News Scrapbook 1968-1969
Mayhepoo
::s.. Physicist ed about it ·rst? Gets Grant
S - ·w YMON SAY Middle Class ets Rules; Poor People Have No Sai . cidP what programs and as SAN DIEGO . 'fhe mid; sis1anre arP best for thP dlP <"lass functions as ·thout asKing thPm " for the poor \Id ' "d<'liH'') ystPm . . I ·r 1hr "nPPd it, want it, or oor ac·e•ording to ( a1 rv I . " r ' The affluPnt de, will use it. Wa\mon. -~-~, . · the . Th~ srcond !Pctm" m . 4-, cJ_'I,, 1' 3/'tjt t t d,;~
What~
• going on
s:_.,_,...c>:J' .Y0, a1•ound herei'
Dr-. Gerald N. Estberg, chairman of the department of physics at the University of San Diego, has received a $2,?(>0 National Science _Foundation grant. The grant u; for con- Estberg, in collaborat n w_i a member of the physics department at Lou ian~ State Univer;,ily, is rese chrng the lifetime of the n gative this problem last summer _under_ an NSF Research Parl1c1pat1on Program for College Teach . Research on the Ii ellme 'the nega t e heliutn ion w~s first done at Columli1a University Two Enghsh physicists of Queen's University .n Northern Ireland further ~eilned the calcul~tions on the lifetime of the hehum 10n. fm- dings of last summer's proJ~ct m a recent issue of ''.Ph~~ Letters." He will contm,uc s research this summer at Louisiana Stale. He is an assistant profe ·sor of phvsics at USD and holds a BA fr;m Reed C_ollege a~d a PhD from Cornell Uruvers1ty. li1med physics. res arch tom1c 1 . th helium ion . He began research on grant. 'f Estberg described the
J/2/t
u-f~
.
f
. ., those Waymon said. The poor view to the "mon~~rt~~~1e, income theinsel\ es as a "no-thing"d
The midd as a "de!l\e the poor, according to Carrol bracket a1 fn c\ \\' \\ a\ mon The affluent de- those earn g ride what programs and as- are not th I ·ithoul a -rng them tf the~ crrn~ma e . 'need it, want it, or WJJI use clus1on f1.~~Lrships, ass fun~tion- system for below a. II d " !ante arp bPst for t~e poor _He st 1 ~ a~alnst "clubs
•
'
sa1
Waymon
oor and suffering, edoDar more from a
lack of self-respect
... a guide to some of the activities and events in the North Shores and the city
and pol\ er.
The affluent see the poor ex- as responsible for their O\\ n church plight. he . id, and _the poor justke see themselves. as nctm s o[ bv
oor are dis-
TODAY
spr1es
in
"CitiPS
Crisis ,
darns Ave. With audience Jolla. Donation $1. One in a participation. series. . . Sunday film program, San Lecture, "A Cr1tical Look Diego atural History Mu- at Today's Birth Control seum. •· ·ature's Half Acre," Methods," Dr. George D. from Walt Disney's "True Huff, gynecologist, 7:30 p.m., Life dventure" •erie , 1:30 :\-Iontczuma Hall, Aztec Cen- and :i p.m., at the museum, !PT, San Diego State College. Balboa Park Donation, 251 Free to public. cents for adults, 10 cents for Art lecture, "Spamsh Ba-· unaccompanied children to roque," Dr. Thomas Pelzel, 16; members of ·atural His-· assistant professor of art, tory Society and servicemen University of California, R1v- admitted free. ers1de, 10:45 a.m, Copley Open forum, ''!low Univer- Auditorium, Fine Arts GaJ. itics re Facing Proposed Iery, Balboa Park. One a ser• Bills," spon ored by North ies, "Meet the Masters." Fol- Shore Republican League, 8 lowed by luncheon. Lectur p.m., Torrey Pines Inn, La and luncheon, $2.25; lecture Jolla. l•'ree to public. only, $1. Reservations are re Lecture and discussion, quired and may be made b "The IIomosel(uals," 8 p.m., calling the Gallery. Jewish Community Center, Recital, Magnusson En 4079 54th • t. Final program/semble, 7:30 p.m., third-floo_n In "Taboo Topics" srries. Ad, lecture room. Central L1 brary, 820 E St Free to pub
