News Scrapbook 1969-1971

IRVING SALOMON Free In

iry Alien to Communi m

/ ·) J, ?r.J

A-JO

THE SAN DIEGO UNION

Ecumenic;al Group Me ts Tomorrow I• V,?() Deadline for applications by churches to become charter mem- bers of he Sar, Diego ounty Ecumenical Conference has been extended until IJirt of constituting assembly at 7·30 p.m. to- morrow in First l:nited Presbyterian Church, 320 oate St. Such applications must be m the hands o( the Rev. Canon Paul G. Satrang, presider.t of the Count Cou cil of Churches, before the meeting begins, the Rev. Melvin IL Harter, executive director of the council, said. Previously, th delld ne was J an 16.

POINT OF VIEW ., Word Of Advice On Philanthropy B\ IJO "ALO FRERMA!li T\ -Radio Fdilor, The San Diego Union The Once-Over , 'o way 10 top Trv Kupci net's advice to Mi- chael Brody, the lellow in Nt·w York who says he wants to give away all his rn i 11011 . ' Wl' C'aught your acl on thl' Ed Sulliva1'1 Show," says Kuµ. :,;,iv•· your mum•.v" ... They do say no t11al :l,fcrv Griffin may he switching his CBS late-night show lo an afternoon slot, thereby averting 1he head- on competition v.1t h .Johnny Car on and Dick Cavett. At least a aozrn CBS station. around the count ry an• leaning to 4 :30 p.m. a a more advant,1gcous lim1• and :\,lerv is said to be agreeable. "'he stations would 111('11 toss in movies or local programming to n•place Griffin . . . 'out in '3'l." says .frank, " I needed thl· bread" ... And Gig Young, who stars in '' They Shoot Ilor,e , Don't 'fhey? '' - an w lilm about tho. e marathon dance days -isn't anxiou to tac le am w serie . Young observes: ''Starti11g a TV rles t like getting married to .oml'one you·ve never met"_ . . A Bouquet To Jimmy Durante trade paper sums it all up in its view of .Jimmy Durante's recent opening at the Frontier: .,J immy Dura, te g ts grander, younger and morP beloved with each appcarlmce he makes before a grateful, enthusiastic, live audience in Las Vegas" .. . Scriptwriters for TV might well ponder t e advice once pas. ed along by Some set Maugham, as follow 'The secret of playwriting can be g1wn in two maxims - l! to the point and, whenever JOU can, cut" _.. It's Alan King's line: ''The ridll'st man in the orld has got to be a TV repairman who's moonlighting as a plumb r" ... On the "Hollywood Squ/lfl'S," whep asked to e the inter- collegiate port that celrbrated it 100th annivcr ary in 1969, Jim Backus came baek with: "l{udy allce'!" And singt•r Chloe Marsh wishes folks wouldn't 1 ke so much port of the m:irriagr of Tiny Tim and his Miss Vickie. Says Chloe: "Don't you think it's touching that she do n't think of · getting ar und $200 for one-night engagements l • ·s than live years ago. Nu Buck, who is co-host of "!lee Ila , ' ommands II whoppin ,000 for hi:i ,i;hoj1/S and figurl's to g os o !'I" a million this year • . _ Bill Cosby com,•s to to n Saturday for two shows and then \fonda), m Los A11 lcs. he presents his "F:venmg With Bill Cosby" at 100 a P,lute. Proccl'd will go lo establi h a medical fund in his name a !he l'SC School of Medicine 0)1 the David Frost Show. Rod Steiger glumly described suc- cP. s as "an eter fight for !he C'hampio hip'' .. There·s a slee •l' thl'se Sunda ni ht': KFMB radio (com- petfog, alas, with Ed Sullivan and the ' orsyte aga"). IJ:s_!' > s1mghll¥ talk show r_alled •·Roundtabl " and__proquceil D)' th_e t nivers1tv of San Diego M1cliiwf 1!\\man nosts along with }'atlwr diaries Dullen. Ne11ma n wa ormer y w1t1i tne13BC in London ... 'To Cove r The Replay ' Pa I Christman. o knows th~ ten·ilor~, checks in with a w on 'f\ s football analysts: "lhc net11 orJ..s have decided that the color man . . should comment on the replay instead of the. play-by-play announcer. So. even if he paces himself with brief comments by the time he adds the comments needed to •cover the replav h stalking too much. lum as iust another prttty fac•(•" 1 " Speaking of singers, Buck Owens And Dkk Cavl'tt ·1dmits there are still a few ".Pcl1t11l'al bugs ' to be wo rked out of hi~ ABC ~how, "and after that," ;;ays Dick, " we can g l afle1 U1e n •al ones" ... P, .1111-ic Laine cut loose with ome dancing h ot r night on the " llollywnod Palace," \ll11c 1 1s an art lw knows something about. Back in J9:l2, l<'rank1e won the world record for marathon dancing in Atlantic City. With his pn rtner, he danced and danced for a total of 3.501 hours. Singing. he figured, wa.~ easier - Fre man

