News Scrapbook 1975-1977

Mothers Gave Them A Good Start

~~t,t,,-.. ,,,..,,_ ~-t, I~// Diocesan choir plans irst performance

She was born in Omaha, Neb., one of six children. She began ro think about a religious life when she was in high school. When she made ha decision ro fxcome a nun, she cho5C' che Sociec:y of rhe Sacred Hcarr, an c:ducanonal order. She came ro San Diego to twlch English 25 y=s ago. Although her mochcr was a "deeply religious woman." she did nor talk abour religion to her children 1 "She JUSC livc:d ic." Siscer Mary Fur:iy, Univcrsic:y of San Diego vice presidc-nt and provosc.

The recently-formed Cath• olic Choral Society of San Diego will perform publicly for the first time during a "Choral Service of Evening Prayer", Sunday, May 29, at 7:30 p.m. Father Richard Duncan• son, secretary to Bishop u.>0 T. Maher, will deliver the

homily during the service to be held in Founders Chapel on the USD campus. Directed by Father Nicolas Reveles, diocesan director of music, the choral society will sing selections from con• temporary music, Gregorian Chant and the English and Italian Renaissance periods,

Years Ago Mothers

Gave Them Good Start

Only two of them were born in San Diego, bur all became promi· nent members of the communiry. They contribute: to rhc: education, entertainment, beaury, fun or health of thousands because they grew up ro succeed in cheir chosen careers. Here, and on page D-11, rhey are when only chc:ir mothers they would.

native- of Brooklyn who

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l1vc-d m Tahiti and orrhC'rn Ctl1• fom1:1 be-fore hc-r fwuly 5C'cded in ·2n Diego when ,he w:is a r«nagcr Nutrmon and hc-..ilrh, m.jor interests for hc-r morhC'r, ~'t'tc' in regnl ro rhe rnvuonmc-nt into which he w:is b. ,rn , he c:J1pamkd on knowledge pined from her mother', interest. Dcbonh Muz;mci, founder of (',olden Door and mcmfxr of Pre;.

CULTISTS, CONVENTIONALISTS MEET 4/)rJ.,11 resents Vi • n xtremist eli Se Of

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and stand along thf' wall of the crowd!'d Great Hall or the ~~piscopal Cl111rrh Thi' si•minar wa., prl'Sl•nted in C'ooperation 11<1!,h thP Unitt•d ,h>w1sh FedPrat10n, the San fl1 go Rabbinlt-al Association and the Nation- al Coafl'rrnrc of Christians and .Jews. The Rev. '1r. L ndqu,st also painted out that the 5emmar was endorsed by the San Diego Rorran Calhohe Diocese which provided l'quipnwnt to vidPotape the s('SRions. In his addn•ss, Dr Galper said some members of rP!tg1ous culls suffer psyrhologl- cal 11npa1nnrnt from rnPmbership In the orgamzat1ons but others do not. lie said he had changed his views on deprogramming and now Mt that psyC'hothcrapy should only be conducted by proft>ssionals aftr.r consulta· lion with the individuals and their parents llt• aid that cults grow in times of stress urh as In Germany following World War I and in Japan following World War II. He l'ompan d the lark of solidarity and national purpoSl' In the Umted States today with the chaos and turmoil in .Japan and Germany llfter the wars. Sense Of Belonging, Purpose Another need the cults supply young peo- ple, he said, is "belonging" - a baSI<' need which he said iR largely unmet in our cultu~. He said the C"ounter culture whi<'h grew on d1ssat1sfact1on with lhe Vietnamese war con tJnUPS in thl' po ·t•Watrrgate pPriod Wltll ma11y young peoplP disillusioned witr. the natwn 's inRt1tutions. HP said thr rehgJOus 1·ults supply the young pcopl1• with a 51•nse of family, a sen&' of belonging, a purpose in life and the answers to their questions. He said the cult leaders may pract ce an mdtrect form of hypnosis that is not under• stood by the cult members, the general pubhc and perhap~ the lraders themselves. Or. Galper said that the fatigue and mteJL~e and sustained emotional stress of life in the <·ults could produce a hypnotic or trancelike stat that would impair the individual's abtll· ty to use the bPst judgement. He said. the proper role of the professional psychologist should not be to dissuade a person from their religious brliefs but to help the patient use understanding and reason to their fullest ab1hty.

