News Scrapbook 1970-1972

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N DIEGO UNION

Sunday M ~19, 1972

• • • changes in English

• •• true-false tests ... radicalism on campus ... freedom of speech ••• S.I. Hayakawa Talks About Language Ian th e re be ,. u ed by his;h cla peopl nowadays Ther 15 a con- nr chnient nf l~n a e bo h fr m b<'>ve and below. Tiu 1s some• ti' g tt-:it h:ippened in hak pearP.'s time. nd will contmu~ to h ppen Ul• def1nitelj. Q. Have urh ramr,af.1:n phr e s a "fr ud up(m thf' puhllr'' and " nanl nd drh1 on" bN'o t p1cnl in our politi- col languagr? : I think so bu comp red with th~ pol lc11! campaigns I th!' 19th Centu- ry, 01rr langua" 1s a b11 t mer Re- m m r whC'n braham I tncr. was called "that baboon from llhno1s," and w ~en ln th lain C'level nd campalr:n thry u ed th11 sln~an, • Rum Homan- n nd Rehelhon ' It~ CIT'~ tom we h ve rown a I tic more poll te m o 1th t.erms S. I. Hoyokawo pr s~ent o~ Son Fronc sco Stote Co!lege, recent- ly discussed sema"1t1cs "ld education w1•h o board of editors of The Son Diego Union. He i• on expert on both subjects. Dr. Hoyokawo was here to address theForum of the Foothills. :l:o letting \'our opr,os1tlon sflk a very fascistic technique, a zi tcch- mque. man from fassarhuse•ts speaks Rut the effect of national networks, "hcth- cr on radio or on telev1s on, p1odure a kmd of umformit} So tliat it IS curious tl'at the announcer on an A'a'Ja'Oa sta- tion •a ks I r nuch hke dn 'lnou rr cm a ltnnrapohs or Bo on station or a ra forr a tat1or Torre are Just slight a fere1ccs, but t'le differences tend to obht('rate th 1 mselvcs. Q: What arf' 1hr prnhlem I a Jan, agr le.a~hrr lod11y·? A: The Q: Is the ll'Titten word dying out he- cau c of U!le11 ion? A: Skil in writing have been dcclm- lng for a long time and 1t arted hap- destroys your wnt ng ability. Or at lea • 1t doesn't give you the chance to cultivate it. Q; Has lhP college campu~ changed In the thret years that ~·ou ha1e been president of San Franc1 co State? A: The campus has changed a gre11t deal Students are study,ng harder than they have been. You can tell by the c1rculation of library books. More books are be ng taKen out, pre umably to e read. More student are staying late n laboratonrs and working on spe- c I proJeCl5. Per I ps in the course of all this a numbt•r of yoang men and nomen have di covered that mean- i11.,ful oc lll change can take place

" .• you don I produce mtamnglul social change simply by carrying p/c,. cards around • • •" son to sprak on th~ campu of UCLA or San Francisco State, how ure would )OU he that there wo:ild b~ no dis- ruption? A lot of r~nple would be !o sure that ther would b a disruption that they wouidn'l 1s 11e thP invitation to him. If the mv1tatlon for him to speak Is not lssur.d and 11 he doesn't ~pPak. that ,im ls 'he number of :wa1l- able ideas that are pre ented to the stu- dent body. Q: How do tudent~ feel at San Fran- cisco State? A: In 1964 when George Linc·oln Rockwell, head of the American Nazi party spoke on our campus, our stu- dents kt him peak. I am terribly pro:id of our students. 1'1e> di agreed w1 h everything that he said, but they let him finish his speech without booing without throwing tomatoes or rocks. That erms to me the kind of freedom we ought to have. We can take a man like Rockwell, who e ideas we despise, but let's give him a hearing. Q: Should high ~chool graduates go right into collrgr? A: I think that higher education houln not be limited to 1he young Just out of high school \1ost students ought lo iake three or four years to do somt- th,ng nor academic before C'OIT'IOg to college, and Uley should be more ma- ture. Q: Do you propose a national sen·lce of some sort? A: I hav(' propo~ed ii, and I think it ls a good idea. Unions ougl.< lo rr.lax their rnlcs to allow more young peopl~ to go rnlo apprl.'nl icrship. Employ rs ought lo relax their employment prnc• t ce and permit internrshir, f, o~ng men and women to work Hi I d :r s part of 'heir educatiol'. l i. Id Ike t see higher ed llon opened up to people who are 25 or 35 or 55. that 1t C'ould be regarded as a 1!f • ong pro- cess.