say what you wish, individ- ually or collectively, person- ally or in any publJc or pnvate medium. The 2,487 wllo cast their votes so unthinkingly - m fact, ludicrou ly - should be a ked if they support the idea of a KCB man located in their block looking for any question- able remarks they may make and oflen 1mprisonin:; them - trictly on suspicion. These academicians, most of whom are now earning sub- stantial salaries and living ac- cordingly, should be asked if they would prefer a tiny, in- adequate flat for their fami- lies and share the kitchen and bath with their neighbors. They should be asked if their preference lies m wait- ing a year for a small car and paying $3.889 for it; or $473 for a black and white TV set. Maybe they favor life in a land where they must pay $5 a pound for coffee and dis- proportionately high figures for almost all other foodstuffs (1f ava1lnble) - and with the madequate earnin s of Soviet professors. In many institutions of high- er learning there are now classes and ample research on the Soviet Union and Red China taught by objective, un- prejudiced faculty members. It is my guess that, such pro- fessors compri ed the 1,128 that voted "no." They are well aware that communism has nothing to of- fer any AmerJcan, including the poverty-stricken, the black and the rebellious youth. EldHOr"s Not•: Ballots were ma,I~ to 1,135 faculty members, the total ;:~~,! :rrrt!8r~~i~.~h./h:. ~~f11:r~:~ snttm. The vote was on a resolution to dis.avow a ,..solution adopted In 1950 by the Acodlff'lic S1nat1. The 1950 reso- lution stated "ProV'ed members of th• Communist Port,, by rea,on of suth commitment$ to thot party, are not acceptable as m1mbt-r1 of tht faculty." Tht official vote: 2M7 YH (for disovow- 1ng the ban on Communi1t Porty mem- benl, 1,.121 aeoln\t, 44 abstained; 3.17' ballots not returntd. The vote on a comparison rHOlution "off1rmin1 that a tacultr mtmber has a corollary obli,o. tioo to allow ond tncouro11 frff ••· pression of vlewPolnt, oth•r than his own" wos 2,730 yes, 901 no, 11 at.. stained; 3,176 ballots not re_tu_m_ed_.__

ronmenta) condition , are sus- ce tlble 'to one- idec! and pre- JU 1k cd p lcmic and propa- ganda that theoretically prom- , e to cure the e alleged na- tional a ilments Instead of h<'ing given the opportunity of an objective study and analysis, these Commum t-leanmg teachers will endeavor to equip them with an understanding that our government and life are defective and they would have an mfimtely better existence under communism, using specious and critical general- izations and emphasizing sin- ister and meretricious con- cepts. \:;.. \;.. How do \ know that card- carrying instructors will at- tempt this in their class· rooms? There are dozens of in- stances around the country \\ here they have already tried to pm on adolescent minds with PoUyanna distortions of theoretical benefits under a Communi l aegis. Communist prolessorn are thoroughly di honest and dis- reputable because they feed their students with exagger- ations of the few tolerable fact in theorehcal commu- nism and Ignore the knowl- edge ( Ihat they surely must pos. ess) that 51 years has left wide gaps in such a system of governmen - economically, socially and especially in free- doms. These professorial advo- cates deliberately ignore the most important ingredient in our daily li£e - the right to