By JOHN BLRRlS 5toff Writer, Tht kn 01'90 Un on

Agitated cult meirbt nar sponsored by th San Diego County Ecumenical Corferencc w rr calm d y ster day by a Lutheran mimst<'r who teache at a Catholic umvers1ty The groups repn Sl'nted at 'he semi ar on extremist rrlig1eus cults Included members of Han' Krishna, the Unlf1rallon Church of the Rev Sun Myung ~oon and the Children of God. They received reassuring words from the Rev Jack Lmdqt!lst, x1 cut1\e director t•' thP conference 11ho wck'Om,d sect members to the seven-hour >;CSSJon at t Paul s EplSC opal Church He propased another conferenc m the near future to glw cull members an opportunity to present their positions The Hev Mr Lindquist ts a Lutheran mmistcr who teach,.s r, llg1ous plnlosophy at the University or San D1 go, a Roman Catho- ltc school. O11e group ra1 d the que lion of religious libet1y. The Re, Mr Llndqui t reiterated his open• mg remarks that sponsors of the conferrnC'c "fully respect the rights of others to believe as they rhOOSE' • and "in no way mean to imply they have '10 right to exist " Challenged on tbe ISStW by Lt Col Halph Wood, USMC, ret national lrnder of l\llii..n~e for Preservation of Rel!gJ0U'> Liberty (APHL), the Rev Mr Ltndqu1St decland there could be absolutely no qurstion as tu the sponsors' comrmtment and ded1cat1on to First Amendment guarantee~ of freedom of religion. Krishna Members March The conference mcludcd a question-and- answer session and an address by Dr. !'.iarvin Galper, a chnical psychologist who has stud- ied religious cults and their members. Dunng the question-and-answer period - when more peopll' made statements than ....ked questions - four members of the Harl' Knshna s,.,'Ct entered from behind the speak· er·s platform carrymg placards declarmg "Jesus Christ was a 'cult" ' and " !loY. Dan• You Attack My Heltgion " The He\' Mr Lindquist smiltngly mVIted them to walk behind the speaker's platform atl.e'lding a m1

ost Village Of Cosoy Discovered Of C d floor tile" "I want v 0 soy e. :.~mpa,d !hi .~ absoluteJ~u ~,sno;~~Zt~;,t ;:sstthc fu-st to suggest that arison discovery,' Moriarty I e might be Cosoy. Pre-- D • Joor tlles of reparters. • I had no . told viou~ly, he explained, all his- ;gs. Moriarty wh n I be an ·concept toncal documents laced th I s CO Vere d d to b tlle Mr (Rlrh~rd) "g~"di~~ Wi th village west of Prc~1dio Hill~ MDI .,ion de \tr. {Brian) Smith on :d thHte noted, for example ite that It would have anzs a the late_ Hubert H. Ban'. I iego Sta-

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Diego College for Men to become USD. During !hose years Sister Murphy taught history and philosophy. and now serves as chairman of the history department. Her departure from USO wtll leavc Sister Alicia Sarre, who heads the languages department as the on!\ ooe of 1he fo1;nding Sisters still actively teaching at the school. ENTERING the Religi, , of the Sacred Heart in I c J, Sister Murphy was profe ,ed m 1939, and until coming to San Diego she taught in high schools in Nebraska. lllino1 and San Francisco. A reception and din~ honoring her years of ser- " at USD will be held this Friday. May 13, at the Hanalei Hotel, San Diego.

Southern Cross Reporter With the end of the curren1 school ·ear Sister Agnes Murphy, RSCJ, will close her 28-year teaching career al what is now 1he University of San Diego. But, at age 65, she is not retiring. 'It is time to move on,' _says Sister Murphy. who, m August, will become adult education coordinator at Our Lady of Grace parish, El Cajon. SHE WAS one of the Sisters of the Religious of the Sacred Heart who came to San Diego in 1949 to found the San Diego College for Women, which opened in 1952. Several years ago the school merged with the San

