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University of San Diego University of San Diego Digital USD Digital USD USD Vista USD News 3-14-1969 Vista: March 14, 1969 Vista: March 14, 1969 University of San Diego Follow this and additional works at: https://digital.sandiego.edu/vista Digital USD Citation Digital USD Citation University of San Diego, "Vista: March 14, 1969" (1969). USD Vista. 366. https://digital.sandiego.edu/vista/366 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the USD News at Digital USD. It has been accepted for inclusion in USD Vista by an authorized administrator of Digital USD. For more information, please contact [email protected].

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University of San Diego University of San Diego

Digital USD Digital USD

USD Vista USD News

3-14-1969

Vista: March 14, 1969 Vista: March 14, 1969

University of San Diego

Follow this and additional works at: https://digital.sandiego.edu/vista

Digital USD Citation Digital USD Citation University of San Diego, "Vista: March 14, 1969" (1969). USD Vista. 366. https://digital.sandiego.edu/vista/366

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the USD News at Digital USD. It has been accepted for inclusion in USD Vista by an authorized administrator of Digital USD. For more information, please contact [email protected].

ALCALA PARK

Election of Officers Set March 24-25 By Rosemary Masterson

USD is now engaged in a spir­ited campaign for the election of one slate of officers following an overwhelming vote in favor of the union of the two students governments. The merger vote, which was held on March 4 and 5, was approved by 85.9 per cent of the 532 students voting. This figure included 167 votes in fa­vor and 47 against at the CW and 290 in favor and 28 against at the CM.

Only executive officers will be chosen in the election. Class and club officers will remain in of­

fice until May 11 when the trial period of theh new merger gov­ernment ends. The new govern­ment will consist of a Legisla­tive Council, the Executive Board, and the Student Court.

Members of the Legislative Council will include the Associ­ated Students' president, the two vice presidents, the two secre­taries, the treasurer, the chief justice, the social chairman, the presidents of each class, the president of the Inter Fraternity Council, the residents' chair­man of each school, the day stu­dents' chairman from each

school, the representative from the seminary, and a representa­tive of the Inter Club Council.

The following students sub­mitted petitions Wednesday for AS offices: Eric Johnson, presi­dent; Lorry Kennedy, Leonard Jones, Brian Riley, vice president (there will be two vice presi­dents, one of whom must be a girl),' Anne Dougherty, record­ing secrtary; Ray Sherman, cor­responding secretary; Chris Schanes, Carl Blomquist, treas­urer; Trudy Simoes, Richard Da­vis, chief justice.

Students viewed the new ef­

fort toward university unity with hope and confidence ac­cording to an informal Vista survey.

Katy Schoener, sophomore: "If done in the light of an eventual corporate merger, it was a good thing."

Stephanie Hamilton, senior: "It's a small move in compari­son to other areas of unity al­ready achieved."

Joe Moten, sophomore: "It is a necessary step for the campus. The merger is a realistic ap­proach to life."

Jim Staunton, sophomore: "I think the merger is going to

cause a university feeling. There will be less animosity be­tween the two governments since we now have one student gov­ernment."

Others, however, were less op­timistic about the results of the vote.

Tom Ronco, sophomore: "I don't think the merger accom­plished anything. We haven't solved any of the problems fac­ing our school. I think it would have been better to begin by merging the freshmen class and building up a whole new group of officers first. What's the big rush?"

Nobody Will Debate the Issue

USD's Forensic Team: It's One Of West's Best

By Jan Gerbaz Like Rowan without Martin, USD debate team captain Brian

Thompson is partnerless. The other half of his individual team, Everett Harry, defected to

San Diego State College this year. But last year the two captured the third-place upper division debate title at Long Beach City College.

In local events, the pair won the San Diego Tourney by defeat­ing entries from San Diego State College.

And that's just one of the little known facts about the debaters. They have averaged three wins in every four matches, a .750 average. Competition pits them against the nation's best when they meet such opponents as USC and UC Berkeley.

Young Team But one of the most striking

things about the team is its relative' youthfulness with only a year and a half of training under coach Richard Lott.

Then there's the matter of the upcoming spring championships. With the other experienced de­bating duo, Rick Walton and Jim Staunton, temporarily split-

CM President Statement

On Student Rights Okays

A statement guaranteeing stu­dent rights and freedoms has been approved by the CM Presi­dent, Rev. John Baer. The statement was prepared by Rich­ard Davis, student representative on the committee.

