News Scrapbook 1969-1971

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Expansion or orrey

IRVING SALOMON Little Hope for Chan Seen in Red Leaders

San Dieg<

• 1nes Park Fund Drive Falters, Butler Tells Inquiry

EVENING TRIBUNE labor WrJtar J• 'JO D rrcll Williams, 38, is one of five mtergroup relaliQnS coor- dinat r$ ( :-icv. position, emplo}ed recently by the state bivi- ot Ai cnti ship Standards. His beat is San Di~. San rnar ,n , Riverside and Imperial counlle . H.s mission lS to elp too oung Joble s. When b comes here, he cruises neighborhood~ most heavily popu atcd tr Negro and Mexican-American famll1 . He stops c r to talk with youths he sees who appnrrntly are idle · • /

Ex-City Attorney Urges Legislature to Cut Goal By OERB LAWREl'iCE EVE!lil:'IIG TRIB E Environment Writer

oins National Group r~ ti •1r-70 Th a t • l'O' rdinator 'if th, a or's Council on Youth

during school and work hours. "I tell them.'' Williams said, • or opportunities II hich actual- ly exist to prepare them, train them and employ them in life- time careers ln the skilled trade - carpenters, plumb- ers. mechamcs." Many he meets have become discouraged, pPrhaps by re- buffs, red tape and comniu- nication breakdowns, Williams said, and are unaware that they can be guided to the basic education required for appren- ticeships. Mo~t or the youths and their parents •·react beautifully" when thev learn that barriers faced ea(lier have been elimi-

Opportuml) has ac-.:epted ar appoirtment to the , 'at ona! \la pov. er Ad\, ~ir) Com• ir1tt.:ce John T. Hareno 31 who has worked on the mayor'!:i council the past two ) ears, was in- vited to join the committee by Secretary of J,abor George P. Shultz. Th( national coirmittee has nine members chosen for their work in manpow£r devel opme:-it and training p~o- grams Bareno said the committee \\Orks with the Depi:rtment of Labor and he Department of Health, Education and Wel- fare Bareno. a Rcµublican, is a 1960 graduate of the Umvcr- sit, of Loyola in I os Angele5 and 1s studymg for h;s la\\ de- gree at the l wer~,ty of San .:Jie"O.

Only th Legi lature now has the power lo bring about tre expansion of Torrey Pines "late Park, the £tale Environmental Quality Study Council wa, told yesterday. Ed Butler, former San Diego city attomey and head of the fund-raisin,: drive for expansion of the park, said then 1s 110 chance that sufhcwnt fund lanotlwr 8200,00IJJ can be rai:ed .n time to match stalP. funds for acquisition of 160 mon• acre~. Butler said the only rem d) is £or the Legislature lo I educe the amount ..hat it ls rcqmring to be raised locally The ~late 1s

Students Plan ograms On Ne ro Culture

putting up $900,000 and has given San Diego until March I to rai e a similar amount Government Aid Pledged lie said a bill 1s being drafted to reduce the required local matching amount to the total already raised $700.000. He said Sen. Clair Burgener, R-San Diego, is planning to in- troduce the bill and that sup- port has been prom1Scd by both San Diego city and county government . Butler was one of a parade of witnesses who appeared be- fore the council al an all-day public hearing at Torrey Pines Inn. Aim of the hearing was to gather data which will help the council make recom- mendations to the Legislature on how more open space can be created in urban area In the state

· l d ese me u e a

'd Th

lHRRELL \\1LUA'1S Intergroup coordmator .

nated, he sai .

lessening of discrimination in ome umons who e rolls formerly carried few minority group m mb rs - the Plumber . Operating Engineers and Elec- tricians Umons said the apprentice hip aide. He has even found om school coun ors unaware of this. he said . Williams was graduated from Fisk University, attended Co- lumbia University and was an aerospace execuh\'e before tak- i! g the st~te po it1on. Enforcement Backed for NLRB Rulings The Admini~trallve Conference of the United Stales has recom- mended to President Nixon, Congress and the federal Judicial onference that rulings by the National Labor Relallons Board bl' automat1calb put into force. This w s reported here by Jerre S. Williams. conferen.ce chairman. m a talk to the San Diego cha~ter of the Industn~I R latioos Research Association. TJ>e as oc1allon met at the~- vcr itv of T e administrative conference Is an independent federal agen- cv created by presidential ex- c~utive order in 1964 Its pur- pose is the improvement of federal administrative process- es.

On committee there is no s arv 1molved, but exp 1Ses me• rrcd in at- ending mcctmgs in wa~hing- ton are paid.

