News Scrapbook 1969-1971

Workshop Set Here o·n Teaching Deaf~~~

registration forms may be Junction Avenue, Detroit, obtained from Father Walsh, Mich., 48209. His phone number Holy Redeemer Church, 1721 is 313-Vinewood 2-3450.

Father Gerald DeLuney, as ociate at Our Lady of the Sacred Heart Church, was named chaplain to the deaf last September. Loca lions of the other four work hops are Christ the King Diocesan Seminary, West- minster Abbey, Mission City, British Columbia, June 30-July 4; Chr1 t the King Seminary, Hou ton, Texas, July 7-July 11; St. Charle. Borromeo Semi- nary, Lockport, Ill., July 28-August I, and Mount St. Vincent's College, ew York, N.Y., August 11-15. Leaders of the San Diego workshop will include Father David Walsh, CSSR, workshop director for the ICDA. Area workers with the deaf also will be u ed to lead St'Sl;1ons held at the various regional meetings. further information and

Professor to Talk On Sup_rem Court ,~ J.~l?O An in-depth look at t e Su- h director of the State Tle- preme Court 11ill be offered by partment's policy plaunmg a noted law professor, author :1 · ~s_ta_ff_i_·n_i_ 9_54_•~~---- and lecturer at the tlnrd m a &eries of Lindley U>ctures Monday at tne Univer ity of San Diegf1..

tn dd1tion, dioc es that do not hav r •llgious education programs !or lhos who cannot hear may also end participants to the workshop . In the • n Diego diocese,

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"$; 17 0 'Nuns Of 70s' Scheduled As Diocese l opic Young 11omcn 0£ lhc San Diego )fomun ( a\hollc Diocese have be n vitro lo take part m a forum on ' t\uns of the 70s at 7:30 p.m. Wrdnesday at the Diocesan Office !or Apostolic • Iinistry here At the meelmg, h1g11 school ju- niors and semors and other young wome~ from throughout the diocese, encompasmg San Diegp, Riwrside, San Ber- nardino and Imperial counties, will learn about religious Yoca- tions open to them. I The Rev. •·eal 'f Dolan, diocesan director of vocations, 1s organizing !!le orientation proicct with the assistance of Si8ter Timothy ;\lane of Holy Fami\v Parish and Si 1er Cath- erine Lett of San Luis Rey the conference room of the d1orcsan office building at .\lcala .Park. site of Uni\· rsitv of San D1):\,.0, Academy . The meeting 11111 lJe in

Ale ander. I Biekel, a Yale law school profes or since 1956, will speak on ' The New Supreme oi.rt - Prospects and Problem " a 7:30 p.m. in the t: D Coll~ge for Women Theater The meeting is open /.0 the public ·1thout charge. The talk is spon or d by ht" Law Libra1~ Jus I Foundation, founded 1 1961 to aid In the maintena c~ of the San Diego County L w Library and to seek unprov ments m the ad- mL" lrahon of justice, partic- ularly in ~an Diego Co 11•,>- B1ckel. 46, 11 as named Chan- cellor Kent Prof sor of Law and Legal H1 tory al Yale in 1966. He received his bachelor of ence degree from City Colle e of 'ew York and his la d gree fro tvard. He 1960. Bickel I as a law clerk for Supreme Court Ju !Ice Felix Frankfurt r 1 1952 and 1953, and wa~ special a · ta t to received an h , of arts degree f a ma. ter Yale in

Los Angeles CCD Hears Rector Father Michael Alcaraz, an assistant pro(essor of religious studies , t;niversily of San Diego, spoke on "The Coming Changes in Liturgy," at the Los Angeles Diocesan Convention of the Confraternity of Christian D9Ctrnjj: recently.

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Seminar G' es LawStudents lipsj& 1r12!~ Univer. ii v of ~an Die o Jaw school stu ents oo e and l!S· tened yesterday as veteran ln~l lawyers demonstrated their courtroom techniques at mock trials at the Hilton Inn. Over 250 of the members of lhe California Trial Lawyers As- sociation met for the two-day seminar which ended yesterday. Attorneys new lo Jaw practice, as well as the 150 USO students, attended the mock trials. Supe- rior Court Judge William II. Ma- comber pre ided over one of the cases. The mock trials included both criminal and civil ques- tions. FACULTY. 'A:\lED Faculty m mber at the trial seminars included Louis S. Katz. moderator ; Rudi M. Brewster, Ar vin H. Brown Jr., Irwin Gostm, Gordon von Kalinowski Thomas Sharkey and Dr. Bern<)rd Gbss. All are from San Diego. Earlier last we k, another