Through this document Davis said he is trying "to serve our students with a vehicle under which they may not only file complaints, but also be given certain rights in disciplinary hearings. That is the intent with which I presented this proposal to the committee. Perhaps with the adoption of this policy the long overdue guarantee of Stu­dents Rights and Freedoms will arise." The statement, is Uni­

ting up, only the novice teams are left to represent USD in that competition. Walton is plagued by an eye ailment.

The team is financed by the CM and forms the backbone of USD's competitive speech pro­gram, which also includes indi­vidual events in impromptu, ex­temporaneous, persuasive, and expository.

Season Lengthy "We participate in from 8 to

16 events a year," said Lott. "We begin in October and compete until May, so we aren't like baseball or basketball with a season of only a few months."

Walton-Staunton have scored impressive wins over USC and Berkeley. Their recent major wins include El Camino, San Fernando Valley State, and UCLA competitions. At the SFVS contest, USD placed fifth out of 120 competing colleges and uni­versities. UCLA awarded the team a superior certificate.

The team debates on this year's national collegiate topic: "Presidential Powers in Foreign Affairs—Should They Be Limit­ed?"

Surge Expected With the recent addition of a

speech major at the CM, Lott expects a tremendous surge of speech interest. "Now we'll prob­ably attract more high school seniors," he said.

But there is one thing the team would like to see more of —girls. Feminine activity in competitive speech is virtually nonexistent

"We need girls," Lott said. Our competition has full parti-ited to CM students. , ..n_ >,„ . . . . . . - c i p a t i o n f r o m b o y s a n d g i r l s b e -

Here is the statement of poll- cause they're integrated. We're cy:

It has been the philosophy of the Student Affairs Committee since its inception to aid the stu­dent in whatever areas are nec­essary to assist him in obtain­ing a meaningful educational experience at USD. In the past the committee has out of neces­sity tended to emphasize the negative aspects of collegiate life, i.e. those in the areas of discipline only. With such a ba­sis, we have attempted to ana­lyze the positive steps that will allow the responsible college student to appreciate fully and derive the maximum benefit from his college environment. Therefore, in our formation of policy, we firmly believe that these proposals fall into the pur­view of the committee's basic philosophy: to represent the in­terests, needs, and desires of the student.

Student Rights Since the University Code of

Conduct tends to elicit a re-(Continued on Page 3)

all for one USD in that respect. Trophies on Display

"Anyone who's interested in our work can take a look at the trophy case at the CM. We have about 15 trophies there. And anyone with interest or speech team experience should drop by my office or speech instructor Mrs. Margaret McDonough's in the CM Library."

Up to four academic units can be awarded for competitive speech.

Lott said some girls have ven­tured into speech classes, the first step in becoming a speech team member. Girls also have aided the department in acting as host to various high school tournaments.

Last December, high school speech teams from six states and as far away as South Caro­line converged on the CM for the Christmas Classic contest.

Three Champions The speech team has produced

three Pacific Southwest (South-(Continued on Page 3)

University) of San Diego Vol. 6 Friday, March 14, 1969 Kin 0

LOVE THY NEIGHBOR—Orphans at An Khe, South Vietnam, receive gifts and cloth­ing. The packages were sent by the CW Mission Unit.

CW Project Aids Viet Orphanages By Janet Howard

USD's newly formed Mission Unit, under the guidance of Sis­ter Aimee Rossi and club presi­dent Diane Franklin, has sent almost 300 pounds of clothing and some religious articles to two orphanages in An Khe, South Vietnam, through the co­operation of Captain Roy J. Cor-der, U.S.A.

Almost 500 children received gifts which were distributed to the Catholic orphanages in An Khe through the cooperation of Army Capt. Roy Corder.

Captain Corder replied in a letter "We were not only able to improve their material well be­ing but we also provided a mo­ment of joy to a child who knows little but tragedy and suffering."

"The members of the club feel that there should be other activi­ties in each person's life that al­low him to give of himself rather than just take," said Miss Franklin.

Diane added, "We are espe­cially grateful to Frank Jung—a South Vietnamese student at­tending the CM—for giving the Mission Club its first opportuni­ty to aid those in need and for being instrumental in shipping the clothing to its destination."

The Mission Unit's next proj­ect will be in response to a plea from Sister Jackie Kearns, RSCJ, former CW ASB President and now a missionary in Masaka, Uganda.

Again, the request is for clothes—men's shirts of all kinds, girls' dresses, boys' shirts and shorts and cardigans. Every size is needed, but especially for girls and boys' sizes 6, 7, 8, 9.

Sister Kearns said that the clothes are needed because "most of the children who come to us for religion and games on Sat­urday are in families too poor to afford the two shillings per month at the poor school or the 40 shillings per month at the parish."

