News Scrapbook 1969-1971

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FREED0~1 VS. AUTHORITY Priest

=~t;~~~sd!~~u~~d~:di~t~ Room 238 of the USD College for Men . The course is open lo the public for a fee of $2 a session leadership, I.re obligations r. society a nd conscience and teaching vs. indoctrination in The s eries will discus

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education alone, but of

are challenges man faces now,

responsibilities he must meet, knowledge acquired by living. 1 F th r hipley aid. " Pope Paul said an inform~ The other member of the conscience must be followed if lecture-team, Dr. John W. thosewhochosenottofollow the Swanke, saw a challenge to inj·unction of the encyclical are individual rights by those fo lowing personal reflection u urpmg authority. and prayer. You alone face God · mong his examples of the with what is moral and im- exe ci ·e of authority, Dr. moral, and not the Pope," Dr . Swanke cited the policeman on Swanke affirmed. patrol who, seeing a group of Laws Needed t nagers on a corner, stops and "Who needs law? he asked. searches them. "All men: Society needs law. "Teenager don't have to be Society can't allow law to be doing anything but congregat- defied, for the sake of society. i ng lo arouse the rnterest of the Disagreement with the law police. If you don't think this must follow lawful means of happens then you don't know expression; this does not give what goes on on the streets of society the right, in turn , to an Diego," he told the class. destroy the individual - Jaw is Doe~ it Justify? designed to promote the' in- The goal of preventing crime dividual. s ems to justify the existence "Some people can't live in of police and even questioning some societies. They must the teenagers, but does it justify recognize what kind of a society unwarranted search?" he they need. It is wrong to stay in a ·ked. a group or society in which one Turning to civil law, Father cannot be a contributing Shipley gave five conditions for member." determining a reasonable law: The lectures on Creedon a nd

The Rev. William L. Ship• degree of consc1ousnes of ley made a case for freedom what one wants and why one this week in a University of wants 1t, and t'he degree of San Diego course called the person's ability to love." "Freedom vs. Authority," and Love? he did it by talking about "The freedom of the will freedom to Jove. is the volitional ability to love Dr. John Swanke had said the greatest good available at there is no freedom, that any one moment. Freedom of choice is defined for every choice, then, is only a means one of u for freedom to love. It en- Father Shipley said human ables the will to unite itself experience is proof enough with the greatest available that man has fr dom. The good, among many possible Catholic priest was free by limited goods - the greatest dispensation from the bishop good available at that mo• and the U D administration ment. to speak not from a religious "Remember," he said, "that point of view. but "a-thPisti- the greatest good for him cally,'' as he put it, and he may not b_e a"'.aihble to him. said: · If a thmg 1s perceived as "Freedom of the will all evil, with no good per- means doing• what one really ceived in it for us at all, we wants to do. 1t 1 a self-dP• are not free to love 1t. So we termination in the strict have no freedom of <'hoice, sen~e- The degree of freedom the choice is deti,rm,ned of tire will depends on the And conversely, 1f the ob- ject is all good are fr P to love t but, again we have .no :!{l:.i.a.Lllll of <'hOlC We re not ree not to Jove 1t iy God is all good buf many

Researchers Seek ;:.2';:;, Medical Answers ome of the mysteries of man's most destructive diseases may be understood as the result of research at the San Diego Biomedical Research Institute and the i ersit of i o. A three-year project to be conducted at the research insti ute and USO has received a $75,000 grant from the National Institute of Health's Division of Allergies and Infectious Diseases.

