News Scrapbook 1962-1964
TH E s uwait (USD)
PAGE 3
FRIDAY, MAY 25, 19b2
PAGE 2
THE NEWS
Assembly ... (Continued from Page 1) mlnary, the junior seminary, was started. In 1957, both eminaries mo,·- d to the campus of USO. Mon- lgnor Bergin aid 1:1ore than 25 per cent of the pne t. in San Diego' Diocese are alumni. of the _emlnary here. It was also announced at this a,~ mbly that Bishop Buddy had been named honorary presi- dent of the University of Alcala In Spain. USD's campus _ l named in honor of the Spanish eity of Alcala, where St. Didacus (San Diego) labored. It has been said that your's is a dying world. You are wit- nesses of the expiration of the noblest civil society in the his- tory of man, the American Re- public. It is tragic, because it need not be. You graduates possess the key. Your Catholic education virtually contains the salvation of our collapsing cul• turc. The time of contempla- tion is past; you must translate your knowledge into action. These years are called por- tentous and foreboding. You Jive in mortal fear of the enemy, and, with pitiful desperation, commend your survival to the . tate. There is no answer forth- coming no change. only grow- ing co;fu ·ion. Bombs and miss- les offer no permanent security, nor ran alliances, treaties, diplo- mnts. settlements, bluffs. The peace which you seek comes from a vital, militant faith, whic-h ls found only in the heart of man. As Catholic university gradu ates, you must be cruclati, cross- bearers. You must rekindle the apostolic flame, and re-estab- lish the age of faith. Follow the example of your heroic ances - tors, Godfrey, Adhemar, and Tancred; lead all Christian men again on a great crusade. Be Jerusalemites; accept no- th ing but the certain and true path. Yours is no greater strug• gle than was theirs, and the price is less. They fought across thousands of miles of unknown and hostile land. They died in the dust of Doryleum and be- fore the walls of Antioch, be- cause it was the Will of God. Your's is the same task. COMMENT By John Wickersham
CRITICS
Library Adds New Serv·ce
OMNIBUS By Jim Crowley
Don't Let Us Down The Ne s appe red la_t \ ·eek for the fir -t time. Right now you hold in your h nd the ~econd i . uc, and you are probably thinking of a third and fourth L ·uc. The News ant- you to keep on thinking about this third or fourth i ·uc. eanwhile, we would like to thank tho e \\ ho ha •e helped to inaugurate thi · pap r-faculty, admini tration, ·tudent and advertisers. The reception of the paper by the admini tration and faculty ha been mo:t h artening. \ 'e hope to retain their ·upport in our future attempts. Professor. have continued to how a great interest in The News, mentioning it fayorably in the classroom. And most of all. the students at U D have shO\ •n a great inter- t In the paper. Without the continued interest and help from the ad- mini tration, faculty and students of USD, The News will expire. But we arc sure that this \\'ill not happen. Next fall will see the tart of a new and better year for USD and The News. We ask for your continued support and interest in making The News a success in the issues to come. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR EDITOR:
ode U
The Winter's Tale, by William hakespeare, was presented at the College for Women on Fri• day, May • and Sundar, la. 6. It was one of the l t plays that Shake peare wrote, and probably rontains his vi ·ion of human life. Thi' play began ,\1th an E'. ·cel Iently portrayed s ene depicting the abondonment of a child by David Hinajo and introduced the ensuing comical scenes with the appearance of the h<'ar, Paul Iajkut After a brief intl'rlude by the verse-speaking choir, the main body of the play follow d. The familiar face of Joe Gil• Ion as the hepherd opened the festivitie. , and a humorous, al- most slap-stick encounterence, of the Clown and Autolycus created spontaneous laughter in a delightfully receptive audl- nce. The melodramatic balcony incident between CamlJlo, Roger Row, and Polixene , Dennis Adams, although lacking sob- riety, restored the action to ser- iousness, If only for a short time. The play progressed slowly until the court scene of King Leontes, played ironically, by Bill Fitzgerald. In this scene, the audience realized their in- vestment in the excellent ability of Susan Fernandez, who was displayed in the type-cast part of Paulina. The closing present- ed a tableau of all centered on the small but unHying part of Hermione, the Queen of Leontes, aptly played by Susie Farrell. The production was spiced throughout with the singing of Shaele Flaherty and a quartet of madrigal singers. Fill-in parts ranged from a collie dog to Bev- erlee Cendall (who would rather dw than spell her name with a "y"). The organization exeprienced some difficulty in getting off the ground, and one of the longer though unimportant parts of a lover was supplied by Chuck Donnelly. May we look forward to next year's Romeo and Juliet with as much anticipation? ADVISE & CONSENT "The pending business is the nomination of Robert A. Leffing- well to Secretary of State. Will the Senate advise and consent to this nomination?" This siln- ple