"What school they know is

that taught them in the playing field and what love they under­stand is that expressed by the mothers, who are probably a miraculous source of pepcils they do not know how to use and other bits and scraps that are magic to children with nothing," explains Sister Kearns.

USD's Mission Unit meets the second Tuesday each month at 11 a.m. in the CW Room 17. Any­one interested is welcome.

"In terms of long-range devel­opment, social justice and all the other highly needed improve­ments, clothes collections do not rank high, but in terms of the individuals reached they are powerful pebbles and full of meaning to those who receive them." said Sister Kearns.

The Mission Unit was initiat­ed this past fall and current members are Susie Barnhart, Pat Curley, Kathy Heily, Mary Jo Monka, Carolyn Franklin and Ann Huber. Marie Farrell is sec­retary.

Page 2 USD VISTA

USD Grading System: It Works Both Ways

"In every course there is always room for improve­ment." And improved courses help to improve the school. That's what the College for Women believes, and it makes sound sense to the Vista.

The CW recently compiled a "Course and Instructor Information Form." The five-page form was offered to all CW professors. Those who chose to participate—and the decision was left to each professor—circulated the ques­tionnaire in their classes on the last day of the semester. Students answered many questions, remaining anonymous, and were asked to offer opinions and make suggestions about improving the class. The questionnaire was handed immediately back to the professors.

The form covered required courses, electives, lectures, labs, textbooks, classwork, outside assignments, examina­tions, and term papers. The questionnaire asked for ratings on how stimulating classes were, how interesting the in­structor made the materia], and whether students were en­couraged to think, criticize, and be creative.

Many students reported that professors made changes in their teaching methods, and followed some of the stu­dent suggestions. This is commendable.

We hope that, in the future, more teachers will take part in this experiment, and that sometime these evalua­tions might even be published for all to read.

—Sean Hughes

Mission Unit Needs More Student Support

Just because student funds are no longer arbitrarily allocated to charity, does not mean that the need for char­ity has ceased to exist. Students understandably objected to the donation of part of their ASB fee to charity with­out their consent. Involuntary charity is not charity.

Hopefully, students would still recognize the need for charity and organize drives or projects on their own. But that, unfortunately, has not been the case here. Here on a Catholic campus during Lent, there is little evidence of student interest in those less fortunate than themselves. Thus, while thousands of people starve to death in Biafra, the USD student body seems not to care.

It makes one ashamed to think what secular colleges do for charity compared with our student body. Many college student governments, for example, organized a two-day voluntary fast to show their sympathy for the Biafran people. The money that would have been spent on cafe­teria meals was then forwarded to Biafra.

I do not ask that USD students starve themselves for two days. But, certainly the Mission Unit is a step in the right direction. It has, to date, received very little student support and even less publicity. I would encourage USD students to actively support the Mission Unit—not only because it is Lent, not only because we are a Catholic institution, but because it is right.

—Rosemary Masterson

Parking Problem Really Exists Now Sir:

I'm not greedy. All I want is to be able to park my properly registered car, complete with student parking permit, within a half-mile of the campus. That doesn't seem to be an impossible dream.

At San Diego State, it's under­standable. But at USD parking so far away seems ridiculous. Especially when you're paying for the "benefits" of a private college. But it seems that my tuition is slated for higher things—like paying for the auto­matic ticket-giver, the Tipton Patrol. My real complaint is that the new parking regulations ap­parently have physical fitness as their goal; how fast can you jog to class?

First, there's no parking on Marian Way. (Since the faculty

can't find a place to park there, the students aren't allowed to). Then, there's no parking by the Immaculata. (After all, all those people rushing to daily Mass need lots of room). And finally, no parking in the road by the CW parking lot (so the faculty won't have so far to walk).

But now the faculty members have decided that their cars might be sideswiped if they park on the road adjacent to the CW lot, so they want the old faculty parking lot back again. Wouldn't it be a better solution to the problem if parking spaces were assigned to each CW fac­ulty member (wherever their hearts desire) ?

Some better arrangements should be made for students who park here. After all, students are people too. —Joan Pesely

Campus Police Job III Defined

THE MERGER nouimr Ws

* if va Ma*e a

Sir: The USD campus police officer

is possibly the most dedicated man on campus. Dedicated to what, I don't know; certainly not to protecting life and prop­erty.

This tireless worker has been observed in rain, sleet, and dark of night, speedily carrying out his appointed rounds—writing tickets. Recently, when a dis­tinguished visitor was due on campus, the officer asked a Vista reporter, "Where is he go­ing to park?"

