Daily Trojan, Vol. 75, No. 26, October 25, 1978 |
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University of Southern California Volume LXXV, Number 26 Wednesday, October 25, 1978
* * - *• Jk H
•*r
• I; • **
THE DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES SKYUNE GUMMERS IN THE VIEW FROM RESDENCE WEST
DT photo by Larry Oram
Football players face misdemeanor charges
By Michele Himmelberg
Sports Editor
The city attorney's office filed misdemeanor charges Tuesday against two USC football players.
Willie Crawford and Charlie Moses, both defensive starters against Oregon State, were originally booked Saturday on felony charges of assault with a deadly weapon. They allegedly roughed up a man, woman and child following a traffic accident Saturday night at 8th Street and Vermont Avenue.
Betsy Mogul, a deputy city attorney, officially filed seven misdemeanor counts against Crawford and two misdemeanor counts against Moses. The charges were reviewed by the district attorney's office earlier in the day and referred to Mogul.
Ed Haight, an investigator from the Rampart Division of the Los Angeles Police Department, said Crawford was charged with seven misdemeanor counts: assault with a deadly weapon (his car); hit and run; driving without a license; driving under the influence of alcohol, and three counts of battery. The battery charges involved Miriam Lopez, 21, of Los Angeles; Mauriciao Nunez, 2Vi, who is believed to be Lopez' son, and Gracian Santos, a bystander who
(continued on page 12)
Approval of campus pub might depend on anticipated profits
building the pub in the Grill, fee, Kulwiec said.
would avoid the problem. - He indicated other sources
Mike Kulwiec, chairman of the would be an endowment from
environmental and external af- alumni, Toward Century II
fairs committee of the Student funds, a loan from an outside
Senate, said approval may come bank and a budget from the uni-
within a month. versity. Profits from the pub
Kulwiec said he believes ap- would be used to repay the debt.
proval requires an executive of- Control of the pub is a major
ficer of the univeristy to assume concern of the senate, Kulwiec
responsibility for the proposal. said. The senate proposal calls
James Appleton, vice- for direct student involvement in
president of student affairs, said planning and operation of the
he is in favor of a pub, with wine, pub. He said architecture and
beer and other beverages. He business students would be in-
also said the money issue should volved in the senate's plan.
not be a determinant in the pro- . . .. , , ,
posal's approval or disapproval. ,If the ™versity took control of
ic n it il if n planning and operation, the se-
lf all goes well, the pub will be . °. . *
j n a lx j nate might withdraw its support,
ready next fall, Appleton said. ^ rr
Depending on how elaborate
the pub design is, construction Even if the pub is not ap-
may cost more than $20,000, proved, Kulwiec said the pub
Kulwiec said. committee would probably go
There are several possible ahead with planning and then
sources of funding, including resubmit the complete plan to the
raising the student programming administration.
JEP ex-employee appeals firing to labor department
A former employee of the Joint Education Project (JEP) is filing a request for an appeals hearing with the department of labor.
Clarence McGhee, a school coordinator for JEP, was fired late last November. He is accusing the university of unjustly firing and underpaying him.
McGhee was employed at the university from August to November
1977 under the Comprehensive Employment Training Act (CETA). CETA is a federally funded employment program administered at the dty level.
McGhee lost two hearings within the university grievance procedure and lost a hearing at the city level.
The first hearing was held within JEP. McGhee charged in this hearing that he had been underpaid and fired without reason. He was told he was fired for lack of interpersonal skills and organization, and was also charged with antagonizing students and staff, he said.
McGhee then appealed the decision to the Presidents' Advisory Council, which sustained the department's decision.
The next step was at the city level, where McGhee was granted a two-day hearing. McGhee charged the university with not providing him with adequate training for his job responsibilities, therefore violating federal regulations, and unjustly firing him. The dty ruled in favor of the university and said no federal regulations had been violated.
McGhee's last course of action is to appeal to the department of labor.
Barbara Gardner, director of JEP, refused to comment until she received a copy of the charges. Other JEP employees also refused to comment.
Barbara Pearson, director of the Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action program at the university, said her office had not received the latest complaints. (continued on page 2)
By John Antczak
Staff Writer
Approval of the proposed campus pub may depend on whether or not profits from the pub will equal those from the pinball machines in the Student Activities Center basement.
The pinball machines clear $30,000 per year, which goes to the operation of the activities center. The basement and the Grill are the most probable sites for the proposed pub. According to a spokesman for the Student Senate, which is sponsoring the proposal, the loss of those profits by the university might be a factor in administration approval.
