News Scrapbook 1975-1977

Top law school graduat

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CEREMONIES f Gr ds

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Look hack to look forward Will tells us D gradt

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'Kinder word, about lawyers cam, (ahforn1a S er tary of State March !~~.~~." 01 ::r~t :~: r~c;~~::~i~~d ~: OTI G TH Tin the post-Waterg lawyer, have a very poor public "ir Eu aid that she has "more respect prof· \lonals in the professmnal ethic exam before th pracll c," l'u aid the bar association 1t di,dplinury ac1ion, against it me mhcrs r adily vailablc to the p "TIIIS IS not true of the C'ahforni f M d1cal l:xarnm r,." ~he chargec b ard rcvok d 41 m d1cal liccn,c, 1 and th n nly ftcr lcn~thy court b court halll •" tat required to I gal community" than he has "f other group in oc1ety". ddin,i that attorney, "arc the

B) JO F.Pll THf, KE TRIBUNE Education Wrller

graduations

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Soulhem Cros Reporter Graduates from the Uni- vcr tty of San Diego were told to go inlo life "with a crick m your neck" looking at the past. George F Will, Pulitzer prizewinning columni t, told the 360 graduates, "The disease of our time is a disdai~ ~or the past. l hope you will Journey through life with a\ much speed as is prudent for looking back- ward." THE GRADUATION cere- monies on the west lawn of

!~~nc;e~pu:, Ma[ 22, werJx;, uo iuaq 3JII SJ3!U3p 4lC3Q ·suo11 a ou_t 2,00< 3fqWCJ;)S 01 jUCM SJil4SIM "l113Q . persons. Will received ar · " honorary degree of doctor O I .>Jow 80 !Pf!nq ~33)( SJil!U.lp 41c 3 a laws as cloudy skies blew irl JJO dwnf SJ 3 4 5 !M 4111aa ·pua :14 1 from the coast. ~4 1 a4i 1no 1n4s OJ :IJ!Silp :11cJ:1dsap Of the 360 graduates 9(/!14:i'>M 8~~:~w :141 inoqc 148no41 received graduate de ' · J:iwnsuoo JO s:ipd and about JOO gree!l~M 341 :IJn(lod OJ ·sµoya lUlldweJ rece111ecau:1 3Je sJaru 3 p u •y« teaching credentials. Presi- · .a.a. aO :nu; dent of USO, Dr. AuthorAo ·saA1aswaq1 :1111:>oyns 01 Hughes Jr., and board 0 1 0 :: re4i .{J:isiw J! 3 4l JO 1spiw ;,41 u! trustees chairman Bishoo. . uonn1 1 1su1 :>41 Sui,(0J1sap uo 1uaq Leo T. Maher officiall? punoJ 8 ;)41 °1 UN.op w:141 punruc handed out the honors. 41 Jl!:IJ 0 1 lUl!M SJil4S!M 41eaa Columnist Will said an 8 'SJil!U:lp 41c:1p understanding of the t . ' uy 3 4 1 Slu!od AJneaq on:iwsoo pu-e pas ISIJ:l)l!W J0J ilOIIJ 0 essential, as there are few· !lUCJJ :llj.L 'SJ:IIJS!M o

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San Diego yesterday More than 7,500 graduates f four mst1tutlons or higher lear· were given the best possible gc awa;1 gifts - their hard- deg)'('(>S. At San DIPgO late UniverSll) overflo rrowd well in exces 20,000 Jammed Aztrr. B?wl to wit mmencem nt exrrc1s s for 1 graduate . The relati,cs and 1 hers remained to th Pnd, de blistering sun. Latrr m the day, under cl,

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Limandn, the Franklin Award. Dr. Author E. Hughes, USD presi- dent conferred an honorary doctor of 1iws degree on Will before he made his address. W1ll, a syndirated columnist and author, discouraged the graduates from looking to.,.,ard a future that 1s basically matenalistlc. "I think economic practicality has gone too far m our thinking," he said "Education has become a pro- cess of packaging people for the job market. •·I truh wish prosperity for you, but without avarice." He implored them not to discard tradition while looking for fresh ap- proaches to life. "Tradition and our past are important, loo." The :\'lost Rev. Leo T. Maher, bi hop of the Roman Catholic ar- chdiocese of San Diego, and Hughes awarded diplomas to the graduates.

you to make whatever short-run ad- justments are neresssary," she remarked. "More important, your education has also equipped you to assist in remaking a society in which dys• function Is reduced to a mimmum." Dr. Brage Golding, SDSU pr~si• dent officiated at the ceremonies. "One percent of our graduating class is missing today," he told the graduates. "The) are the students who were graduated last Fnday at our Imperial \al!Py campus in Calexico." Paul G. Steen, a physics and mathematics major who achieved a perfect 4.0 grade average during his undergraduate years at Stale, was the valedictonan At USD's commencement, the two top seniors v.ere Teresa E. Ketchum and Charles d.'1 The for- mer eceived t Alcala Award,

