News Scrapbook 1968-1969

Bishop f urey N e Texas Archbishop CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 the death of Bishop Buddy, ~larch 6, 1966. Bi hop Furey, who complet- ed a three-week, 25.000-mile t O u r of the Far East Ia t m O n th, s:iid he has m_ixed fl-elings about his a p P o I n t- ment ''I'm orrv to leave my many friends in San Dif'go _bt'.~ happy to go to ~an /ntomo, Bishop Furey said. The peo- ple there are wonderf~l." He said he doesn t know when he will leave San Diego. Throughout his career, Bish- op Furev has been known as a personable and_ tireless work- er. He sen·ed m the Ph1ladel- p ua archdiocese more than 30 ,ears before coming here a!]d a ·quired a reputation for v1g- 1>rou prosecution of rehg10us program . He is noted for his hility to work with la>:men .ind 15 credited with ra1s111g millions of dollars for Catholic dianh1•s Horn m Coal Region , He was born in the co~, mming community of Summit !!ill Pa.. Feb. 22, 1905. He a_t- tended Coaldale, Pa , pubhc school:;, 11 as graduated from St. .1ary High Scho?I there and·studied for the priesthood m s a i 11 t Charles Semmary, Ovei brook, Pa.. and the Pon- tifical Roman Seminar Y, Rome Bi hop Furey 11.as ordained by the late Cardinal Pomp!IJ in Rome :\lareh 15, 1930. lie was pres1d nt of Immac- ulata c O 11 e g e , Jmmaculata, Pa . from 1936 to 1946. He 11._as t e 19th R e c t o r of Samt Charles s minary \ice pre,1- ( cnt of the Semmar) 's board of tru tees and professor of pastoral theolog~. liturg) and Homiletics fr om 1946 to 1958. He 11 as appointed bishop by Pope John XXIII, Aug. 17, 1960 and consecrated Dec. 22 that ) ear Honored for Sen ice Ile has been honored many IImes for his work here. Last , larch, the ·ational Confer- ence of Christians and Jews cited him for ''his s e I f I e s s dedication to his church and community and for his recog- nition of the religious values 111 a,l denominations." Archbishop Lucey, friend of former President Lyndon B. Johnson and a crusader for liberal causes, has held the an Antonio po t 27 years. He wa an outspoken supporter of .ew Deal policies. particular- ly those for im roi; ments of

Furey Appointment tirs Praise, h ck

The appointment the ~lost Rev. ~·1 ancis .J. Furey, bishop of the Sun Die~o Catho- lic diocese, as archbishop for the 500,000 Roman Catholics in San Antonio was greeted with shock and also congratu- 1 a t O r y remarks today fro~ c i v i c, educational and re h- gious leaders here. "Oh. no;• said Dr. Malcolm A. Love. president of San Die- go Slate College._ "I hate to lose him in San Diego. What a tremendous person he is. I'm a little bit shocked to hear he is leaving. "Bishop I<'urey has been_ a real asset to ow community and I am unhappy to see him leave but J con ratulate him, of co~rse. I know his church has recognized his ability b) this appointment." Love cited the bishop for h!S ··tremendous contribution:" to higher educat.on (1ere.. L'niversity Strides Cited ' His outstanding e ff or ts ha,·e advanced the cau,e for higher educa!i~n h~re," Love said. ·The University of San Diego has taken great strides since Bishop r'ure) has been here and he has heiped all ed- ucation." DeGraff Au tin. chairman of the Board of Supervisors. said B1 hop Furey·s transfer will be a loss to San Diego. "It's a gret loss to us, but a big gain for San Anton10," Austm said. "T love him dear- ly. He has bt>en a great friend and a counselor. He ,has done a great Job he1 e even though he had a difficult assignment having to follow Bishop Bud- dy." ·wonderlul Opportunity' :\lajor Curran said the an- nounct ment came as a •·great shOl.'k.'' 'I think it's a won erful op- portunity for the bishop. Just last week I had th1; o~ r,ortuni- ty of sa:, ing public!:, I felt he was one of our better citizens. "I hate to see him leave the community because he h a s contributed a great dea to the city. However. Im sure it's a sign of his achievement within the church structure and I congratulate him for t h a t. But. I certainly hate to ,ee h!Il1 leave the community." Force For Ecumenism of Religious I e a d e r s Bishop Furey as a vigorous supporter of the ecumenical m o v e m e n t and expressed hope his successor will be just as strong a force for ecumen- h ·1 d a1 e