the law must be consistent, just, observable, enforceable and u eful or neces ary. "Not every immoral act should be illegal," Father Shipley said. "An act should be illegal only ,f it affects the common good or society. The group makes the decision on Jaw, and the group has the right to make rul for itself," Two Occasions There are ortly two occasions when or from those in authority do not diminish freedom but really increase it, he aid. "'l'h fir ·t i when it is for your own good, the other is when it is important to the group or team and you will benefit as a member of that ~team,' "If a person disagrees with the draft, it isn't worth burning down the whole country. Leadership couldn't be right all the time it isn't a requirement to always be right - but to be getting the job done,' he atd, Commenting on Pope Paul's encyclit•al, Dr Swanke said, "only th06e well-informed and educated can set aside Pope Paul's law. H explained that he was not speaking of formal

human disease," Dt. Pincus explained. Dr. Pincus is laboratory director of the Biomedical Research Institute and is associate professor in residence in biology at the university.'The president of Biomedical Research Institute, Dr. Maurice Schiff, is also associated with USO as a research associate in biology. Dr. Pincus was at Salk In- s ti tu te before joining the Biomedical Research Institute. He received his BS from Temple University, his MD from Hahnemann Medical College, and his DSc. from the • University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Spanis has been active in research on biological clocks and circadian rhythms . I Recently he has been simulating biological ex- periments in space with the Ip of a gravity machine. Dr. Spanis earned his BA from Queen's University (Canada), and his MA and PhD from University of CaWornia al Los Angeles.

other objects can be pe ceiv- ed by a person as all good," he said. "Free choice comes when we hit a combination of good and Jack of good, as we per• ceive the object. If you see it as more than 50 percent good, you'll take it. So you try to develop objectivity, you don't focus on the small- er part-the Jess than 50 per- cent - in order to choose well. "And the more there is t.o love, of a person, the more

The research group will study tissue injury in diseases which ' involve cell immunity, said Dr. William B. Pincus. "This type of tissue injury is active in several clinical diseases, such as cancer, multiple sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis. It is also involved in rejection of grafts in animals and man, whether they be heart implants or skin grafts," he said. The search for answers has been conducted at the institute and the university for two years under the direction of Dr. Pincus. Dr. Curt Spanis, chairman of the USD College for Men Department of Biology, ·s co- investigator in the NIH grant "Our work will seek to find where toxic material acts on human cells and how it acts so that methods of repressing or inhibiting their action can be found and could be used eventually in the treatment of

(1u(·~tlon Ral. ('d

If biology changed and babies come from test tubes or without parcnL~. will society n •d marnage as a permanent 1nslttution, h(' ~kcd With mal not n · d d as fathers, will tht•rc be an "exec ·s of ma cuhn · b10-mass?" These I

I

FATHER SHIPLEY

Does love of an alcoholic kill the theory?

you'll love him ." In adequate community A~ a marriage relationship a handicap whether new re- leade.i:_ship pecause problems grows through the years, ~he spect did not follow. As the have increased beyond lead• more good you can perceive problem was left hehind, he ersh1p cntena ••• n that per on - through said enrichm~nt and maturi- A communications gap in lrno;,vledge -:- and the mo_re ty created a stronger love. relationships so that we are 1 ou 11 -~(Jll,le him. Fa th er Ship- The professor said exami- quicker to relate but without e~ sai i t d t h II d nation of freedom and autho- real dialoguf! the p~~risse u..~~n·t1o~eeo"i!n ri!IYI bin thle ndex_t ftohur welekts Lagging social ~C\ences and h 1. · f th I w1 e p ace rn c rea 1 y arts alco o 1c proo a you a~e of several current crises: the • · • wrong? Surely the alcohollc pace of change quickened by Leaders who lack courage needs more love,. and I will communications media; ,a and a!l electorate that lacks care more for hu!1 because multiplicity of people, with a commitment •.• he needs !)'!ore carmg. T love larger percentage of tbem A set of sex value among hu'! more. . . youths who to survive today's those under 25 differ nt from Not so, said Father Ship- pressures need shrewdness, those of peopl_e over ~. m a ley. He suggested she ask any prudence, urage and self- sexual revolution ... person who has loved a man control-' nd haven't Jived And a crisis of "cere~ral . . or woman who has overcome

long enough to develop it."