"On Marian Way, I suppose," came the reply.

"If he does," said the officer,

"I'll give him a $10 ticket." Such dedication is indeed a

rarity in these trying times. Fur­thermore, this gentleman is so observant that a student's car was stolen and taken 30 miles away, to La Costa. Is this any way to run a campus?

There also is a report that a priest was issued a ticket for parking on Marian Way, while saying mass at the CW. And while this ticket-writing was going on, a student's car caught fire in the east parking lot, never to be noticed by our dedi­cated campus police.

The humor in these matters (Continued on Page 3)

6 ( s - e N S ) quiet walls white and blue and brown . . . lonely sounds play across the ceiling, shadows soft and deep bring to mind your hair, clinging in tenderness, smiles . . . the reflections of the chairs on the hardwood floor . . .

golden rivers beneath their feet, and in the distance, the babble and tinkle of a solitary piano

echo I see the tawny moon of your face in the doorway . . . and then comes the undulating flooding noise of the late ripened afternoon washing the pale walls of wood and glass, cleaning away the light, pushing it, pressing . . .

it vanishes through the windows.

. . . such darkness, such utter darkness . . . quiet walls white and blue and brown . . . lonely sounds play across the ceiling.

—Janice Adamczyk

Ad University of San Diego

Sean Hughes _ Editor Rosemary Masterson News Editor Belita Taylor Page Design Pat McCartney Sports Editor Janet Howard Feature Editor Jon Connor Photo Editor Nancy Myers, Mike Chambers, Pat Canova Photographers Jan Gerbaz, Esteban Ruvalcaba, Tari Erwin Reporters Dennis Dorney Business Manager Bill Thomas Moderator

Editors Note: Letters to the Editor must be no longer than 250 words. They

must be typed and double-spaced. No anonymous letters or letters written under assumed names will be accepted.

Friday, March 14, 1969

Sean Hughes When picketers picket, when

marchers march, and when dem­onstrators of all denominations do their thing, they usually pro­test against the obvious prob­lems only. Oh, I know black people are treated unjustly, and I know Vietnam is horrible; but those major difficulties over­shadow all the small annoy­ances, that bother us every day. And the one that bugs me the most is the Western Union Tele­graph Company.

Show me a man who can have a telegram delivered on time, to the right address, without any misspellings, mi­nus backtalk from the opera­tor and insults from the de­livery boy, and I'll be very, very surprised. As if all that weren't bad enough. Western Union has just raised its prices again. Maybe I'm a bit harsh on the

Telegraph Company. Perhaps I should have explained earlier that there are two types of tele­grams: there are the serious types, announcing business meetings, births, deaths, invita­tions, cancellations, congratula­tions, readings of wills, notices of induction, and the signing of contracts and treaties; and then there are the ones I send.

No wonder Western Union operators get angry with me. I've sent messages in code, in French, in Esperanto, and backward. But I am continu­ally confronted by the Western Union rules, such as, "I'm sor­ry, sir, you cannot say that someone is dead, in a tele­gram, if he is really not dead." I got the measles, once, while

rehearsing for a play. I wired the cast, informed them of my affliction, and added, "Am only rehearsing one line: 'Out, damn spots.'"

"I'm afraid I can't write that word in the telegram," said the operator. Naturally, I asked, "What word?" "That word right before

spots," she said. "You just can't use bad language in a wire."

I protested the rule from a logical standpoint. Shakespeare had written the sentence, not I. My use of the quote was meant to be funny, I assured her. Still, she persisted, no matter who •wrote it, the word "damn" could not be used.

How embarrassing to have to settle for the word "darn." Just imagine Lady MacBeth saying, "Out, out, darn spot!" I hung up after informing the woman that English literature would be in a sorry state if she had been a telegraph op-eartor in Stratford-on-Avon.

* « * Monday is St. Patrick's Day—

time for the annual "wearing of the green." But I'm afraid I'll be wearing black, instead. You see, I'll be in mourning.

During the evening of March 17. 1966, one of my heroes died. This towering monarch of modern times collapsed fatal­ly while lighting a cigar, after eating a delicious gourmet dinner in one of Rome's better restaurants with an unidenti­fied, beautiful Italian actress. This regal, roly-poly ruler was

paid a million dollars a year by Egypt—to stay away! This over­weight, over-bearing leader spent his countrymen's money on the greatest stamp collection in the Eastern Hemisphere, and the world's largest collection of erotic literature—the Vatican li­brary of vulgarity. This satiated stateman was, in his personal life, one of the most wicked men in the 20th Century; but he glossed over his duties, raced through his life, gambled, and sinned with such admirable aplomb, with such class, with such vigor, that one can almost forgive him.

