News Scrapbook 1968-1969

Mon and the Un ive rse fbt cimt Jitga Inion • r, is o ·u ·ey Visits, anish Towns To •· icent nial • • It • • • II ,. t

Gurnaer S1>ealis. On Subversion At USD David Emerson Gumaer, who claims to be a former campus undercover oper~- tive. will speak at the Uru- versity of San Diego tomor- row. , While working as a police undercover agent he was as- . signed to rnfiltrate subver- sive activities of the so-called New Left '.\1ovement in the United State~. ~or two years he was a member of the Communist youth apparatus. Gumaer now speaks across the nation sponsored ,by TACT 1Truth About Civil Turmoil . He will show how the C-Ommunists are concen- trating their effort on youth, particularly on .campuses, ac- cording to TACT. His talk on the SD cam- pus will be at More Hall at noon, --,--------;-- . USD Group 1 Plans Ga la I University of San Diego Auxiliary members will spon- sor a cocktail gala and cruise of Mis ion Bay aboard the 1 showboat Bahia Belle, on the evening of Oct. 24. 1 Boarding will be from the Bahia Motel dock with cast- off time scheduled for 7 p.m. 'Ihe evening will get ,.. under way with a "Sundown- - er" featuring hot hors d'oeu- vers and cocktail . Dancing \\ill be to the Frankie Reed orche tra !rs. George ~lcClenaban of La Jolla, chairman of the 1went, has asked lllrs. George 'W. \\'olfe of Clairemont to be her co-chairman J\lr. and ~lrs. John A. Waters, .Tr. ha, e been appointed chair- man of hosts and hostesses. Invited to assist the Waters in welcoming guests aboard are !\lessn. and Mmes. R. E. Archibald, Leo J. Durkin, S. Falck Nielson, Charles J. Riz. zo and Brig. Gen. and !\!rs. Edwin C. Ferguson. Others Include Col. and '.!rs. • · eil R. '.\lacintyre, 'ilessrs. and • Imes. John F. -canlon, John T. Scmll. Rol>- e ·t V. exton and Ross G. '!harp. Reservations will close Oct. 2-0 according to Mrs. Wolfe, reservations chainnan. SENTINEL

Inter-Religious Institute To Meet Thursday San Diego's religious leaders will attend the second annual Inter-Religious Institute Thurs- day at the College for Men, Uni- ' versity of San Diego. Five hundred persons arC! ex- pected lo attend. Theme of the institute will be "The Religious Community and Racism," First session will be at 3 p,m. The Most Rev. Francis J. Fu- rey, bishop of the San Diego Catholic Diocese, will welcome the ass em b I age. '!'be Rev. James H. Oxley, pastor r Be- thel AME Church, will be the key!lote speaker. Alter panel discussion of the the , the conferees will divi,de into ·30 inter-racial, inter-faith study groups. Dinner will .be served at 6: 30 in the college dm- ing halls. At th.e evening session, start- ing at 8, reports of group study will be made. Rabbi Joel S. Goor, spiritual_ leader of Temple Beth Israel, will summarize. The Rev. :Welvin IL Harter, pastor of Pioneer United Chu,rch or Christ will lead ecumenical worship to close the institute. Herbert J. Solomon, chairman or the San Diego Region, ,Na- tional Conference Clf Christians and Jews will be chairman of the aftern'oon session, the Rev. Heber H. Pitman, presiden~ of the San Diego County Council of Churches, of the evenmg ses- sion, , The institute will be sponsored by the NCCJ in cooperation with the church council, the Ameri- can Jewish Committee, the San Diego Catholic Diocese ~nd the Southeast Ministerial Alliance. Bishop Back - FromSpain The small Spanish town of Petra no 7 has a collection of e m b I e m s from San Diego presented by the Most Rev. Francis J Furey, bishop of the San Diego Catholic Dio- cese. It is only right that Petra should have reminders of San , Diego, because it is the town where Father J unipcro Serra was born. Father Serra found- ed the San Diego Mission in 1769 Bishop Furey returned yes- terday from visiting Petra, a town of about 3,000 people, (Cont. 011 Page B-6, Col. 1)

