News Scrapbook 1968-1969

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San Diego,

rofessor At USD Com • 1nes A1 o o~v, e

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Karena . hields lectures sociology the problen s of tropical med- terms this is human ear-wax. at the Un'rersity of San Di- kine toda · at the Universit) One of the few researchers ego, Dr. hields is _making of California at Berkele\ De- in the world in this new area her secon reeent VISlt to partment ol International of study, Dr. "hields worked Berkeley to confer on the re- llealth. she uill combine her in Chiapas, because il is one suits of h · research. medical train;ng and her pro-! of the few racially isolated Working ith the lX Berk• fe si n of anthropology. ·areas left in the world ·'If eley·s DT. icholas Petrakas Dr. 'hleld spent her leave there are any pure races left, Dr. Shields PJC lain~ that he from the t ·mversity of ·an they would be the people in research dra s hea\ ily on Diego last ,ummer in Chia- Chiapas," she said in an in- her years e erience in pa•. :\Texico doing basic med- 'er\'iew. Chiapas and Central Ameri- ca as an ethnological re- searcher and medical mis- I sionarv. Deep 111 the Jungles of the on of cerumen. In non-scientific anthropology and

tropical state o Chiapas, Dr Shields owns a plantation in- herited from her fatner where she conducts a medi- cal mis. ion. he is the mis• sion's only doc-tor, and her \'isits are limited to holj- dav . summer and sabbati- eais. he explains the isola- tion and lack of medical care: ··I have trained a few people in first aid, who are a:ble to ' carry out my instructions for patient care in certaih cases like anemia ot, in an emer- gency, burns." The interest in cerumen 1s, according to Dr. Shields "pure researeh into the anti- bodies and hormones found in the substance. There ap- pear to be racial or at lea,l kinship relationships in the inheritance of the two differ- ent types of ear wax. one waxy, the other Ilakey. 11 the inherited characteristics of the two types of ear wax is known, science may learn more about disease re. is- tance and immunization and whether the• type of ear wax a person po sesses is related to his health,'' she added. On the faculty of the Uni• \'ersity of an Diego for the past 10 years, Dr. Shields said that when she goes back to Chiapas this summer, she will lake students with her for research in anthropology or languages. " I can extend knowled,ge in depth this way and gi\'e the student a ,·iew by t-xperiencing another cul- ture ll is the descendants of the :1-!ayas that I care for at the medical mission. There are about 500 in the hills about the mission. It is seven lo 12 hours by horseback to another medical facility," she explained. Holding a replica of a stuc- co head from the Mayan tomb of kings at Palenque. >'lexico. she describPd its features as more that of a Magyar t han Mon;:oloid . despi t e the chel'kS. The high!~ stylized nose. she feels . was a case of artistic license, noting, ··1 have men working for me in \lex1co that look exactly J ike this stuceo head, except for the stylized nose. Palen- que. Chiapas was a citadel of the ancient ,1ayas. 200 years or more ago and the people in the area have changed lit- tle trom their ancestors," she said. Dr. Shields has written two anthropological studies, "Three in the Jungle" and ''The Changing Wind» She is now at WO'l"k on another book. on her research on the inheritance of types of ceru- men. Though her life alternates bPtween the jungle, of tropi- cal .\l.exico and the lecture rooms at the t:nh-ersit,, D1. h1elds finds her acti\·1ties

nardino; and Dick Heitzig, 20 of Appl, Valley. Reveles leads 33- voiC'e seminary choir and combo at th weekly folk Mass and in ehurc-hes throughout the diocese.

SI, 'GC. USD s minari ins will . ing and play ut 11 u.m. folk ?llu.<;s tomorrow in lmmac- ut te Chapel on U, D campus. From I fl ar id• Revel s , 20 of Ocean- sid ; JetT) C:uth, 2:1 of San Ber- , l~'.\IINARIANS -

Folk Mass Leader Urges More Singing

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benefit university's community development prO-' gram to tutor low income children. Miss Maz- zetti is in charge of Southeast San Diego tutori project. Smith is general chairman of prog_ra -Evening Tribune Staff Photo

UP AND AWAY -

Deborah Hadley, who will

dance in the Nutcracker Suite performance Thursday at 8 p.m. at the University of San Di- ego, goes through a practice routine for students Charles Smith and Joan Mazzetti. Show will