Two CT'rnm1c Pol h rd • a panlsh door hmg' and an abundanc of Indian pottel) hav been 1ne<1 from a knoll In bustling llotel Circle to open an mtngumg new portal In an 01 go's earliest history The artifacts, found by five scientists \\0rklng th slt lay 13, were offered ye I rday a th remmns or the lost village or Cosoy Co Y, or Koso1, was a community of 150 lo 200 Kum yaay, or D1egu no Indians the pam h explorers round hvlng on a south bank of th San Dt o River, a four-pound cann n hot (on mile) distant from the intrud rs' entrenchment on Presidio Hill Had th vtl.lagc not been present Dr Paul II Ezell noted yesterday, It i; not I riy that Father Jumpero Serra would hav establtshed h first California mis- ion on the hill occupied by the soldiers who pr Ced d him In 1769 "It was pan!. h practice to c,stabllsh th Ir m1SS1ons close to fairly large papula• tlo~ or potential converts," Ezell noted. Ezell, prof ssor or anthropology emer- 1us at an Diego tate university also .,g ed another reason why co~y ls lmpartant to California's hlstorv 'Thi Is th fir t Indian - i prefer to call It Old American - settlement denti• fled by name In l'pper California." Moreover, he noted, but for a devtatlon from th naming practices or mi lonar• I th hlstorie mission might today have anoth r name. 'Ir th panlsh explorers here had fol- lowed th prarhce of Spanish explorer or th mainland (Mexico), instead of naming th pla an Diego Alrala, they would ha\e nam d It San Diego Cosoy," Ezell Id, as was done south of Tuc.-;on at fl Ion an XaYler del Bae, the last word being the Pima Indian word for water The Cosoy discovery site, already b~ing anxiously probed on a larger scale for add1t1onal eYldence ,s east of Hanelei Hot I ' Archeologlsts, headed by Dr. Jam R. Moriarty or the Unlwrsity of San Diego , began the dig with no mklmg of finding mtsslon history In fact, unh last week, r.osoy was unhr.rsally thought to have existed well over a mlle to the southwest in Rath r the diggers were searching for rock tools and PoSSJble other remains of a preht torlc San Diego people at lea&t 20 000 years old and passtbly more than 100'000 years old. Some artifacts or the ancient people already have been found at the site Th n on the 13th Ju t und r bulldozed surfare of th~ knoll the digge found two pl ces of broken ceramic e what tod.iy 1s Old Town.

In his "History of

Y rroft,

ramtf1l'at10ns s1m I

that what Dr. Ezell ha/ d~!'coto rai_irorma," wrote that the

edged

founded on a

v. mi sion was

• Cosoi, 1s crcd."

Ezell said his wife G 1 ~t l'alled by the natives

but added r mr rma• -

-0soy, now Old Town."

re a

our pa t ls kind or nprobable enough to already dll'CCtlng

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EVENING TRIBUNE

said Ezell credlt for

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4- FRIDAY, MAY 6, 197~•

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Ordination slated.in • unique rite The Hev Louis Sokach. 30, will be ordamed a priest of the Byzantine nte or the Roman Catholic Church to• morro11 at 4 p m. at The lmrraculata on the Umver• s1ty or San Diego campus. omc1atmg in the r,•remo- nv, believed to bl the first ordmatlon of a Byz::'ltmr nte priest .n th• \Ii cstern states, 11 ill JC Byzantine Bishop Em J M 'lalik of Parma. Ohio :ltr Sokach, a deacon V , t: La I s;;; ,Hd IS a member or Holy Angels Bv• zantine ChUrch, 5154 Hav.- ley Blvd., the Cit) ·s only Byzantm Catholic parish. Pastor JS the Uev Joseph Radvansky •

Husband has been her 'number one booster'

I

NRMC nurse to realize a 31-year goal- a degree BY KORI CALVERT intention of

allergic diseases, so that she may function at almost the level of physician in un· complicated cases." He indicated that Mrs. Jensen's civilian status is particularly advantageous. "All allergies are chronic," he explained. "They cannot be cured, only controlled. We need to have someone trained to follow these patients." He added that corpsmen can do this, but they rotate frequently. "That's why civilians are so important in the treatment of chronic illness," he remarked. In Mrs. Jensen the Allergy Service would have a sub· specialty nurse who could deal exclusively with allergic diseases and monitor patients on a longitudinal basis. the Allergy Service plans an expanded role for •,.Mrs. Jensen, her family is preparing to celebrate her graduation. "They're so proud," she said of her children. "They're coming from all over the United States to be here for my graduation." Her number one booster, though, has been her husband. "He's about the proudest of all," she declared. "I've had nothing but encouragement from him, one hundred per cent plus encouragement. My husband promised he would help me get this degree 31 years ago. He's so happy that his promise to me is finally being fulfilled." Husband is proudest While

