News Scrapbook 1969-1971

CAMPUS CORNER 7~ '3. /J., ,,, News from area universities and Son Diego State College. UNIVERSITY OF SAN DIEGO By BELITA TAYLOR . ThP Cnllege fo~ Women is going through a physical chan~c. All the multi-colored glass-paned do?rs are being replaced wood ones. Exit signs also are brmg ms~alled at doors. changP~ were ordered by the San Diego Fire Department for saldv purposes 'd h · from Asa r~sult classes are ncing shifted to avm t e_noise the buzz-saws and hammering. The total construction cost for the prn iecls is estimated at $100.000. f M G•11 A nP\I' ~omen's group on campus, composed o aryL b1 l , :'llirey· Lee, and Sara o J,

have 1.nde1 taken the reorgani- zation ()f the university bulletin boJrd m the student lounge at the College for Women. The board hacl become disordl'red as a re:,ult or random posting of ann, uncements and other matc1i:1l . T 1e g:rl~ have arranged (he board so that there is a secllon for e:tch type of event. It is now divided into placement, person·1l, graduate, cultural, camp•is life and academic sec- tions. The group says that 1t wi!l re. crve the prerogative of rearranging the board to avoid cluttu:·. T,l" Rev. Laurence P Dolan,

.Mark Aeder, University of San Diego; Bruce iller, U.S. Inter- national Universit , and Suzy Roi• lander, San Diego tate College. lso fielding pla~ er~ for the four- hour game will be the University of California at San Diego. a e

Team captains

TA 'K FULL -

men. h r • for the , ·ational Frd ration of Pries1s Co111wils 11 hi<.:h I otcd ) c. terday to :,:upport the Californm grapr strike, ate donating money to upporl th<' Farm Workr ·s Organizing Committee. Ion• th.in ::oo dele 1 •nlcs 1·ontribut1'rd a total . 87 .

from t area colleges find their hands full m this practice dive for first annual Underwater Monopoly Championships to be held in Star- Kist Underwater Theatre Friday night at S a World. From left, re

JJELITA TAYLOR a proll'~rnr of lhe~log) at t_hc CollPJ;f' for :\!en, will take a two-year leave to continue studies (or hi· rlol'torale ,n theology. . . . ,. Fath•r Dolau will attend Saint Paul Umvers1ty, Ottawa, Can- ada in September. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA ByROGERSHOWLEY. . Student are prep2ring again for a grueling \ •eek of fmal~ Jn Pad of the usuRI exam questions, more professors r~qmr cs ay at ~stions. Samples are given to students a week m ad- vam e and they arc asked to write what they have prepared - w1tho.1 1 notes. s d in Tn,, A' will present a free magic show at 8 p.m. un ay Revc,ile Cafeteria. At the Coffee Hut at 9 tonight 1s a free flick, "Hold That Ghost " . &:onum1st Sir Roy Harrold will discuss Keynesian economic~

Scheduled Friday ,~c....~ Teams from four area rolleges will meet at SeaWorld Friday in the hrstannuat Underwater Monopoly Championships. The contest, to be held from 7 :30 to 11 :30 p.m. in the 5,000-gallon Star-Kist Underwater Theatre, was organized by the Outing Club at San Diego State College. Other teams slated to participate are U.S. International University s Circle K Club, the Scuba Club from the Universit~ of Gahi'orma at San Diego, ar.d the l'mvcrsity of San Diego's Asso,tated Student Body organization. Players Use Special Equipment The 320 Outing Club members organized the zany e,ent to include presentat10n of a !. "1olarship or a ca. h pme for some needed school project, wht h :ill go to the winmng team. According to Outing ChfB president Sam Fernandez, the championships would inc1ude four team members fro~ each, club. "Of course," f'ernandez said, "they will have to be skilled m diving, as well as Monopoly. ' The club has arranged with Parker Brothers, makers of the internationally famous game, to engineer and suppl)" the game board for underwater play. The game company will also provide 150 conve•1tional board~ for practice sessions. Practice Session Needed Contestan scheduled a practice session to be 1eld today in U1e swimming i;>ool at the Hilton Tnn. · Sea World, which has a?reed to donate its Undernater T'.1eatre to the student project, will also donate one or two of its attractive "sea maids" to assist players, Fernandez said. 1 • We expect to ha\ e 250 representalll'es frum each college :ittending this unusual event," Fernandez said. •If our club wins, we'd like to donate the money lo the Scripps Cottage for its grounds improvement proJect." Fernandez and a Sea World spokesman said oth r plans are in the works t!> include some type f cntertamm nt during the four- hour game.