racher "ho wants o keep the larguage exa<"I. precise an! me;m. 1ngf11l 1s fighting a los ~g ba le But you hav to put up thr fight tnvway For examrle we now use Ur \\nrd '01 r•ere ted" to mran 1 Uninte- rl'sled." 'iou ran't ~11y 'd lnt~·es Cae'! introduced !11 term • be t I" " nd 'beatnik'' was nbv ously a useful word But tllday words ally appear once or twice in a columrust's writings, and then are dropped. Q: What effect d tele1i

only if you know what you are doing You do. 't produce meaningful social change s mply by carr) mg placards around th street. Q: You said tnat part of the reason for radicalism on campus i. because uni\ er lty tudtnt , as well a~ rPrtaln profe sor, con1 n otten through to the mdergradJ tes who are ,n sch ol totla}. Another thirg l think 1s Vl'ry lll'l)Ortant, 1 that many n! the s u- dents who arc m college today saw the enormous upro r ,11 thl' colleges from 1964 to 1969 and many of them re olved that when they got to college, this was not g :ng t'l happen lo thrm. Q: Is the radical element still on cnmpu? A: There are some I ftovers. Many graduated Some wrrt to JBil, others \\en to law c.bo~I But the important t~ Jg 1 that a t0llege would be very Jch pc r 1f thPre wer no radira,s aro... d. Yo:i haH to hal'e ome around lo contribute to the dialogue. That's wh t the1 are doing now becausp they cannot mount disruptive dcmonstra- t,ons th way they used lo Q: Did 1iolenl'e on campuS<'s leave any cars? A: I don' tltink we ha1•e the kind ol freedom of speech we had in 1964. Q · Could you give a pe<"lfic el[• ample? A: Suppo!,c you a k L) ndon B. John-

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r 1d1cal language In the Unitrd late..~ toda with !ht redknl lan~uage 1n Hll• ler' r. rm D)? A: Tl'ere nre som very unportant IT'.:lar, 1 Fir t ll! tlie reliance upon 1ncantai1on and th repetition of a slo• gan Th " Ver) common in Hiller' lime and il i very common Ill our time t n Franc1sC'o State Coll radicals 'l'.ould get an mcantallon llke "On trike, shut It down, Gn strike, shut It down " They kept repeatrng 1t, rt of getting them el\l:! h pnotiz d This I not very differ nt from the Ill· cantatory Ian uage used by Hitler. An• o lier similarity 1~ tl-e refu al lo Ii ten to lh e with wliom you d1 agree If I d1sa ree with you or ),OU d1sagrre with me Pwill ltst,·n to each 'lth r s argu- ment \I, 1ve acli other a chanre to s a But he mood of the ew U>ll in •hr last fo\\ year~ ha~ been not to let the opposition sp ak at all Q: Jlld lhl happen In California? : Ye Thev ca celled the peeeh at St nhrd of Henry Cabot Lodge for ex• 11mpl People m one wa) rr an- ot"rr wrre connected \\ 1th 'he war ef- fort ba\ b en houtrd down. or not be n permitted to speak at a at li • \ er~ t1 r h gh pre i:e St der.ts who ca 11 therm rives • ThP Tribunal for War rim d1 p d thft rla s of a pro- fe ~or at •he Dltlver !y of Cahfol"'ta in Berkeley ca11 e 1W' acted as an ad- viser to the Johnson adm1m tra11on.

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Irvine· .Rips USO, 14-4

Four CSD pitchers issued 11 walks and gave up 12 hJts as the Toreros absorbed their Pighth loss in 20 games 14-4 to .UC Irvine yesterday. ' ' Rod Spence, 11 tormer St Au- gustine standout, paced the An- teater a'lack Wllh lhrre hits. Jr. v,ne <"atcher T()m Stucky al ·o had I hree alcl ics. Kerry Din en managed tw h!l s in leacl111g the Torcros who see 1 hc>il' next a\'I 10n Sat~rday again~t non1111g11ez Hills State 1n a do11blehcnd<'r sta1tn1g at 1,0o11 rn .National City's E, Toyonj Park . UC ll"'v/ne 400 202 ~01 H ]2 7 USO 1l01J DOD 130 - 4 8 2 Bot low onl'i Sf y o o R.uhf'r. 5) Archomhnult (6). Bretch 8) and Kms: man. HR Garner lUSD , 8th. ore on.