Guard-Short SD o Host 1 iablos Tonight With one o( its start1r." guards dcfmltcy out and another a flu I bug v1cl1m, the l'n!vcrs1ty of I an Diego opens 1ls hom ba · 1 ketbal! ea on ton ght agn1nst Lo Angeles Stat in the Tore• ros' gJ m. JV teams of th t vo schools 1 oprn lhc program t Ii o'clo<:k 11 ith the vursity gnmc at 8. l' D s t a y s home tomorrow !ljght for a return game with Long Beach Stat after losing a 7 54 d ci ion to th 49ers at Lorg Beach I t week Toreros coach Phil \\oolp rt in hi seventh d on nt the U D helm. had cnoug prob- lem with only two starters re• turning from a team that posted a 15 10 record last )!'ar. SCIIRA~l IIVRTS Al\1,LE Then Monday of this week s art1ng gw,rd , · al Sc h ram ame out f a pr cllce se ior: colh 1011 w, n torn llgarncnl 1n 1 his ankle. '!'he result 1s a six- \ w k nten e m a ca t v.1th l an additional lwo weeks before rcturnm I'> action h . ( Sc ram a 5-11 junior, was l ·ated as the sparkplug on Uw 1 quad hy Woolpcrt. ''His loss I rc.1ll y hurls us " sa, s Woolpert. T 1e guy m•vrr would quit driv- ing 111 ver give way to anybody. hat's lhe way he got hurt An- her pl )Cr challenged him at Id-court and Schram wouldn't \e ground They really hit!" , 'ick Nicassio, another 5-11 ju- 1or guard, is the flu victim. He has not worked out all week and even though he may suit up l01Jight, 1 not expected to ce 111uch action. To fill the void, Woolpert has moved 6-5 supho ore Benton White to a guard spot with 6-1 1un·or :\1ike Pradels expected to op at the other guard berth. WILIKTE, ;\l GF.E BACK

well the public outnumbers the students. " I'd like to see more tudcnts taking part," he said -ROBERT DiVEROLI

Th • [olk Mass is a religious celebration, not a con c er t, . aid the leader of a University of San Diego mus: cal group which assists at Sunday Mass on the SD campus. certainly don't want people to come to 11ass af!d just sit back and listen," said icholas R e v e I e , 20, USO seminarian from Oc anside. "The idea of the folk Mass i tQ get p •ople to articipate more actively," he s in an mterv1ew. 33-Voice Reveles' group neludes the 33-voice seminary " We

Karena Shields, as- soriate profe~,or or Anthropology and ."oriology al the l"nhersit~ of . an Diego. ~ill lecture today at the l'ni- n-_r itv or California at Berkeln on her new medical resea1:rh in cerumen. "hich is human ea1-ua ·. .__ _ ....,_,,._...,_ -..;.....:.....;....:.___.....;.._ __~ --=="'-----l from the bridge-a wider ,·iew

)= {).-u.,,;, Friday, December 6, 1968 _ Krulak Tells Of N. Viet's Objections North Vietnam's objective at the Paris peace meetings is to talk as much as it can and to fight as much as it is obliged to, Lt. Gen. V i c t or H. Krulak, USMC, ret., said here yester- day. Krulak spoke before law stu- dents and faculty members a the University of San Diego. About 15 student pickets identi- fying themselves as the Com- mittee for Truth from our Mili- tary in Vietnam stood before the speaker's stand with signs prior to Krulak's appearance. Slogans on the signs included "War's good for business - in- vest yout son," and "What can you tell us that we haven't al- ready neard?" Ktulak respond- ed by telling tl)e group that three o[ his own sons are serv- ing voluntarily in the military. CITES KOREA "The military had the North Vietnamese on their heels when we began to back off," Krulak told the students. He was com- mander of all Marine forces in the Pacific before his retire- ment. "We should have learned our lessons from dealing with the Communists in Korea," he said. "Every time we made a conces- . sion, the Communists increased their pressure and activites." He said North Vietnam is doing the same thing in Paris and South Vietnam. North Vietnam is in Paris be• cause it wants to be there, he said. THREE REASONS "North V i e t n am had three reasons for talking peace," he said. "First, they wanted us to stop doing something that had been hurting them desperately. They beat the tub and thumped the drum and got the bombing stopped. And all they did was to whisper aside, 'If you do stop ~e b om b in g something good MIGHT happen to you'." Krulak said within 72 hours after the bombing halt, the Reds had intensified their attacks on the cities and their activities in the Demilitarized Zone in, creased. The North-South supply route increased its operations. He said the second reason the Reds came to Paris was be- cause they wanted a window to the world. "Hanoi is a bad win- dow," he said. "So is Moscow or P r a g u e. Paris was best for them to get their propaganda out to the world,.". lie said. "Re- member that h V i e t n a m beat the Frenc I in Pari , not at Dien Bien Phu." The third r e a s o n was tfiat from Paris they could better gauge how the American politi- cal scene was developing. The United States must nego- tiate from a position of strength if it wants to win over the Com- munists in Vietnam, he said.