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DATEBOOK 3Candidates To Conclude Series At USD Three candidates will speak at the University of San Diego this week to conclude USD's political forum scries spon- sored b1 the Political Science Club. All talks are in More Hall at the USD law schooL Rep. Bob Wilson, R-San Die- go, speaks at 12:15 p.m. to- morrow. H,, seeks re-election in the 36th Congressional Dis- trict. Alan Cranston, U.S. Sen- ate Democratic n o m i n e e, speaks at noon Wednesday. At ll·30 a.m. Thursday, the speaker will be Rep. Lionel Van Deer Ii n, D-San Diego, seeking re-election in the 37th Congressional District. After the e I e c t i on s, the black vote will be analyzed by Archie Moore, former world boxing champion and founder of the (ABC) Any Boy Can program. He will speak at noon, Nov. 12. * * * Rep. Bob Wilson, R-San Die- go, will make two campaign talks Tuesday. At noon, he will address San Diel!o City College Young Republians in t h e school's admjnis ation building. He will address em- ployes or Sears at 8 a. . at the San Diego store king lot. On T h u r s d a , will speak to the Downtown Opti- mist Club at a noon tun on at the University Cl b. * * * City Councilman Floyd :\lor- row, Democratic candidate in the 39th State Senatorial Dis- trict, will speak at coffees at 8 p.m. Tue dav in the home of l\Ir. and .\Yrs, Harold Tracy, 9518 Fermi Ave., and at 2 p.m. Wed nesday in the home of Mrs. H. Jesse Bee!<, 4458 Muir St. At 7:30 p.m. Wednes- day, hr wi speak at San Die- go State in the Social Sciences Building, e ·onnmics depart- ment. * .. .. * Henry Boney, chairman of the county Board of Supervi- sors, will d• cuss county ballot proposihons before the Na- tional City Republican Wom- en's Club at noon tomorrow in Church, 521 E. Eighth St., Na- tional City. * * Robert Dent, seekiog re-el-

Candidate Tells Students at USO Of Aid Proposal CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

