News Scrapbook 1969-1971

none better in the world , "Third, don't let others un- dermine our competitive system of industry a nd en- terprise. It is superior, it is effective, it is fai.-, and it offers just incentives to those who contribute most." Asserting that "freedom always comes high .. .and sometimes includes the risk even of death," Stans said. "Extremists are always overwhelmed in time by the common sense of those who know there is no future in destruction. The destroyers of today will not survive any more than the witch burners of colonial New England or the book burners of Hitler's Ger- many. "The flag burners of 1970 will Jbe held in history's contempt with the cross burhers of the Ku Klux Klan. "If you will deny the ex- tremists if you will have faith in yourself and Americc1 's in- stitutions - then in the days ahead you will get the greatest possible reward from the education you have now com- pleted and from the great op- portunities which are ahead for )(OU."

J Doctor Out nes Cancer The ry Dy LO

USD's 17th Commencement ~o&wui I l/ l () Stans Tells Graduates To Grasp Challen :-!early 380 University of San - chlev ments in planning, in Diego graduates were urged by building, in c~tin~ a quality of Secretary of Commerce life are unlumted. Maurice H. Stans at their Most Rev. Leo T. Maher, commencement last week to university chancellor who grasp the challenges facing presiDed at the cere!11onies, them in such areas as welfare, presented Stans with an housing, pollution, education, honorary Doctor of Laws taxation and transportation. degree. Also receiving an At the same time , the honora~y law degree was Lt. university's 17th annual Gen. Victor H. Krulak, USMC, commencement speaker ret., vi~ president of Copley cautioned them to "work within Newspapers and a leader m the system, build on what we humanitari~n and charitable have and you can create the endeavo:s. . . perfection which other USD c1t~.~rulak ~pec1flcally generations have failed to for bemg a firm believer m the achieve." principles of peace, h_ar~ony He emphasized that " no ~.nd 1:ommuruty goodwill, for generation has ever had a ~ed!cahon . to . the sou~d chance to do o much in so short prmc1ples of Justice, humaruty a time for so many." and individual growth," and for 3,000 Att nd active participation in "com- Stans told the graduates and munity, national and in- some 3,000 other people at the ternational proJec!s,"_ commencement exerci es in the Goal of lnst1tutlon Civic Theater that " problems of Secretary Stans' citati?n our ociety have an ominous read, " It ts the goal of the m- potential ora time bomb. stitution

... Grasp Challenges, Graduates Aq~s-~9 0 {Continued from Page I) achieve chaos and destruction." submit is the purpose of prayer, Sta_ns suggested three ways in worship, sacraments' and the which students and other youths Mass." c"n "seiz~ the future with the He urged youths not to lose optimism it deserves ." . They their vision of the future based are: on "sound Christian values." "First, don 't be discouraged "We have the vision given to by tilings as they ' may seem us by Christ," he said. "It is from time to time. An un- ours to translate continually believably better world is into our lives with His help, so coming which you will help to that we may do our tiling - to build, and it can hold the transform the world... promise of realizing man's "The meaning and purpose deepest aspirations. of life - of ail human activity, "Second, don't downgrade of all knowledg,e - is incarnat- the United States or its instl- ed in Christ Who is the Way, tutions Challenge the critic~ the Truth and the Life." and yourselves to improve StudentllWarned them but do not let them be de- stroyed because there are

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. CANCER THEORY . (Conh nued) J, :/ •.h: ( y ' v ty operat no clinic organ sms. facllltlt for patient treatment. " e people were going Dr. IJvlngston said she has down to their death because lt done preliminary work with (the organism) was not foWld \n hwn1ms but i not prepared to time. They did not need to die giv out the r ts. Neverthe• like this," she said I , h 1d. ah ts favorably A special dye is ,needed !O unpr d with the progress. trace the micro-organisms in Dr IJvlng on said she has the blood, but except for that, tri (l "autogenous vaccines" on the pro{'ess is easy enough to be 11 all number of persons, done in any doctor' laboratory including herself. She said he during routine physical ha had cancer on the face and examinations, she said arm and also was In a wh el She hopes for easy detection ch11ir for a year following of early cancer victims and then hcurt attack. use of conventional treat• She Indicated the deadly menu- surgery, X-ray and toxins 1ven off by the micro- antibiotics. organ! ms can be responsible Vaccines against cancer will for other ll as well as cancer. be harder to create, she said, Dr. Llvinl(ston said the fumes and will have to be individually are d adly that before she tailored. had a proper hood In her labora• Batelle's job, she said, would tory he would havo! to rWl out- be to extract more of the tone id to gulp for fre h air con- residue frum the micro-organ- antly. Isms, identify 1ts biochemical h bowed films of the properties, rWl more tests on mlcr(H)rganism, still a tiny animals and, hopefully, find de- peck when m gnlfied 30,000 toxifying agents. tun s . Once the biO<'hemical proper• Tlic organism is so deadly, ties are identified, many she said, that one part of it in currently known antibiotics sev ral milllon parts of blood Is may help to fight the infection enough to arrest the turing long enough for the body to o! cells in a tadpole. build up Its immunity, although e showed movies of blood a vaccine is the only final an- ta n from patients who soon swer, Dr. Livingston said. died from cane r. The blood She has been working on her was crawling with the micro- theory since 1947, when, she

