News Scrapbooks 1977-1979

APR 30 1979 (,.. b"11.e..

3/. I .2. 11 L h I 0 Gaines, Brovelli Vi ,it Prep Stars In/Talent Search On the first day high school seqiors were permitted to ign na- tional letters of Intent to play basket- ball, it was so quiet you could have heard a pen drop in San Diego County. San Diego State Coach Dave Gaines was in Phoenix ye terday, ~ying the Aztecs will entertain v- eral prep prospects this weekend, but the first signing will probably not come until next week, at the e liest.

TONIO bishop Furey Dies (( lnu rrom l)

Gain~s, Brovel li Search For Talent (Continued from Page D-1) USD Coach Jim Brovelli we_ can get l~gitimate, blue was in San FranclSCO, where chdii~!t:M in Pittsburgh he said he was encouraged for an all-star tournament 'O " 'O '" Sweetwater and Chff_ Lev- ~earth someone iwho can ; ingston of Morse conflnned provide Immediate help. z previous announcements b~ San Diego State has half 0 signin with California an ·ts allotted 18 campus visits S Wichita State, respectively' ~ill available and Gaines O i teign I cs of course got a weekend. There are seven 1 te ast~'- he was n~t hired open scholarships. a . b t h JS Another local school, US. untilf_delO dtaJ! :; lure ~t i:ast International University, con I n would love to tgn some a handful of top players to players but first It needs a San Diego Stall'\ coach 'to replace Mike "We're ootlng for seven M Do Id McD nald was pretty good playe;.s:"t ~e~ea.i: ~arch 7 and the Aztec coach id • 0 start westerners have yet to tap a supers, tieeau go~ a~ replacement. ed so la the upe . Ron Kirkpatrick and uar- already gon , but we th ink ryl Stokei;, two of the players _ ... by his p;-ogress, but as yet had nothing _to announce. True, Michael Pitts of last week, he Is In Phoen~ for a similar function this eek and it is crucial he :i! but they were the only pla~~ has ers m the county to comm1 tentative°iy scheduled i three such visits by out-of• - themselves to any college state prospects for this

~NEIL MORGAN

JEWS, CHRISTIANS Understanding, Scriptures Tied By RITA GILi.MON Staff Writer, TIie San Die,o Union The study of the Hebrew Scriptures and Christian writings of the first century by scholars of all faiths will lead to closer understanding between Christians and Jews, according to Dr. Jane Via, professor of Scripture at the University of San Diego. Via was one of a panel of three who spoke this week about U1e sources of Jewish, Catholic and Protestant Scriptures. The other speakers were the Rev. Mel Hart.er, an assistant at St. Mark's Methodist Church, where the luncheon forum was held, and Rabbi Perry Nussbaum, a retired rabbi who headed a congregation in Jackson, Miss. ussbaum said the Bible Is to be thought of as a lihrary rather than a book. "Jews emphatically objert to the tenn "Old Testa- ment" for the Hebrew Scriptures," Nussbaum said. "We do not think of il as old, it is alive." Th Scriptures were accumulated ovPr a period of 1,000 years, he said, with the old,~st protion believed lo be the Song or Deborah from the 5th Chapter of Judges. "After that first piece was written down, it took another 1,000 years for them to be canonized. It wasn't until the first century that the rabbis actually canonized the Bible and said those particular books were written under the Inspiration of the Holy Spirit," Nussbaum said. Two books that had a rough·tlme being cleared by the rabbis were the Song of Songs amd Esther. "They were very popular, but the rabbis were dubious about the sexual imagery In the song and worned about the fact that God is not mentioned in Esther," he said. "They finally decided that you could interpret the song as the Jove of God for Israel and Esther showed God's care for his people, even 1f his name wasn't mentioned " Nussbaum said that for the Jewish people, the Scrip- tur s are the record of God workmg on Earth and among humanity. "ll began with mystically minded people who asked where the world came from. They weren't scientists, but poets," he said. For the Jews, the Bible Is divided mto three parts, the Torah (the flrst five books), the basic textbook of the Jewish faith, the prophets and the writings (many of them historical). "These were an tales handed down by word of mouth by a nomadic people," Nussbaum said Via said that for the early Christians, the Scriptures were the Hebrew Scriptures. • "Jesus was a Jew, his followers were Jewish and their Scriptures were the Hebrew Scriptures," she said. "The gospel was first preached in tbe synagogues." · Via said that when the original followers of Jesus began to die, it became im-