was given at the Univer- sit~ of San Diego by W8;Y· · · d'rer-tor ll{ the CJtJ. mon, 1 • . Co mi1- zrns' JntPrrac1Rl m 1 tee of San Digo. rPcPnt}. Wavmnn rlrscrihes so.cial ,. • m11n1ripal scrvwrs an.. I[ chooJ, 1ch11rrhPS WP arP, s , . . d<'III er~ ~vstems, rte. I as h'ah rost l l. •rrng at J.., 'P IV( d sPrvicP!II p ngrams an · . hie h itre rrc•quPnUy no in ;:-;.,.orda nt'(' wil'the rrquests and rn•••ds o! the poor Ne; J<'e<•dh>H'k 'I'hl'rP. ls little or no !eC'd- b ·1c•k h(• HtatPS the idea ' · . oor and suggP~t,ons of the Jl llrl' not hra rd. Thr affluent lee! thry know what Jhe an• swrrs are for the poor th,, proc·PPd to make P "rn!P~. ancl pnforce them. m u on said. Povert~. vva,,m has man , dimensions Ac·- cording In the 'money . those below a cer• gamP , , tain income bracket are ca lli>d poor and thos(' ea m- in.. pPnnv or a dollar g a • more are not, HP stressed that the poor discriminated against PY ar<' ·. f etuhs pxrlu~1on r O m ch111 ch groups, scholar- ships. justic-1> in courts, "; Thc>1 have Jp,s mone) • I kno~ ledge>, ]PSS food :jl.~ a e g1vPn less attPnt1on . cau•r hp, arr> not m~,~- (ContinuPd o Pai:-e A-"
. I hey feel no• their en-
o They the affluen . ~o I s~· know- bodr outside of
d
grnups, sc
it"
. The seconcf Ieeture_ in the m courts, an
ah out
care~
''Cities m Crisis" _senes was have less n;on:) 'an~ are g1v- canipment
the
becaus11 thPm ," he dedare~.
ledgl, '.ess atfeniion
the Univer. ity o_! ·an JJicoo by WaYmon, d1- en
given at ~ector of
v. aymon ddle class a ·iet •,'' meeting
described
th
b .
ess
1
a •·paper so-
the Citizens' Inter- thev are not mem .~1 o
r_onfer:
_in
racial Committee, la~t week. kpn~.i.lege~dd!~>up
nte rooms, passing iesolu ions. aLthorizing 1!1 e Liga. ion aft pr In\ e~ttgat1on, aud
and c1~~)' he .. I oed group \ iew l he pm I e; irr!'sp n ible,
social
lie de cnbed
tchunh-
services
municipal es, welfare,
a.
poor
chools, etc.J. as the
,as. ing la\1s
deliverv S)Stem, del!\enng
commit-
formed
lla1Hig
program.
_ at high co. t
tee.,, au
antl services \\bich are fre
thl' middle the) ha1 e helped
confere11cP~,
al
accon.lauee and need.
l{ueutlv not m with the reque t of the poor.
das, feel
, 0 ,e the p1'\11Jlems of poor, he said. . According to \\ 3) mon tlus brings up the qu_est1,ons of the .
There is little or. no feed Liack he said-the ideas and sugg~stions of the poor are not heard, The a fluent fee! they know what the answe1 s are for the poor an? the~; oroceed to make the rules
for
poverty 1t .•s,
whose
it exist
whose benefit doe.
and why does ~overly co~-
lhese ques- explored m
111 iii! be 1969?
linue lions
!)l,~ ,:m,-tl~~----~ is ion rhar e.
them, he de-
enforce
and
lir.
,
ior~. .
later .e 'I he ,
.
clared.
IONOAY
. er-
ll Cns1s
tie
Poverty, Waymon said, has
WED:\ESDAY
and
"Prolonged
Letturc,
ies \\ 1 11 contrnue each \\ ('d neday evening th r o u g h ;\larch 26.