I[ lhcrP 1s lh1s plundrrPd planet. it's got to be thP !in., Isla, nH' n~t,on of Kuwait in the Middle East Thal, at least. is the illlprcssiun ) 1111 gain after talking with \lio, ,\mina .\1 Saball . bro11n-eyed, 18-~ear-old beautv who is a KuwailL pr111crss ancl is a !ic,hman at the (niversity of San Diego. There are no taxes in oil-rich Kuwait, ;1J1 · .\I Sabah points otlt. Also. There is no draft. There are no TV commer- i::ials. All medicaj services arc ree There arc no Communists. Education is free, includ- ing college education . Kuwait has lhe \1orld's ! highest per capita income, (over $3,000). However, there is one anything approac!Jtng par d1 • on AMIX,\ AL SAB.\H "Women in the United Stales are much freer. Kuwait is an Islamic country, and traditions and religion hamper the freedom o[ women. Girls and bovs don't mix the way they do here. · "We ha\'e man) wealthy l\uwat1 women who are op- erating businesses they inherited when their husbands died, but this is frowned upon." . ;1liss Al Sabah is the niece of the Emi o l'uwait, Sabah Al-Salim Al Sabah, whose power is approximately equi\·alenl lo tlJat o[ the president of the United Statc_s.. Her natiol!, she says, could be termed a ~oc1alist1c democracy. Laws are passed by two houses of parliament,, and the Emir has the veto power. ' The princess' father was the late shiek, Fahd Al,Salim Al Sabah, who was a crown prince and served as Kuwait's I minister of welfare. Her mother is Badrieh Al Sabah. She has seven brothers and sisters. Miss Al Sabah is very personable and gracious and has a command of English topping that o[ most Amenc~!1s. She first arrh·cd in the United States when she \\3S five year old, and attended elementary school in Philadelphia. where she learned to speak English. She says her parents sent her lo the C.S. to get a better education. She is majoring in English at USD and intends lo teach when she returns to her homeland. After staying in Philadelphia four years, she le.ft to attend finishing school in Kuwait, Lebanon and Switzer- land. She happened lo read about USD in a college hand- book, she says, then sent for the school's catalogue, and !hat induced her to !lead for thf' '\lcala Park campu,. I "When I returned here, I was t:isappointed at first," notes the black-haired beauty. "What really got me do:wn, was the attitude of young people toward U.S. foreign policy in Vietnam. ;·'{ow that I've talked lo many slndents, rm beginning to believe the l'. S. shouldn·t be in Vietnam" As the member -Of a royal family. l\liss .\1 Sabah enjoys diplomatic immunity in this country, but her po• I sition nets her no other privileges, or incom~, from I uwa1l. .I\ l the moment. San Diego runs second bc,l lo Plula- dclphia. in her estimation, although ~he P?in\s out she hasn't been here long enough !she arnved in September) to visit the city's poir.ls of interest. ., She also is quick to observe that she !las been thorough- ly impressed by h~r reception at. USO. . ., ·J think Americans are tel'nf1cally lnendly and open. she says. ··Once they find out you're from a foreign countr~. they try to take you in and see that you're n~t homes.1ck." :lliss Al Sabah has travelled extensively rn the ~llddle East and Europe. and admits she prefers a number of European countries to America ··1 thmk I know them bclte•·:• she slates "Here. _l feel lost because the land is so vast. ,\!so. I think ,'\men- cans seem lo be in more of a hun·, than other people l'\e visited but the\· seem to be gain;ng by it" •·Also, we have no Communism 'I he government g1yes the people so much, they don't feel the need for anythmg else. "We ha\'e such a small population. about 150,000\ people, and so much income from oil, that we are very. very luck} " . . Although l.. S. tramc frightens her. :\l1ss. l Sabah intends to purchase a car soon and take a flmg automotive rat race. One thing for sure-she'll never have to running out of oil. In' observing that there are no taxes in Kuwait. s~e _ adds !hat ·'things would be dif[erent jf \\e didn't have _011. I drawback. Women aren't al- ~owed to vote. Or is that a drawback? ··r think they"ll change that· law when women cau prove to the man thal they have the capacity and rcsponsibilit) ," Miss Al Sabah notes.