King Farouk was like no other man in the last thous­and years—evil, decadent, filled with lust, proud, fabu­lously wealthy . . . and loving every minute of it. Black arm­bands, anyone?

Friday, March 14, 1969 USD VISTA Page 3

Arab-Jewish Conflict Tied To Nationalism

ROUND TABLE—Ray Sherman, CM ASB secretary, discusses possible campus speak­ers with Piper Cole, a Cal Western student; Gary Curtis, AS program board chairman at UCSD, and Gary Krause, at right, vice president of the Cal Western student senate.

NBC Official Warns Of News Restrictions

By Janet Howard

BEAUTIFUL DOWNTOWN BURBANK—Two resolutions are before the California Legislature that restrict interviews in television broad -easting, according to a West Coast network director.

"One would set up an equal time provision for any interview concerning civil rights; the other would restrict 'staging' (any ques­tion involving a straight yes or no answer) of new events," said Hank Rieger, NBC director of network press and publicity, at the fifth annual career conference of Theta Sigma Phi, professional women's journalism sorority.

In the opening talk, Rieger said he didn't feel these proposals would pass in the Legislature, although he did state that NBC will now only cover a "riot" after it has been declared so by law-enforce­ment officials.

Five workshops were presented, including: "When—A News Car­eer?" "Where—Women in Broadcast Journalism?" and "How Do I Start Getting the Job?"

Milton Gelman, television-movie script writer and an instructor at UCLA and Loyola, emphasized specialization. He advised the journalism students to concentrate on another field along with writ­ing. Gelman recommended that the beginning writer always have a target, to be "constantly expanding the search for yourself."

Les Gilbert, West Coast bureau chief for Fairchild Publications, spoke at one of the panel sessions.

He suggested that reporters should never take information "off the record." Gilbert said Los Angeles Times reporters are under orders to get up and leave the room if a speaker says he is going to speak off the record.

Helen Brush, freelance photo-journalist, urged everyone to learn how to operate a camera.

The keynote speaker was Jane Ardmore, author and journalist. Miss Ardmore told the conference that a woman has to "care

enough" to be able to find time to write. She emphasized that a writer should be on the lookout in day to day situations for story plots. Concerning those who say, "I'd like to write but I just don't have the time," Miss Ardmore concluded with the advice "care enough to write about your own experiences and what you think about others' experiences."

Jot These Down . . . March 4-30—Exhibit on Children's

Paintings from Southern France, San Diego State College, Atec Cen­ter, 8 a_m.-4 p.m.

March 14—Master's Becital. Ron­ald Burdick. SDSC Music Auditori­um, 8:15 p.m. French Horn with vi­olin and piano accompaniment: "Son­ata i G Minor" (Corelli). "Sonata for Horn and Piano" (Halsey Stevens), "Trio for Violin, Horn, and Piano," (Lennox Berkeley).

March 16—Concert of American Composers, SDSC Music Auditorium, 3:15 p.m., $1.

March 17—lecture on "Telepathy. Clairvoyance. and Precognition," Russ Burgess. Grossmont College, 8 p.m., Rm. 220.

March IS—Lecture on "Amazing Points of Light," Southwester Col­lege Planetarium, 7:30 p.m.

Lecture on "The Hospital through a Child's Eyes," Mrs. M. Constance Salerno, assistant professor nursing, SDSC, 7:30 p.m. Montezuma Hall. Aztec Center.

March 19—Lecture on 'The Anti-War Humor of Mark Twain." Dr. Robert Rees. assistant professor of English at UCLA. SDSC, 7 p.m., Az­tec Center.

Concert of Chamber music by Tellmann Trio, SDSC, Aztec Center, 8 p.m., $1.50.

March 20—Drama, Thesis Play of Arthur Miller's "All My Sons," SDSC Theater, 8 p.m., $1.50.

Film, "Fernandel and Charlie

Chaplin," Grossmont College, 7:30 p.m., Rm. 220.

March 21—Lecture and tour of SDSC Astronomy Department, Jerry Nadler and Richard Moyer-hosts, 7:30 p.m.. Rm. 108.

Continuing until March 21—Ex­hibit on Hallmark Card photos by Harry Callahan. SDSC. 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., Aztec Center, 8 a.m.-4 p.m.

Piano Becital by Cheri DeMuth Amos—senior recital, SDSC. Music Auditorium, 8:15 p.m.

