted the new oishop on his arrival from Santa Rosa yesterday. Leading the official diocesan welcome was Auxiliary Bishop John R. Quinn, who served as Administrator here since Aug. 5. when former Bishop Francis J . Furey became Archbishop of San Antonio. Bishop Maher was accompanied here by several Santa Rosa priest· and his brl/thcr. the Reverend Raymond Maher of San Rafael. Bishop Maher is scheduled to say his first Muss as San Diego bishop at 9:15 a.m. tomorrow in Our Lady of Guadalupe Church, 1770 Kearny Ave. He also will later say Mass in the University of San Diego College for Women chapel. numbers," Bishop Maher said. Story of Blind Beggar Told The blind beggar of Scripture instead given the power to see •ho ked Christ for alms was that he might no longer be a primary mission is to communicate divine life." l'fan fo Raise People's Goals Revealed

LANCE CLEM open to display for the public. Freshmen this week will be deciding which classes they will take for the rest of the year. Early registration makes it pos- sible for frosh to reserve classes now for the winter and spring quarters. The Cal Western Lecture Series opens Friday with Mrs. Helen Colton speaking on sex and mental health at 10 a.m. in Boney Hall. dmission is free. SAN DIEGO STATE COLLEGE By ROBIN MAYDECK Stop the War Week efforts on campus culminate today. The campus chapter of the Student Mobilization Committee, last week, painted the names of San Diego State students killed in Vietnam on the fence surrounding the library construction night the names were painted over with pro war slogans. The Associated Students

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USD Law Sh1dcnts T cd{e Part in t 'ew Legal Cornp:JHion SAN DIEGO - A new form of leg~! competition has started at the U111vers1ty _of San Die:;o Law School , makmg USD th(! third law school in the n:ttion to p,:rticipate. , 1 1 he new comprtition, called the I Attorney - Ciient J\loot Court 1 Competition, was held in S:in Diego ~upcrior Court u11d was graded and Judged by 2-1 practicing attorneys from San Dic"o, includin" many ' alumni of the School or Vi",~ 1 Two teams won in a field of 20 competing teams. J . Sundvold will meet Henry C. Cilsd;;n and Philip A. I Dc:Massa in the final competition to j ' be held next month . The fin al rou nds will be held ,before the entire USD School of Law student body, said Ron J Feenberg, !\'loot co~111 B o a r d chairman. 1 he fac11Ity of the school :who arc also practic ing attorneys will ~erve as the graders, he said. Tl,e o r i g i n a t o r of the ,competition, law professor Lewis . {Con tin ued on Page 15, Col, 5) I l USO Law Studen'is (Contlnacd t?om ra::o Onr> Brown o( the University of Southern Cali[ornia law school attended tl1e San D i e g o compditton. USC and t h e University of San Francisco are the other two law schools to ·try this type of competition , Fc~nbcrg said. USD will send a team to use in the spring to compete in the Californ ia s tate in t e r - sc h ool com11ctition which wi ll be hosted by USC. , I Raymond G. Saatji:m and Stephen

Council gave its support to the efforts by requesting that the campus flag be lowered for 90 minutes Monday. Moratorium Day has presented some campus prob- lems. Students and faculty members have been urged not to attend classes, but Chan- cellor Glenn S. Dumke has sent a directive to the state colleges stating that faculty not meet- ing classes would be in viola- tion of academic ethics. The faculty Senate has gone on record condemning the Uni- versity of California Regents for firing controversial profes-

ROBIN :\-IAYDECK sor Angela Davis, and also re- solved that no one on campus should be denied employment because of political beliefs. On the cultural side of campus life. the Cultural Arts Board will sponsor a concert by harpsichordist-lecturer Igor Kipnis at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the campus student union. Also, tickets are available for the Oct. 26 concert of folksongstress Buffy Sainte- .Marie. and for the campus' first theatrical production of the seme ter, "The Odd Couple," which will open Oct. 24. The campus television station KEES (Channel 15) will resume its Ford Foundation-financed series "Under-30" at 7 p.m. Thursdays and 10 p.m. Sundays. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA By ROGER SHOWLEY Among the speakers scheduled to take part in .Moratorium on the War activities on campus today were American poet Law- rence Ferlin Ferlinghetti and Mario Savio, leader of the 1964 free speech movement at Berkeley. Revelle College Provost Paul Saltman was also sched- uled to participate. The Associated Students did not have anything specific

Raimondi, <.:ere- monics toda~ at St. Joseph's Ca- thcd -al (Story on Page A-16.J at installation

. "EW BISHOP Bishop Leo 1Iahe1, se ted n '('Ph es a staff, symbol of 1i,; c ffic<' from rchbi,;;hop Luigi

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planned, according to presi- dent Jeff Benjamin. He said the thrust of the observance was individual participation with no mass demonstrations engineered by campus groups. A special referendum con- cerning the case of philosophy professor Angela Davis, Gov. Reaga_n's educational policies, the Vietnam war, and tuition at the university was held the past two days. The vote grew out of a meeting of all nine UC student presidents two week-

Page 6 I O J € i Fact of Faith Series Scheduled in Encinitas Fact_ of Faith, an :"dult religious education series, will b.egin the _th1r~ presentation of its program October 7 at Oak Crest Junior High School, Encinitas. .Previous sessions of the series have been given on the Univer s1ty of n Diego campus. The classes will meet Tuesdays at Fathe~ "'.i~cent de Paul C_ouncil, En- Michael Alcaraz, liturgy, and c1mtas. ~he course 1s approved Swanke, morals. for ~r<:<11t for C~nfrat.ernity of For further information Chnsttan Doctrine teachers, those interested may contact said Dr. John Swanke, chair- Father Raymond Moore of st. man of the adult education John's Church, Encinitas, or program. call 753-6254. J-o 8 p.m. and end November 25. The lectures on scriptures, structure are sponsored by the Father John Portman will speak on the structure of the church; Father Laurence p morals, hturgy and church Kmghts of Columbu~, St. Dolan, scripture;

ROGER SHOWLEY ends ago, and was aimed at showing the regents where the 105,000 university students staod on t~ese issues. Ballots were being counted today. This extraordinary week ends with two events Friday. First the AS will present a fifty-cent film, "The Hunt." at 7:30 p.m. in the Revelle College Undergraduate Sciences Building Room 2711 ' An hour later Philip Drath speaks in the cluster gym north of Revelle, on "Peace Movements-Past and Present." •

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