Skull Fossil Discovered; Search Set

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Flo rnoy Eyes ate Bid 3·/3•)

tomorrnw al 4 p.m. m Room 3010 ;if the Undergraduate Sci- ence n.. ,!ding Revelle College. The S;in Francisco Mime Troup,• v,111 make a second ap- pearan<'e al UCSD al noon Fri- day in Ilevelle Plaza. And at 9 p.m. Saturday there will be a dorrn-sµonsorcd dance m the plaza with the "Soda Cracker Band." ThP. latest scandal on campu, rs the popu_lation ex- ploi;;.n (lf dogs Canine com- parions accompany Tritons to clar.s, the library, and other everlL s,,me even spend the nigrl with their owners in the dorms. But the City Puund- mas!C'r has warned that un-

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ROGER SHOWLEY leashed dogs may be picked ~p and that they arl' nut allowed in the buildings under any cir- cumstances SAN DIEGO STATE COLLEGE By ROBIN MAYDECK The status of the mini "People's Park" JS improving. It seems that fund up to some $80,000 will be available for the ca_mpus park near Scripps Cottage. The Associated Studenls_ ~ounc1I has allocattd ~07 for park blueprints, surveys and fertilizer m1:lch bin, Indications are that the controversy-plagued parK might be rPady for September . . . . The Azfecs arc going to the polls today, a1though 1~ is still _a bit early for the annua-l spring elections of student officers. This .election is a special referendum, termed by s(L1dent officers as _a glorified Gallup Poll, to see 1f "" .-'11."l!-.:. stuncnts are willing lo pay an adm,ssit•n fee lo football

..

WILLIAM S. WHITE

Legal Profession Is bligated oSave ~- S. Judicial Syf~~.'TI".Jl) lWlll The American legal profes- sion faces, and knows v~ry

gamr·~ above thi, 40 per cent of the st 11dent fees allocated an- nually to the campus Athletics Board. It w;1s a publicity stunt, but also :i feat of daring when four memu~rs of the campus ser- vice fraternity, Alpha Phi Omcg:1, canoed some seven mil~, down \he rain-swelled San Diego River last week. The ~tudents took their trip to remind the community of the April Ugly Marr On Campus Weck, which is held annually to ra1sr. funds for a proposed summer camp for handicapped all women with keys wo,uld have to be in by 6 a.m. each day. Spring quarter will see changed security rules. Two of tile regulations apply directly to off-campus visitors who will only be allowed on campus be- tween 8 a.m. and 15 minutes after the curfew hours set .for women student residents. Visitors must display the "visitor card" at all times on vehicles, and park in specified area~ unless picking up a date or returning a date at the womrn 's residence halls. In such a cnse, a 30-minute time limit. will be imposed. Special ari>·1 for visitor parking will be located west of the chapel and

RO~

Nt~~ well that it faces. a running · 0 ...ut l),',. conspiracy from the far left to \f' , •''\ destroy this country's_ system GO\!

of justice by degradmg, de- fouling and even paralyzing the courts. The obscene shambles made of Judge Julius Hoffman's courtroom by "The Chicago Seven" aos participants in the equally obscene shambl~s