control." Father

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Today's

to enjoy Chancellor William

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~- ,-1f-'.~ . TO JUDGE S.D. SHO\V f Philatelic Museum

both ironically requires firm- commencement at er leadership For the new the Univentty of Californi:i individualism, he said, our here in which he urged grad- society has incomplete con- uates to use intellect to pick cepts of rights, freedoms and their commitments, and then conscience . . . use emotions to back them More leisure and afflu- up. The reverse is today's pa1- ence . . . tern, said Father Shipley. address

Decency Rally Of Youth Set Here July 21 'The chairman of the ' Youth for Decency Rally'' planned for 7:30 p.m. July 21 in Balboa Sta- dium predicts a turnout of 20.· 1 00 vouths. Gar)• Lane. a Jaw studrn.t al the Universil\· of San Dieg_o. who is in charge of the rail). said he hoped the stadium will be nearly filled for the event, which has been planned for l\1 o months. · Lane, or 4i92 ~IL Gaywas Drive. said he feels ··it is lime for responsible youth lo speak out for decency. ·' He said he is disturbed be- cause San Diego "has become known as the smut capital of the United Stales." Early last month, Lane asked interested young people, who wished to volunteer their time and services to promote a de- cency rally, to contact him at his home. Response was so heavy that the University of San Diego Col- lege for Women's auditorium was used for a meeting. Preliminary plans were made by more than 70 representatives of area colleges. high schools and junior high schools. They set up several area commit- i,•es. \ ·hose function was to in- l)rnf teenagers of the rally. L,rne. 23, said the rally wilt <'tmonstrate that most students ppo e smut and favor decent Ii crature Lane has had h!S problems with th dult community in tao· e rally. Business peo- 'll aiid se ol administrators ha e been Jb · us, he said. Lane neei!s to cover ex- nenses, but tN 9 dults "haven't , een it as a good) investment," 1e said. Now that the money is finally .-urning in. the rally has been et for July 21. The San Diego Up With Peo- 1ile group. "Ll't's Go San Die- go.'' has volunte:cred services as have several ~opular local mus- ical groups. ··our aim i lo make smut and dope unacceptable in our schools," said Lane. ?-/J-t

ton Center, Mass., when the cardinal came and mquired if any of the sisters knew any- thing about stamps,'' Si ter Fidelma a} . "There were only three of u at the convent and he need d someone to take care of hts collection. so he gave me my first formal lesson. The humor was very subtle " 'What do you sec about this stamp that is unusual?' he a ked. I replied it had an inverted surcharge." Sister Fidelma acquired her know ledge from a library book, although she already was a novice at collecting.

shells," she says. "Then, at the convent, I once picked up three Vatican City stamps out of a wastebasket, peeled them off the envelope and pasted them in a nickel notebook. My brother gave me a stamp al- bum for Christmas." Now an expert in philatel- ies, Sister Fidelma is in San Diego to judge the city's first International Philatelic Exhibition, opening Wednes- day at the Community Con- cour e. She will be honored there at 2 p.m. Wednesday at a tea presented by the Univer- sit of San Diego Auxiliar . er time and effort to tbe mu- ister Fi e a onates

I seum, the only institution of its kind in this country sup-

tor, is in charge of the world• wide collection now consisting of 125 albums. Dr. Guy Dilla- way and Dr. Russell Hill are the Great Britain collection and have spent two years reconstructing sheets of the 1840 issue. Walter Curley is working on the Graf Zeppe• collection depicting the German dirigibles of World building Jin

endow-

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ments. The Smithsonian lnsti- tution and the U.S. Post Of- fice Department in Washing- ton, DC., house the only oth- er major stamp collections in the United States. She is as- sisted by a full-time librarian,