y terday peaking at various •ations in the Los Angf'lea a. He wound up the day by ttendmg II prore •sional ha - kethall gumc at the Forum in Inglewood. Late yesterday arternno11 he met with leaders of the cgro community Jn a bowling alley 111 Compton at a conference i1rranged by th i\"egro Elect- ed Officials C u n c i I. Leon Ralph, i',;cgro mcmb r of the state A embly, presided Approach 'cen Kt·y At the informal gathering, I Cnmslon said h1• w11l \\Ork hard lo cnlargr: the pres nt !lead Start program to mak 1t av,1ilable to disadvantaged t·hildren from the age or four on, but ad the program need n w and fresh approaches to the· problems faced by minorl- t children . He al~o said he was c plor- g the poss1h1hty or privately mancrd t·hool for minority children m their own neigh- borhoods. to provide the kind f experimental edur.at1on process which are not possi- ble in public schools. Cran ton, w ho cla 1hed h I ms c I f as conservative 111 money matters, liberal in hu- man matters, said he would hkc to re college education available to every child who is capable of college level study. Education Dlscu ·. d In a discussion of b 1 a c k power, Cranston said h inter- preted 1t to mean th effort to provide proper cducahon for all so that blacks may par- t1c1patr in the main stream of life "T h s meeting r pre. ents the real b I a c k power " he s,11<1. "\1en and women who ,,rec rablc of contactmg )Our own pcopl(', and of accom- pli hin fine things." E a r I i c r, in answer to a question, Cran. ton said he ob- Ject d to the appearances of E Id r id g e Cleaver Black P,1nlhcr Ira er, on the cam- p cs of the University o Ca_l- i r n i a, caus • Cleaver 1s 1 -mouthed u convicted inal and facing additional t hearings. Cleaver in Comments At the ame time, I can d rstond why the faculty in- t ':um. It rtamly 1s bet to learn a out the Black h r move ent from one I own men, but I believe could find a better choice 'leav('r," Cranston said. nston be an his day ear- ly 1n S n Francisco. In Los Angeles, e ,made two appear- ance at Hughe Aircraft Co. plants. I . Devoting much of his time to the needs of improved po- l i c e departments, Cranston won appla e by sµgge ting private i n du try, such as Hughes. be gi contracts to build small, 1 ng range two- wav radio co munications for officers to frc them from the nder Study Hughes has such a two-way radio now under study, and the factory workers refer to it as the Fu12-Com proJect. Cranston spo of the needs for control or th causes of air pollution as tood in an open courtyard beneath smog- gy skies, for the need of noise a b a t e m e n t a Jet aircraft whined low overh ad. lie warned his listeners that his opponent, Max Rafferty, will take the mistakes he ha made In the California educa- tion system with him to Wash ingt11n if Rafferty would wm Tuesday's election. Opponent Criticized "I tru t that all parents and all teac~rs are fully aware ' that Raffrrty would take to w, hmgton hi policies of fail- ure and n glect. The children and schools of California still would suffer under his heavy, clumsy hands, and so would all the children and schools of our nation," he id. At the Culver City Hughes plant, Cranston told a lur.ch- break audience of about 1,000 plant w o r k c I"' that he and Rafferty differ greatly in their view the war in Vietnam. lie c I r g c d that his oppo• n nt's policies Muld lead to the drafting of as many as 3- mi!lion m n and po iblv lead to th use of atomic weapons. ncces ity of the police car Project t ckmg close to

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SOUVENIR-The Most Rev. Franci .T. Fure)", bbhop of the San Diego Catholic Diocese, di spl f:Yli a memento from his visit to Petra on the Spa nish i~land of Majorca. The town is the birt(1plac:c _of Fathel" Junipero Serra, founder of San Diego Mis- sion. Bishop Furey elt \Emblems in Spain CONTINUED FROM PAGE B·l

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patron saint. Bishop Fu rey cel- ebrated Mass at the tomb of the saint. Bishop Furey also celcbrat- Mass at Palma, Spain, and v isticd St. Francis Seminary where ;Father Serra studied for the p icsthood, and later taught. " A musical g o u p, Pueri Cai1lores, pre led a concert in honor or our group in the main auditorium of the senu- nary," 1s b op Furey ·aid. "And we all thought what a wonderful thing it would be if we could bav this group vi:;'lt San Diego for our bkentemli- al." B i s h o p Furey i lew ram New York to Madrid on Iberia Air Li nes' inaugural DC8 jet flight between the two cifi(S. His flight was part of a pro- gram to promote vi its by Spanish tourists to San Diego during the year-long 200th an- niversary celebration here.

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ection in the Third Supervi- sorial District, wi!J discuss his candidacy at 8 p.m. tomorrow before the Spring Valley Com- munity Council, old Chamber of Commerce building, 9062 Memory Lane, and at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at a !'ally. at 2876 El Cajon Blvd. ,. * * City Councilman M i k e Schaefer, Republican nominee in the 37th Congressional Dis- trict, has scheduled two Chula Vista appearances Friday. He will speak to employes of the Sears store in Chula Vista shopping center at 8:30 a.m., and to students at Southwest- ern College at 11 a.m. * * * Rep. Lionel Van Deerlin, D- San Diego, will address the American Institute of Banking at 8 p,m. tomorrow at the Hanalei Hotel, Mission Valley. At noon Wednesday, he will address a l u n c h e o n of the League of Democratic Women at the U.S. Grant HoteL * * * Assemblyman Pete Wilson, .R-San Diego, will speak on be- half of the Nixon-Agnew cam- paign at a coffee in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Moore, 5127 Bixel St., at 10: 15 a.m. tomorrow. He will dis- cuss the GOP platform at 3 p.m. b e for e the Associated Women Students at San Diego State in the Aztec Center. * * * Assemblyman John Stull, R-Leucadia, will address the Independent Insurance Men's Association at 6 p.m. tomor- row at Marty's Inn, Ocean- side. y