·\ccord1ng
many dimensions.
llme for a.m., Ch1l-
('Cp Di\ing in the Weddell ·eal." 01. Gerald Kooyman, I children, Snipps In litut10n of Ocean- dren's Room Pre-school stor 10:30
L1-
Central
,r.::~, -~ ~--~~;-,r,;o,'.."1 o_graph}; 7 4,'i p.m., Natural bran 820 E St. History, Museum, Balboa THUR. DAY Park. free to public. l,t>cturP, "War and the Su- Ii land l I kets, $30 per cou- Stite , a. si trnt professor of ed by La Jolla ,tu;eum of p!e Inform t10n, 278-5420 history, San Diego State Col- Art, followed b u~cheon Lecture, uati\e Photog. lege; 7 p.m., council rham- Film _$1, lunc~eon 2.J0, res- r phy and Conservation." bers, ztec Center, at the ervat1on., 4.:,4-0183, must An el dam , naturalist- college. Second in a senes on have been made Y .Ionday, photo rapher, noon, Russ America at war. ~!arch 10; tickets at box of• Auditorium, San Diego City T E DAY f1ce 10:30-11 a.m. day of pro- College, 1425 Russ Rlvd. Recital, Chamber Perform- gram. ,, TOMORROW ers of San Diego, piano, oboe, Play, "A Thousand Clowns · clarinet and viola, 7:30 p.m., by Herb Gardner, presented Cancer\, LIii Kraus - see Central Library, downtown. by Mesa Colleg , 8 p.m., yesterdays h tin~; Free to public. Apolliad Theatre, at the col- .1\fo;,fc al play, Wes~ !de Lecture. "The Academic Iege. Also ow, Satui:- Story see yestrrday s 11 t, Senate: What Are the Is- day, and ne ur da , Fn- mr, . ue •", Dr. Walter Kobn,,day and txlay, Gen~ral l,ecture by .1_1m Stew?rt, physics department, Univer- admission, $1. 0. Information C!1Ief d1\e , , en P In titu- ily of California here, 12:30 or re~ervations. 279-2300, lion of Oci ano raphy, La P ni Tor rev Pine• nn La I Ext. 23;i Jolla; at "family t"ht'' pro.:._·.....;•___:_____ ._ _;,____________ •ram of city library, 7:30 f'1Im program. on ~culptor lnler Arma Henry >'loore, 11 a.m, Sher- . wood HaIJ, La Jolla, sponsor- Cer bra! Pal y Foundation, 7 premP. i! m , Kona Kai Club, Sheller Silent l'ourt Leges," r·ranm
2~-t<" .3/'/,A,
···- -~-·-·
,, reeland-~lartin Betrothal Mr and :\lrs Philip Patrick Martin Jr. of La Mesa announce th~ e~gage~en·t of their daughter, Patricia Anne, to J~hn Earl Vreeland Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. John Earl Vreelan . The young couple _ will be -~,--, married on the weddmg anru- vcrsary of the bride-elect's parents, July 5. Miss Martin was graduated from the Academy of Our Lady of Peace in 1966 and now attends University of San Diego. She is membe.r of Delta Epsilon Sigma, national honor society.
USO T orerqs Claim City Cage Crowni~'" It the first losing season successful in one re~(. USO was . d th was the "city champ10n. for Coach Phil Woo(pert an e The unofficial accolade University of San Diego T?reros belongs to the San Diego four- in six years. But at leaS t it was
year college whose basketball team has the best record of games played between the frur local schools. USO defeated California Western three times, San Diego State once, and UC San Diego twice including last Saturday night's homecoming dual. The Toreros ended their season with a 10-15 overall record. The Toreros, who haven't been known as crowd-pleasers this season closed out the cage year by not disappointing their fans. Last F'riday they defeaLed Chapman College, 59-56, and on Saturday night UCSD fell to the Toreros 70-64 in an overtime battle.
Mr. Vreeland was graduated from Kearny High ~ch~l and is a senior at University of San Diego. Ile is a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon Fra- ternity. The engagement was cele- brated at a family dinner gi1,1en on the recent wedding anni- versary of th bride-elect's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Philip Martin.