compankd by guitar and tambo cassionally mnrac gos. The group a.m. :\lass Sun USO Immaculata

apel and once a month by invitation at diocesan churches. "It's the trend," said Re- veles of the folk Ma " It gets people to take a more direct part in the serv• 1ctl, hich was the id a hind the liturgical s p i r 1 encour• aged by Vatican Council II," he added Simple and ingable Reveles said he doesn't like to use electric rs because they are.too loud. He said the new music is written to be simpl and sing- able with the greater accent on ~ords and their meaning than on music. "The traditional Gregorian chant is too difficult to sing," he said, "and other hymns have so many 'thees and thous' they'd sound too awkward if changed." Inspired By Old estametit Reveles, who h had sever- a I compositions published finds the Old T lament a great inspiration for his com- positions. When th<' USO Ecumenical Center wa, dedicated recent- ly, Reveles' modern setting, for Psalm 23, "The Lord is my s h e p h e r d, ' was per- formed. Reveles, who is majQrmg in mu ic besides being a semi- narian, has been p I a yin g piano for 15 years and com- posing for 11. D e s p i t e the modern sound in church mu- sic, he's not against organ music. Organ Not Suitable ''That's my instrument and it has its place," he said. "Lots of good music is still bemg composed for the organ but Jor regular Sunday use I don't think U's practical." Re •eles s-.1id even p e o p l e pa t' the teen-age stage "dig" tile fo.lk Mass. "A woman about 70 came to me after :\lass one Sunday and said she really felt she had joined in the service," he said. R e v e 1 c s said the Sunday folk Mass at USD draws so Ryon Equipment Presented To USO Three truckloud of electron 1cs and te ·tin;{ equipment have been presented to the Universit) of San Diego's phy~ics depart- ment b} Hyan Aeronautical Co. '1 ht• equipment includes oscil- los opes, meters, pumps and motors , aC'cording to Dr. Ger- ald E tb rg, department chair- m n Es brri: aid equipment be. yuml the Immediate needs or USD will be> u cd in a university PIOJ ct lir help hi •h schools d vclop c rwc interc t .

MINSTREL Mike Chambers limbers up his vocal cherd1 for another stint as a volunteer en e ainer at San Diego's Juvenile Hall. dent Star as T eacher--Min trel / C'l-4URT':"'v!O:s!T ArPa resident irnrt sturle11t al thP Unive,nit~ of San [)iPgn who rton t e \\ ith I, often finrl the Pnte ajnprs silting next IP l h!'m ? nrt discussing 1he idea nf r.a\ ng some tun at the gatJ,etlng.

combine her two professions for the benefit of "her" peo- ple at Chia-pas. I

!ikf' <:hamhPrn, 2:m1 Bur- e11..r l'lhrl., ha• hPr.omP a \Vf'll known figJH'P t San 1et1>• ,\11\,nilP Hall. Four \\Pl'k• ago Chamhers. ~long with {f'llOW roJIPg" sTUdPnls 1 .AHtPti, ,lnhn Turvis anag;• - going cor- fef' houst' atmosphere, .. he uid. "We i1 down and lalk with the kill joke. 111,ryonP, b111 the genHal 1·eacrion has been ve1·y good." . ''"' F'at·~ .. A ,UfferPnt

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.5, JJ, (.INl6r,/ USO Eyes Meet After .500 Tour

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U n i v e r s i t y of San DiegDi which broke even in four game in the Pacific Northwest la week. will make its next bid in the Holiday Baskrtbal! Tom11e. at Cal Western University after losing at Western Washington State Saturday. The game, played at Bellingh- am, Wash., resulted in an 80-59 defeat for the Toreros. A total of 55 fouls was called. Forward Jeff Filzenger was the only real threat for USD as he scored 19 points. Center Gus Magee was next with nine. Western Washington led at the intermission, 37-28, and limited the Toreros to only 17 baskets for the evening. Western Wash- ington connect on 32 of 44 free throw attempts to pad its edge. It was the fifth loss for USD against two wins for the season after previously winning over Portland State and Pacific Lu- . th e r a n and losing to Puget Sound on the tour of the X orth- west. Cal Western, now 2-4 aflf,z: dropping all three games tif midwestern trip, will be joined by the Toreros, UCSD, Alma (Mich), Pomona, Northern Ari- zona, UC Irvine and Cal Baptist in the three-day tourney at the Westerners' g y m beginning Thursday.

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d around me and they we e talking and giggling likP mad. I didn't think it \,a, mP: so I asked them wha had hroughl all this on . 'l'he, told rne I was l hP fi, st thr~ · d bPPn near in months.'' TPaC'hini: I nnr C'ha mhers y. ·

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