March 23—Youth Concert with College Community Orchestra. Mira Costa College Gymnasium. 3 p.m.

March 25—Lecture on "Its a Small World." Southwester College Plane­tarium, 7:30 p.m.

March 27-29—Play—"A Midsum­mer Night's Dream," Southwestern College Theatre, 8 p.m.. $1.

March 25—Lecture by Richard Armour on "today's Society." Call State College for time and place.

Lecture on "Communication Nets and Webs," Dr. George W. Sorenson, assistant professor, of journalism, SDSC Aztec Center, 7:30 p.m.

March 26—Lecture on "DSD—Its Uses, applications, and Dangers." Grossmont College Student Center, 8 p.m.

March 27—Pilm—"Belles of St. Trinian," and Mr. Hulot's Holi­day," Grossmont College. 7:30 p.m., Rm. 220".

High School Drama Pestival, SDSC

3 Colleges Lining Up Top Guests

By Steve Ruvalcaba Unprecedented cooperation by

USD, Cal Western, and UCSD may provide USD with the best line up of speakers in its his­tory, this spring. Under consid­eration are William Buckley, Ar­thur Goldberg, Melvin Belli, and Mohammed Ali. USD has allo­cated $2,000 as its share for the project.

Most of the speakers are to appear during Challenge Week. The idea of Challenge Week, ac­cording to Ray Sherman, CM ASB secertary, is "To challenge students through the presenta­tion of a variety of ideas by a variety of speakers." Speakers will appear daily during Chal­lenge Week.

Other speakers under consid­eration are David Smith, M.D., former director of the Haight-Ashbury Medical Clinic, Robert Scheer, editor of Ramparts Mag­azine, and Louis Lomax, author, commentator, and TV personali­ty. Sherman said he hoped to get Buckley, publisher of the National Review, for a debate with either Scheer or Lomax.

Edward Keating, founder of the now defunct Ramparts Mag­azine, will speak on campus sometime in late April or early May. USD in cooperation with UCSD is attempting to get Gold­berg, former Labor Secretary, former associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, and former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations.

Next semester, according to Sherman, the ASB would like to set up a monthly USD Forum in the Lark, in order to stimulate and challenge students over a longer period of time. The ASB, if necessary, would provide fi­nancing, publicity, and the fa­cilities.

Jim Murphy, former president of the Political Science Club, will be the chairman of an ASB coordinating committee on speakers. His job will be to co­ordinate the speakers' calendar this year to plan next year's cal­endar, to further cooperate with UCSD and Cal Western in the acquisition of speakers, and to provide information on speakers to next year's officers.

USD Debate Team (Continued from Page 1)

ern California, Arizona, Utah, and Nevada) champions. They are Steve Maddox, oratory; Tom Ronco, extemporaneous; and Dan Webster, expository.

The speech team's next activi­ty is the Pacific Southwest For­ensic Association novice meet this weekend at Whittier Col­lege.

By Rosemary Masterson It is possible - for the Arabs

and Jews to live in peace in the same land, according to Dr. Farouk Mawlawi.

Mawlawi, the director of the Arab Information Center in the western region of the United States, spoke at More Hall last week on the Arab-Israeli crisis.

He emphasized that the con­flict is not a controversy between two religious groups or two ra­cial groups. Rather he described it as a confrontation between two opposing nationalisms-Jew­ish nationalism vs. Arab nation­alism.

Former U.N. Delegate After defining each national­

ism, Mawlawi, a former member of the Lebanon delegation to the United Nations gave a brief history of United Nations in­volvement in Palestine.

He decried the "unholy parti­tion of the Holy Land" in Nov. 29, 1947.

"This partition gave the Jews 56 per cent of Palestine includ­ing its most fertile lands," he said.

The Arabs, who comprised two-thirds of the population, were left with 43 per cent of the land in an arid desert, he said. By 1949, 77 per cent of Palestine had become the state of Israel.

Press Criticized Israel today occupies an area

three times what it claimed be­fore the Six-Day War in June, 1967. After pointing out that Is­rael had been condemned ten times in the U.N. Security Coun­cil, Mawlawi cited the "com­pletely biased American press and media."

He supported the UN peace resolution for Palestine but said he regretted the refusal of the Israelis to negotiate the land they seized in the war. He also condemned Israeli attacks on civilians and the "inhuman treatment" of refugees.