Incorporating a pinball game room into the pub design, or
A REAL, LIVE SPY’
Past director speaks out for CIA
By Brad Avery
Staff Writer
Although the Central Intelligence Agency has made mistakes, broken laws and failed on some projects, its faults have been far outweighed by its services for America and world democracy, said William Colby, one of the agency's past directors.
Speaking to about 200 students in Bovard Auditorium Tuesday, Colby said major changes have occurred in the agency in the last five years, including direct accountability to Congress for its actions and a gradual movement into the workings of government for its previous position of a totally separate organization.
Colby, 48, was director of the CIA from 1973 until 1976 and of-fidally began working for the organization in 1962 as chief of the Far East division.
A slight, bespectacled man, Colby first told the audience, "I guess some of you came here because you wanted to see what a real, live spy looked like. I don't look like much of a spy, but during World War III was a spy and I was dropped into France behind enemv lines."
Giving a brief history of intelligence gathering after W.W. II,
financed by the Soviets. The Socialist and Democratic parties could not match the tremendous advantages that the Soviets had given the communists. The CIA wanted to help, Colby said, but legally, they couldn't. The Soviets were not helping legally either, of course. "So we dedded to copy the Soviets and send in secret aid," Colby said.
Colby said that kind of aid later expanded to para-military aid, but that the techniques that were often assodated with paramilitary aid were exaggerated. "These actions did contribute to the resistance of the Castros and Stalins of the world," Colby said. "We have had our failures too — like the Bay of Pigs. And sometimes we were just wrong, like the attempts to assassinate Castro," he said.
One of the most important events in the history of intelligence was the successful flight of the U-2 spy plane that brought back reconnaissance photographs of the Soviet Union.
The U-2 brought back stunning proof that the Russians had put missiles in Cuba in 1962. "We were having a debate on that (whether or not missiles had been placed in Cuba) and it wasn't until the U-2 showed us the same (continued on page 2)
Colby said the U.S. disbanded the intelligence forces after the war with the reasoning that they wouldn't be needed again. But the need for "centralized information" became evident very quickly as President Truman became "sick and tired of bits and pieces of information," Colby said.
A core of intelligence experts was soon put together, but Colby called this stage a "quiet kind of approach to intelligence."
Then, in 1948, an election was approaching in Italy and one of the three parties — the Communist Party — was well-
WILL1AM COLBY
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 75, No. 26, October 25, 1978 |
| Description | Daily Trojan, Vol. 75, No. 26, October 25, 1978. |
| Full text | University of Southern California Volume LXXV, Number 26 Wednesday, October 25, 1978 * * - *• Jk H •*r • I; • ** THE DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES SKYUNE GUMMERS IN THE VIEW FROM RESDENCE WEST DT photo by Larry Oram Football players face misdemeanor charges By Michele Himmelberg Sports Editor The city attorney's office filed misdemeanor charges Tuesday against two USC football players. Willie Crawford and Charlie Moses, both defensive starters against Oregon State, were originally booked Saturday on felony charges of assault with a deadly weapon. They allegedly roughed up a man, woman and child following a traffic accident Saturday night at 8th Street and Vermont Avenue. Betsy Mogul, a deputy city attorney, officially filed seven misdemeanor counts against Crawford and two misdemeanor counts against Moses. The charges were reviewed by the district attorney's office earlier in the day and referred to Mogul. Ed Haight, an investigator from the Rampart Division of the Los Angeles Police Department, said Crawford was charged with seven misdemeanor counts: assault with a deadly weapon (his car); hit and run; driving without a license; driving under the influence of alcohol, and three counts of battery. The battery charges involved Miriam Lopez, 21, of Los Angeles; Mauriciao Nunez, 2Vi, who is believed to be Lopez' son, and Gracian Santos, a bystander who (continued on page 12) Approval of campus pub might depend on anticipated profits building the pub in the Grill, fee, Kulwiec said. would avoid the problem. - He indicated other sources Mike Kulwiec, chairman of the would be an endowment from environmental and external af- alumni, Toward Century II fairs committee of the Student funds, a loan from an outside Senate, said approval may come bank and a budget from the uni- within a month. versity. Profits from the pub Kulwiec said he believes ap- would be used to repay the debt. proval requires an executive of- Control of the pub is a major ficer of the univeristy to assume concern of the senate, Kulwiec responsibility for the proposal. said. The senate proposal calls James Appleton, vice- for direct student involvement in president of student affairs, said planning and operation of the he is in favor of a pub, with wine, pub. He said architecture and beer and other beverages. He business students would be in- also said the money issue should volved in the senate's plan. not be a determinant in the pro- . . .. , , , posal's approval or disapproval. ,If the ™versity took control of ic n it il if n planning and operation, the se- lf all goes well, the pub will be . °. . * j n a lx j nate might withdraw its support, ready