statement in Allen Drury's Advise and Consent (the movie will be released in June) sud- denly sets in motion the diverse forces that si.de for or against the nominee and that, like the maddeningly slowly moving Senate, take all 616 pages to complete. In an authentic portrait of Capitol Hill and Washington so- cial life, Drury has peered through the smoke-filled com• mi.ttee rooms and exposed the bitter conflicts of the Senate. Here, he has probed in fascina- ting, though wordy detail, the minds of the statesmen, the old- timers, the "opportunists and idealists." Despite any political dirt injected in his novel, how- ever, he always leaves an aura of forgiveness for these men- some honest, some scrupulous, some competent, some sinister- but all brought together in one place, under one flag and God, and for the most part dedicated to something called freedom and the rights of man. The novel is set in some in- definite post-Eisenhower per- iod and yet the president must be FDR. The other characters cannot be pinpointed (he al- ludes to over 100), a case of now you guessed, but guess again. I found myself w r i t i n g real names next to the ficitious ones in the book, The highlighted figures, each
son, an Intelligent, capable, and pra ctical man, who i not above a little di hone ty to see the nominee confirm d; Seab Cool- ey, a consi'nathe enator from South Carolina full of craft and cunning, equally dl•tennlncd in hi· wily roof-rai Ing ways to . e th nomin defeated; Brig- ham nderson, a young up-and- coming pre idential a pirant, who finds that a hidden seg- ment of hi pa I e. ·po d to ruin his career; and Orrin Knox a cantankerou man of great integrity, who adds the final touch to the unravelling drama . And son on it goes, this monu - mental maehlnE' called the U.S. government, carrying its coun- try's hope in "the kindly, plea- sant, gr<> nlng land about to learn whether history still had a place for a nation so strangely composed of great ideals and uneasy comproml. e." MOVIES All Fall Down (John House - man; M-G-M) . Take one Eva Mnrie Saint, one Warren Beat- ty, one Karl Malden, one An- gela Lansbury, onC' Brandon de WiJde, give them a producer like John Houseman, a script by William Inge from a best- ~<'lling novel by James Leo Her• lihy, put them together on an M-G-M lot, and what emergC'S should be exciting, first-rate drama with a punch. What should, and what docs eventually emerge Is two very different things. What could have been an intense, probing analysis of a frustrated, blc£>d• ing American family, turns out to be a C'asual peek, and equal- ly casual excursion, into sheer boredom. What could have been a serious American film, a pic-- ture in the tradition of France's New Wave film movc>ment, Is in the end a haH-hearted, feeb• le attempt at art, and an over- whE'lming successful attempt at commercialism. Just because th film was shot in black and white do s not make it art. The film is generally faith• ful to the Herlihy novel, al- though the Inge script plays up the debauchery but none of the humor of the book. It tells the story of the Willard family: Pa- pa (Malden) drinks; Mama (Lansbury) Is overly, overly- protective with her two sons, es- pecially Berl-bert (Beatty); son Clinton (De Wilde) and family friend, Echo (Miss Saint), have one thing in common with the rest: they all fall down in lov- ing adoration to Beri-beri.
now offering
The library tud nts a n
!though
fe v month o th Departm nt pub!L h d a d ment which they dubio Jy titl- ed, Freedom From Wm . and it I this piere of tripe \\hlch I wl. h to di t In thi column. a ub-titl the . tat Depart- ment ha rall d the pamphlet the United tat ' plan for com- plete disarmament in a PEACE- FUL \\Orld ( p · min . The authors state In the pre- amble of th declaration of di-- arm ment that th<' goal of the nited ~tate I a "fr <', cure, a nd peaceful world" of indepen- dent ~tale: which adh r to a t or common standard of ju_- tl . Sounds great! HoWe\'E'r, tlo s this Include those two great ·t of penCf"lovlng coun- trie.·, thE' Union of SovlE't So- riali.st Republics and the Peo- ple's Republic of China? If o, J ft'<'! that the author·' defini- tion of free and justice do dil- f<'r .eriou ·Jy with mine. Further on, they state that we are to live in a world where "adjustment to change takC's place in accordance with the principles or the United Na• tions." Now I ask, aren't the principles of the United States good enough for American citi- zens? Must we go to a godless body in order to determine what Is the just road to follow? If so, then blame the apathetic Am• Prican citizenry. As objectives of this program they demand "the disbanding of all national armed forces and the prohibition of their re-es- tablishment in any form what- soever, other than those requir- ed to preserve Internal order and for contribution to a United Nations Peace Force." Anyone care to ask the Secretary of De- fense to write an epitaph to the Armed Forces of the United States? I certainly do not, nor does the Idea of having an arm- ed military unit of the same :\longolian police that intC'rven- e(I in Hungary in United States interest me. If this !
