News Scrapbook 1981-1982

READER NOV 5

1981

LA JOLLA LIGHT NOV 5 1981

circumvented and that the Attorney General's role as overseer be lessened. le also eliminated Ford and Carter strictures chat the agencies must show cause that their targets might be engaged in subversion. Critics of the revealed plan, among chem the ACLU, argued that such an executive order from Reagan would constitute the first time in the country's history that a president authonzed the CIA co do these things, as opposed to simply blinkmg a cymcal eye, as pre-Ford presidents had done . William Colby was not the one to hold the spotlight on the parade of witnesses and documents that were illuminated during the Church and Pike hearings, but as director of the Central Intelligence Agency during those years of exposure he was uncommonly forthcoming for a man in his position. He was so cooperative with the Rockefeller Commission in 1975 that a somewhat uneasy Nelson Rockefeller, sitting as chairman of the ad hoc review panel, asked Colby, "Bill, do you really have to present all this material to us?" Only a few months later, Gerald Ford sent Colby back out into the cold, possibly because he tended to talk too much, ostensibly (and according to Colby) because Ford wanted a member of his own team, George Bush, in the sensitive directorship. Colby is a perplexing figure in recent intelligence history. He is the highest man in the CIA ever to have written a lx>ok on the agency, and he was an active player at the beginnmg of the process that ultimately attempted to set clear guidelines and limits on what the agency could and couldn't do. But he's the same man who organized the mysterious Phoenix program in Vietnam - a joint venture between the military, intelligence, and security forces of this country and those of the Thieu regime in the Republic of South Vietnam -which sent agents into the countryside in search of the wispy Viet Cong infrastructure in ways that critics of the war insisted led to torture and assassination of Vietnamese whose guilt had not been established. Colby concedes chat of the 20,000 villagers killed in (continued on page 5, col. 4)

Colby to talk

Before ap- pointed director, Colby served in Stockholm, Rome, and Saigon and as the Agency's chief of the Far East Division. Currently an attorney in the Washington office of Reid and Priest, which specializes in in- ternational legal mat- ters, Colby is the author of numerous articles an,1 has published a book1 "Honorable Men: M) Life in the CIA." In the course of his USD address, Colby will discuss nuclear missiles, oil cartels, religious militants. being

William E . Colby, former director of the CIA, will appear in a public address at the University of San Diego, Nov. 9 to 8 p.m. Colby will discuss "the tur- bulent world around us and the ways in which America must mobilize to defend itself." His talk is sponsored by the USD Associated Student Body. Tickets will be sold at the door. Admission is $3. Colby, who has spent his life in intelligence, served as director of the CIA from 1973 to 1!176.

was run not just by Nixon, but Kissmgcr, Haig, Haldeman, and Erlichman, during a period when che Allende government in Chile was overthrown with direct CIA participation and younger members of the CIA were upset over the agency's spying mro the domestic affairs of U.S. citizens. And so it came as no surprise lase March when the New York Times ,ran an editorial condemning che revival of domestic spying as an "open call for government lawlessness," that Colby reacted by writing the T,mes a letter accusing the newspaper of sensationalizing what had been relatively few and minor CIA transgressions, and publicizing what was only a rough first draft. Snll m all, he is one of the most talkative and accessible spymasters we have, and his 1978 lx>ok Honorable Men, while laden with self-acquittal and minimizanon of the evidence against the agency, makes his current position on public oversight of the CIA seem more hawkish than che views he once held at a time when America was more aggressively skeptical of the agency. The former CIA director will deliver a speech co the public on Monday, November 9, at 8 :00 p. m. at the University of San Diego. William Colby, who is now a lawyer specializing in international affairs, will examine "the ways in which America must mobilize to defend itself." For information call 291-6480 x4592. -Bob Dorn

