News Scrapbook 1969-1971

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THE SAN DIEGO UNION Elect 5

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rs, ouncilmen a 25 Del Mar Bond Issue OKd; Turnout Light In Most Areas

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SAN DIEGO. CALIFORNLt;. 92112-WEDNESDAY, APRIL

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USD Students Win klock Law Office frleet Los Angeles (Specia])-Every Jaw school has a mock courtroom but none contains .a simulated law office. But the first thing many Jaw graduates do after passing t~e Bar examination is to work m an office. And more decisions are made in law offices about law and human conduct than are made in all the courts of the land. The first national mock law office competition was held at the Uni- versity of Southern California Law Center Sunday as a new develop- I ment in legal education. University g1 f-i'O pj~~ law stu- dents Henryasden an hilip De- Massa were the winners. Mercer University's Daryl Cohen and David Booher and the University of Iowa's Steven Frankel and Thomas Breuch tied for second place. Raymond Saatjian of San Di<;_go was present as an alternate. Louis J\1. Brown, .a •Los Angeles attorney and recognized expert in the field of preventive law, thought up the idea of the Jaw office com• nctation for his student~ :it use. I An adjunct professor, he teaches a I course in "Planning by Lawyers", an elementary class in preventive law. Two students from each compel· ing law school worked as a partncr- si11p to interview a client for about an hour in front of a panel of judges 1 who arc attorneys with extensive experience themselves in conduct· ing such interviews. . l Judges were Los Angeles at- torneys Seth Hufstedler, pr~sidcnt of the Los Angeles Bar Association; Don A. Ladenberger, an Lowa graduate, and J. Michael Hughes, a San Diego graduate. Thomas H. ;\1c· Peters, San Bernardino attorney, 1 a :11ercer graduate, was an alter- nate. After the interview the students dictated an office memorandum, I but most of the judging was done on I how the interview was conducted. The client was Richard J. K.amins of Beverly Hills, a practicing at• torney familiar with the type of in• formation, or lack of it, that a new client might give an attorney about .a problem. . A week before the competition, 1 the students first received a memo . J from a "secretary" telling them I I that a prospective client wanted to 1 sec them about a lease he proposed to sign for a store building. I The client-brought a "real estate I agent" with him, but "the students had no advance information that ,both would be present at the inter- ! view.

Five mayors and 25 councilmen \\ere clect£'d hy voters in l2 cities in San Diego Counly. Three city counc1lmc1.1 were named in San Clemente during the regular b1enn1a, elections. The voters turnout was light m mo. t areas, according to elec- tion officials. San Clemente was defeating a uniqw• plan to charge $1 a year admission to the San Clemente City beach. The advisory vote yesterday was ordered for the guidance ?f city councilm.en who are concerned about the ri. mg cm ts of lifeguard prolect1on and increasing number of be11ch - visitors. F arl Andreen . . . . . . . . . . 925 In Del .\far, voters anprov(•d a The apparent winners were $1 7 million bond issue to con- Goodenough, Callahan and nee! to the San Diego sewer ys- Parker. tern. Incumbent :'\,lrs. Janice Heinzmann easily won re CHULA VISTA elect1on to the Citi Council in GO of 60 PrPc-incts Del Mar. Gordon ·Denyes and FOR MAYOR Dr. ,John Silver fimshed in a ti• Thomas D. Hamilton ....... 6253 for the th M. Roberts, Robert Lawhead Sr........ 1,531 men•~ shop owner and former Joseph Callahan .......... 1,547 mayor. L .1 ialmG B. 1one ute ow nc. , ur on ..... , ....... . p t C C 11 . ).!rs. Janice C. Heinzmann 30 of 37 Precincts (inc.) •······· ·· ········· ··· .625 Gordon Denyes.·•••········ THREE COUNCIL SEATS .......................... 1,785 Luther G. (Joe) Reid (inc.) 2,742 Thomas Ruiz.•.••.•••••.•• 1,537 George Waters ... ·: ····. · 2,860 ESCONDIDO 27 of Z7 Precincts TWO COU, 'CIL SEATS The apparent wmners were Mrs. Holly Beck . . . . . . . . . 922 Waters and Reid. A. Raymond Bernardi..... 374 SAN MARCOS 3 of 3 Precincts TWO CQt:NCIL SEATS Le'ebert L. Stiles ........... 1,277 TWO COU 'CIL SEATS l!enry A. Andrada ........ 115 w 1r A B 1 (I )

. I Quak rCollege Teaches /l:~~~'tt.~. ~". - Haverford CoHege lias an- students a be ter under-. nounccd the creat10n of a cc11- standing of the inn r city by ter for teaching, studying and ha\ing them live work and u~ing nonviolence to re ·olve tudy in Philadelphia's mner conflict city. Pau T Wehr. who holds a Another of the center·· pro- doctorate. international rela- grams, supported by a $20,000 tion.s. will head the center. la- federal grant, i aimed at beled the center for , ·on Vio- bringing formal and mformal Jent Conflict Resolution. leadership together from the Grant Provided One of the program con- mam line and the inner city to s udy µoverly. health pollu- tion drugs, and educat 1011. Purpos~ Explained

1R.l 8 U-IJe '/--.1/• 70 Stove league To Honor USD Catcher

ducted b\· the center is· the educational 1molvement pro- gram financed hr a three-) car 180.000· grant from the Ford Foundatior