Urges SUJ.1P-Ort Slate~~er' 1idist~ I. Flournoy last night praised Uni- versity of San Diego facID'tY members tor their contribution to peacefu l education in Califot• nia and urged USD alumni to support the mshluhon to msw-e its growth. Flournoy represe nted Gov. Reagan, unable to attend the USD Alumni Assoc1ation-spon- sored reception honoring the Most Rev. Leo T Maher, bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of San Diego and chancellor of the university_ The controller, with degree from Princeton and Cornell, de- scribed himself as the product of private universities. He said he was well aware of the finan- cial and academic contributions independent institutions make fo higher education in the country'.' $20 'IDLLIOS A YEAR "In California, privat cril- leges and universities expend $20 million annually," he said. "This sum represents money that would otherwise have to come out of the taxpayer's pock- et. 11 Flournoy commended the fac- ulty for instilling USO students with "philosophical insights enabling them lo confront the realities of the world." • "Tbe flame in the lamp ot learning 1s flickering in Califor- nia," he said. "A peaceful col- lege campus has become a rar,. ity, The University of San Diegp is one such campus. Yout _ci- Following Flournoy's speec,li, Bishop :'.ilaher told alumni \h the university had come of age. "We must look to the future;• he said, "when both the diocese and the Religious of the Sacred Heart will relinquish control of the university to laymen. "We have taken the infan~ i.Jl- stilution so far; now as it gro~s to maturity 1t is up to other5 - to our friends gathered here, to the community at large." Bishop Maher announced that the school is embarking on a $16.9-million improvement plan in the seventies. He said the money was needed for upgraded academic programs, faculty sal- aries and facilities. forts are appreciated." UNIVERSITY OF AGE

muntry, voted 2,487 to I, 128 in favor of hlrl g or retainin avowed Commu• ni t~ on the variou fa ull1e Why• ft r 18 years of tudymg communi m my puzzlement mu t c rtainly be JU tihcd. Ha the acadenuc mind be- come nalve and, hence, con- fu rd the I . ue of teaching with advocating an unwel- com ideology• Do they think welcoml! g Comrnu prof or com- piles with h r resolution of "free lnqmry and fre ex- pre I be n e cntial attrib- utes in the community of sc-hnlar '" Th(>re I o t bly an ur• nl need for • £re inqlllry" becau e 1t I mamr slly apparent from th vot that there 1s too much era s i"no• ranc among o-call d schol- ars about co 1uni m - and they should conduct a ' !re Inquiry.'' They n ed to learn about communi m, Its ideology, its progra , its government, its econo c , its society - and the mi Ing freedoms. C ...._, Their vote 1s the epitom of lncons stent thmkmg because it wou have been 1mpo sible to ca l uch a vote under a Commun1 regime. So, let th ·re he objective inquiry and clas room expre ions and discus, 10n on every phase of hfe m tbe Soviet l' nion and oth r Communi t countries. In thts way, students will I arn of the fallacies of the system lessons which apparently 2,487 educators havP not I arncd Let the academe become knowledge~ble through sophis- ticated tudy of a form of po- litical liquidal!on that de- grades our dignity, decimates our le acy and squanders the moral as ets of our land Pro- fes rs and students would th n be equipp d lo objective- ly compare our form of de- mocracy and the life it pro- vides with similar phases in the Ille of communism Furthermore, they should b ahle lo compare our so-called dcf1C'lcncic with the greater dellc1cncc of commu!'II m \;.- '-- Note, though that thi~ is d1f• f rent from the ubhmated and bias d orientation ngela Davi~ and her ilk \\ould offer in philosophy, onom,cs or political science cla srooms. Youlhs' minds today, being frustrated, di nchantcd with our government.and intolerant of our econQmic-social envi- la t month