In his address, Secretary Stans spoke of disorders and other problems on today's college campuses and warned students: "The apostles of violence would. have you believe that notiling is right with Amrica, and everytiling is wrong,. They would move our political process out of the law, out of the legislatures and into the streets. "They would substitute violence for voting and would replace institutions with anarchy. They would sweep aside knowledge, order and decency They would destroy in the name of liberalism and in the style of Hitler." Stans- condemned "those .Yho loose riot and violence in our cities and our colleges" a nd at the same time say noth- • mg constructive about "what kmd of an America they would try to build in place of the one they abuse. They won 't admit that they have nothing to offer in place of the system we have today." Wreckage of ations The commerce secretary observed that "the pages of history are strewn with , the wreckage of nations where such men have had their wa)II The overwhelming majority of my generation knows these men represent a small minority of yours " He emphasized that "the age of dissent has taught us that violence is not necessary to achieve solutions. It cannot achieve them - it can only

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" citizens who are intelligent and informed, who realize they have rights and duties ... who have sound, moral, religious characters . . . who are just, generou and self sal'rificing, and obedient to authority, In a word, w need men and women whose lives are dominated by principles that are ri~t and true." Earlier in the day, 81Shop Maher \\-as principal con- celebrant of a Baccalllureate Mass in Immaculata Chapel at which Father John R. Portman, chairman of the USO religious study department, delivered the homily. Father Portman told the graduates that the " values you have studied and partially absorbed eed a continuing translation daily " RMII leaning " The ability to stand back from the situa tion - to glimpse - to see th e real mea ning of tilings is needed so that we do not become lmmeshed and immersed in tbe murky morass of our own tty needs but are able to ce t e broader issues, the Christian, Catholic prin- ciples by which we live our lives. "This requires time - tilis I (Continued on Page 3)

Commerce sec. speaks atU SD s V o-i..c.t. V ~,, .-. * , · J. J 0 AN ?~EGO, Calif. - The honora ry degree of doctor of

said, she was scoffed at for be- lieving cancer is an infection, now a widely-held belief. Where she differs from many, she said, is in believing the toxins set off by the infec- t ion-not the Infection it- self-are the killer. Dr. Livingston took the cancer micro-organism away from the host and put it in healthy mice and found she could increase the incidence of cancer by 85 per cent. She has identified the micro-organism as a primitive member of the actimycetales family, an organisn that probably predates man and takes many fonns . She said the soil is a prime carrier of the organism, but that it is everywhere, especially in the food we eat. There's no

escaping it, she said, so we must build immunity instead. Dr. Livingston said as things now stand one out of every four persons will get cancer. · She reported her findings in November to the New York Academy of Science, where, she said, corroborating evidence was given by scientists from th e University of Edinburgh and the Univer ·ty of Tokyo. She said much work in France and Germany also is proceeding from her theories. Dr. Livingston said "I feel so strongly. I believe it. When you believe something with all your heart, you've got to finish It. U we can push a little harder, with more determination, I know we can do it."

man officially responsible for _e. population census of 200 million Americans g a v e graduating students of the th .

laws (LLD) Th

t

1 e census e •

ter to 60 million residences came from Secretary Stans

·

Be f_ 0 re an

Universit

of San Di

the

anticipated

O

Commenceme 11 t last Friday.

a d d r e s s

ga!b'-:i~g of 3,000 persons a't th e CIV!c '.11ieater more than

students

received

their

350

Secretary for Commerce Maurice H. Stans arrived in San Diego from Washin on D.C. last Thursday to present address at the 17th aMual graduation ceremonies of the University's undergraduate college and School of Law. He ,. a~ also awarded USD's

degrees. Most Rev. ;Bishop Leo T. Maher, Bishop of San Diego pre ded. The Univer- sity! which cckhra!er, ils 21st anmver ary ln October, has been bu·lt I rgely by the work and 111ance of elements ?f the C.1 ho ·c church though ,its students a'ld fac ulty rep. resent all f~it" ·.

Latin culture SAN DI EGO The 136. Three units of credit will be University of San Diego will given . offer a l(k!ay workshop on the Some of the plans include culture of the barrio with the v1sitmg, observing. and working a 1 tance of the local Mexican• with the Mexican-Americans in mencan community. their places of business. The workshop, from June 8- recreation, social agencies and 19, will be under the direction of community meetings . All local Mexican-Ameri c an activities have been arranged architect Henri Jacot and USD through the USO Mexican- sociologist Janet Jensen The American Advisory Committee, cour e in " barrio\ogy ," whose members come from the according to Miss Jensen, will local community leadership. expose its participants to all Those interested in the phase of activity in the local workshop may obtain additional Mexican-American neighbor- information by contacting the hood,. or barrio. . director of the summer session

/.Ii 7,._,_,,._ t 6 · ? (.} Catholic Tonsure Rite Performed in Pulllic 1·he token clipping of a used in monasteries to pr i e thoo