OVERDRIVE: Cecil foore likes his new Malibu -station wagon, even now. Until a few day ago, he was ecstatic. He thought he was getting 24 mile to the gallon "You can't bt>," his son said, and took it out for a test trip, during which he learned C S.-made car v. as equipped with an odometer that read in kilometers. (Multiply by .6 to get mile ) Moore promptly w nt back to City Chevrolet and a ked a service mana~r to do methmg so his 12,ooo-m1le var- ranty wouldn't be a 7,200-mile one. After two days of negotia- tions - during which one sales- man suggested extending the warranty - they finally Just wound the odometer back. : 1.. 'l tm aide to Cltv Councilman Tom Gade, insists be' not fi rm on whether he'll run for his bo ' job. But taggle Mazur (the Old Globe actl\'lst) ha been shop- ping for Wittman-for-Council of- fice In Pacmc Beach. ay. Witt- man coJI}: "If l were a candl· date, Jaggie would be my cam- paign manager." . . • The an t'rancl co Convention and Vi I- tor Bureau has turned out a sllc guide to it city.• ·aturally. It a published here, at Cardinal/i\1arcoa.... Phil Hop- kins, who got bis start in the food bu ine_ elllng let lac "'ith Dick . 'ixon· brother Donald, i the new catering director at Lo • ·ovios In La !)le a..•.• atural order: In the city phone directo- ry, under Univ. of Calif. chool or ~edicine, the Ii ting that fol- io\\ 'Reproductive . lediclne," note George 1'1cClenahan with arched brow , is "Student flair ." 0 R TOW. .: The Labor Lead- er's Jim Price ignored his inv1ta- l1on to view the new labeling and addressing machine by Cheshire (Xerox) at yesterday's ational Postal Forum-West. (Cheshire is on Labor's do-not-patroniz list.) toore'

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Estate Planning" will be the topic of a talk by John McCabe, associate profe · sor of business law at the University of San Diego, at 7:30 a.m. Friday In the Valencia Hotel, as part of the breakfast seminar se- ries sponsored by the .I school's business faculty . ./ .

who led Kearny to the CIF championship, previously signed letters to play foot- ball for Utah and LOng Beach State, respectively. But Komet coach Tim Short has been trying to convince both to try out for the bas- ketball teams. Other all-county team member Ace Eason of Oceanside, 10m Stavinsky or Sweetwater, and Jerome Weatherspoon of Mt. ~iguel also igned to play football at Stanford, San Diego State and Arizona State, respec- tively. But Eason will try out for the basketball team and select between the sports 1f he mak the squad. Several of the area's seniors are considering the 1 umor college route San Pasqual's 'ick cu mella is visiting the U mvers1ty of Pacific, but is considering some of the local two-year schools. Monte Vista's Paul Huyser Is giving Point LOma· and Grossmont a close look, while teammate Jeff Mor- gan and Helix High's :\iike Wills both appear headed for the Griffins.

Archbishop Furey Dies In San Antonio

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Art Management Course DIEGO - The design

sign,. will deal with all as~ts of exhibit presenta· Gallery and local exhibition Toe class is one of nearly oo courses offered by USO lion both in SO'S Founders areas.

execution and management of prol . onal art galleries and museum exhibitions will be the focus of Art 141, a summer schOOI course at the Uruversity of San Diego weekS. from Aug. 6 throllgh 24 and meets from 9 to 11: 45 a in. weekdays. comb, rn,1J professor of art, the course. "Exhibition De- The course runs three T l \\1tit Taught by eres ·