pm .. thml floor lecture room, Gent al J,ibrary, 8 0 L L • Second of !our meet n"s. annual rlolhing foru n. h~h · ns and Fabric . l9 9' pr ntcd bv \dull Educa!Jc\n Ppartmrnt of r1f cho lo 9 3rJ p m a 1d to um ' Pac1f1c Rea, h Junior H1 h cbool 4676 lngraha Free to puhlJc I o d 21 Play, ' tans a anti war drama b} Re olt Brecht, 8 30 p.m , Little The- l!fre, San Diego City Colle e, 1425 Russ Blvd. I.so tomor- row and M rch 14 and l5 . Tickets and e ervations, 239-7854. SATURD\Y I Musical play, "West Side Story"-see earlier listing. "Rock" concert, Paul But- terfield Blue Rand, the Taj Mahal, Sons of Champion, and the r'ramework, sponsored by As llciated Studpnts or San Diego Slate College, 8 p m . Prterson (;} mna. ium, at 1hr C'ollege Ticket.~ on sale at ztec Crnter box off1c·1\ Rummal(I' sale, auxiliary lo Veterans of foreign Wars Post 3788, 9 ~m. to fl p.m. 1 7711.'i Othello St Kearn ,1e a I o tomorrow. Pro CePds to CanrPr Fund -quare dance, 12th anni-
/ Debate Set On Dissent Edward T Butler, former San Diego city attorney, and A. L. Wirin the American Civil Liber- iies l'nion 's chief counsel for Southern California, , ii\ debate th legal conflicts of dissent and law enforcement at noon Wed- nesday at the Unive1sity of I San Diego School of Law's More lHall. ..: ~/3/~/
PATRICIA MARTIN
I 'Answer • IS says new
What~~ around ~ere~ ...,.--- \\EDI\ESDAi · t' 't'es ac 1111 1 Law forum, one of series· . and debate hetween A. J:.,. Wirin, and the c,ty chief counsel for Southern I
H) SARAH co:-.Gno~ ."rntinrl Staff Writer
l nt1J now. people ha\ e looked to in titutions for v r n s10n to "'ee the way they felt." It \la only_ all right to have the feelings they had 1f tne.> ouJd fmcl sucll pP1 mis ion in thr Bible, m church, or from educa- lM · and experts. Th t · the 11ay Ph1l11p Kavanaugh, ::11.D. sees an out\\o n psychiatry that has evolved to "telJmg_ people now that its all nght to tru · . · · _es." 'I he Ps}Ch0Jo 0 , Club of the I ers1t · of San Die o ( SDJ imited Dr. Kavanaugh to spea a 1 s mee rng ,ast Tue da) mght. .. . . But "after-dinner speeches are 1mposs1ble for Dr. avanaugh no\\, Instead, he ·reacted" to his audience without a prepared text. The fact that he shared his expenences in group encotintef and ··total psychiatr}" with men of USO had special igniCicance . . . . _ lie shares their background m Catholic schools and the Church, as well as their interest in psychiatry and psycholo 0 y. The exp~rience was therefore '·exciting" for the Jo ins Hopkrns graduate whose brother i_s James _K_av- anaugh, former Catholic priest now marned and hvmg in San D1e 0 o PHIL K.\ YA:\'AUGH C \.LLS HIMSELF "A PSY- hiatn t trained in psycholog_\. He heads La .Jo11a·s I rnan Resources lnstitute. Dr. Knanaugh came to San D1 ao a ii .\a\\ p Fhiatn. t, spent three years at Ser pp l1n1c and two more in pnvate practice before foundin" the ln titute There a program of ongoi_ng counsel)ng in mar- ·1a"c. family, budget and vocation Is provided with a din~en.·1on "hard to label," but much like Synanon, Kairos r1r Esalen in encounter approaches. . Ile described a new psycholog:, to the men at LSD. 'fhe modern behal'ior,al sciences, Dr. Kavanaugh told the students. evolved from Victorian .ir Puntan rnlture-mostt; ''in opposition to. and as a reaction to," . . ,\t times people reacted badl_1·. They ennsioned a \lorld 111thout limits. said 'do 11hat you feel.' ifs all or none. F e1>dom becomes absolute freedom. Free choice become 1rre pon,ible choice. The Puritan eye sees on!:, black or hite, even whPn the man talks about raj . •·(!. 