Wehr described the nom io- lent cenl"'r as 'oart of a Quak- er college's effort to make its urriculum more relevant and ts re earch resource · more acce.. ible for the solutions of col'flict problems m its metro- pol!tan en\ tronment ·• Haverford is the first col- lege in the country to be found- ed b)· Quakers. '

Carmelite Nun To Receive Veil Sister Astrid of the Holy Face, OCD, will make her Cina! Profession during a concelebraled Mass al 7:45 p.m. this Friday, April 24, at the Carmelite Monastery, 5158 Hawley Blvd. Sister Astrid, Shirley Kershaw, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J06eph Kershaw of Lemon Grove. She is a native of Shrewsbury, Mass., but has lived most of her life in the San Diego area She is a graduate of Helix High School and later studied al the Corona• do School of Fine Arts and the La Jolla School ofArts and Craf'ls. She entered the local monastery of the Dlscalced Carmelite nuns in 1964 and made her first Profession in 1966. She has three brothers, Joseph, Roger and Lincoln, all of San Diego. Following the Mass of Profession, Msgr James O'Donoghue, vicar general for Religious, acting as delegate of Most Rev Leo T. Maher, will give her the Black Ve!l, the symbol of total con• secration to God. M~gr. O'Donoghue will be the principal celebrant of the Mass. Other concelebrants will be Father Franz Robier, chaplain of the monastery, and Father Benjamin Canier of the Ilnjyersjty of San, Diego. Father David Costello, OCD, of El Carmelo Retreat House, Redlands, will preach the homily. Music for the Mass and ceremony will be sung by the nuns. No personal invitations are being sent, but the nuns cordially invite the friends of Carmel lo assist at the Mass and ceremony. The three following days Sister Astrid may receive visits from her friends and the friends of the monastery are invited to meet her during the visiting hours from 10 a.m. to noon and 3 to 5 p.m. Saturday, Sunday and Monday. So~ t/,J.. 3,) tJ USD Studen oup Spo~2!! Eg~t 1~ 0 Week A Conference on Environmental Law highlighted Earth Week activities at the UniversitX of San DiegQ. Speakers, films, cam• pus clean up and d1stnbut1on ol environmental literature were also scheduled by Students for Environmental Awareness. The law conference, jointly presented by SEA and law stu• dents, was held from 2 to 6 p.m. yesterday, Wednesday, in

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on Friday. Carpgozian will speak on the pollulfon problems of the national forest. Harold Riley of the California Wildlife Federation as Monday's speaker. The proposed Underwater Park off La Jolla and Torrey Pines was his topic. On the schedule of films being shown daily in the Study Room of the Student Center are "Ill Winds on a Sunny Day," "Multiply and Subdue the Earth," "Marsh Land Isn't Waste Land," "The Bald Eagle," "The Polar Ecology," "Seeds of Destruction," and "Population Ecology." . Literature was berng distributed by SEA in the mai.1 foyer 'lf the College for Men.

More Hall, USD School of Law. Participants included ecol• ogists, planners, engineers and attorneys. Speakers were Clark Gaulding, San Diego Air Pollution Control District, and Leonard Burtman, San Diego Water Quality Control District. The effects of pollution and smoking were on display all week at the College for Men in the main foyer. The smoking research exhibit included a section of a normal lung, with normal effects of pollution, graphically contrasted with' a lung section from a smoker. The other ill umin.a ted exhioi told the statistical story of the ef- fects of smoking. The speakers series is being held daily at noon in the Student Center. "Life Styles That Tred Easily on the Earth," was the topic of Tuesday's speaker, Dr. John Todd, San Diego State College bioloijy professor. John Milton of the San Diego Zoo spoke yesterday on the role ' of a zoo in· protecting en- dangered species. Two USO students t.ake the platform today Robert Mc- Clure, senior premedical student, and Robert Blum, Stanford graduate doing graduate work here, were to discuss air pollution and overpopulation. John Caragozian, Jan of- ficer, Cleveland National Forest will be the final speaker

quence Pentcco t and a '\anet silk scr cc p1int l\llss Snook i. a member of the apost<'lic secular institute o ur Lady of the Way Fall oo . She i a member of e ollege Art A ociation gf America, Fallbrook Art Association, anct Arlington Art Guild. ', She has exMbit d at Fa I· brook, Rancho Califit,rnla, Rio Hondo College, Saa Pedro :\lumLipal \r Gallery. S Andrew·s P,r101 v at \ a,) er• rmo. and galleries in Los An· geles and ~an Francisco. ~!is~ Snook~ 11lu rated the ew catcclusm "Di. c:ove'ring God's Love," an

KOF CQIFT - The San Dieeo-lmperial Valley Chapter, Knia;hts of Columbus, presented a $550 check to the San Di110 Peace Memorial Committee toward completion of Old Town's outdoor shrine to the Sacred Heart dedicated to world peace. Shown at the presentation in front of the shrine are, left to right. fpJher Alfred Geimer, chapter aplain, Dennis E. Parra, chapter president, and Cdr. Verne R. Hubka, chairman of the l!lffll'lfflttee which spearhead11d erection of the peace memorial. Besides the K of C, other a:roups support- in& the shrine included Lay Apostles of Mary Brotherhood, Society for the Enthronement of the Sacred Heart in the Home and other rtli1iou1 and civic or1aniutions. The shrine is at the corner of San Die10 Av- enuund Twin• Streat on 1rounds of St. Mary's Convent. ;Jd V. ,;,.. J, J () .____

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