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The Blade-Tribune-

Symposium on Nazi Holocaust at USO Sunday, Monday The econd annual SympoSJum on the Holocaust will take place Sunday evening and Monday at University of San Di~o•s Salomon Lecture Theater or Desales Hall. Tlie conference, sponsored by the San Diego region of the l\at1onal Conference of ChriSt1ans and Jews, IS an opportunity for peoll,le of all faiths to examine the dynamics of Germany that led"to the Nazi HolocuasL The conference's keynote speaker will be Rabbi lrviTJg Greenberg, executive director of the Presidential Comrrus- sion on the HolocausL Registration will be held between 6 and 7,30 p.m. Sunday at Salomon Theater. Cost 1s $7.50 for th,e ieneral publ c, $5 for students and seniors. J.. A,~ //e..J 4.,, 7 ;;.,- r, rf\ Mrs. clirios Tavares was c hlrman'of a r eption following Sunday's Sister Rossi Scholarship Concert at Camino Theater at the University of San Diego. The concert was a benefit for the music scholarship fund of the university. The program included Bach's Triple Piano con- ce~ by USD music faculty members Ilana Mysior, Michael Bahde and Rev. Nicolas Reveles. Violist Carmen :MacDonald and flutist Adrienne Swanke, student competition winners, played with the USD Symphony Orchestra directed by Dr. Henry Kolar. Among those asS1Sting Mrs. Tavares were the Mmes. Leland Schoch, Charles Antoniak, Raymond /, Stangl, Charles Wallblom and Evelyn Roth. ../ J I.lb..:.. ,,,..,] S /9.' .,,

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perative for the continued life of the church to write down the traditions of the apostles. "Jesus' words were con- sidered as authoritative for the Hie of the church and so were those of Peter, James and others among the disci- ples; but not until the sec- ond half of the second cen- tury did the writings begin to be collected decisively," Via said. "Even as late as 290 A.D. there was no point where they cut off the canon," she said. Via said books were cho- sen partly to refute particu- lar heresies and partly from a sense that some were more historically ac- curate than others. The church did include in the canon some books, called apocrypha, which bad been rejected by the rabbis from the Hebrew canon, but which had been preserved in the Greek translations and widely used throughout the Greco- Roman civiliz?tion. Mel Harter, said the gen- ius of the Protestant Church was in putting the Scrip- tures into the hands of the common people, instead of restricting them to schol- ars. "The apocrypha were in- cluded in some early trans- lations, but later left out and today are not included in most Protestant transla- tions," he said. The 1611 edition of the King James Bible included them, following Luther's decision that they were use- ful for study. In the 1629 edition, they are excluded.

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History Of Ja\:z ·Ir, bu,1 To Be UC Class SAN DIEGO -The history of 20th Century jazz is the focus of a summer school course offered at the Un- iversity of San Diego. The course, Music 127, meets · every Tuesday and Thurs- day. lrom June 25 through Aug. 3, 6lo 9:30p.m. The class will cover the entire history of jazz in America, beginning with early African and European Influences, the blues, work songs, ragtime, Dixieland, Swing, Jazz and Electronic Rock, and Modern Jazz. Students will also participate in live music study, with an emphasis on how to Ii sten to jazz. The class is one of nearly 80 courses being offered by the USD Summer School program. Tuition for the three-unit course is $105 per unit. Advance registration is advised and is available by calling 293-4524. • Two San Diego organiza- tions are having installa- tion luncheons Thursday. The Women's University Club makes it official for new president Jerry Cunn- ingham and other officers like Dr. Viola Granstaff, Mary Beth Wedberg, Mari- an Knowlden, Dr. LaVange Ric hardson, Vergenia Karns, Bernice Davin and Peggy Scott. And the University of San Oleo Diego Auxiliary will welcome new board presi- dent Pal Keating, as well as board members Judy Comito, Betty Bass, Gene- ' vieve Wolfe, Marion Brown and Joan Betts. The USO luncheon is being planned by Judy Kee- lin and Nan Woltman, and Julio Tejada, president of Mex-Art International, will talk to the auxiliary about "Universities and Art."·