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four month:; an<.i become the first man west of the 111 ississippi to be ordained to t11e recently restored permanent diaconate Qf t h e Roman Cat h o I i c i lrnrch. Assists in l\Iass l.s a deacon, Ryland \I oulu be able to aJsist in the l\Iass, officiate at mar- riages and funera ls, and baptize and visit the ~icl,, among other possible du- ties. 11 ho has been teaching at the Catholic- run uniYersity for two year~, once :;ervrd as an Episcopal priest in Wash- ington, D.C.; Beaumont, Tex., and Oklahoma City. father, Ryland has been active iri t he formation of the San Diego Ecumenical Confer- ence which began t his year as a Protestant-Ro- man Cath.Jlic body replac- ing the San Diego County Council of Chmches. The rime new seminari- a, ,ere .Franci~ Bloom of Lo Ang£'1es: Jr,:; eph C, r- roll of Carpinteria ; Ri<'h• ard Dyer ' Whittier: .James Miles of Baltimore, l\Id.; Nicol11s Reveles of Oceanside and S:m Diego residents Donald Coleman, Charles H o c h, .J a m e s . foore and Louis Poulain. Ryland, l\Iarried a nd a

• I Federal Home

Loan

Appro 1 of a new off.Ce of San Die o Federal Savings and Loan Association in the "Model Citit!s" rea of Southeast San Diego as be..,n granted by the Federal H e Loan Board, lt was ann unced today by Gordon C. Luce, president. Tilm · (Tim) Scott, recently electe

Board, San Diego Feder 1 new branch wm be locatt::d 3511 Na ional Avenue, just ea t of 35th Street and 09po;;ite Otto Squ opping center. The 1mtial C'ffice will be a portable s ructurc that will open in 1, +-> ,lun . A public open house celebration is planned !or July 1. "Use o: the portabl~ otfice allows u:; to bring savings and loan service to the area alr1osi; unmediately," L -o c e s _id. "Meanwhile, pl, ns are bemg formulated tor canst tion of 3 permanent office building on the me property_" Sen·ice to be offered at th~ Sot, heast San Diego offic.e WI l i ud.., home improvemer t > n s home fmancing, e 1cat10~ loans, and a wide .:Jy o. savings acc:mnts. • • 7_(> 1300-square-foot

deacon.

to participate in the 8e• minarians' steps lea "'lg to Ryland, 49, is expected to compete t he permanent diaconate training within the priesthood. I

The work hop will be offered to the general public either as a credit or noncredit course. The course is "Barrio Mexican American Culture," Sociology

at the university.

Roman Catholic dioce- an officials said it was Lhe fir ·t time the tonsure rit• ual had been performed publicly in this country.

....:....----~~

Bbhop Leo T. )lahel', ---~- before nearly 1,000 per- ,,ons i Immaculata Chapel Sunday, 8nipped in fo·c

places to form "crosses" in the hair of nine seminati· ans and former Episcopal priest Qr. Rav Ry land, an a ~1stant professor m the ~ i\'ersi ty of San Diego's 1·eligious ~tudie~ depart- ment. Adopted from Roman ,; The tonsure rite, symbol- izi ng the transition from layman to t \e clerical tate, began in the We:,t- em church at the close of the 17th centurv. ·The rite had been adopted from a Roman practice of trim- ming the hair of sen·ants. The rractice had also been

6

:Jo an Diegon 11 tote History Post

TIM SCOTT Asst. Vice- Pres. Mgr. S.E. Branch

of l . I> 1 o< l I 111\ r 11 ,if ~JII 1 m ng pool 1~ to bP open to tlH.' puh!Jc Jor the . ummer , \ 11 cla,, a \1eek. Pool Ii,,ur, are- noon to 5:30 p.m. c\ er:1 tla.\ e. cepl ~aturda,. Saturday homs ate JO a.m. lo :i:30 p.m. Willie l\loore is to be in charge of the program. · Fees for the pool are cents for those 16 and undet" and 60 cent:i for those over 16. Lifeguards and pool at- tendants will be on duty at all time . , II llllllllllg msl! ucl10n \\ j)1 hr ol I r1 d frn111 10 a.111. to noon ~!ondav through Thu r.· d in 10 • on ll(' sion•. 11 i to b '7 for IO le~- •nn. p • lile al tJTne, ()f regit• trat10n. ,,J.r•JD 0 1e110 •11

Pool Opens To Public The Univcrslt~ r.f ~an Diego swimming pool i open to the publ ic for the summt r Lifegua rds and pool attendants are on d:ity. Pool hours are noon to .5.30 p.m. daily except Satur- day and 10 a.m to 5:30 p.m Saturday. Fees for pool use are 40 cents for persons under 16 and ~g,n.,~ ,i~r others. ( .)f' J ()

Equipment grant SAN DIEGO The Clar- ence L. Steber Foundation has awarded a $1500 equip- ment grant to Sister Agnes Schmit, PhD, professor of chemistry at the Univer- sity of San Diego. The grant will purchase a liquid sclntlllatlon count- er and Infrared spectro- photometer.

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