off Photo Sistet· , ancy Morrrs. president of t_he University r San •Diego College for Women, g1v~~ th~ .R:e~. Florentino Idoate a tour of the SC'hool 8 fac1ht1es. I 0 ·I 9' . <, 9 5 t>,r&-o...._Auxi I iaries U.t<\ : 0"

A-5 Unity lor ChristicinsCa led Unit's Goal

Are Honored B Mercy •.,,.., • S,11,ttr.• ..,~,.. Members of the Mercy Hos- pital Auxiliary were gue.sts of the Sister8 of Mercy at a din- ner in the hospital auditorium for the first general meet ing of the season. Mrs. M. Emmett Moran, pr esident of the auxil- iary, introduced th.e gue ts of honor Mrs. William Hazzard,,;hair- man of the award s commit e, presented the women wh re- ceived ,their a wards from Sister M. P lacida, hospital ad m inistrator. Sister M. Pl acida expressed apprecia- tion a nd gratitud e for herself and on behalf of the staff and patients for the many hours of volu nteer work the auxiliaries had given to the hospital. She praised the time and services volunteered as specia l activi- ties above those which the hos- pital coul d render. Awards given auxiliary · members represent recogni tion for accumulated 100, 200, 300 and 400 hours of service, Pins are awarded fo r 500 hours with a bar designating each additional 500 hours. Mrs. F ran k J. La ntry, Mrs. Wilfred Lau r endea u, Mrs. Robert Neyenesch, Mrs. Du- gald L. Quiner, Mrs. Eric Whitman, and Mrs., War ren Wieand receive" ard s for an accumulated 28,773 hours of service,

Demo Urges Viet Pullout By BETTY ,PEACH The U n i t c d States should withdraw its combat troops from Vietnam and equip the S o u t h Vietnamese to fight their own war, Alan Cranston, Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate, said here today. Cranston addressed students at the Univcr. ity or San Diego Law Scboo), as one of three appcrances m San Diego to- day. The U.S. should p r o v id c modern we a po n s and adv- anced military training to en- able South Vietnam to "take over the fight on equal terms" with North Vi tnam, Cranston said. "The South Vietnamese gov- ernment will n ver get the support of ii people or devel- op the politic abilit neces- sary to its o ·n defense as Jong as they t ink U.S. troops will be there orever defend- ing them," Cr a nston said. "We must pull combat troops out of Vietnam as fast as we can do it with honor and con- science." Cranston spent a busy day (Cont. ou Page A-9, Col. 4) TR l 13/JJJE 1 o/3.1/451

The ecumenical movement is aiming for more than un- derstanding among Christians, says the Rev. John R. Port- man, director of the Ecumeni- . cal center at the University of San Diego. It reaches, he said, beyond understanding f o r Christian unity without uniformity. "St. Paul speaks of church- es, not the ch u r ch," said Father Portman in an inter- view. Center Dedication Set The Ecumenical C e n t e r, formed last March by the San Diego Roman Catholic Dio- cese, will be dedicated at 4 p.rn. tomorrow with a number of area churches represented. The Most. Rev. Francis J. Furey, bishop of the San Die- go Diocese, will lead the cere- mony. The center was formed to foster Christian unity, Father Portman said, because "the division among Christians is clearly contrary to the will of Christ." Common Bond Seen One common bond all Chris- tians can share today, he said, is a concern for personalism and individual ·responsibility, the idea that individuals must assume responsibility for their actions. He said that while Chris- tians have for centuries been suspicious of one a n o t h e r, their differences, even in dog- ma, are often less sharp than previously considered. Some dogma, like papal in- fallibility, may remain a bar- rier to Christian u n i t y for some time, but other dogmat- ic differences s e e m to be more a p p a re n t than real, Father P ortman suspects. Conference Report Cited He noted that in 1967 a con- ference of Luther an and Cath- they were in remarkably close olic theologians