The new Ecumenical Confer- ence, when constituted, will re- place the 25-year-old council of Protestant churches, broadening its base to encompass member- ship of Catholic parishes and welcoming participation by leaders of Jewish and other non- affiliated denominations as ob- servers and consultants, the Although the San Diego Ro- man Catholic Diocese. as such, wi!l not now join the Ecumenic- al Conference, the Most Rev. Leo T. Maher, bishop of the dio- membership on a parish basis. The Rev. J ohn R. Portman 1 di- r ector of the Diocesan Ecume- @iliU~loo.. has repre- 1 sented his church during more Rev. Mr. Harter said. CATHOLIC PARlSHES cese, has strongly supported

A 'La Apostles of the Sa- cred Heart seminar will be s n ed by the San Diego Roman Catholic Diocese Council of Catholic Women from 9130 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Tuesday at the College for Women, University of San Die o. Speakers will include the Most Rev. John . Quinn, auxiliary bishop of the dio- 'Therese of the Quid Jesus Church, and the Rev. Pat- rick J. Kearney, diocesan director of the Lay Apostles. .ce e ra e a noon Mass."-"-"" I l't•ld _ __________ _ h Q • ·11 1 b t Bis op wnn wi cese and pastor of St.

. . than two years of planning the op Bl_oy's d1ocesean executive new interfaith alliance. council. ~le curate at St. Father Portman said at least John's• E'Piscopal Church, Los 15 Roman Catholic parishes wtll Angeles, he was a college work- be among the 75 to 100 congre- er ~t the University of Southern gations expected to sign up as Cahforma charter members of the new I Macy is president and a mem- conferencc which will be more ber of the national executive inclusive than tbe church coun- board of the San Diego Feder- cil by welcoming Catholic, Mis- ation of Christi~n Family Move- souri Synod Lutheran and so- ments. He also 1s on _the _boards called evangelical Protestant of the R~an Cathol~c p1ocesan memberships. Ecwnerucal Comm1~s1on, the Bishop Maher and the Rev. New Adult Community, Cham- Heber J. Pitman, a past presi- ber of Comm~rce urb3D: devel- dent of the council and pastor of opment conuruttee, Fanuly Ser- Central Christian Church, will vice Association and Homemak- offer meditations at a pre-orga- er Service, of which he is a past nization celebration tomorrow president. night. Dr. Robert Hall Mayo, se- Following the Ecumenical nior pastor of the host church, Conference organization meet- will take part. _ ing, a "Goals for the 70s" ses- During a business meeting, sion will begin, with discussion starting at 8 p.m. and including of program planning for the action on incorporation articles, emerging new decade. bylaws and budgetary matters, PROGRAM CHAffiMAN the expected 350 assembly dele- . _ gates _ five from each prospec- Pnnc1p~I progr~m areas and College Park United Presby- Church; Publicity, the Rev. C. terian Church and stated clerk A. McClain, First United Meth- of the San Diego Presbytery, odist Church and special min- and Alfonso Macy, architect and istries, the R~v. Ernest M. Fow- leading Catholic layman of St. ler, Lemon Grove Congrega- Charles Borromeo Church, are tional Church. can~dates to become the fir st Charter officers will be in- \ pres1d~nt of the conterence._ stalled after the planning ses- Candidates for vice pr~1dent sion. Registration for the are the Rev. Donald R. Killeck, Ecumenical Conference con- pastor of Our _Lady of Angles stituting assembly will begin at Roman Catholic Church, the 7 P m Rev. Jack Lindquist, founding Ch. : f St F ,.;~ s.,, · pastor of All Saints Lutheran J ll"S O • ran~i- Church, and Mrs. William A. ?;!,al;'Y at t1n,1verSI o San Diego Reilly, a communicant at St. arnf ol li'irst . niiea 1'resbr-' Paul's Episcopal Church. terian C~urch will take part m The Rev. Dr. Macinnes, also a ,..th_e_m_e_e_tm_g_._____ _ tive member congregation - their chairmen WJU be ecume- will ballot on election of officers nical relations, Dr Ra ond and board members Ecumenical Council. LlST CANDIDATES of the R land of Universit of San Diego; soc,a concerns, the Rev. Jllm~ Oxley, Bethel AME Canon Satrang, rector of All Church; Christian education, the Saints Episcopal Church; Dr. Rev. Kenneth B. Carson, Gra- William A. Macinnes, pastor of ham Memorial Presb erian