- rvice
re!eren
del nited El Cortez
Fr. hnrl . Doll n, director of , announced la t week Commerce Cle rl.ng , Inc. (CCH). publisher of • r port , which will to ha,T the mo t up-to-da < infor- mation on federal tax reports. CCH will be co-.;tlng the li-· br I') about a year, an_d \\ ill be invaluable to all bu 1- n administration majors, par- ticularlv tho In the accounting field . • Dr. T. Hillard Cox, chairman of the busJn :s administration and economics department, said the d partmc-nt had wanted these rt'.fnence works for a long time and wa happy to have them. '·It was 1r. !1,1artlnelli who or- dered the books," Cox said, "so he should get the credit." Iar- tinclli, an a istant professor of business admi.nistratlon, is cur- rently t aching a federal tax cour_e at the College for Men. CCH gives . peclal help on _r~v- enue ruling., gives full, off1c1al texts of pertinent new federal court decisions on income tax and publishe weekly analyses of the Issues in newsworthy pe- titions pending before the tax court, Too, it kPcps abreast wit!\ the captial changes for comput- ing tax on investment Income, thus keeping the service up-to-· date. The CCH has been used by leading tax men throughout' the country according to a re- port recently published by the company. CCH provides "com- pact time-saving and conven- ient' service to a ll who u se it,"' the report said. Father Dollen said that books had not yet arrived, but would be ready for u. e this summer. Gavel Club Loses At Pasadena Back from their two-day ex• cursion to West Point Qua lifier Tournament held a t Pasadena City College, ::\'lay 4-5, the mem- bers of the Gavel Club who par- ticipated could only sigh and conclude that competition was tougher. The three speakers, Roy Solo- mon, Jim Stoffa, and Jim Crow- ley, came home worn, slightly dejected and with only one ex- cellent certificate won by Solo- mon in exterporaneous speak• ing. This winds up the club's ac- tivities for the year, having par- ticipated in other tourneys at San Diego State, Loyola Univer- sity and University of Califor- nia at Santa Barbara, as well as at the Model United Nations held at the El Cortez Hotel. Hou topi I 1 make it pos dble for tud nt librar It 1 th
a nd dramatic moment . With more than 110 college· u nlver~itie participating from \"E'n western stat D's two rleleg t , G rg, Primov nnd Jim Stoffa, b att,e of a ' a te entry, w re only ab! to ob - aln th . heikdom of Kuwait for r pr · ntation. Sin this nation is not a memb r of the u.• and only maintain an ob n ·or group, our delegate. were faced \'ilh three major ta.ks: 1. To prove Kuwait's l ndepen- di'nc-c of Iraq; 2. To win the votp of the . e- curity council; and 3. To win a two-thirds vote from the General A sembly for adml slon . In four davs of wrangling and ,,(fort anct' through constant lobbying and caucausslng, USO «uc-c-Peded. Thi' International Court of Justice handed down a unani- mous decL«ion (15-0) in uphold- ing Kuwait's independence of Iraq (Univ. of Arizona) , after Kuwait tore Iraq's ca. apart in a speech before the court. In the S curity Council, Ku- wait used several political man- euvers to persuade the U.S.S.R. {Univ. of Oregon) to drop its \'Cto. Kuwait won a unanimous deci ·ion (11-0), a problem which a
JOHN McGEE, sophomore and member of Phi Delta Chi Fratern- ity, enters the convers"tion with students from Nazareth House School. Phi Delta Chi held a picnic for 90 students at Felicita Park in Escondido, April 28.
