News Scrapbook 1968-1969
s .i.i~ , Priests, Students Jailed ~or Sit-I n JERSEY CITY, N.J. (AP) - Police broke up a sit-in t St.. Peter's College. here ycste day, arresting 44 students and fa ul- ty members, including three Catholic pri~sts. Another s1t-m was started in defiance of a court's order. About UJO student8 at the tholic college originally s t in a the office of the school's ex- ecutive vice president to protest a refusal to rehire a t heology professor. Many of these demonstrators left when Supenor Court Judge Robert Matthews ordered an end to the s1t-ih. Thirty-five stu- dents and nine faculty mem- bers, in Iuding the priests. WCl'C arrested when they refused to leave.
USD Speech Team Pla~ess-.2.Hf University or San Diego four- man speech team look second and Uiird place at Southem Oregon College's Invita lional Speech Championships recently. The USD team of Thom Belleperche of La Cresenta and Stephen Maddox of El Centro took second to the Umversily of Nevada. Third place team members were Tom Westfall of Arcadia and James Staunton of San Gabriel Belleperche also won third place in after dinner speaking, said Richard Lott, USD professor of speech. .So~
REPORT CARD School and Youth Notes 4'.-.;tl- Chlef Simeon 0. Adebo, an African diplomat and under secre- tary general and ex ult e director of the United Nations Insti- tute for Tra1mng and Research. will speak to the World Affairs Council of San Diego on '·Education For What?·· Ade o, chief of the Jkoko, Abcotuka and Sowotade tribes in :-0-iger a will speak at luncheon meeting at 12 noon Friday at El Cort , Hotel. SD Dinner to Honor Social Worlr Grads A dmner to honor the fourt h gradua·ing class to receive the \la r In Social Work Degree at San Diego State College will be ld Friday at 6:30 p.m. ilJ Aztec Center on the campus. The din JS being cosponsored liy the San Diego chapters of the 1onal Association of Social Workers and The California So- Vorkers' Organization, the campus Student Social Work iation, and the Social Welfare Club. Fiesta Slated Saturday at UCSD The Associated Students at the University of California at San Diego and the Oceanids, the faculty wives' club, will spon- sor a fie ta Saturday beginning at 1 p.m. in Revelle Plaza on the campus. Booths featuring Mexican food and games of .Mexi- co. and exhibits of Mexican culture will be open. Strolling mari- achis will play throughout the day, and a perform nee by the Esludientina de la Paz, a children's singing group from Ti- juana. will be presented at 2 p.m. The Ballet Folklorico will perform at 4 p.m. A concert by the Baja ~farimba Band at 8 p.m. in the UCSD Gymnasium will highlight the day's activities. The public is in- vited to attend the fiesta. USD Junior Gets Heart Group Fellowship Robert J. McClure, a junior at the University of San Diego, has been awarded a 1969 Student Research Associate FeUow- ship by the California Heart Association. McClure will s~nd 10 weeks at San Diego State college this summer doing r earch. McClure is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray McClure of 1033 J\aranca Ave., El Cajo USIU Student Homed Law Society Official in Britain Myron Nordquist, a ludent at United States International University's California ~• stern School of Law, has been ap- pointed Regional Coordinator in Great Britain for the La1, Stu- dent Progra o he American Society or International Law. Nordquist will begin his assignment in the faU when he be- comes a graduate udent in international law at Cambridge University, England.
•
ancis J.
lost. Rev.