"And heaven help you ii vou get a director who is replay happy." Christman adds. "Then you end up talkmg more than the play-by-pla~ man _· _· _· -= • ===.....- ~---------'

USD Gets Apology For Report Error WASHINGTON - The National Executive Director of Young Amencans for Freedom has written to the University of San Diego, apologizing for an error in reporting about New Left activities made by YAF. The error stemmed from a previously confidential report from Phillipp Abbott Luce, former- -- -- ----- ly of the San Diego area and "In good faith, and at our own now YAF college director to cos ts, na tronal YAE' has Randal Cornell Teague, 'na- destroyed all copies of the tional Y AF executive direc• original memorandum and this tor, about violent activities on was an expensive thing to do. thepartoftheNewLeftonCal- We have now reprinted the ifornia campuses. memo citing the University of In making the apology,

BIBLIOGR \PUERS haw fun too. sity of Sau ])if'o-o lihran·, B. Gene Hun book by Fr. Charles Dollen on sorial aspects or abortion. Two bibliography en- tries deli~htt•d Hunt particularly: book, "Sex, Sex, e "by l\loorc. And an article, "Prudes, Lewds and Polysyllahles," by Smylit>. I the Univer- ,,as omg so:ne r.-seareh Yor a ne,v

former president of the church council, has served as moderator of the Presbyterian Synod of California. Formerly a UCLA campus pastor, he is a member of the boards of the Community Welfare Council and National Conference of Christians and Jews, as well as chairman of the church council's budget and fi- nance committee. LEADERSHIP POSTS Father Satrang was appointed in 1968 as canon representing Bishop Francis Eric Eloy of the Los Angeles Episcopal Diocese in ecumenical studies and dia- logue. The San Diego religion leader is a member of the church council's faith and order commission and serves on Bish-

ReaganAide Plans Talk On'-c;a"Jp~ys Robert J . Keyes, Gov. Reaga n's assistant for com- munity relations, will give a public t.alk a t the University of Sa n Diego Friday, February 6. He will speak at noon in More Hall on ".Minority Groups and Community Relations ie California," sponsored by the USD Political Science Club. Keyes, 33, was · appointed by the governor in 1967 as a liaison to the minority com- muni ties for labor relations housing, race relations and antipoverty programs. He also acts as the st.ale's human relations officer to all city and county human relations com- missions . Before taking the post as aide to the governor, Keyes was special assistant to the Secretary of Business and Transport.ation, Gordon Luce. Keyes was the second USO alumnus to be appointed to the USD Board of Trustees. His appointment was announced in September. Keyes was graduated in 1962 with a bachelor's degree in business administration, with minors in economics and philosophy. A noted football player with the USD Toreros, Keyes was captain of the team during his junior year. He went on to play offensive halfback with the San Francisco '49ers and with the Oakland Raiders. From football Keyes went to educa lion, heading the business department at Marian High School, Imperial Beach, 1962-64. He also was Marian's varsity baseball coach and assistant varsity football coach. His next post was at St. Augustine High School where he taught accounting and coached varsity track nd was assistant var"i ty footbaJ.I .:oach.