great deal, in particular fo1· the i1t1pctus he gave ecumen- ism m this cit)," said the Rev. Heber H. Pitman, for- mer pre idc1 t of the San Di ego Co v Council of Church• es. "I would hope his successor will pidc up w1,ere Bishop Fu- rey left off in this regard, par- ticula•ly since the council is about to become a truly ecu- m e n i c a I organization with Catholics as lull members." Cordial Wilh Everyone 'The Rev. Charles L. Conder, dean of the San Diego Episco- pal Convocation, echoed this appraisal. "It 1,as during Bishop Fu- rev's term of office that the Council of Churches and the Catholic Diocese began con• versations which have led to closer cooperation an~ e~entu- al Catholic membership m the ~-ouncil," the Rev, ~Ir. Conder said • 1 offer him congratulations and best wishes on his new appoi11tme11t. He has been a great leader. an open-minded man who JS warm and cordial with everyone he met." Rabbi ~lonroe Levens of Ti- fereth Israel ynagogue as- sessed the bishop ·as "an ener• getic force for good and prog- ress in this commumty, espe- cially in terms of the ecumen- ical movement. Respected by Community "He always tried to foster better relationships among re- ligious and r a c i_a I ,groups,'' Rabbi Levens said. ·He has the respect of the entire com- munity. 1 regret his leaving."' Said the Rev. :\fel Harter, interim executive director of the San Diego County Council of Churches: "Bishop Fure~ has been a great asset to the further~nce of ecumenism in San Diego. , .. We ,rnuld hope for a simi- 1 a r I v ecumenically oriented man to replace him here as Bishop. Our loss is definitely San Antonio's gain." The Rev. W i I I i a m :\lc- Auliffe. Paulist campus pastor at the University of California at San Diego. who started ~n adult education program m San /\ntonio said Bishop Fu- rey should do well in the Tel:- as City. ..Bishop Furey can do not~; ing but good in Sa~ Antonio, said Father McAul1ffe. ·'He's a younger man than Archbishop Lucey and much more inclined to hear people out and understand the situa- tion in the dioces_e~-'-' ._.... "The problems are of such dimensions that the Protes- tant ethic is grotesquely in- applicable to the situation, The old belief that early tp bed and early to rise, hard work and sobriety would take care of everything just doesn't work when applied to a large group of Americans who lack education and skills, are in poor health and haven't enough to eat," he said. "IX THE FACE OF BC.:R- dens of racial discrimination and economic discrimination it becomes doubly unrealistic. '·Jt is interesting and iron- ic that ·the people who be- lieve most fervently in the Protestant ethic are the peo- ple who comprise the domi- nant group in our society- well emplo,1 ed, SPcure, ac- cepted-the WASPs, if you will. It is therefore inevitable that those who do very well in a system lend to think it's a great system," the college dean said. "But of the Kerner Re- port, its blame-fixing and its most shocking elements h ave been the most talked about. · We forget or ignore· th at its findings are very perceptive in social. educational an ra- cial data that we never had before. ThP report spells out specific needs and programs that have been tned. and it recommends 8ome that ought to be employed."

I WINS BONO _ Den ise Mor in, first place winner of the patriotic essay contest sponsored by the Father Thomas B. Austin Council, Knighls of Columbus, accepts top prize from Chester Jantz, youth activities chairman. The council holds the contest annually among eighth graders of Madeleine School in memory of John Gilmore, a deceased Kof C member. Theme this year was "Freedom of Speech and the Press and What ii Meansto Me. 1 __ ..~~f,.«A-tt l>A,.~~ c1:.......... c..t-s h ~w (f~e~Aeu~ lii

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n u~go Catholic dioce ·e, 111 ith th right of ucce . ion. He wa installed in that orr- k:e Sept. 11, 1963 and succeed- ed to the t11ie of bi hop upon t Cont. on Page A-S. Col. 1)