1e appointment is for a one-year term expir g June 30, 1971. Bareno said in ac- cepting the a !P_Qmtment. tnat ~------

School and Youth Notes :/<>-0- Fore,, 1 W.irb "u! s;i r~cr a Yo.. h Airer - a I school and Jumor h1 ,h ag ct •\clrPn tomorrow fro n 9:15 am to 1 p.m. at the Ca iforn 1 Treater Ma) or Cu, ran 11open the program \\ n1ch will 1rC'ludc a co,1- rert by the. 1 ava Training Center Band and songs by Ue Ieart- land Youth for Decency. O.J. Roed, San Diego police chief, will be g '? t ;ieaker, followed by the 1 ·aval Training Cenlt.. Choir moti n pic- ture, "The Young A'llerirans, ' will conclude the program. 2 Job Skill Training Courses Set San Diego C : Schools Adult DIV! ;on w ,I or er i • o 1 ra mg courses for persor. without job skill . A m t>htr e s O'l course will meet from i a.m. to 1 :30 p.m. beginning l\farch 2. An electronics assembly course, which is !muted to women, will be held from 7:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. starting March 9. Bo'h courses will meet Monday through Friday for 20 weeks at the San Diego Skills Center, 83:i i2th St. USD Names 2 New Administrators The University of San Diego .ha, appointed two new ad ninis- trators. Mrs. Lula Barry has been appointed director or p rson• nel and Paul H. Maynard is the new director of accounting. Both positions are under the Joint administration business of- fice, headed by General L. Hitzeman, USD business manager. 'Y' Starts Swim Classes for Adults The Southeast YMCA has announced the beginning of an adult fitness and recreation swim held Monday through Friday at noon. Both men and women are invited to attend. Beginning tomorrow the pool will be open Saturdays and Sundays from 2 to 5 p.m. with lifeguards on duty. Classes for nonswim nrs meet Monday, Wednesday and Friday evenings from 5 to 7 p.m. Enrollment is open at any time. can m ,J y" f

7/J

l ( 1 ,,(_n,-,_. ;1 /l 0 L bor Dept. Aide ks rsda

Present procedure that N- quires the NLRB to go to court to ·'sell" its order to the court before it gets enforcement, no longer is an effective safeguard for the board or par- ties i,volved in NLRB matter , Williams said the conference found. The •'LRB rulings should be automat,cally impOsed. going into court only if there are ob- jections filed, the conference

the chairman

recommended,

JERRF.: S. WJLUA\1S Conference chief reported . Apprentice Wins Title, Cash, Tools

The rhamp1on apprentice bricklayer of San Diego ~oun Y is hchael Adamson, 25, of Clairemont a member of Bricklayers Local 11. He won the title, a cash award and a complete_ set of tool:; of his trade in competition with 23 other apprenhces at I sa College Saturday. . Jrvm Torian, union president, said Adamson a_nd Fred WratlS- law 21, of Chula Vista, who finished second, w1~I. repres~nt ~an Diego in California and Western States compellhon April 2a .ln Lo~ Angeles. Adamson is employed by Quality Masom1· Wralts- law works tor Etchings Masonry. The contestants were· Judged on c:::s room grades and construction from scratch ,of a wall ?f brick, block and stone, said contractor James \\ ard. He_ is chairman of the industry's union-management Joint Apprentice- ship Committee, contest sponsor. \

FOLK MASS

18, 197:J

'J-·(f,7 C Priest Favors Guitar, Songs The Rev. Ian Mitchell, an I Episcopalian priest, preaches need for brotherhood. been a parish priest, a slum L'SE FOLK .MUSIC worker. a prison chaplain and with a guitar m his hands and a song on his lips. Father Mitchell, 43, -,,ho has

C-4

EVENING TRIBUNF

Walking Call Keeps

• I g

He feels folk music is a me- dium that can be used to tell both youth and their parents about Christianity and the He and his wife do not sing tradil1onally religious songs in their performances hut in- stead choose from cont<'mpo- rary folk music • with a dis- tinctive Christian message," Father Mitchell said. Exam pies are "What the World . 'eeds Now 1s Love, Sweet Love" and ''My Cup Runneth "I don't even hint at a ser- in my performance," said Father Mitchell. "The sermon is implicit in what I'm Over With Love." Church, Chula Vista, and will do so again at 7 p.m. Thurs- day at St. Andrews-bY:the-Sea Father ~ad Mrs. Mitchell also will appear in roncert lo• morrow at 8 p.m .at the a_J versity of San Diego gymna- Episcopal Church, Pacific doing."

a missmnary, thinks folk lllllr' sic will reach more souls lo- day than "Bihle banging." That is why, in 1967 while serving as a missionary to made a decision to take a folk lass he h3d composed onto the road, he recalled in an in- Now Father Mitchell and his Navjo Indians in Uah, he tervlcw'here. business personalities and perform the folk Mass and popular folk songs of love wife, Caroline, are virtually mon show

and protest Father Mitchell performed churches and colleges and uni- ' his American folk Mass Sun- versities throughout the coun- day at St. John's Episcopal ry. in nightclubs,

APPEARED ON TV Father M1tchell

-

ap-

has

television's Beach.

on

peared

'-Tonight" show and on local The long-haired clergyman, who once was arrested for Joining an an,i-war prote t at meriran folk :\fass in 1958 while in seminary at ·ashotah House 10 , ashotah, Wis. Father Mitchell, a native of Indiana. studied music in col- lege and ori9inally set out to write musical comedy television.

~mm. the Pentagon, wrote what is t-~"'-=~-=:;.:..-==:.........~~-...:.. thought 10 be .lhe original

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