News Scrapbook 1969-1971
Clip anti save all week Surday, February 21, 1971 r------------------------------·---------------------------------------------------------, THE S1!!_ DIEGO UNION
• ________ .. 1
7 p.m. today in San Diego State's Peterson Gymnasium. GABOR SZABO - The jazz guitarist will play at 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday in (he 1101 Club, 1101 Scott St. Dance
MUSIC MAKERS - The club will present a program of vocal and instrumental music at 8:15 p.m. tomorrow in the San Diego Women's Club, 2557 Third Ave. JONAS 1'ORDWALL - The organist will play at 9:30 a.m. today on the pipe organ of the Fox Theater, 720 B St., sponsored by the San Diego Organ Group. ZINA SCHIFF - The violinist. accompanied by pianist Ilana Mysior, will play at 2 and 8 p.m. today in the Jewish Community Center, 4079 54th St. COLIN SLIM - The head of the music depart- ment at UC! will discuss early keyboard music (1325-1600 ) at 4 p.m. Thursday in the UCSD Humanities and Social Sciences Building. PAT STRANGE - The violinist will play at 8:30 p.m. today in UCSD's Matthews Campus Recital Hall, accompanied by various cham- ber music groups. SYMPHONY CONCERT - Violinist Michael Rabin will play with Zoltan Rozsnyai and the San Diego Symphony at 8:30 p.m. Thursday and Friday in the Civic Theater. VRONSKY AND BABIN - The duo-pianists will play for the San Diego Community Con- cent Association at 8: 15 p.m. Tuesday in the Civic Theater. I Pop I;'/ THE ALLEY-The Escondido folk theater, 340 E Grand. will present Frontier Constabu- lary and the Smith Family at 8 p.m. today and the George Stavis Group plus Paul Pol• ash at that time Friday through next Sunday JAZZ ENSE.1\IBLE - The San Diego State en- semble will perform at 4 p.m. today in the school's ·Recital Hall . QUICKSILVER '.\fESSENGER SERVICE - The San Francisco rock group, joined by Boz Scaggs and Robert Savage, will play at
From Feb. 21 To Feb. 28
the Oceanside. First Presbyterian
day In Church.
ALMANAC
•
'THE 'f A VERN' - George M. Cohen's vintage comedy will be presented by the San Diego Cabaret Theater, a new com- pany at 1280 Fletcher Park- way, El Cajon, at 8:30 p.m. Mondays through Saturdays beginning Friday.
'ON THE CUSP' - The original musical re· vue will be presented by the Patlb Playhouse, 373 Hale Ave., Escondido, at 8:3011.m. Fri- day and Saturday. 'A READY MADE FAMTLY'-The J. '!.bias comedy will be presented by the La ~sa Players at 8:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturda~~ through March 6 with a 2 p.m. matinee next Sunday in the Ben Polak Fine Arts Center, 8053 University Ave., La Mesa.
Drama
'ALI BABA' The play for children will be presented al 11 am. and 2 pm. Saturdays in the USIU Center for the Performing Arts, 350 Cedar St , lhrough April JO.
AMERICA:- BALLET THEA- TER - The company will re• turn to the Civic Theater for three performances next week- end, a program mcluding "Les Sylphides," "A Rose for Miss Emily," "The River" and "Theme and Variations" Sat- urday at 8:30 p.m.; "Cop- pelia" al 2:30 p.m. next Sun- day, and ''Swan Lake" at 8:30 p.m. next Sunday.