ROEL 0 n. U.S. INTERNATIONAL UNIVERSITY By DOUG BOWERS Dr:R Carroll Cannon, Cal Western provost and College Coun- cil c~,:iirmJn. has recommended that junior women be given dormitory keys, allowing them to come and go at will. However, l\lAYDECK childr

made of the 1968 Democratic •'ational Convention was not made bv the defendants alone. It was made as well, and demonstrably aided and abetted if not in fact directed, by attorneys-at-law whose malice and hatred toward the -GraYSmlthl The San Franc;sco Chron;cle American judicial system is

'What r hat~ a'bout moderp trial, is cleaning up afterward • • .'

p rh s the ugliest of all the ugly phenomena of our times. There is a remedy here and the American bar bas only to use it. It is a thing called dis- barment. Every lawyer prac- ticing in the United States has a duty not on!¥ to. his client but a high obhgat1on also to any court in which he may ap- pear. This is to serve as an "officer of the court" - that is to say, to defend the hono_r aJld the integrity of the Judi- cial system of which he,is a part. . What, then, is the bar gomg to do about so-ealled servants of the law who have, in fact. become the active and screaming enemies of that honor and that integrity? More specifically, what is the bar going to do about, say, an attorney called William M. Kunstler, whose conduct in t~e Chicago riot trial was a pubhc indecency and who ha now gone forth from Chicago to carry the new barbarism as far away as both coasts? • '·Protesters" and this,

-Reg Manning, The Ariz()na Republic, Phoenix

Friend in Court

delicately put it, an • outbreak of fires and window smashmgs followed a campus speech by William M. Kunstler." If the American bar can stand this sort of thing much longer, then the American bar is standing in need of a great deal of self-examination, not to say of self-indictment. The plain, the incredible and the frightening truth is that the central pillar of our whole free society - a system of jus- t\ce that is the finest work of a thousand years of the Anglo- American heritage - is in clear and imminent danger from a studied campaign to besmirch and smash it - and only the legal profession can ~ave it. Too much has long since-be- come too much.

one journalist is ashamed to admit is the craven euphe- mism' often used in his own profession to describe crimi- nal hoodlums - exercise their "right to dissent" from the war in Vietnam by burnmg down a bank in Santa Bar- bara. c;:. 0:. Nobody, and certainly not this columnist, charges that Kunstler, an "officer of the court " told these "demonstra- tors"' to practice public arson in daylight while a nort?-al force of policemen and fire- men was unable to prevent the destruction. Nevertheless, Kunstler, this "officer of the court," was on the scene at Santa Barbara, and, as the news dispatches

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3 P-) cJ USD Law School Schedules Moot Court March 13-14 ~Uli.l.µ~111...,~~~i.lltThe p bhc is imited d Loyola Urher iii s. zonia have been taken Ol'er by M kmg Jpgal points Members of the San D,cgo that LO~ntry's government and I. w \Hstern rcgwnal eonlc t wJl bench will Judge the event nationahzed. h t~ams from law schools at 1he moot court 11ill argue a Winners .,iJI go to •·ew York UCLA, U D, Cal Western, t;m case involving a Canadian 011 for the international event April Moot court rounds will h Id ver 1ty of Southern California, company ownPd by American 24-26. Teams from Great Bnt- th Courthouse t 7 pm UC Davis, UC Ha ling , Univer- stockholders, whose holdings in ain, France, Canada, Germany rch 1~ and !I a n1 , March 14 sity of Santa Clara and Stanford the mythical country of Arna- and the United Slates will vie.

DOL'G BOWERS

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north of the administration building.

azz oncert In ~~{J,,_ ~X~nasiu A benefit jazz concert .-.ill be J){'rfornml Monday from 3 to 5 p.m. in lh U11iversity of San Diego gymna ttJm to aid th uni\ ersit Educational Opportunity Program for dis- advantaged students and members of minority communities. 'fh West Coa. t .Jazz Society will II.lg<' the program, which v·ill fJature the ThreC' Sound , a Los- le gruup. The Educational Opportunity Program at USD is dir cled by Willie Moore. There are more than 50 student~ enrolled at the niverb1ty under auspices of Ure program.

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