Lenten ·Talks, Interfaith ~:J1d Rites Planned DISCU sion of the mission of\ the modern church, an interfaith service, a lecture on new meth- ods of teaching religion and a \ fellowship luncheon program will be among Lenten season events here next week. Durmg the third session of the annual Lenten School in Chris- \ tian Living, at 6:30 p.m. tomor- row in Community Congrega- tional Church, 276 F St., Chula Vi , those attending will form s all self-study groups. ch group will put into writ- in ome of its members' basic beliefs on the subject of the church's contemporary mission aims. The meeting will follow a potluck supper at 5:30 p.m. SERIES CONTINUES Continuing a series of ecume- nical meeting for Lent, the Rev. Jack Lindquist, pastor of · All Saints Lutheran Church, 6366 Genesee Ave., will conduct a worship service there at 7:30 p.m. Tuesda) , followed by dis- , cussion. · Begun last Tuesday at Pio- neer United Church, the series will continue March 10 at St. Mark's United Methodist Church, 3502 Clairemont Drive, ~nd concltide March 17 at St. Catherine Laboure Roman Cath- olic Church, 4038 Mt. Abraham Ave. Dr. Ra mond 0 . R la . pro- fessor o re 1g1ous stu ies at the UniversitY pf San Pie"'2- will speak on "The Changes in Teaching" at the third meeting of a four-part series on contem- porary aspects of religion at 8 p.m. Thursda~ in the faculty dining room, De Sales Hall, Uni-

USD fills Two Posts On Staff s. .:2 • .:l. /.· )0 The appointments of two new administrators have been announced at the University of San Diego. Mrs. Lula .Barry has been named director of personnel and Paul H . Maynard as director of accounting. Mrs. Barry's new duties in- clude staff records and benefit programs, recruiting for staff and student placement for undergradutes on and off campus. Maynard will supervise and administer the installation of the university's new accounting system, as well as the regular accounting functions . Both posilions are under the joint administration business office headed by Gerald L. Hitz~an, USD business manager. Mrs. Barry served. 12 years with the California Department of Employment in San Diego (now the Human Resources Development Agency ). For the last four years she worked in the placement office, screening and referring qualified ap- plicants for jobs. For the last year she was in charge of Project 45, a program for old_er workers having difficulty fin- ding employment. A native of California, she received her education in Michigan, with a BA in business administration from Wayne State University. Maynard came to USD from his position ~s assistant director of student finances at North- western University, where he also served in the school's

Nuns·Cite Goal of Vocation ~out~_, :;l. ·cl"· ??1 Sister Catherine Lett of San Luis Rey Aca demy, co- cha irma n of the diocesan Sisters' Senate, said the nuns' group believes in " integrating, not bala ncing, spiritual and secular activities." " It's not so much weighing one against the other as recognizing they're both part of a whole," she asserted. Her view was echoed by other members of the senate, in- cluding Sister Mary Jo An- derson of Mercy Hospital who declared, "We don' t believe in over-emphasizing one at the expense of the other." Started last October, the senate includes members from the more than 45 religious· congregations in th!: Diocese_of San Diego. Co-chairman with Sister ca'therine is Sister Mariella Bremner of the Uruvers1 of San Die o College for omen. ister Regina Rose of St. Mary's House of Studies, Old Town, is secretary. Not Glorified Corps Sister Catherine said that today's nuns are not members of a " glorified Peace Corps," since "there's got to be more than secular tasks to being a nun.u And that "something more" is Jesus Christ, she said, pointing out that while a nun should not lose herself in ex- cessive spirituality , neither should she so wrap herself in secular work as to lose sight of the spiritual dimension of her chosen vocation.

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group of lawyers att~nded a conference of the American As- sociation of Law , rhools, also at the Hilton Inn. Deans from 47 law schools in 11 western states attended the session. CARSWELL COM.: E , "T According to a random sampl- ing most of the deans felt that G. 'Harrold Carswell is com- petent but not brilliant and does not have a strong enough ~r- sonality lo be an outsl_and.mg U.S. Supreme Court 1usbce. Few of the deans wanted to be quoted. . However, William Pe~n ck of Ar izona Slate offered this com- ment on President Nixon's nom- ination 0 [ Carswell to the cou~t: "I don't regard it as a d1stm- gui~hed appointment and haven't heard anyone who argued that it is," he said. Then he added: "I don't expect the country to crone apart at the seams if he's confirmed_'~'

Sister Mary Jo said that being a nun used to be a good way to become socially involved, but " today there are lots of organizations like VISTA and the Peace Corps where girls can be of service." More Involved Consequently, both agreed, there is much more to being a nun then serving in hospitals or aiding the poor or others in need. There is faith in Jesus Christ and His Church, they said. Speaking of the Sisterhood, Sister Catherine expressed the opinion that ''we're over the nun shortage crisis I see hopeful signs because women coming into the orders today are more stable and know what they want." Sister Mary Jo agreed and added, "They're more mature and don't have the over-roman- ticized ideas of what a nun is that many girls u~ed to have."

Research Administration Of- fice working on property ad- minlstration and as security officer. He received his BA in ac- counting from ' orthwestern in 1962 and his MBA in quan- titative methods later.

versity of San Diego. QUESTION SE.5810

Father Ryland formerly was director of the Center for Chris- tiaJI Renewal, Oklahoma City. His lecture will be followed by a question and answer period . The Rev. Paul R. Pulliam, minister of evangelism and stewardship at First Presby- terian Church. Fourth Avenue and Date Street, will speak at.. a Lenten fellowship luncheon at 11:45 a.m. Friday in the church dining room. The. series will con- tinue through March 20.

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