Music ALCALA TRIO - The chamber ensemble will petj'orm at 8 15 p.m. tomorrow in the Camino Hali Theater at the University of San Diego. Al\,JERICAN COMPOSERS CONCERT - Sig- ma Alpha Iota will pres,•nt the annual event at 3:15 p.m. next Sunday in the San Diego State Recital Hall. LARS-GUNNAR BODIN - The Swedish com- poser will di~cuss electrc,nic music at noon Tuesday in the GCSD Mattb.ews Campus Re- cital Hall. CHAMBER ORCHESTRA - Rafael Druian will conduct the new ensemble of UCSD at 8:30 p.m. next Sunday n the school's , rat- thews Campus Recital Hall. MARGARET LONG CROL'CH - The harpsi- chordist will present a senior recital at 8: 15 Friday in the San Diego State Recital Hall. FRANCISCO ESPINOSA - Th e guitaris.t will perform at 8 p.m Wednesday in the Grossmont College Student Center, El Cajon. ROBERT GLASGOW - The organist will per- form at 8 p.m. next Sunday in St. Paul'i; Episcopal Church, 2705 Fifth Ave. LA JOLLA CMC ORCHESTRA AND CHORUS-Thomas Nee will conduct the en- sembles in a performance of Anton Bruck- ner's Mass in E Minor at 3:30 p.m. today in the La Jolla United Methodist Church, 6063 La Jolla Blvd.
'BRECHT ON BRECHT' - A portrait of the author through his writings as assembled by .\lichael Tabori will be pre-. sented at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays through March 20 beginning this week m the San Diego Mesa College Apolliad Theater. 'HAY FEVER' - The Noel
NIW THIS WEEK
'ROSENCRANTZ AND GU D&"ISTERN ARE DEAD' The Tom Stoppard play, which contains a liberal dose of "Hamlet," will be presented in the San Diego State Dra- matic Arts Theater at 8 p.m. Friday, Saturday and March 3 through 6.
JOSE GRECO - The Spanish dancer will bring Nana Lorca and their companies to the Clvlc Theater for a performance at 8 p.m. tomorrow. Opera OPERA AUDITIONS-The annual Metropoli- tan Opera Auditions for the San Diego District will take place at 1:30 p.m. Saturday in the San Diego State Recital Hall. Also...
Coward comedy of manners will be presented by the Old Globe Theater, Balboa Park, al 8 p.m. Sundays and Tues- days through Thursdays; at 8:30 p.m. Fridays and Satur- days, and 2 p.m. next Sunday, :\larch 14 and March 28, be- ginnmg Tuesday at 8:30 p.m. TO. 'ESCO PLAYS - Two plays by Eugene Ionesco - "The Bald Soprano" and •·Jack: or The Subrmss1011·• - 11ill be presented by lhe USIU School of Performing Arts. 350 Ce- dar St., at 8:30 p.m. Friday and Saturda 1 . ' 'IYE'-The multi-media play by David Cun- ingham and associates 1s being presented at 8:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays in the Ano- maly Factory on UCSD's .Matthews Campus. 'LET' LISTEN' - A program of readings for young audiences will be presented by die Lou Tteri and a group of readers at 11 a m. and 7 30 p.m. Saturday in St. Peter's Epl copal Ch ch, Del Mar.
'THE SILVER CORD' - The Sidney Howard drama will be performed at Actors Quarter, 480 Elm St., at 8:30 p.m. Friday and Satur- day. 'TOM SAWYER' - The San Diego Junior Theater will present the play for children al 7:30 p.m. Friday and at 2:30 p.m. Saturday, 1oday and next Sunday in the Balboa Park Puppet Theater. 'THERE'S A GIRL IN MY SOCP' - The Ter- rence Frisby comedy will be presented by the Coronado Playhouse at 8: 30 p.m. Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays through March 20. 'Sl\'OW WHITE A:-;o THE SEVEN DWARFS' - A new adaptation of the fairy tale with Sneezy and the gang at Actors Quarter, 480 Elm St., will be presente~ at 2 p.m. for chi!- . dren matinees today, Saturday and Sunday. 'THE WORLD OF CARL SANDBURG' - The Alpha-Omega Players will present a drama- tization of the poet's works at 8 p.m. next Sun-
•
'OOLLARS FOR STUDENTS' - A concert by students from all four San Diego universities will be presented at 8 p.m. Saturday in the Camino Hall Theater at the University of San Diego. 'RUMPLESTILTSKIN' The Puppet Play- house, 3903 Voltaire St , PQint Loma, will pre- sent the play for children t 2 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------· THE SOUTHERN CROSS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1971 Page 3 CCD Regional Congress Diocesan Leaders in Key Roles ., B-8 ING TRIBUNE J../,'1/ s~n DiE Southern Cross Reporter ANAHEIM - Speakers and instruction of the deaf and mentally retarded plus 21 others for personal enrichment.