REPORT CARD Schoof and Youth Notes Tru.l~ ,jJe:/4/ ~ The !1njyersjty of San Diego has been awarded a Nationa] ience ~·oundation grant for the purchase of scientific equ1p- ent. The equipment to be purrhased under the $1,500 grant m- udes an analog computer, teaching aides, digital logic units, nd reference materials. 2 Students Named to Dean's List • Two San Diego students attending the University of Arizona have been named to the deans' honor list. Virginia Olsen, daughter of Mr. and Mr~. Raymond F. Olsen, 2977 Mobley St., a junior majoring in social administration, was honored by the College of Business and Public Administration. Glenn Thomas, son of Mr. and '.\1rs. Edward L. Thomas of 927 Tarento Drive, and a sophomore in music_, was named to the dean's list in the college of Fine Arts. 'He 1s a graduate of Point Loma High Shcool. Steven Reina to Receive Commission Steven V. Reina son of Mr. and '.\1rs. Vincent S. Reina of 7416 Salerno Ave., ~ill be one of 64 senior cadets in the Univcr• sity of Oregon's ROTC program to be commissioned as second lieutenants in the U.S. Army Reserve. iologica/ Sciences Award Presented John M. Costella, a second year biology student at the Uni versit of San Die o has received an award from the Ameri- can Institute o 10 ogical Sciences. The award was an honorar- ium to attend a four-day course in biomedical telemetry at the university. Student Unrest Discussion Scheduled Dr. Edward E. Sampson, associate professor of psychology at the University of California, Berkeley, will disc s the psychol- ogy of stud nt unrest tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. in oom 100 of the Social 3cienc s Building, San Diego Slate Col ge. The lecture is one in a series of summer lectures at the college. YMCA Opens Beach Front Camp A beach troot camp operated by the San Diego YMCA has been pened o thl" Silver Strand in Imperial Beach. Football, basketball 1ce,"tK1C1,;,~_:and track will be offered for boys. Girls will be be to partic1pa m gymnastics. Aquatic sports such as surf mg, sailing, water skiing, skin and scuba diving and life saving will also be offered. For further information contact the YMCA, ll15 Eighth Ave.

Professor 9~ s-;i Honored At USD SAN DlEGO - Dr. Curt Spanis, biology professor at the University of San Diego, has been honored by the stu- dent body for the second con- secutive year as "outstand• ing faculty member." He also received top honors in the division of natural sci- ences, also for the second year in a row, Spanis, 2067 Chalcedony St., received his trophy at the an- nual University Ball, at Hotel Del Coronado. Presenting the award, Eric Johnson, associated students president, characterized Spa- nis as "above all a real human being, the kind of professor I hoped to experience by com- ing to USD." Others honored in the com- petition were: the Rev, Wil• liam Shipley, division of hu. manitics; Donald Lintz, divi- sion of business; and Dr. A. John Valois, division of s_ocial science. Among the accomplishments of Spanish, Johnson listed the founding of the Pep Club Band, to increase school spirit at athletic games, coaching the tennis teams, and his ser- vice as faculty moderator for Phi Kappa Theta fraternity.

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splitting into two Jlm,tjl~.. worlds? By . AR \II C'O 'GDO · jquel compares the year's opinions have had _hea,·y in:i- 1 .sion at l'SD, Horchler was s it d State Sl'nlinel 'taff ,rritn events to the commission's pact on social action. He 1s asked how he thinks the eris- findings a year ago, _and Rich_a~d H?rchler, dean of is-torn year since the "report 1v.enty-f1ve selected San weigh anew its previous adm1mstrat1on for York Col- • . ., bl. h d h D I d S f th atl . n 1 • • •t lJ - ·t ..,, T on cns1s was pu 1s e as •1ego. a er O • • 0 a recommendations for equ1t- lege. C1 y mversi Y w . ew Council ?f Christians and able housmg. education. em- York, and the fo!mer nation- been affected by th~ report, ,I \\S ~CC.I), att~mpted to plo,ment and economic bal- al program director for or by recommendations put turg back a new hde Thurs- ances to feed the hungry. NCCJ. forth by its authors. day as ncwsca ers blared . . He told the • 'CCJ leaders, forth the news I a "law and The new report, Shll point- all women that the Kerner "Some of the ideas express- o der" cand1rlates ha\e ~·on ed toward P 1:evenh?g cns~s Report's short-range predic- ed in the original report were a mayoral pnmarv m , ew th at no _socio-poli!ical . S) s- tions have been borne out- not on! shockmg for many \or and a mayoral e e tion !em ca~ \IJlhS t an1,. JS entitled that efforts, by private and Am~ricans. they were dis- m Mmneapol m the wake One l ear Later. governmental groups to alle• maying. They could hardly ('CJ LE R:\ED nate po1•erty and social ills brmg themselves to accept a that after the first report, ha1e been "too 1itt1~·• to re• S!atemE'.nt _t}1at we are a 'ra- in versP a trend that 1s carry- c1st societ_,. put m flat terms. 8 ive 1• our e\rr area of ife to me!'t the ing us toward two nations: The report contradicts our Los n"ele • Th t f h program \\ere initiated e mte h mt of a con ervallH victory m THE