VISTA PRESS

NOV 51981 Concert vvill dedicatef university pipe organ SA DIEGO - Jared concert. USO faculty and c1v1c Jacobson, prominent San The public may attend organist for the city of San Diego musician, will be the the event, which is spon- Diego since 1978, holds a featured soloist at ,ored by the Friends of doctorate in music arts, ceremonies on Friday, Music of the Universitv. keyboard performance, Nov. 13 dedicating the from the University of recently installed pipe The 648 pipe in- Arizona. ln addition to his organ at Founders Chapel, strument, the gift of the A. affiliation with the Univer- University of San Diego. Eugene Trepte family, was sity of San Diego, he serves The concert will begin at 8 constructed bv L. W. on the faculty of the p.m. and will feature, in Blackinton and Associates University of California, addition to Jacobsen, the of El Cajon, the firm that San Diego, and on the USD Chorus under the completed the recent summer faculty of the direction of Nicolas restoration of Balboa School of Music of the Reveles. Park's Spreckcls organ, the Chautauqua Institution, A reception will be held world's largest outdoor where he began his in Founders Hall im- pipe organ. own musical training at mediately following the Jacobsen, member of the the age of 5.

,:, C

0 E

'i a: l a:

> JJ C 0 i

William Colby

imposed during the Ford and Carter presidencies against domestic surveillance practices that had been revealed by the Pike Committee in the House and the Church Committee in the Senate in the mid-Seventies. It turned out the proposal was a response to a Reagan request for ideas from the agencies on how to counteract the new American threat from within that has replaced the antiwar movement of yesterda'i terrorism. The Reagan draft proposed that the powers oft~ Attorney General to issue wartants for search to the intellig ce agencies be

Today's CIA

CIA (continued from page 1}

Back in March this year, a few months after Ronald Reagan's inauguration, the New Yark Times pickeJ up a draft copy of a Jocument the administration w,1s secretly circulating among the various intelligence c tablishmcnts. The Jraft outlined a considerable number of mca,urc that ¼ould undo restriction placed mainly on the CIA, re ulations that had been

the Phoenix operations, about twelve percent died at the hands of police and security and not the military. Colby was Richard Nixon's choice in 1973 to succeed James Schlesinger co the directorship during the feverish days immediately after the Watergate break-in and the growing scandal over its cover- up. Tpis was a time when Washington

SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE BLADE TRIBUNE NOV 5 1901

READER

NOV5 1981 Lemon Grove (CA.) REVIEW Winning Stre~:, At Stake Sat. USD beat a stubborn foot- ball squad from USF last week 27-14 to remain unde- feated in 1981. This week USD will take on Chapman College Saturday afternoon in a 2 p.m. .:ontest carrying an 11-game winning streak. the Toreros scored a quick 21 points from the arm of quarterback Steve Loomis, who completed 21 of 28 passes for 226 yards and 4 touchdowns. The 21 comple- tions tied a Torero pass com- pletion record set earlier this year by QB Erick Sweet against Whittier. Jerome McAlpin was the Toreros' leading rusher with 60 yards in 9 carries. Joe Hen- ry combined his receiving and rushing talents to accumulate 81 yards, gaining 35 on the ground and 46 from the air. Tightend Mike Ledbetter had another good night catching 4 passes for 48 yards to lead all receivers, Against USF

NOV 5

198

Nov. 5, 1981

Page 2

NOV. 8- ~NI\;ERSITY OF SAN DIEGO ORCHESTRA. Beethove!1 s Piano Concerto No. 1, featuring pianist Fa\her l':11colas Reve!es; 4 p.m. Sunday, Camino Theatre Umvers1ty of San Diego. Free admission Information: 293-4551. . -;,

LA JOLLA LIGHT NOV 5 1981

In Concert, Father Nicolas Reveles and the University of San Diego's college community orchestra will perform Beethoven's Piano Con- certo no. I and Dvorak's Sym- phonyno. 8, Sunda1•, November8 4 p.m., Camino Theater, Univer'. sity of San Diego. 291-6480.