• Class on M ge Offered by Di cese Ti, k.,_.._,_ 1 :i. r, '? Procreation is a side effect, Swanke believes children not the purpose. of marriage, are tokens of the Jove husband says Dr. • Tphp Swa~. chair- and wife have for each other. man of the Adult ucation "When I love someone, I Program of the San Diego Ro- want a token of that love," he man Catholic Diocese. said. "What's a more fitting Swanke says that while token or memento of love than women probably have a "nat- the living symbol of a child?"

USD tuition increa P- ba ed Tuition at the lmiversity of ::,an Diego for the 1970-il acadenuc year has been rais- Pd t.o $1300. The $100 raise was made necessarv by "ns- ing operating costs· and rac- ulty salaries, according +o letters mailed last week to tudents. parents and friends of the universitv by l\Ionsignor John E. Baer Sister Nancy Morris.

California at San Diego. Fur- thermore, again at our own costs , we are including a retraction and explana lion in our next mailing to those who contributed as a result of the mailing and to YAF's own contributor lists. "We do not treat this ma tler lightly. We regard it as serious. 811 l we regard the actions we have taken, together with this public announcement, to be The wholely adequate to rectify the the

Teague stated: "The University of San Diego, one of the most outstanding and reputable universities in California, was accidenlilly cited in a recent memorandum from this office as the campus where an example of New Left violence had occurred. " This was in error, and we

ural inclination" to have chil- dren, men probably do not. Parenthood, Swanke said in an interview, is generally a ''post facto" matter. Primary Purpose Analyzed This means that parenthood is acceptable once it happens, but that the pnmary purpose of marriage for both partners is companionship, Swanke said. Swanke, who Is also philoso- phy professor at the .llllil.:l:1:- ~i!,Y of §aq Riego~ will reacn:-a course on · arn ge: AChris- tian Vocati " at 8 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 29, through March 17 at Oak Crest Junior High School, 675 Balfour St., Encinitas. Liturgy Course Offered Two other courses will be of- fered t e same evenings. The Ve111 R v Michael D. Alca- raz, ecutive iecretary of the Di_ocesan Liturgical Commis- sion, will teach a course on lit- urgy. A course on authority in the church will be t'Jught by the Rev . James N Poulsen of Our Mother of Confidence Church.

Companionship Stressed That's why God made male and female while at the same time intending that the prima- ry purpos of marriage is companionship, Swanke said. Swanke believes parents love their children, but only through each other, and that their foremost goal always is to equip them to make lives of thejrown. In his course, Swanke will discuss marriage from the standpoint of man, selfishness, unity, perfection, community, sanctity and other aspects. Divorces Explained He believes most bad mar- riages result not because at least one partner is neurotic, but because both have failed to "meet the right one." "Most people are a little before marriage," said Swanke. "All they really need is someone to like them, to love them for what they are. It's the kind of people who never meet someone like that who are in trouble and make bad marriages." neurotic

to

apologized

have

it.

for

university

typographical error in original memorandum left out for " of California," for the incident Freedom is a conservative actually occurred on the youth organization with 51,000 campus of the University of national and local members and California at San Diego. - 513 chapters. the situation. " Young Americans

Wallach Play Tryouts Feb. 5-6 _::: . - /" The University of .San l)jego production of "The Absence of a CeUo," by Ira Wallach, will be performed March 20 and 21. Director Kathleen Zaworski said tryouts for the cast of seven will be held February 5 from 4 to 6 p.m and from 7 to 9 p.m., and February 6 from 4 to 6 p.m. in the USD College for Women Theater. The casting is for three men and four women, ranging from 20 to 60 years of age, Miss Zaworski said. The play will be given at 8 p.m. March 20 and 21 in the college theater, with no charge to the public.

Made with FlippingBook - Online catalogs