The
, most
o
more than 1,000 p of th m v. 1v
Fu , bishop of the San Die- go Catholic Diocese, returned from a ttlree-v.eek tour of Far East air bases yesterday and expressed admiration for the willingness of U.S. servicemen and theJr dependents to make sacrifices. "I heard no complaints," Bishop Furey said. "The men were anxious to get the war over with and go home, but that was no complaint." Aids Chaplains Bishop Furey, 11ho made the tour as technical ad1· ser to the Air Force chief of chap- lains, adm101stered the sacra- ment of conf1rmat1on to Air Force personnel and their de- pendents. He estimated he confirmed
and children of
· tz Slated To Speak On Campus So. <'.At-,.a IJ.l.;,'a .JJ, l~r,J W. Willard Wirtz, Secretary of Labor under Pres ident Lyndon Johnson, will be the ma in speaker a t the June 12 meeting of the San Diego Chapter of the I ndus t r ial Relations Research Associa tion in More Hall of the University of San Diego School of Law. Top labor and JT1anagement officials of the San Diego area will be present at the meeting of the newly formed chapter , said interim president, J oseph A. Sinclitico, J r ., dean of the USD School of Law. lRRA works for un- derstanding in the field of in- dustrial rela lions, Sinclitico said, and seeks to improve teaching in the field. George Shultz, Secretary of Labor, was IRRA president before taking his post in President Nixon's cabinet. Wirtz was a ppoi nted Secretary of Labor by President J ohn F. Kennedy, after servi ng 20 months as Under Secretary of Labor and continued as secreatary under President Johnson. Wirtz has taught law at the University of Iowa and North- , westPrn University and was also· clive as a tabor arbitrator befor becoming Secretary of Labor·.
Air Force servicemen. The bisliop said he dined with non-Catholic chaplains at the various air bases. Asked About Unrest "The most common ques- tion I was asked was about campu - unrest at home," he .aid. "I wish I had the an- swer." B i s h o p Furey flew more than 25,000 miles m his tour. The air bases he visited were H i c k a m in Hawaii; Kanlo, :11ura, Fu ch u. Green Park, Yokota, Misawa. Itazuke and Hakata in Japan; Naha on Okmana; Chin Chuan Kang on r' o r m o s a; Clark in the Philippines and AnderEen on Guam.
l~ s7;;{~~ Convention :\lore than 2,000 delegates and their families are expect- ed to attend the annual state convention of the Knights of Columbus, May 29 through 31 at El Cortez Hotel. ,\ civic reception for the convenhon w i I I be held at noon May 30 in the Century Room of El Cortez Hotel. Welcoming the Knights and their f a m i I i e s "ill be the :\lo t. Rev. Francis J. Fure) , bishop of the San Diego Catho- lic Diocese; James S. Copley, representing Gov. Re a g an; :.\layor C u r r a n; Supervisor Jack Walsh: Reps. Bob Wil- son, R-San Diego, and Lionel Van Deerlin, D-San Diego; State Sen. James R. :\lills, D- San Diego, and Wadie P. Ded- deh , D-Chula Vista. The 500 voting delegates to the convention will elect state officers to take office July 1.
REPORT CARD School and Youth Notes 'T~ s-;1,/,9
•
IBishop furey ells Of Far East Tour The Most Rev. Francis J ..f'ur- "Even then, ' he said, 'II ey, bishop of the San Diego heard no complainL~." I Catholic diocese, returned yes- ~n Guam, the bishop, w~ose terday from a three-week tour: ratmg on the lour was equiva- of Far East air hases with ad-1 lent lo that of a thre~-st_ar gen- miration "for the ~illingness of era!, at_tendcd a bnef_mg f?r our men and their dependents to filers_ gomg out on bombmg mis- make sacrifices " swn m the war zone. Afterward, rd no ·c m 1 • t ,, h he said Mass for the success of At all the bases he visited he get the war over with a nd go said, he had lunch or dinner home- but that was no com- with non-Catholic' chaplains- plamt" · "and tile most common question _The most poign~nl part of his I was asked was abut the c;am- lnp, the bishop said, came on a pus unrest at home. I wish I flight from Manila to Guam had the answer." "I h . , ea O P am ~• e the mission. I said. 'The men were_ anxious to
l•.l>MU 'D ALTER Iii paper amon • winner
HOJIE AGAIN - The Most Rev. Francis J. Fm·ey, center, bishop of the San Diego Catholic Diocese, is welcomed home at Lindbergh Field by Msgr. John Purcell, left, diocese T,i. 4-c,~~ ¢~,
vicar general, and the Rev. Roger Lechner, his secretary. The bishop returned yesterday from a three- week tour of Air Force bases in Far East to give confirmations.