'T·OJ{'J'l'\ \TEL\', PS\CIIIATRY EVOLVED durin~ an age when mstitut1ons held a largel.v Puritan- ical µ}11Iosoµh\. So the philosoph; of psychiatry was anti- uritan auq the most popular and influential form was p ychoana } 1 'The o choanalv t took an idea •that the sexual na ure of man \\ as g'ood and not bad-and institution- alized 1t 1\ith all the old rigidities and defects of a Puritan Jn t1tt1t10n "The 1nstitutionaliied 'Ilea then became the mas- ter of man, rather than his senant. II was set up to free m,rn, and then as an institution fell victim to the • ame olrl d1sea e ·• Dr Kavanaugh said. When p,ychiatrv was in ii. adolescence, the psy- chiatrist sard, people werp demanding institutions to pro, 1de an. wer.. P \'chiatrisls felt the pressure to give thrn, \I hat tht>v I\ ere demanding, a1f developed a "mys- ti al lheo1:, of ps}C'hoanal,vsis - which no one can uutlerstand" ":\01\ WE'RF SA YI. ·c TO PEOPLE, 'THE A\. swer I r allj \\ ithm ,1ou. \Iv job 1s lo help you find this an. wer 111thin >·011 • The irony of it is that psychiatry and P~Fholo :, had been savini: this for rears, but only 111111 I be •innrn_g- to happen in praehce .. 'I he doctor said that psyrhiatn 1s not '·changing" our ou ture, hut reflecting' 1!, in dissatisfaction with lnst1t11Uons. J he ha e lried o ell fl<'opli> how to expel·1ence he Puritan heritage. '' PPople hear in Puritan terms, and
California of the American Civil Liberties Union, and Ed Butler, former city attorney, I I noon, :\fore Hall, University _!!f San Diego. .J Pre-school story time tor children, 10:30 a.m., Chil- dren's ~oom, Central Library, Lecture third in series, "Cities in Crisis," Carrol W. Waymon, executive director, Citizens' Interracial Commit- tee, 7:30 p.m., Rose Room, College for Women, Univer- sity of San Diego. Also next three Wednesda s. . u 1ca pay "West Side Story," presented by San Die- go State College, 8 p m.. Dra- matic Arts Theater. and Fri- day plus 1 p.m. matinee Sat. urday. Tickets $1.50. Call box / office, 286-6033, between 11 am. and 3:30 p.m. daily. -----
lJ. . S. archiviSt to speak here The man m charge of the Rhoads has been prominent Declaration of Independence in the news recently as keep- and the evidence in the assas- er of the assassination evi- sination of John F. Kennedy dence which has been a key will be a featured speaker element in the Clay Shaw at the fifth annual San Diego conspiracy trial in New Or- Historical Convention. leans. Dr. James B. Rhoads, ar- Historians an d history chivist of the United States, buffs will bear papers and based in Washington, D. C., speches by 40 of the nation's will speak at the final dinner top scholars and historian of the three day convention. according to Dr. Raymond The convention will be held S. Brandes. co-chairman at the University of San the arrangements committee. Diego Thursday through Sat- The theme of the convention urday. His topic will be/ is the 200th anniversary of "California in the National the birth of San Diego and Archives." of California. . ...0,. 1( c, ,,_J 3,/2_/4 f'
~er. ary danee of Kearny Koru Krusher~, 8 to 11 p.m., Pa- cific Reach Community Cen- ter, r sham and d ~ --- :.-:0 ---~ ...... ,.,,,.:-rt -:- -:......:-~ , .. -~~· ···••::..;;;;;;:, __ __ .•. ,.. . . Recital, Nicolas Reveles, iani t, and Catherine Vat- oune, oprano, in works by eethoven, Prokofiev, Han- el, • chumann, Puccini and !hers, 8 p.m., College for Women Theatre, University of San Diego. F'ree to public.
------~--~·-- -
'D LJ d 1 So ez.,;,,, es1gn or n ers an 1ng Y0 Lecture Series Topics Listed "Design for Understanding," a four-week series of lectures, panel discussions, and community dialogue on the subject of racial stresses in today's society, will hold its second meeting at 7:30 tonight (Thursday) in the College for Women auditorium of the University ofSan Diego. Sponsored by the Social Action Committee, represen- t d• • f
a -,ee yes er•
day's listin .