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LOCAL NEWS 0

2 Area Priests t;' Get D.C. Posts \A Two priests of the San Diego Roman Ca ,olic Docese have b n appomted to posts mWashmgton, D. C. Father Lawrence Purce!,, rector of St. Francts eml• nary, will lx>come a member of the secretariat of the Apostolic Delegate in the t:nited States. The appoint• ment is for six years. Father Frank Ponce, asso- """o c1ate pastor of Our Lady of '\ Guadalupe in San Bernardi- no, will serve as a research a si tant of the Spanish• speakmg division of the United tat Catholic Con- I rence,

PAGE 8-1

AY 23, 1977

rowds onor 7,700 Graduates At Ceremonie

the world n ds is n undPr- standing of the p t Very

1769 Site Of Indians Indicated By CLIFF S~IITH Sc:ience Writer, The San Olego Union Archeologists have discov- ered In Mission Valley what they believe to be the re- mains of a Diegueno Indian village occupied when the Spanish missionaries ar- rived here in 1769 Dr. James R. .'.11onarty of the University of San Diego said the artifacts found adja- cent to the Hanelei Hotel indicate that the site is what remains of the Diegueno vu I age called Cosoy, or Kosoi. Dr Paul Ezell, profesrnr of anthropology emeritus at San Diego State Univer ity and an authority on early San Diego ruins, acknov.1- edged examining the mate ·. als and dra mg th conclu:s1on, but w1ti'held de- tails about the find . • I will give a full report on wha• has been found at a press conferenre tomor- Co:soy figures prominently in the earliest hJStory of San Diego because it was in close proximity to the first Chris- tian mission establlshed in California. Dieguenos of the ~illage, or ranrheria as it was knov.n, were iJl close contact v.1th the missionaries and soldiers who estahlished themselves on Presidio HUI in mid-. Tay, 1769. Cosov also 1s believed to row," Ezell said HI TORIC ROLE

7,70 few (graduates) will have ideas that are new and true." ''You should travel through life v.1th a crook in your neck - from looking back." He aid college wa not an e. cape from the "real w rid" because it 1s still ( ontl ed on B-5, Col. I) rad ate In 4 Ceremonies

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Smith, Dr James. Moriarty and Richard Gadler. Site also has yielded possible remains of an Indian village.

Examining ancient rock tools at discovery site in fi sion Valley are, left to right, archeologists Brian

Diegueno materials were found near the surface at a site just east of the hotel presently being excavated m a search for the tools of a prehistoric people who may have existed here as far back as 100,000 years, Some prehistoric rock tools, which .'.11:oriarty said are at least 20,000 years old already have been found at the site, named the Charles H. Brown site after the late founder of the Atlas Hotel c~ain. )'Joriarty said he turned the Indian materials over to Ezell and the latter conclud- ed that Cosoy was situated at the Brown site.

have proHded the first con- verts to Christianity m Cah- forma. Wnting in "The Time of the Bells," historian Richard F. Pourade states: "But bv 1arch 12, 1771, apparently the padres had at last been able to convert a few ol the antagonistic, stub- born Diegueno In_diaru; v. ho lived m the village of Cosoy, or Kosoi, among the trees at the foot of Presidio Hill. 'PITIFULLY FEW' "Th€. first new converts, or neophytes, were pitifully few compared to the almost overwhelming number of heathi>ns, or gentiles. " Moriarty said the Sister Rossi music concert set at USD fhc seventh annual Sister Rossi \1u,1c Sd1olarsh1p Fund Concert will be held Sunday. :-V!ay hat 4 p.m. in Camino Theatre eniH:r\ity of San Diego. Akala Park. 1 he program includes Grieg's "Lyric Suicc" and Smetana's "The Moldau". Fca1ured soloist~ "ith the USO S1 mphoni "ill be Delores Humes. soprano. and Louis McKay, bass. Hume~ has appeared in several USO Workshop pro- ductions nd performed for ,·arinu ,en ice organi,a- tions. McKa,· has performed "ith the San Diego Opera ,rnce I9bJ and in \evcral Starlight Opera produc1ions. .?S-11 ---