But Labor was represented - by a score of picketing Amer can Postal Workers (protesting the firing of strikers in Richmond, Calif., and Jersey City.) .. . merica's Finest City Week, faced with pa;ing its own way in the first full year of Jarvis-Gann, ha found an angel at Square Pan Pizza. The Aug. 25 Half- Marathon, a big-draw event (4,000 runners expected), will be underwritten by the restaurant chain·. . . . Lloyd George Venard admires the spunk of the divorce specialists who've been advertis- ing in our classifieds under "Swift Kick Divorce Agency.'' ... Jerry Newport, a taxi driver and candidate for City Council in the 2nd Dist. (who isn't?), leaves no doubt about where he'll place his loyalties. He's campaigning in a stenciled T-shirt that says, "Stop Wilsonomics - Delete Pete." HARD TI IES call for harsh measure , I suppose. Rita Calva- no read it in the minutes of a recent Cajon Valley Board of Education meeting, on budget cuts in light of Prop. 13: ·' ... the ssociation asks that no per- sons be laid off . . . but that reductions take place through nutrition." But starve 'em out? LINE ITE 1S: With all the postponing of the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks, Dennis Lang suggests shuffling the acronym to STAL.... Commencement peaker on May 20 at USD Law School: U.S. Appeals Judge John !mor Wisdom who, it is hoped, ill impart major wisdom. . .

APR 251979 'f,i~lo\,t,_

USD SIGNS TWO MORE R!~R~!!!. ward from kyline juruor college in Daly City and Jimmy Robinson, a &-7 for- ward from st ary' s Higb In Phoemx, have 1gned to play their college basket· ball at the University of San Diego ne t year, Levesque, the most valu• ab\ player in the Coast Confer nee, was descnbed as •a very physical power foraward ' by USD_ Coac_h Jim Brovell1 "Robinson a lumping Jack," Brovelli contlnu d ..He was on very talented team In An· zona "We need good depth on the front line and these two players Wlll really help us where we need it most." Brove I no~ ha gned four recruits and said he plan to bring in one more ' a~ for-

College productions t ginning this week inclUO Rodgers and Hammer- stein's "Oklahoma!" at the University of San Diego Camino Theater at 8 p.m. Thursday through Saturday and 2:30 p.m. next Sunday; '17zi.Jl7 V..,;o..,

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Harter said the many new translations available today help to keep the Scriptures vital and alive but "it is no help if people don't read it," he said.

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LtrinJ lluarctet will perfonn in ancer Research T Foundation Benefit Concert u ~Y at 8 p.m. in SD' Camino Th ater. The Quartet will perform Divertimento in D m jor K. 136 by cr.zart and La Jollan Robert f'ur thent l' Qu rt t for ~larlnet, Violtn , Viola and llo, Op. f6, with clarinet' t Robert Barnhart. Al.!o, String Quartet No. 2 by Henrr Kolar , featuring viohnt. t Henry Kolar and Alic Goodku~. celli I Marjori Hart nd v1oh t Nick Stamon. o a

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1-i't Annual Student Dance Concen , including excerpts from "Oklahoma'" and "We rS·d Sto " l · 1 e ry, c ass,c, and modern pieces, will be presented by USD dance students of Mari lyn Green and Anooshah Golesorkhi, r;~ooay, May 3, 8p.m.; Saturday, May 5, p.m.; and Sunday, May 6, 8 p.m., Camino Theater, USD, Alcala Park. Z9J-~8Q x4296. $: J I /C fd_,V

Stock" will be subject of the

'Uncle Miltie' Is Still At It Comedi a n Milton Berle, one of the first of the great stars of televi- sion and still an endur- ing comedian, performs at 8 tonight in Camino Theater at the Universi- ty of San Diego.

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San Diego stock market strategy, breakfast s~mmar, to be exploring the strongest held on Friday, May 4, stocks during a market 7:30 a.m., in the Galleria upswing the weakest Room of the La Valencia stocks i~ a decline and Hotel in La Jolla . the most consi~tent The series of twelve stocks. meetings was designed The cost of the to give San Diego seminar is $15. For business people an registration information opportunity to interact call the USO Continuing with the USO School of Education Department Business faculty . at 291-MSO, extension Dr. Mario Picconi, 4318. ---------.... '_'Update"

The alvatlon rmy will hold its 9'lnd anniv rsary annual awards dinner at 7 p.m Thursday at Va<"ation Village, 1404 W. Vacation Road The princrpal peak- er will be Dr. Author E. Hughes, president of the University of San Diego. Special recognition will be ,

Art students at the Univer- sity of San Diego are hav- ing their annual all-media show through May 18 in Founders Gallery on the campus . :::- '? 7'/ v,,,p...

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