to keep p r i e s t s abreast of what they can do in the light of Vatican II, Father Portman said. It is now possible, for exam- ple, for a marriage between a Catholic and non-Catholic to take place before a non-Catho- lic clergyman, Father Port- man said. He said this is p o s s i b 1 e when the clergyman is Fath- er, brother or uncle of the non-Catholic party. The Center is also sponsor- ing an ecumenical workshop here Nov. 13 for clergymen of all faiths. It is talking with the San

Diego County C o u n c i 1 of Churches about membership in the council and it works closely with the local branch of the National Conference of Christians and J ews. Two Priests Meet Father P or t m a n and the Rev. Laurence P. Dolan of St. Charles Church in Imperial Beach meet periodically with non-Catholic clergymen to dis- cuss theological questions. The Center is also consult- ing with the North Clairemont Distriot of Ch u r ch Women United about the latter 's invi- tation to admit Catholic wom- en as members.

Works with youths City rlonors USD Trainer For Service Willie '.\ioore, athletic train- er for the University of San Diego College for Nlcn, was honored by the city yesterday for exceptional service to Project Summertime. l\Iayor C u r r a n presented Moore a city certificate of ap- preciation in ceremonies in City Hall. Moore was coordinator for a swimming program in· which the university made its facili- ties available to underprivi- legedy oungsters participating in Project Summertime, the citywide program of work and recreation for youth. Ap ,-ctmatcly 1,500 young people r eived instruction in swimming and lifeguard tech- niques at the university dur- ing the summer. "Next summer we hope to take more kids," Moore said in accepting the honor from Curran

REV. JOHN PORTMAN Common Bond of Concern of the Eucharistic sacrifice of the Mass. "Despite all remaining dif- 1 ferences iu the ways we speak and think of the Eucharistic sacrifice and our Lord's pres- ence in His supper," their re- port stated, "we are no longer able to regard ourselves as divided in the one, holy, cath- olic and apostolic f a i t h on these two points." The report was issued by representatives of the U.S.A. National Committee of the Lu- theran World Federation and the Bishops' Committee for Ecumenical and Interreli- gious Affairs. New Guides Given The San Diego Ecumenical Center is run by a commission of five Catholic priests, a Lu- theran minister and three law persons. It has undertaken a number of projects, one of w · is to

Sharing Problems The decision of the University of San Diego to postpone the opening of its spring semester for a week to accom- modate students who might be turned away from overcrowded San D i e g o, State r e f 1 e c ts the concern that has made San Dif'go great. IL is a magnanimous offe1· by the stu- dents, faculty and 1 administration of USD. Unfortunately, however, it is not a total solution to the problem. USD, although its heart is in the right place, can accommodate only a few h u n d r e d' more students. Thousands may be twned away at State. San Diegans should applaud the p:ri- vate college and tw'l'l with renewed v i.,- 01" to solution of t he problem s of i s public institution. LIV!oN ijs/4ez Nove.m

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or Southeast Sanlblack and while recipient f~milies Logan Heights area, USO coeds . !and men from three USO fra- ts will ternitie~ IHII develop friendships t d

A program to aid the undDerprt- ~.togro vileged children of San iego . ie and Tijyana has been started bylm th eir homes. . The efforl mvolve~_ ~ulormg,l,eac b111lrling a mid~cal ~lm~c III bi~: t~!~a They the University or San Diego. · t

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