Bishop Furey Honors Due At MCRD,¾~; Military personnel and civil- ians will say farewell to the :\lost Rev. Francis J. Furey, bishop of the San Diego Catholic diocese, at a review and recep- tion today at the Marine Corps Recruit Depqt. Bishop Furey has been desig- nated archbishop of San Anto- nio, Tex. A schedule of ceremo- nies during which he will be en- throned Aug. 6 m San Antonio was released yesterday. Bishop Furey will arl'ive at the quarters of Maj. Gen. Low- ell E. English, Marine Corps Recruit Depot commanding gen- eral, shortly before 3 p.m. to. day. The review will begin at 3. The public is invited. Following the review a recep- tion will be held in Englfah ·s quarters, The bishop recently finished a 25,000-mile tour of U.S. military bases rn the Far East. The schedule in Texas calls for him to fly into San Antonio at 3 p.m. Aug. 5. There will be an informal reception atfthe air- (Coutlnued on l>-8, Col. 5)

Bishop Furey Honor Due Today At MCRD ·1,., • ""'- ~/J.J/b1 (Continued) port. At 4 p.m. he will present begin at 11 a.m. Aug. G with a his credentials at San Fernando concelebrated Mass at the ca- Cathedral. At 5 p.m. he will thedral. The chief concelebrant hold a pres·s ·conference at La will be the apostolic delegate to Posada Hotel, where there will the United States, Archbishop be a dinner at 7 p.m. for the Luigj Raimondi. bishop and guests. He will spend Official .functions will end the night at Assumption Semi- with an installation luncheon at nary, which will be his perma- Palacio de! Rio. There will be a nent residence. dinner at 8 p.m. The installation ceremony will us KEARJ\Y \11<:SA TI

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' he Kerner Report out- lined a caste system based on color and wealth that seems to determine our opportuni- ties. Those who beleived that the "American dream" is achieved, or is being achiev- ed, had always thought that our problems came from 'bad people.' And then •a year ago we were told that the vio- lence cannot simply be blam- ed on those involved in the violence. "INSTEAD, IT CAN BE attributed to a S> stem which makes violence inevitable. The report pointed a finger at the nice, conscientious people who paid little atten- tion to the 'other Americans,' the ).fexican-Americans and l\"egroes and ghetto poor who did not succeed in life the way 'niee' people did," Hor- chler ~aid. That hit the whole Protes- tant di it JJOt, he ask- ed. by a ing the under- achiever for his own pl ght?

Class to cover crisis i11 1ninority educatio11 I A ->Ummer San Dieg~ late 1ucation; Carrol Waymon of C?llege workshop, "Cnsis in the Citizens' Interracial Com- Mmor1ty Education," will mittee; Dr. Leon Nower San consider ways of bringing Diego State· John Joh~son 1 about a ~eal(hy multi-ethnic Urban Leag~e; Walter Por:I I reJat1onsh1p . m schools and ter, Community Opportunity thr commu!11!y, . . Programs in Education; Bert _ThP_ ses~1ons will consider Rivas, Education Opportuni- ~1nority culture~ ln Califor. ty Program; Dr. Uvaldo Pa.Jo. 1 , nia -:- th& bl~ck, Mexican. mare.•. San Diego State; Jef- •Am rican, Oriental, and frey M bui, Japanese-Ameri- m. nc-an Indian-and_ howjcan Citizen• League, and Will an lll)pln°ement of white in• Hippen, Jr. Yokohama-San/ I st1tut1on upon these cultures Diego ister City C-Ommis- contri1:>utes to problem in •ion. / educah~~- . Enr_ollment is limited. Per- Weeknight cla. ses will be sons interested in attending Ju nP. 1~•27, from 7 lo 10 ~-m. for college credit may make I af Wri.E(hl Brothers Junior. application for enrollment S _n lor High Sc~ool, 1110 Car, with Summer Sessions at San l olma Lane (Highway 94 at Diego State. 1 1 47th St.). Further Information Is . Workshop spea~ers will available by writing to Dr. 1nclt!de Mrs. Lomse 1?}'.er, Manyille R. Petteys, Summer pres1clent C?f the Unified Sess10ns, San Diego State, School District Board of Ed- San Diego !l2 J 15.

1 nivei 1ty o San two undPrg1 aduatP :l i.! tu mtr P- th i r s10ns and financinJ aids or- -fic·,,s as of July 1 t'11s Y< a,. c-r·urding lo 111, p , id1•n1s r the rwo coll!' . The Ve1 I Rt ~aC'l' p, ,•sirlPI I of he USD CollPge for .\IP1 and S1strr Nanc-v \!01 ns, prrsident of th" t 1sn C'oll1•ge for Worn.

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