museum, ,private, nonsec- tarian In t1tutlo n hau mg two stories of stamp coll ctions built upon a nucleus of one started by Cardinal Spellman many years ago as a student in Rom. "I wa a young slSter at the Sacred Heart Convent in New- Nun Will Be j Judg:. Of tt lamp Sho,v (Continu d from d-1) stamp and the envelope to which it is attached )_ "We have a papal state collection that is outstand- ing," says Sist r Fidelma, •·as well as colleftions signed by the prrnce and prmces, of Monaco. The, Dwight D. Ei- senhower collei,tion was pre- sented to us by the late presi- dent. He was not a stamp collector himself, but had preserved many pieces from the post office department and world leaders. It contains the first rover from outer space, snatched from the nose cone of Di coverer Flight 17 in 1960," The niu um al o houses the Charles Lindbergh collec- tion, which Includes a letter II J. Lynch of S n D ego, one of the aviator's early flight in- structor , wrote to Lindbergh while the 'Spirit of S Louis" wa und r constructlo in San Otego. It noted his aircraft wa " ome bus." There are al o Vatican stamps auto- grap ed by Pope Ptus XII, Pope John XXIII and Pope Paul VI. "The cardinal was a real collector," says SJSter Fidel- m,1. ''Often h£> per Qllally saw to It that the stamps were au- tographed "A we before he died, I saw him in • ew York and we looked at tamps e us d to jok about how Sister F1delma ne dcd a filing cabinet when I first tarted " ,1

a library consultant and a War I." handful of volunteers, each of Sister whom have been carefiil~ screened before tb&y a lowed lo work with the col- · -

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Sf udy Slated By USD Team Research into the type of tis- sue injury active m cancer and multiple sclerosis and the rejec- tion of heart transplants will be conducted in a three-y.ear pro- ject at the University of San Diego. A $75,000 grant from the Na- tional Institutes of Health Divi- sion of Allergies and Infectious Diseases will finance the study by the university's Biomedical Research Institute. Dr. William Pincus, one of the study team members, said the group will probe the trpe of in- jury that involves cell immuni- ty. "This type of injury is active in several diseases such as can- cer, multiple sclerosis and rhu- matoid arthritis," said Pincus. "It is also involved in the rejec- tion of grafts in animals and man, including heart trans- plants." The work will seek methods of inhibiting the action of toxic matter on human cells, methods that might eventually be used in disease treatment. Co-investigator of the grant will be Dr. Curt Spanis, chair- man of the university's College for Men's biology department. Pincus is laboratory dir ctor of the Biomedical Research In- stitute and is associate profe • sor in residence in biology at the university.

(Continued on d-Z, Cot 6)

YOUTH TO 'STAND UP' MONDAY ecency Rally to The Y ut er Decency Rally'' w,11 be held as sched- uled Gar.)' Lane, an organizer of tJ-e event, made that an- nouncement today before the City Council Lane said the rally is to counteract what he called the decadence a n d immorality that is beuig pu hed off on American youth in the name of freedom. He told council- men funds to cover the expen- ses of the event have been raised. He said the rally will be held at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Balboa Stadium. He said that an article in yesterday's Evening Tribune "turned the tide. We have been flooded with calls from people - parents, youths and business firms - who want to see the rally held.·• T h e committee organizing the rally was ~150 short of its goal, he said. but the ava- lanche or funds has made the

rally possible. Lane. of 4792 Mt Gaywa Drive and a June radua t.l!Ll[niversitf of Sa1L. · ~hgol of Law . said ·:since yesterday afternoon we ha e been successful in obtaining the money we need." The rally was in jeopardy, (Cont. on Page B-6, Col. 7)

Decency Rally Cleared to Go

o a man minority of young people." Several local rock groups, folk singers and other enter- tainers have volunteered their services at the rally, Lane said. Mayor Curran will speak at

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CONTINUEO FROM PAGE

although the city offered the use or the stadium free, be- The mayor has proclaimed cause it was short of the Monday as ''Youth for Oecen- amount needed for the re- cy Day." quired insurance premtum on "Our slogan is 'Stand Up for the stadium. Y o u r Generation.' " Lane Lane tllanked the council- said. "We know the majority of youth favor decency and l'-e men for their support of the want them to tum out by the rally and invite4 them and thousands Monday night and others in the t-ouncil chamber prove it. • to attend and "to stand up for "We also wants adults to turn out for the rally, so they can see how many young peo- pie are a g a i n s t dope and taking the blame for the acts _ s_m~ut_·_•________ the rally, he said. the young people of this coun- try who for too long have been

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