Recital, Howard Hill, • sistant professor of muSJc, San Diego State College, in a iotin performance, 8:15 p.m., , isic Auditorium, at the co[. r.e PoodlP Club, .\KC-sanctioned mateh, Balboa Park Sixth and Laurd trN!ts. Open to puh- lir r.ntrie do e 11 a.m. ,Judg. ill!( . tarts 12 30 p m. Confor- mation and obedience cla ses included. ln C"a of rain, match w11J be held at J\111s,ion Va!Jey Shopping C enter Park- ade For further information. 4:53-0615 evenings. Discussion, ''The Forgotten Minority" about Mexican- America~s. 8 p.m., auditor- ium, First Unitarian Church, 4190 Front St. Free to public. Sixth in a series of eight dis- cussions on "Challenges to the Establlshment." Third annual harp recital, San Diego chapter. American Harp SocietJ, 2:30 p.m., a~- d1torium, House or Hospilah- lv, Balboa Park f'rec lo pub- hr Panr d1scu s1on n pon, t Mous ps}'C'hll phenomena, 7 rJ p.m , r.aJrfornia Para- p }c:holo , F'oundation, 3580 Do!( ho~. an Diego
The concelebrated mass Junipero Serra will be a high point of the convention. Sister Cath- erine McShane said. Sister McShane, chairman of the USD College of Women's de- partment of history, is the other co-chairman of the art rangements committee. Bran. des is chairman of the same department at the USO Col- lege for Men. Father Serra founded l\Iis- sion an Diego de Alcala in 1769 at the site of the Pre- sidio in San Diego's Old Town. Procedures for the can. onization of Father Serra are under way, and the process will be described for the con- vention by the Rev. Noel Moholy of Lakeport. Fathe: Moholy is the liaison for the canonization cause between the Franciscan Order and the authorities in Rome. honoring Father
s"' U'l.r>~ T I k Set ~PJ/b f On 'Impact' A nationally known psychologist will discuss t~e impact of colleges on their students at the Univers!ty of San Diego tomorrow (Friday). Dr. Theodore Newcomb, visiting professor of psyc~olo~y at the University of Cahforma at San Diego, will speak at 12: 15 p.m. in the College for Women Theater. Sister Irene Lawrence, chairman of the college's sociology departmment, said, "Dr. Newcomb will pose a question which has to be faced squarely and is a challenge to the faculty of any university." The talk is directed to students as well as faculty, she noted. A prpfessor of ps;rc~ology at the University of M1ch1gan, Dr. Newcomb is author of the text, "Social Psychology," used by numerous universities, and has prepared many studies on the subject of his talk..
PSYCHIATrlIST KAVA\'Al'GH !\Jan's sexual nature instilutionalbed-again.
life. The church has defined God. Th school has de- fined knowledge. And psychiatry has defined health. But we can't define, we can only e"perience-in re- ligion. for example, as an interaction between a person and his or her God." What purpose. then, does the institution serve? '·It only offers a sense of community, and belonging." Then \I e might get this indiscriminately, in any m- stitution, in a basketweaving class, perhaps? ",\JA:\''S SE\'SE OF ALO\K\fESS IS HIS DEEPEST reeling, his deepest fear You can't explore that in a basketweaving class. The present stage of the protest movement is an anti-institutio'n stage. :\Ian has yet to evolve an institution which can serve him. And we do need institutions, those which accept change as a part of living. "People look for nice neat bundles. closure on el'erytbing. because they don't feel secure with the world constantly changing. If I reassure by telling you that the ,~orJd is not changing, I am n true to myself or to vou, "'fhe new psychiatrist is telling people how to Jive with change, and he is living with <:hange, too. He is not rnstilut1onalizing be 1dea. He does not say. 'I've got it, that's it t re .'-because then it would stop growing"
Employment, communication, housing, and law enforcement aspects of this problem will be discussed. Ja;e Becerra will moderate a panel discussion of problems facing the Mexican-Americans m the white culture. Later in the series, aH registered participants will engage in small-group discussions on subjects previous ly presented. Registration fees a re $10 a person, or $15 a family, with students eligible to participate fQr $5. The Social Action Committee of the priests' senate has con- cerned itself over the past year with such problems as the boycott on grapes and the lack of proper recrea tional facilities at some of San Diego's schools. Father Leo Davis of Cardijn Center, is chairman of the committee for the coming year. On Suntlay evening,
ting the Senate of Priests in the Diocese of San Diego, the series continues each Sunday and Thursday evening until March 23. A production of the Citizens Interracial Committee, "Design for Understanding" will be featuring speakers and panelists from varied Mexican- American and black organ- izations, such as MAYA, CORE, NAACP, Black Panthers, and Brown Berets. Also par- ticipating are teachers and professors from the San Diego City Schools and from San Diego State College. Dr. Tom McJunkins discussed real and mythical aspects of racial discrimination at last Sunday's opening session. Carrol Waymon spoke on reasons for prejudice.
•
Tonight's session will be a panel presenta lion on the ra cia I , problem and its symptoms.
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