next fall, Appleton said. ^ rr Depending on how elaborate the pub design is, construction Even if the pub is not ap- may cost more than $20,000, proved, Kulwiec said the pub Kulwiec said. committee would probably go There are several possible ahead with planning and then sources of funding, including resubmit the complete plan to the raising the student programming administration. JEP ex-employee appeals firing to labor department A former employee of the Joint Education Project (JEP) is filing a request for an appeals hearing with the department of labor. Clarence McGhee, a school coordinator for JEP, was fired late last November. He is accusing the university of unjustly firing and underpaying him. McGhee was employed at the university from August to November 1977 under the Comprehensive Employment Training Act (CETA). CETA is a federally funded employment program administered at the dty level. McGhee lost two hearings within the university grievance procedure and lost a hearing at the city level. The first hearing was held within JEP. McGhee charged in this hearing that he had been underpaid and fired without reason. He was told he was fired for lack of interpersonal skills and organization, and was also charged with antagonizing students and staff, he said. McGhee then appealed the decision to the Presidents' Advisory Council, which sustained the department's decision. The next step was at the city level, where McGhee was granted a two-day hearing. McGhee charged the university with not providing him with adequate training for his job responsibilities, therefore violating federal regulations, and unjustly firing him. The dty ruled in favor of the university and said no federal regulations had been violated. McGhee's last course of action is to appeal to the department of labor. Barbara Gardner, director of JEP, refused to comment until she received a copy of the charges. Other JEP employees also refused to comment. Barbara Pearson, director of the Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action program at the university, said her office had not received the latest complaints. (continued on page 2) By John Antczak Staff Writer Approval of the proposed campus pub may depend on whether or not profits from the pub will equal those from the pinball machines in the Student Activities Center basement. The pinball machines clear $30,000 per year, which goes to the operation of the activities center. The basement and the Grill are the most probable sites for the proposed pub. According to a spokesman for the Student Senate, which is sponsoring the proposal, the loss of those profits by the university might be a factor in administration approval. Incorporating a pinball game room into the pub design, or A REAL, LIVE SPY’ Past director speaks out for CIA By Brad Avery Staff Writer Although the Central Intelligence Agency has made mistakes, broken laws and failed on some projects, its faults have been far outweighed by its services for America and world democracy, said William Colby, one of the agency's past directors. Speaking to about 200 students in Bovard Auditorium Tuesday, Colby said major changes have occurred in the agency in the last five years, including direct accountability to Congress for its actions and a gradual movement into the workings of government for its previous position of a totally separate organization. Colby, 48, was director of the CIA from 1973 until 1976 and of-fidally began working for the organization in 1962 as chief of the Far East division. A slight, bespectacled man, Colby first told the audience, "I guess some of you came here because you wanted to see what a real, live spy looked like. I don't look like much of a spy, but during World War III was a spy and I was dropped into France behind enemv lines." Giving a brief history of intelligence gathering after W.W. II, financed by the Soviets. The Socialist and Democratic parties could not match the tremendous advantages that the Soviets had given the communists. The CIA wanted to help, Colby said, but legally, they couldn't. The Soviets were not helping legally either, of course. "So we dedded to copy the Soviets and send in secret aid" Colby said. Colby said that kind of aid later expanded to para-military aid, but that the techniques that were often assodated with paramilitary aid were exaggerated. "These actions did contribute to the resistance of the Castros and Stalins of the world" Colby said. "We have had our failures too — like the Bay of Pigs. And sometimes we were just wrong, like the attempts to assassinate Castro" he said. One of the most important events in the history of intelligence was the successful flight of the U-2 spy plane that brought back reconnaissance photographs of the Soviet Union. The U-2 brought back stunning proof that the Russians had put missiles in Cuba in 1962. "We were having a debate on that (whether or not missiles had been placed in Cuba) and it wasn't until the U-2 showed us the same (continued on page 2) Colby said the U.S. disbanded the intelligence forces after the war with the reasoning that they wouldn't be needed again. But the need for "centralized information" became evident very quickly as President Truman became "sick and tired of bits and pieces of information" Colby said. A core of intelligence experts was soon put together, but Colby called this stage a "quiet kind of approach to intelligence." Then, in 1948, an election was approaching in Italy and one of the three parties — the Communist Party — was well- WILL1AM COLBY |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1566/uschist-dt-1978-10-25~001.tif |
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