He said, nonetheless, that the Jews and the Arabs had lived in peace for many centuries before the British and other foreign

SI ,000 Collected In Campaign For McGeever Grant

By Tori Erwin

A drive to raise funds for the Dr. John Francis McGeever Mem­orial Scholarship, honoring the late chairman of the CM Educa­tion Department, has produced more than $1,000.

Edward Warren, the new de­partment chairman, hopes to of­fer the first scholarship in the Fall semester.

The scholarship will be award­ed annually to a financially needy student through the Teacher Education Program. Al­though freshmen, sophomore and junior students are eligible, the fund is primarily aimed at sen­ior and graduate students. It will be the only scholarship of­fered through the college avail­able to graduate students.

Dr. McGeever was an All America basketball player at Duquesne University in 1932 and 1933. He joined the CM fac­ulty in 1966 and died in St. Louis on Jan. 10. On Jan. 13, a letter requesting contributions was sent to the USD faculty, and former friends of Dr. McGeever at Western Carolina University, and Dade County School District in Florida.

Mrs. Beatrice Knott, CM facul­ty secretary, announced that re­sponse to the request for finan­cial support has been quite fa­vorable.

"This is not to say, however, that the task has been accom­plished," Mrs. Knott said.

Contributions can be forward­ed to Mrs. Knott at the CM.

powers stripped the Palestinian Arabs of their right of self de­termination as a nation.

"We can live together," he said, "but not by forcing the majority to conform to the mi­nority."

CM President Okays Statement On Student Rights

(Continued from Page 1) sponse of what the student is not allowed to do at USD, we feel it necessary to initiate a state­ment of freedoms simultaneous­ly guaranteed to the student. It encompasses a simple form as listed below:

Freedom of Expression—The rights of students to hold meet­ings, and petition for a redress of grievances to the Student Af­fairs Committee. This is con­comitant with the committee serving as a forum for the stu­dent and also affording the stu­dent a liaison for communica­tion between the administration and himself. In addition to this freedom of expression, a student should not be intimidated by the faculty or administration for his particular views.

Freedom of the Press—The rights of student editors and let­ter writers to discuss and criti­cize public and campus issues freely in the student press. This guarantee is necessary in order that a free exchange of ideas may exist not only among stu­dents, but also among and be­tween faculty and the students as long as discussion is carried on according to accepted stand­ards of journalism and good taste.

Rights to Privacy—Granted that the student relinquishes certain rights to the school upon his admittance, the right of un­warranted search and seizure should not be given to the pre­fects without the written consent of the apartment occupants. Procedural Rights and Disci­

plinary Hearings Certain basic procedural rights

are guaranteed to an accused in any proceeding in which he stands to bear some loss. A stu­dent before a disciplinary hear­ing is in danger of very sub­stantial loss of his reputation, opportunity to learn and earn­ing power.

These rights include: First—The right to notice of

charges and of the evidence on which the charge was based;

Second—The right to appear before the Student Affairs Com­mittee in his own behalf and to call witnesses on his own be­half;

Third—The right not to be compelled to be a witness against himself or to have his silence taken as an inference of guilt;

Fourth—The right not to have illegally seized evidence (in ac­cordance with the right of pri­vacy used against him;

Fifth—The right not to be cen­sured unless his guilt is proved beyond a reasonable doubt;

Sixth—The right to be repre­sented by a representative act­ing in the behalf of the student.

—R.M.

Campus Police (Continued from Page 2)

will cease to exist if someone is attacked in the dark, unlit west parking area. Surely, one could not expect the campus police to come to his rescue.

I, for one, would like to see the job of the campus police re* defined, and measures taken to prevent reoccurrances of the above events.

—Jon Connor

Page 4 USD VISTA Friday, March 14, 1969

Wooipert Looks At A 10-15 Season

SPORTS SHORTS S"K? By Pat McCartney

Many factors go into the making of a losing season in basket­ball, and it is often difficult to point them out exactly. Almost harder, it seems, is to pick out the good qualities of a team that has not done as well as expected.

Most students who attended the Toreros' basketball games have theories concerning the quality of the team's play. I think, therefore, that it would be interesting for the student basketball buffs to com­pare their opinions with those of an expert coach, Phil Wooipert.

The Toreros finished the season 9-14, and the Toreritos compiled an identical record. Both teams played well near the end of the season, the varsity winning four of their last five, and the JV's six of the last nine.

Wooipert had his troubles this year, but comments first on the Toreros' good points this year. "The consistent play of Gus Magee had to be one of the best points," Wooipert stated. "He never turned in a bad game the whole season; he just did a great job.

"Gus* play and the way we finished up were the good points. We finally started putting it all together reasonably the last several games of the season," Wooipert remarked.