Editor: We understand that the offi- cials of USD have d clded to eliminate Senior Week. We feel that this is an injustice to those graduating. The graduates have worked hard for their education and they deserve the privileges granted most seniors throughout the country. Senior Week should have been canceled at the be- ginning of the year, or it should go through as planned this year and canceled next year. The administration sh o u 1 d go through with its plans in or- der to be fair to all concerned. Interested Students Editor: I have just received a copy of your first edition of The News from a good friend of mine in your College for Women. As the former editor-in-chief of the student newspaper here at the University of Santa Clara, I would like to take this oppor- tunity to congratulate you and your staff for a job well done. I see from the article on page one that you are a senior. I think that you will be able to graduate with the knowledge that you h ave made a definite contribution to your University. A student newspaper is a very necessary and integral part of any college or university and any school that does not have one is definitely lacking some- thing. But I think that you have now given your school a means of publishing student opinions and controversy as well as stu- dent news. In addition to this, a really student newspaper is the best means of public rela- tions that any school can have because it truly mirrors the type of students who attend that school. So congratulations once again to you, and here's hoping that you get the cooperation you asked for in your editorial. I will be looking forward to your next "fortknightly" (sic p. 2 staff box) newspaper and also to a basketball contest between USD and "nationally-ranked" Santa Clara. Best Regards, Paul Caro
Congratulations! I take pen In paw to praise your laudable en- deavor of May 4 and pray that you continue your fine work In the future. It is about time that the students at USD find out what's going on NOW-not three weeks from now. I will be look- Ing forward to your next edition and those following with inter- est LAMBERT (Editor's Note-We pause to ponder the possibility that may- be lions and other animals do write. If so, we would appreciate a letter from Huey, Louie and Du ey, or even from Yogi, Mickey or Clarabell. Thank you, Lam- bert.) Editor: In your last i sue you devoted a good percentage of the back page t o the varsity baseball team. It is too bad your ap- proach had to be derogatory. I would like to d iscuss the two articles in q uestion and attempt to answer the charges. First of all, t here was the picture of the team with the caption u nderneath, "Because of the season record, members of the team wish to remain anony- mous." This was an outright lie. Our record was 12 wins, 10 loss- es and one tie, which ls far bet- ter than our other varsity teams Second, there was the article by Mr. Juliano. In my opinion, the story was adequately done, but there is a little more to it than just that. I don't believe I saw Mr. Juliano at one game this year. Therefore, his facts are hearsay. One complaint he had was that the administration didn't schedule name colleges (USC, UCLA, Santa Clara, etc.) to lose. Three of the name col• leges we lost to were ranked in the top ten in the nation. USC is defending national champion. We lost to USC, 3-9, UCLA, 2-6 and Santa Clara, 3-4. can you imagine what would have resulted had we played USC or UCLA in football and basketball. Let's be truthful; the baseball diamond is the on- ly place in the world where we can compete with these schools. Sincerely, Terry Lorenz
Orphans Enjoy Delta Chi Picnic Take 96 orphans, Phi D lt.'.1 Chi Fraternity and tlwir date., tons of food, one Saturday, blend In lots o( fun. and what have you but the Nazareth Hou.-e Pirnie, held at Felicita Park, E~ondldo, April 28, un- der the guidanc and spon or- s hip of PDC. Transported in chartered bus- es provided by Phi Delta Chi and His Exc-cl!C'ncy, Bishop harlcs F. Buddy, the orphans e njoyed , elf-devised spy games (on their hosts and ho. tesses), baseball games, hikes to Look- out Point, nml foo
Social Calendar :\1av 2H--U 1iversity Ball-Palm · Room, U S.· Grant Hot I. Formal. :\Jay 27- College for Woml'n Commenc<>ment. o I l ege for Women. .\lay 30-.\1c>morial Day, Univer• sity Holiday. JI.I a y 31- Ascension Thursday, University Holiday. June 1-Univc>rsity Holiday. Jutw 1-8--C'ollegc for !1,1en Ex• aminations. June 8--Scmior Ball for seniors only. June 9-Scnlor-Faculty Softball Game> - University High School at 10 a .m. Junt' 10 -College for Men Bac- calaureate Mass - Im- mnculata at 11 a.m. Ju,w 10-Co!lege for Men Com- menccmC'nt - A le a 1 a Theatre at 4 p.m. CM Starts Tennis Team Sc>vcral College for Men :;tu- dcnts have offered their i;ervices towards starting a tennis team. Although they are not official represent at ivcs of the college as an athletic team, the tennis en- thusiasts this Tuesday took to the courts against a University of California at La Jolla team. Thus, they initiated the first ln- terc-ollegiate tennis match in the CollC'ge for fon's history. Largely responsible for get- ting the tennis team started was Richard Madsen, junior, er for the team. An avid tennis enthusiast, Madsen played ten- nis for SaLnt Ambrose College in Davenport, Iowa, before coming to USO. 1\ladsen lettered in ba ·. ketball here. Philip Woolpert, new athletic director at USD, said the univer- sity would support a tennis team "with tennis shirts and I ,1 who