breakthrough for Mrs. Jensen was the opening of USD's Philip Y. Hahn School of Nursing. Only RNs are ac· cepted in its program. Mrs. Jensen was one of the first. "A lot of RNs want to get their degrees, but there's no place for them to turn to," she explained. When Philip Y. Hahn School of Nursing opened its doors, "it was like Christmas in September. All of a sudden there was a place for RNs to get their degrees." Mrs. Jensen has been at- tending Hahn since 1974. She said that learning how to study again was a major adjustment. "l really had to concentrate," she commented She added that her biggest thrill "was being accepted by younger students as one of them." She is, she admitted, .the oldest member of the class; and she jokes that she and the youngest member really should have a cake, "just like in the Marines." the way she received encouragement from both colleagues and family members. Of great assistance with her studies were the librarians at Thompson Medical Library. "They really went all out for me," she said. "En· couragernent plus." Capt. Hinton, former Chief, Allergy Service, was ex• tremely helpful in getting Mrs. Jensen started on her degree program. This encouragement has been continued by LCdr. Schalz, Hinton's successor; and by LCdr. Yamamoto, who ha, acted as her preceptor ' As part of the whole nursing science program l had to be in the field," she explained. To fulfill that requirement, Yamamoto trained her to do physical evaluations and history taking. "We are trying to groom Mrs. Jensen for a unique position in the Naval Hospital," said Yamamoto. "Up to now her role has been primarily administrative." Yamamoto anticipates her moving into a more clinically patient-oriented position which will utilize her expertise in pa lient care. As of September 1977 there will be only one allergist assigned to the Allergy Ser• ice. "To meet this shortage," lated Yamamoto, "we are rying to train Mrs. Jensen in All along

taking up her studies when his were com· pleted. But four children and the many moves mandated by her husband's Marine career forced deferment of her educational ambitions. She took courses as her children grew, then attended Palomar Community College on a part-time basis to corn· plete preliminary course requirements for her degree program. The important

public health. She also will have the distinction of being the first Hahn graduate from NRMC. "I really feel quite good about it," she admitted. "It bothered me that I hadn't finished." A college degree has been her ambition ever since she was in training for her RN diploma. She commented that she worked to put her husband through college with every

"Self-actualization is a great thing," smiled Mrs. Edna Jensen. The Allergy Clinic Charge Nurse knows this so well. After 31 years, her long• sought goal to earn a bachelor's degree is about to be realized. On May 22 she will graduate from the University of San Diego's Philip Y. Hahn School of Nursing, receiving a bacht!lor of science degree in nursing with a certificate in

>urs offer, JL· -----,-L

D ~ ndi-ng'

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the H.' P::m Olson or

the

City, Okla.,

fartha Craig tery of European origin amid fragmen~of yHof • ashvfJle, Kay Indian pottery ouston, and Pa- Ezell wa summoned and, together With Harbour of Heston, others, Id nttf don pl or the ceramics

as San Ehzano Polychrome manufac. tur d In colonial :\1exico betw n 1700 and 1750 in th tyl of a papular \l,are rrom the Island of taJorca. Th copied ware made m I ·xlco w c 11 d " mJOlica .. (C I n 8 , 1. J)

A lesson in radiology LCdr. F. Yamamoto is oboutto exp loin some sir,us X-roys to Mrs. Edna Jensen. Dr. Yomomoto hos served os Mrs Jensen's preceptor while she hos worked toward her bochelor's degree at the Philip Y. Hohn School of Nursing. She will receive her degree ond o certificate in public heolth ot groduotion ceremonies on Sundoy, Moy 22. (Photo by HN Poul Terrell),

The) are "t d Byzan• tm b rn u the c•u f patn· archate of the ancient ch.irch 1. the F:ast 11i:..~ at onstanttnople, formerly known as llyzant, m n Byi..1nt n hu~ches pn• ·rve th•· 1 1 t •us tPms o feih ~ncd al ar bread, communion admm· , trred a bot1, b~ead and 11me, bapl!sm by immer• s1or. and, 11hPre permitted, a married prwsthood By• ntme pnrsts L the l nited State ar!' not permitted to mar11

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