J.L. Neeper Re-Elected Opera Head ] Josiah L. Neeper has been re-elected for a second term as president of the San Diego Opera Association and 13 new members have been elected to the group's board of directors. In addition to Neeper, offi- cers of the association, elect- ed at the annual meeting this ~· week, are Esther M. Benter first vice president; Mrs'. Walter J. DeBrunner, treas- urer; John J. Malkind and Mrs. Donald E. McKinley, assIStant treasurers; Ray- mond F. Zvetina, parlimen- tarian; Mrs. William B. Rip- pee, membership chairwom- an; Douglas L. Bekkedahl COMBO chairman, and si~ 1 specialized vice presidents. These include Harold B Wilhams, funding; Mrs. Donn H. DeMarce educa- tion, Mrs. George R. saun- ( ders, guild council; Mrs. Ni- t kolai Sokoloff, production; a Robe_rt C. Meyers, public t relat10ns, and Mrs. Lowell i 0. North, opera center. f New directors elected are Robert C. Meyers, Mrs. A Grant Bening, Stan Cham- bers, Paul C. Cross, Richard C. Levi, Edward H. Mackay, Mrs. Lowell O North, Mrs. Douglas K. Pay, Mrs. George Nels Sorenson, Fred C. SlaldPr, Mrs. Frank T. r Weston, Christopher Ycanos I and James Zien.

Irvine Tennis Win Assured UC-Irvine yesterday clinched the team champion- ship and placed Curt Stalder In today's singles finals in the NCAA Division II Tennis Championships at USD. The Orange County school has 19 points and cannot be caught by Southern lliinois which has 15 and the tourna'. ment's other singles finalist, Juan Farrow. Stalder, the No. 3 seed, yesterday stopped the de- fendmg champion and No. t seed, Roger Gueddes, a Bra- 7jJian representing Hampton Institute of Virginia, 6-4, 6-4. Farrow, seeded No. 4 eliminated Jeff Williams, San Diegan playing for ucr, 6-1, 6-4, with tennis brilliant enough for USD coach Hans Wichary to describe the winner as "the greatest black player in the world, next to Ashe." Stalder and Farrow play for the singles championship today at 10 a.m. It is a best- three-out-of-five-set match as is the doubles finals at i p.m. Slngl.es, semlfinols- Farrow (South- ern lllmols) dt. Williams {UC-Irvine) ~1. 6- •; Stalder (Irvine) df. Gueddes (Homr:iton), 6-4, 6-4. Doubles, quorferfmals - Guedchts- Foxworth (Hampton) df. Smlth-Rusick (Southern Illinois). 6-2, ~2; Wllllams- Staldt-r (UCI} df, o,tmer-Plerce (COi Stote-Havword), 6-3, 6-4; Edles~ McNomoro CUCI) df. Klorr-Svensseon (USO}, 6-2~. 6-2; Farrow-Fernando (Southern 11/rnois) df. Schnall-Holmes WIii/oms• folder (UCI) df. Gueddes-Fo;ic:worfh Hamp-ton), 6--2 6·2: Fcrrow-Fe-r-nando Southern Illinois} df. Edles cNomoro

Football Games The University of San Diego yesterday announced a IO-game football schedule which will mclude national- ly-ranked California Luther- an College and the Universi- ty of Redlands. USO also is scheduled to oppose two . CAA College Division Two PQwers, Cal State, 'orthridge 1 and Cal State, Los Angeles. The Toreros' home games will be played Saturday nights, starting at 7: 30. USO GRIO SCHEDULE Sept. 10-Af Cal Lutheran. 2 o.m. Seol. 17-Reolon~s. 7·:JO om. Seot. 2'- A1 Pom<>r'!o, 7: 30 p.m O • 1-0cclden• IOI, 7:JO o.m. Oct. J-AI lltler._7·:JO pm. Oct. 15-At Col Sta Nort_hnd~, 7 :JO pm Oct 22-Azusd Pacific. 7:30 p.m. oct. 29-Cal stc;ite Los Angeles, 7:30 p.m. Nov. .S-Umted Stotts Inter~ notional Univ~n11v !Homecoming), 2 P.m, Nov 12-A1 51. Mary''!., l lO P.m. COLLEGE TENNIS . USO •• L0119 Beach 1 Singles- Beot- lY CUI dLSm lh, H,6-2· Wrlghl (UI df Ashl\119, ..1, g-1, Jensen IU) df. Dow• son, 6-J 6-3: Rowe I Udf. Oodlon, 6-2, 1- 6. 6-1; Gord - Beall, Wright IU) di Smith-DowM>n. U, 6-0, ~2; Jensen- Rowe IU) df Ashllno-Ood1on. 6-3, 6-2; Peterson-Bigham {L) df Portman-Gar dOn, 6 l. 6-1

women and Ministry, an institute to discuss the role of women m the Roman Catholic Church, will be held June 13-22 at the U~iverSity of San Diego. The mst1tute will be conducted by a facul- ty team from the Immacu- late Heart of Mary of Mon- roe, Mich.

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Contmumg board mem- bers are Donald C. Bauder - ----~---- '

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