Live the Faith. The time Is At film's end, Echo commits short, and you will receive but suicide; Mama Is still overly- one chance. It is not a matter protective: Clinton no longer o( taste, nor convenience. When hero-worships Beri-beri; and the hordes of Islam were spill- Beri-beri? Wc>ll, he continues to ing over the Pyrenees and abuse women cruelly, as he has storming the portals of Con- been doing for the past two stantinople, the medieval man hours. did not hesitate. He bartered his The film itself is pure halon- whole life for a red cross on his ey, and not even the better kind tunic, and with singular re - of baloney which is served up solve set to the deliverance of as "adult entertainment." Ac- the Lord's City from the Infidel. tor Beatty acts up a storm of I hot air by looking disgusted . You, too, are ?entlemen war- with the whole thing; Miss n.ors, ~ut the _citadel that you Saint, surely a better actress muS t liberate is the nature of , than this, should return to Is- man, enslaved_ and degraded. rael and "Exodus;" producer Abandon all thmg:' and take ~he Houseman should return to tele- cross, for th ere w~ll bl: n_othmg vision and resurrect Playhouse once th e enemy is ~ithm the 90; and scenarist Inge should wa~ls. You are the picked and either start writing "Return to tr':lmed youn~ men of the Cath- Splendor in the Grass" or go ol~c. community. you are both back to New York. Actors Mal- privileged obligated; d~ not den. De Wilde, and Miss Lans- sully th e pr_iv_il~ge, nor addtcate bury should vow never to make th e responsibility of your Cath- another film. ol!c faith . Unfortunately, the greatest Lead a new crusade, and all tragedy is not the tragedy that good men will follow you. Car- takes place in the film, but ra- ry the field again under the ther that so much talent could Holy Lance, and bear once more be assembled for the film, and in procession around the for- in the end, that so much talent tress of the enemy, the sacred could be and was so easily wast- vessel of truth. Young Catholic ed.
j the student-coach-play- STS Approval
"We are proud of our accom- plishments" said president Joe Nevadomsky, and "we feel that, in one year, we have elevated the prestige of USD on other campuses by our rigorous parti- cipation in these events." Mission Valley Sporting Goods
The fraternity consists of ten tennis balls," but no scholar- members. Officers are Jay Wll- ships would be offered, at lea ·t son, chairman; Joe Wilimck, co- for a couple of years. tar}; and Gary • _forgan, treas- For the coming year, the team urer. George K, 1cs, mathem~- will have a nucleus of five men tics profes or at the college, 1 with at least one year's exprei- faculty advisor. ence. They are Madsen, jun- Sigma Tau Sigma plan - to be- ior Frank Ponce, sophomore gin its first pledge class in lark Saunders, and two fresh- September. The brother· wish to men , Walter Johnson and Fred str s. that this is a service fra- Wellenkemp. Dennis Alevlzon ternity, and only those interest- and Richard Hitt, seniors, help- ed m doing a worthwhile job ed out this year. should consider pledging. H3:3S 331:1.l V HO.l av SIHJ. '!>NIHS z&& I·6 '1'!> s:rq.6!N ADpuns "PAIS: DIJO[ D'J SSlS •A0p.mios ·ADP!,I.l pua}(aaM AI 3A3 zzvr a3oow SlNJSJHd 3SOOH HOOd
YOUR EVERY SPORTING NEED EXPERT RACKET RESTRI NG ING
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THE NEWS Published Fortnightly During t he Scholastic Year by The Asso- ciated Students of The University of San Diego, Alcala Park, San Diego 10, C alifo rnia. Editor .. ... . . ...... ............... ....... .. Bob Keit h Assistant Editor Ra lph Fear Business Manager .. ..... .. .. .. ...... ...... Fred W idmer Sports Editor ..... ............................................. . Dick W ilbur ~hi:r~fot ogr~phe ~·:···:··:.··:.·:::::.·:· .....::::.. ·•·· Ch~~k :~~ed Faculty Moderator . . . . ..... Fr. I. Brent Eagen Reporters: Joe Nevadomski, Jim Stoffa, Sam Juliano, Jerry Sherry, Mike Hughes. •
J. B. BARBER SHOP 4 Barbers
Closed Monday
2351 Linda Vista Plaza
ROBERT'S STORE FOR MEN
American men, by your good and honorable lives, lead us not into a people's paradise, but ra- ther, to the Eternal Jerusalem, wh ich lies beyond a ll t he seas of the earth .
Downtown
5th at " E" St.
the subject of his own book, a re Faith is the great motive pow- the Majori.ty Leader, Bob Mun- er. - Calvin Coolidge
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