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71!11Jq -, UNIVERSITY OF SAN DIEGO Bv ESTEBA~ RUVALCABA ' , '\\'Spaper erlitc;rs are often crusaders. James B ce (;ahiU, ed •or of CSD's bi-weekly undergraduate newspaper, The V1s- qi, is a ca~e m point . . . . . . Cahi ll, 20, a junlor maioring m pohl1cal science and bus1- ne , crusadrs for an 1mprol'ed campus jou:nahsm program, better comrnun•cations and for an mexpens1ve speakers pro• gram. . h 400% Advertising revenue has increased by more t an over previous years, under Cahill's directmn, to make up half _ t~e

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Five chool participate m 11r J. ··- f 1r m d1oces ' northern area, held in ·t. Edward's school, orona. Grand prize winner Timoth> Fior, seventh grader t tlli-rlne' River ide. • lifornia Columbian Clumties benefits from fishfry 6 p.m. Friday, Mdrch 31, Columbu · hall, 4425 Home Ave, San DI go, sponsored by K of(' Cahrillo Council. USO orchestra and concert choir in premier performance of Lawrence Brullo's cantata "Good Friday and Easter Dialogue," 4 p.m, Sunday, March 26, Camino Hall Theater,. Alcala Park. Dr Henry Kolar, chairman, SD music d partm nt, conducts. The D1oce,an Sister · ,·enate elected Si le harlene Talbott pr id nt, Si trr Carlotta di Lorenzo vice-presi~ent, .S1 tcr Menan James Carberry treasurer, and Sister lari II Bremn r commurucalions chairman. ocu1d1 ~'-"""'' •

Humbles USO, 5- ByMIKE YORKEY The La Jolla High varsity tennis team saddled the University of San Diego Toreros, on March 15, giving the Yikes the right lo call

Harry Ojala, 6-2, 6-3. With the Vikings in an unbeatable position, 5-2, and darkness prevailing, lhe remaining doubles matches were played as one-setters. Holladay and Nunez lost one match 7-f, in a sudden-death tiebreaker, and Mott and Mike Newberry lost in pro-set, 8-4. The outstanding win for La Jolla upped its record to 4-0 in the young season, the loss was USD's first of the year. Later in the spring the Viking nelters will travel to Los Angeles for exhibition matches with UCLA and USC. Tho~h the Vikes don't stand much of a chance against the two major" college POwers, one can be S\a'e that use will remember the scare thrown at them last year by the Viking contingent On the high school front, U,a "second" team composed of the last ten men, have been disposing of their Western League opponents in routine fashion, completing 7--0 routs over Claremont and Madison High. The impressive netters lost only four games in the Clairemont Match, and in 14 sets they won 11 by 6--0. The Yikes play Kearney High tomorrow afternoon al Mesa College. Next week during Easter vacation some members of the squad will play in the coveted Dudley Cup tourney in Santa Monica. ~--------

Vista budget. Cahill feels 1t is his dutv to try to make The Vista self suffi"cient Cahill quit a gas station job to work 30 lo 40 hours per week on The Vista, but feels that the journalism depart- ment is working under ex- treme hardships. The university has only one instrurtor teachini:; two courses. "The university offers us practically nothing, and the ASB doesn't offer enough." he said. ·•our typewriters are still broken, w 0 h~ve no cam- era, and there are no funds to alleYiate our problems. ··r don't see Thi• Vista ac-

themselves the best tennis squad-college level on down-in San Diego. USD, ranked potentailly in the lop 10 in the United States in the small college division, has defeated every college in the San Diego area by a 9-0 count. Tbe team was reportedly "frustrated for a lack of competition at the collegiate leve~" but Coach Russ Lan- thorne's Vikings proved lo be too much for the Toreros. John Holladay, playing in the No, 1 spot for L.t·Jolla, downed Andrew Rae of Australia, 6-4, 6- 0. Steve Mott ripped through Mike Kellogg, 6-2, 6-4, and Gom.alo Nunez pulled out a clutch 6-4, 6-7, 6-4 victory over Guy Fritz. Ted Hagey routed John Schwikert for La Jolla's fourth singles point, 6-2, 6-3. In doubles, Hagey and Bruce Kleege clinched the match, breezing through Schwikert and

