News Scrapbook 1981-1982

EVENING TRIBUNE AY l 4. l98Z

Mrs. Ric_hard J. Reilly of La Jolla will be installed as presideut of the USD Auxili- ary Thursday at a luncheon to be held at the La Jolla Country Club. She succeeds Mrs. Ross Tharp. Mrs. David Jacobson, also of La Jolla, will be in- stalled as treasurer. Also to be installed are Mrs. J.C. Tibbitts, first vice-presi• dent; Mrs. W.H. Edwards, Jr., second vice-president; Mrs. Hayden Moore, record- ing secretary, and Mrs. A.H. Mikkelsen, corresponding secretary. The Village Singers will entertain with music from the 1920s through 1940s. Mrs. A.H. Turner is chair• man of the event. The USD Auxiliary is composed of women volun- teers who reside throughout the county. In addition to the goal of stimulating in• terest in USO, the auxiliary annually raises funds to as- sist the financial air J>rO• grams at the university.

Thursday, May 27, 1982

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SUMMER HARBINGERS <. onllnued from 8 It emucl heph rd Ill (U M ) and ROTC members from the Oranse Glen Hillh hool in E cond1do. 1 he W gencr' p oplc fairly outdid them dve with colorrul port. w r, out-of-this.world ac- e oric., m rt nd 1head-0f-thc-times davtim loth s and omc or the mo t ~triking evening wear to how up on lo l , unw y . Th empha i thi year i. on pants, pants, pant . Bloomer , jodhpur , evemng horts, city horts in above-th knee or mid-calf I ngth. , and cocktail w ar in II lengths - one eye-catcher was a copper pant, lightly flared and pleated at the hip worn with mat hing co t•I ngth tunic, yum, a the phra B , yum, n,c lca-o'-mutton lecve is making its rcap- P r, nee, e pecially in fall and winter clothing, while the llah n d . igner ar into durk, muted ~ilk and ilky cotton~ for ummcr. (Wag n r's do ome F NTA 'TIC thing with cotton from the tore' uropcan d signer , by the way.) a veritahl horde of p oplc there either to m ct the candidate , how their party loyalty or merely t c I, drink nd be merry while two of the M Jody ce combo kept the music Jlght, bri ht nd lively. Their pr cnce on the scene wa und1:rwri1ten by Andrew W th im, hu band of Jo Wcslheim, ch irman ol the evening. arole Ann R , le u p1csident. manag d 10 tay cool nd unruffled in h r I cy beige knit while keeping Introductions and amenities moving rnoothly Jong. Hostess "Sam" proudly introduced her parents, 1 oni nd Milton in£, who had just been named Que n and King of the Mira Me a nior group ... roni w wearing her d p ro~e. flounced "corona- tion" gown but had left off the mantilla. Milton wore ·1 tuxedo and ruffled shirt in honor of his royal t tu . Vir ii nd Jane D niel on wer there, as were Dori Mc oy, Je n Hardin, Lynn and Chri tine Doz - h was one of the guest model. donating h r time - and Nancy Leon rd. ••• And now to them tallation luncheon of the USO uxiliary. No fa hion ·how here, but the gue ·ts were all drc ed up for the occasion, so it was almo t as good a the real thing. in tailed as th new pre ident along with Tina Jacobson and Eleanor Mikkelson, both of La Jolla, treasurer and cor- re ponding cretary, re pectivcly. (Eleanor is just back from China and is a walking encyclopedia on l i hi• olored opaque t king ma trim leg under all those horts. nd cxy touch lo the whole nscmbl • nyway. there w I.a Joli 's .arol Reilly wa

LA JOLLA LIGHT

f ' Local women head USO auxiliary

La Jolla's Ca10I Reil- inslalled as prcsiden1 of lhc USD Auxiliary al a luncheon la1ed for Thursday, May 20, al 1hc La Jolla Counlr} Club. Taking office wilh her will be Tina Jacobson, also of I a Jolla, ly will be

treasurer, and Allison Tibi11s and Pally Ed- 1'-ards, vice presidenh; felicia Moore and Eleanor Mikkl'lson, secrelaries. Musical en1er1ain- mc111 will be provided by 1hc Village Singers.