By JOH, . KE!'i', EDY
Students are submerged in the grind of final exams this week. Seniors are finding it somewhat difficult to keep their minds on the books as the June 1 graduation gets closer. The first Joint Honors Convocation for the College for Men and the
,
transport carrying
a
aboard
CONFIR'.\IED 1,000 This was the fiPst such trip by Bishop F,'Jrey, who carried the designation of technical adviser lo the Air Force chief of chap- lains. He logged about 25,000 miles tn administer the sacra- ment of, confirmation to Air Force personnel and their de- pendents. ·He estimated that he con- firmed, "well over 1,000 per- sons." mostly wives and child- ren of the men. He visited ijickam in Hawaii; Kanto • Mura, Fuchu, Green Park, Yokota', Misawa, Itazuke and Hakala in Japan; Naha on ' Okinawa; Ching Chuan Kang on Taiwan; Clark in the Philip- ' pines, and Andersen on Guam. MASS IN TOKYO In the Philippmes, he incurred , a case of laryngitis ,that lasted a week. In Tokyo, he celebrated Mass at a Catholic Japanese convenl. The nuns sang in Japanese and English, and afterward, he said, "they handed me a guit;ir- so 1 sang 'Santa Lucia' in Italian." Bishop Furey was greeted on his return at Lindbergh Field by Msgr. John Purcell, vicar gen- eral of the diocese; Father I. Brent Eagen, the chancellor; rather Roger Lechner, his see- r tary and his niece, Ann Bridg- One of the things the bishop rt Dougherty.
wounded men from Vietnam.
College for Women was held Friday. Topping the award re- cipients was Eric Johnson, as- sociated student body presi- dent and a senior b i o I o g y major who received the Charles E. Franklin Award as the most outstanding student at the College for Men. Mary Ellen Esterling, a senior Eng- lish major at the College for Women, won the most out- standing student award for the College for Women. Pequod, the literary maga- zine of the university's College for Men will be distributed to the university community Fri- day. This year's Pequod marks the fourth anniversary of the magazme of p o e t r y, fiction,
Law Stud nt Elected
Richard Spc:ire, a ·tud ·nt 11t United St11tc Jnternat10nal Uni- \ r; ly' California We t rn School or Lav., has bPen elected national secretary of the A. octalion of Student 1nlernationa1 Law Sue-I t1r Spe r v. 111 be- ork:ng in mtemallonnl affairs for th gmernmcnt m Wa h1ngton this -iimer Scholastic Medo/ Won h:irl s F Merrill, Ill on or Ir and rs of 2.124 l'cnro !it., a stud•·nt at the Unlv 11 of Arizona at Tur on, has be n awarded the mencan Legion Scholastic Ex- cellence Cold \ledal. Terrill, a grad•iat of Clairemu11t lligh School , is majoring in 01 J ntal studie. at the uriVPr~1t .
EDY
JOHN KE
and criticism. Contributions for the magazine are solicited from the stud nts and faculty and from other poets and writers not connected with the school. Paul Carey Reid, a senior Eng- lish maior. is editor of this year's Pequod. Dr. Lee F. Gerlach, professor of English, serves as the faculty advisor for the publi- cation. The approval of a new academic calendar for the two col- leges next year has brought about the development of a three- week, January intercession. Students will have an opportunity to pursue special studies and earn three units of credit during the January 5 to January 28 period.
---st
I p to
t air bases by his nircc A
. Bishop Francis J. Furey, <'enter, is w0Jcomed at Lindbergh Field on his return from three-week tour of
Bridi;et Dougherty, and :Msgr..Toun-.mwanted to know was: "How did
do today?''
the Padr
Purcell, diocesan vicur general.
.
S_j/p1/_'-;J
Made with FlippingBook - professional solution for displaying marketing and sales documents online