USD Pipe Organ To be Dedicated J an'iego music·ian, will lit> thE' featu •d soloist at cere• monit>s on Friday, No,· mher 13 d,•dirating the recently ln - stallc-d pipe organ at 1' ounders Chapel, University of · n Di- t.~o. The coneen will b,•gin e.t 8 p.m. and will feature, In ad d,tion to Jac-obsen, ttw USD Chorus under the direction of Fr Nicolas Reveles. A n,ccption will be held in rounders Hall !mm~ately Jollowing the concert. The general public is cordially in- vited to attend the e v n t, , \\ hlch is sponsored by Friends of Music or the University. The G4S.pipe instrument, thE> gift of the A. Eugene Trepte family, was constructed bv L. W. Blackington Assocs. ~f Fi Cajon, the firm that com• pleted the re{'ent resor-ition of Balboa Park's Spreckels organ, the world's largest out- door pipe organ.

Buddhism topic of seminar

READER

C

NOY 5 1981 Noontime Concerts will preview a winter opera workshop production of La l',nzze di Figaro, Wednesday, November 11, 12: 15 p. m., Found- ers Hall, USO. Free. 291-6480 x4296.

"Buddhism," will be the topic of a seminar offered by the University of San Diego to be held in Honolulu Hawaii from Jan. 4-25'. Dr. Delwin B. Schneider, USD professor of Asian religions, will coordinate the seminar and serve as instructor. The seminar will focus on a systematic study of the teaching of

cultural

to

visits

Gautama, the Buddha, with special attention to Buddhism in Hawaii and the Christian response to it. Students from any accredited college or university are eligible to enroll for three units of semester academic credit. The "Buddhism Seminar in Hawaii " includes a program 'of scheduled classes directed readings, and

:J.

monuments. Tuition is $150 per unit for degree students and $75 for extension students. Travel ex- penses, including air and ground tran- sportation and hotel, are $750. Reservations must be confirmed by December 7, 1981. For information and reservations, contact Schneider at 291-648().

READER

NOV 5 1981 Vincent Price, who should know, will speak on the history of villainy, Thursday, November 5, 8 p.m., Camino Theater, University of San Diego. 291-6480.

SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE BLADE TRIBUNE NOV 5 1981

EVENING TRIBUNE NOV 6

LOS ANGELES TIMES

1981

NOV 6

d Dr. Henry Kolar, professor of music at USD, will con- uct the USD Orchestra in_ a concert of music by Antonin Dvorak at 4 p.m. Sunday m the Camino Theater Alcala ftk cam~us. Fat~er Nicolas Reveles will be f~atured e repeto1re also mcludes works by Mozart. · "LA &review_ o~ the ~inter opera workshop production, a ozze ~1 Figaro, will be presented in the noontime concert series at 12:15 Wednesday in the French Parlor Founders Hall, USO. •

DAILY TRANSCRIPT NOV 6 1981

UNIVERSITY OF SAN DI (Camino Theater USD)· Fath EGNO ORCHESTRA CONCERT • . er ,colas Reveles·~-~ thoven Piano Concerto N 1 "" orms Bee- with the orchesira: 4 p.m. Sunday. o.

EVENING TRIBUNE

----~- ... William Colby, former director of the Central Intelligence Agency, will di cu~ the intdligcnce service at the Univcr ity of San Diego Monday at 8 p.m. in the Camino Theater. /

1981

NOV?

SAN DIEGO CLIPPING SERVICE BLADE TRIBUNE NOV 51981

William E. _Colby, former CIA director w·11 d. W Id ff · • 1 a airs ~t S_p.m. Monday at the University of San tego. Adm1ss1on ts $3. Call 291-6480. ISCUSS D or

CONCERT

USD continues tts free noontt performances each Wednesd me concert sertes with Par1or, Founders Hall Thi ay at 12:15 p.m. In French Quartet In a recltal ot Cos teek features the Brasswlnds more lnformaNon call 291~roporary music for brass. For ext. 4296.

Made with FlippingBook - Online Brochure Maker