The USD Auxd .try is

Lynn Kinder, USO

up of

made

Patty Edwards, Katie Turner and Carol Rellly, new USO Auxiliary president

\\(men

volun1cers from 1hroughou1 Sall' )iego Counly and, aside wm s1imula1ing inl\'rc in 1hc universily, r iscs funds annually ro a ,isl lhe school's financial aid prog-r_a_~m~·______,

Dr. Author Hughes thanked the auxiliary for its support of the university and announced that enroll- ment for next year is already closed. Both Msgr. Egan and Sr. Virginia McMonagle were presented with gifts of appreciation on behalf of the auxiliary with Dr. Hughes doing the honors. Entertainment was a lively hour of "memory" music by the Village Singers, who do what they do just for the fun of it, and left nothing out of their '20s-through- the -40s presentation. The group has a thoroughly good time and some of their musical spoofs are absolutely hilarious. The auxiliary draws its members from throughout San Diego County and La Jollans on the guest list

included a lot of (comparatively) old friends along with a lot of new faces: Mary Jo White, Bonnie Cog- gan, Josephine Ghio, Josephine Fletcher, Genevieve Bennett, Katie Turner, Helen Egan, Lynn Kinder, Anne F. Johnson, Sara Finn, Pat Keating, Leslie Binder, Claire Tavares and Judy Keelin . Tablemates, along with F ·no, Jacobson and Mik- k lson, included Bahia Mary Roberts, Erma O'Con- n;,r, Mildred K. Walsh, Gemma Alessio and Tina Cutrie, and a nicer, more hospitable bunch would be hard to find any,,w:;h:.::e::r.::.e.____________..._..

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Wagener'• model at GOP reception what to wear and where to go, so anybody planning a trip, a k her, ask her!). Msgr. I. Brent Egan opened the proceedings, reading a 300-year-old prayer asking for peace and tranquility in "this hurly-burly world," proving once again that the more things change, the more they stay the same. He then in talled the new of. ficers.

La Prensa San Diego May 21, 1982

Mexican Ambassador USO Commencement Speaker

EVENING TRIBUNE 198? USD, CAL WESTERN, SDSU 8,000 grads flip their tassels By Hugh Grambau Tribune Suff W nlcr In cer moni that ranged from raucou to ed te, more than 8,000 college stud nts received degrees in san Diego y terday. Attorn y General Smith told the grads that a new attorney can't pos- sibly know what' In store.

LA JOLLA LIGHT . ,,. .... La Jollan awarded doctorate Helen K. Copley of La Jolla, chairman and chief executive officer of Copley Newspapers has received an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree from the University of San Diego where she is vice chairman of the board of trustees. The degree was presented by Dr. Author E. Hughes, USO president.

Dr. Author E. Hughes, presi- dent of the University of San Diego, announced that Bernardo Sepulveda, Ambassador of Mexico to the United States, will address the undergraduate/gra- duate commencement on May 23. 520 undergraduate and 126 graduate students are eligible for degrees at the 3:00 p.m. ceremo- ny at the campus stadium. The degree, Doctor of Humane Letters, will be conferred upon Ambassador Sepulveda. Prior to this appointment as Ambassador of Mexico to the United States, Mr. Sepulveda was Secretary of International Affairs of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI). He has also been the Advisor on International Affairs to Mr. Miguel de la Madrid Hurtado, PAI candidate for the Presidency of Mexico. In 1981,-Mr. Sepulveda was a member of the Mexican delega- tion to the International Meeting on Cooperation and Develop- ment of Heads of States and Governments. Sepulveda has held positions of Advisor on International Affairs to the Secretary Planning and Budget (1981); Assistant Secretary of International Affairs of the Ministry of the Treasury (1976- 81 ); and coordinator of a program on foreign investment in Mexico for the Secretary of the Treasury (1971-75). Ambassador Sepulveda was Deputy Director General of legal Affairs in the Ministry of the Presidency (1968-70) and has served as legal advisor to various governmental institutions. Serving as a member since 1977 and as President in 1980-81 of the sixth Commission on Transnational Corporations of the United Nations, Sepulveda also was rapporteur of the United Nations Intergovernmental Working Group on a Code of

Conduct for Transnational Corporations. From 1977-80, Ambassador Sepulveda has served as a member of the Mexican delega- tion to the Annual Meeting of Governors of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank as well as to the Interim Bank as well as to the Interim Committee, the Development Committee and the Group of 24. He has also represented Mexico (1977-80) at the Annual Meetings of Governors of the lnter- american Development Bank. Ambassador Sepulveda has been Mexican delegate to United Nafion conferences, including the U.N. Conference on the Law of the Sea (1974-75) and the Vienna Conference on the Law of Treaties (1968). In bilateral matters, he has taken part in joint commissions of Mexico with a number of other states. Sepulveda has published widely in ·areas of Mexican relations and is currently a professor of International Law and of International Organiia- tions at El Colegio de Mexico. He received a law degree (Magna Cum Laude) from the National University of Mexico in 1964, and a Master's Degree in International law from Cambridge University (United Kingdom) in 1966. Born in Mexico City December 14, 1941 , Bernardo Sepulveda is married and the father of 3