... University offers-:'4: Brullo compositit:r-,>..a Univl'rs1ty of San Di go Or('h lra and th University Conn•rt Choir will perform an original composition by Lawrence Rrullo on Palm the multitude, displays disappointment, anger and resentment while the solo voices act as

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ESTEBA:-,/ RUVALCABA quiring the esfence of profes- s10nalism that is necessary to turn out a really fine profes• sional newspaper.'' Cahill said . . In spite of these problems. Cahill feels that commumcat1on between The Vista and the administration is better than at any time 11 the paft. Along with his Job as editor. Cahill js a day-student repre- sentative in lhe Student Senate. In this role he and Claire Maund, the other day-student representative, have established a bi-weekly speakP.rs program in the Student Umon, This -pro m has been well received, according to Cahill, with an a eel feature that the speakers appear for free of charge.

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The Univer S,in Diego tennis team whl!:11 has been frustrated for lack or com petition at the collegiate level, ~uffered embarrassment at the high school level yesterday on the To~ero courts. La Jolla High, perhaps the f111est eolleclion of prep tennis talent 111 thp country. defe.Jted USD, 5-4. It was USD·s first loss of the season. In kej singles matches. J<>hn / Holladay of La Jolla defeated Andrew Rae, a I.SD import from Victoria, Australia, 6-4, 6-0: Gonzalo 1~unez of L.1 Jolla / downed Guy F'ritz, 6-4, 6-7, 6·4: S eve Mott of La Jolla hPat l\like Kellogg. 6-2, 6-4. and 'fed 1fagey of La Jolla routed John I Schwikert. 6-3, 6·2 In a douhle match 1 h,1t cl nchPd it for the Viking , Ha- ge> and Bruce K cege con- I qu red Schwikert and Harry Ojala, 6-2, 6-3. The other two doi; Jes matche were played J as one- <'t!ers. lie ults: SINGLES John Ho lad,v Jolla Andre-w Rae, 6--4, 6 0 Stelle M , o Joi · df Miko K•IIO

heavenly reminders that Christ will rise again. A funeral march concludes the first movement of the depth of desolation. The interlude continues the runebre mood until the chorus hints of Chn ·t's ari:ing and leads the jubilant second movement. Two fugues continue joyous mood only to dissolv into a feeling of guilt and remor e because of having di believed the forsaken Christ. But then the multitude i reminded that God so loved the world that He gave His only Son The cantata closes with th f •!mg of love, hope and faith. is a compo er of piano, violin and chorus com sitmns lie has been ·1 violin! t with the San Diego Symphony In addtion to his musrc, he i well-known for h1. ab1hty as an artist Brullo has won many art awards and participated in one-man shows in Southern Cahfom a The concert i open to the public and there 1s no adrm ton charge. Brullo of EI CaJon

Sunday 1n Camino Theater at 4 p.01 The larch 26 concert will be

.:3/1 Seminars at USD on community needs A SERIES OF four seminar-breakfasts on community needs starts March 22 in University of San Diego's Rose Room. The seminars are spon- sored by the National Conference of Christians and Jews' San Diego Region. Each one will begin at 7:30 a.m. and end by 9 a.m. The first seminar will deal with "Attitudes of Youth Toward Government and Law." THE OTHER three will be: April 26 - "Community Relations and Ad- ministration of Justice," May 24 - "Problems and Challenges of Public Education," and June 13 - "Politics of Protest." The seri~ s tQ foster dialogue among represen- tatives of religion, educa tton, government industry, 'hu iness, la....: enforcement and com- munications.

:S(?AY, MARCH 30, 972 -Pace 19 Hughes denies USO endor s Proposition 9 Dr. Author E. Hughes, president of the University of .San Diego, has denied that USO endorsed Proposition 9 or the people's anti- pollution initiative on en- vironmental ma tiers as indicated by the People's Lobby in a letter. He requested that USO be deleted from the list of en- dorsers and not used to promote the initiative. While individuals at USO are encouraged to par- ticipate in civic and political affairs, Dr. Hughes said, "no one may use the name of the University of San Diego as a body without the express permission of the president."

Rosary Group

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