"The overtime against UCSD was as good a basketball game as we played all year. Being threatened, and then coming back like that is a very good sign."

Turning to the Toreros' bad points this season, Wooipert said: "The biggest problem this year was lack of consistency, and our lack of ability to sustain our play.

"For example, in the Trinity game, we proved in the first ten minutes that we could play them even or better; and yet, possibly because of that realization, instead of prosecuting our play, we sub­consciously let up.

"In the years I've been coaching," Wooipert added, "I've never run into such one-sided officiating. We had one-after-another of one-sided officiated games—Puget Sound, Westmont, Cal Poly-Pomona, Whittier, Western Washington, Pepperdine here, Nevada Southern of course, and UCSD, although that one was not so much one-sided as it was just poorly officiated from the point of view that the fouls went against us.

"The point of it is," Wooipert said, "that after awhile the team figured 'What's the use?' What is frustrating is that we didn't play that different basketball from one night to the next, but the foul totals would surely say differently.

/ "I don't want to use complaints as a crutch, but I would have

to say that the Puget Sound game was as bad a job of officiating as I've ever seen. I told them that.

"We pulled even," Wooipert continued, "and then had the game taken away from us. It would have been a great win—a deserved win. Their team apologized en masse after the game.

"When we've had even officiating, when the foul totals were about equal, we won consistently," Wooipert pointed out.

"Frankly, I don't have any answer," he conceded. "When I've gone to the press, it's backfired, and talking to the officials doesn't seem to help."

Other negative factors that Coach Wooipert pointed out were the loss of Neal Schram and inexperience. "I would say the difficulty, of which I was involved," Wooipert concluded, "was that the team was a lot better ball club than their record."

A lot goes into a basketball season, good points and bad, ups and downs, hot streaks and cold. It seems, though, that this year the Toreros had their share of the bads, downs, and colds.

It appears that the future will hold more of the good points, ups, and hot streaks. Said Coach Wooipert, "Frankly, I'm optim­istic. We're losing only one key performer, Jim Wilke, who helped us considerably this year, especially in the late season.

"We're hopeful of lining up some boys who are capable of play­ing varsity." One, John Scottland, is already enrolled in school, and attended Portland Junior College. "We wanted Scottland when he went to St. Mary's High School in Berkeley," Wooipert said.

Next year's schedule figures to be another tough one. Besides competing in both UCSD's and Cal Western's tournaments, the Tor­eros are scheduled to play games with Trinity, Abilene Christian, and Lamar Tech. Wooipert also hopes to schedule two with Loyola.

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Torero Baseballers Whittier Tomorrow

Coach John Cunningham's baseball team travels to Whit­tier tomorrow for a noon dou-bleheader, and to San Diego State Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. for a single game. The feeling on the team is that "This is our year."

Although the Toreros have a respectable 3-2 record, the wins are only symptomatic of the real gains that have been made by the team. "Last week the team won two of the better games we've played in the last four or five years," Cunningham said.

Emotional Team "We had some dancing on the

field when Dave Gonzalez stole home with two outs in the ninth to win our first game," he ex­plained. "We haven't had that type of emotion for a long time."

Tomorrow's games against Whittier don't figure to be easy. Last year the Toreros split with the Poets ,and according to Cun­ningham, Whittier normally has pretty good pitchers. This, and the fact that injuries have slowed the Toreros, helps to re­strain the growing enthusiasm on the team.

"We've been handicapped by the weather and injuries," Cun­ningham said. 'Tom Berry Is out for the season, and Bill Cromp-ton, Tom Brown, and Tim Smith have all been injured. Duane Lawson caught a ball in the eye in a freak accident and may have to undergo surgery.

Help In Sight "We don't have many bodies,

as a result," Cunningham con­tinued. "John Wathan and Mel Arnerich have been playing both basketball and baseball and have been doing a good job, es­pecially considering they haven't been able to practice. Now that basketball is over, we'll receive some help from Ted Pecot and Steve Bajo."

Although the early season play has pleased the coach, he

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still is not sure where they stand. "Because of the weather, we're not sure where we are so far," Cunningham explained. "We don't know whether every­body else is ahead or behind us."

"We played a real good game against Loyola, but lost 2-1 on a fluke single. I was extremely pleased with Gary Myron's pitching, and it was gratifying that he was able to come back and beat State.

"We play quite a few major colleges," Cunningham said, "but we'll be good if our pitch­ing holds out. The attitude is the best we've ever had. With the schedule we have, if we split even, we'll be doing well."

—PKM

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