The attorney general said that after H2 years in Washington he had developed a new law of media accu- racy. "Everything you read in the pa- pers is absolutely true, except that rare story of which you have direct knowledge," he said, citing contra- dictory descriptions of his perform- ance and actions. At USD, McKay and USD Profes• sor Kenneth C. Davis received honor• ary juris doctor degrees, joining Sepulveda and Helen K. Copley, pub- lisher of The Tribune and The san Diego Union and chairman and chief executive officer of Copley Press Inc., who received honorary doctor- ates in humane letters from the uni- versity. Mrs. Copley is vice chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Univer- sity of San Diego and was cited for her contributions to the university, the community of San Diego, and to journalism. She is director of the American Newspaper Publishers As- sociation, vice chairman of the American Newspaper Publishers As· soc1ation Foundation, and trustee of Scripps Clinic and Research Founda- tion.

"A new lawyer, no matter how well trained, can never know what lies ahead," said Smith. a Harvard Law School graduate, appointed to bead the Justice Department by Pr ident Reagan at the beginning of hJS term "You arc entering what has be· come perhaps this nation's growth profession," he said. noting that there are more lawye in the nation than steel workers. "You enter the profes- sion at the crest of a great wave that has swept law and the courts into every aspect of American life." But, Smith cautioned, lawyers have historically been mistrusted by the public and the grads' greatest challenge "is the respons1b1lity to im• prove the system of justice m the future." In public opimon surveys, lawyers as a group receive lower confidence ratings than Congress, the press and trade unions, he said. ''That's doing pretty badly."

At California We tern School of I.aw, more than 200 graduates hs• ten d to U.S. Attorney General 11• 11 m French Smith challenge th m to Improve the.tr prof ion and rap the pr , th watched him hand a dl· p' ma lo blS son, Scott. Meanwhile, nearly 7,000 graduates at san Diego State Umvers1ty heard author Dr John Gardner exhort them to rock the boat in life The ceremony was festive, as graduat eel brated throughout the commenc ment At University of San Diego more than 600 grads listened lo Mexico's new Amb sador to the United Stat 1be the coni11ctmg per• pectiv nd th potent al for coop- eration betw n the two countrt and 260 USD Law School grads heard Robert B. McKay, retired dean of the cw York Univ rsit School of Law.

San Diego, Friday, May 21, 1982

THE TRIBUNE

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3 CEREMONIES SUNDAY San Diego graduates dust off caps, gowns

'Tis the season of caps and gowns, diplo- mas and parties. San Diego State Universi- ty, University of San Diego and California Western School of Law will hold their grad- uation ceremonies Sunday. SDSU_ will have a bumper crop of gradu- ates at its 83rd commencement which be- gins at 10 a.m. in Aztec Bowl. ' Bachelor degrees will be awarded to about 5,700; master's to 1,180 graduate stu- dents; and joint doctoral degrees to four. grade point average, will give the valedic- torian address. She is a French major who plans to get her teaching credentials at SDSU. Bernardo Sepulveda, Mexico's ambassa- dor to the United States, will give the prin- cipal address at University of San Diego's

graduation ceremonies at 3 p.m. in the campus stadium. Degrees will be received by 520 under- graduate and 126 graduate students. Sepulveda and Helen K. Copley, publisher of the Union and Tribune newspapers, will be awarded doctor of humane letters de- grees from USD President Author Hughes. _USD's &hool of Law will hold its gradu•

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ation at 10:30 a.m. in the campus stadium. Author-lecturer Dr. John Gardner will Robe~ B. McKay, director of the Institute give a tongue-in-cheek commencement ad- , of_ Judicial Administration, New York City, dress, titled "Help Stamp Out Idealism." will be the speaker. Degrees will be given Margaret Mandac, with a perfect 4.0 to 260 graduates.

US. Attorney General William French Smith will give the keynote address at the California Western School of Law's gradua- tion at 10:20 a.m. m the Organ Pavilion of Balboa Park. His son, Scott Cameron Smith, will be among the 220 receiving degrees.

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