D• ;J/
.;:t.
says, , c
v1N1'10 TR1euNe Ntws ••••rr
have been
O
gain
anything but deliberate." An interpretation of Father Padovano's remarks is given the Rev. Lawrence M. by
to
easy way
An
to
is
these days
notoriety
write a book or give a talk making some bizarre. shock- statement about Jesus The traffic over this short- cut to fame is becoming quite ing Christ. year, Jesus has been depicted m print as a mushroom, hip- heavy. Within the past
leaches scnp-'
Purcell, -who
lure at the University of San
---i:Iesays Father Padovano,
to present
attempt
an
in
Jesus Christ as an ideal pos-
stressed
imitate,
to
sible
Jesus' human side ¥•hile still acceplrng his divinity. Humanity ,Emphasized He thus showed that ''what is unique about Christianity is precisely the humanity which God took on in the one person of Jesus Christ," Father Pur- "Father Padovano demon- strated that it is in fact pos- sible for us to identify with and imitate Jesus because he was fully human," the priest lie said Father Padovano meant to show that Jesus' di- vinily did not so overshadow his humanity as to nullify the latter. And he said Father Padovano contended that the Catholic Church teaches that ·•Jesus Christ is not only God as the second person of the Trinity, but also a man in all cell added. continued. Comments Explained He says Father Padovano suggested that Christ there- fore "knew himself only piece- meal as we do" and that he learned from and was formed rt was in this context that Father Padovano suggested that Jesus "only as man" did not know he was to rise from the dead, Father Purcell be- He says Father Padovano did not try to explain the mystery of how an "a\1-know- ing divine Christ" and a ''learning Jesus" could be one and the same. He sug- gested, however, that youth by others. lieves. they can imitate, rather than through his divinity, "which they can but affirm," Father 'Selective' Fundamentalism A curious thing about all novel Jesus-theorists is that they ignore any part of the placing complete reliance on the literal accuracy of any minor detail which may seem to support their view. This pretation might be called "se- lective fundamentalism." It's doubtful whether these far-fetched theories influence Their chief effect, probably, is to create a short-lived sen- sation that will sell a few books or magazines. But they do amount to an Purcell said gospel which plainly con- tradicts their idea, while approach to biblical inter- anyone's religious beliefs. · in." T ans. says Father that Jesus had "a intelligence and hu- c 11, an man will, both of which are r very nature ex- treme!y limited.·• could be Christ's reached humanity, through which
early
revolutionary.
pie.
apostle of women's liberation,
homosexual
married man.
another
from
visitor
and
planet.
Capabilities Limited A Roman Catholic priest Jesus was one who had "Jim- lied intelligence and remark- said here last month that sources" 1'.ho did not even know he was destined to rise ably limited emotional re-
Clarence L. St er, USD Trustee, Dies
Sunday evening with a Mass concelebrated by the diocesan CCD directors, including Father Denis Ryan o{ San Diego. Workshops at the congress will include elementary and secondary levels, adult and pre- school education, religious
representatives from the San Diego diocese will play a prominent part in the CCD regional congress to be held March 26-28 at the Anaheim Convention Center. Sponsored by the CCD offices of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles and the dioceses of San Diego, Fresno and Montery, the congress will feature local and national experts in religious education. The congress will open with a youth rally organized by Father Neal Dolan, Director of Vo- cations for the San Diego diocese. FATHER FRANCIS Wieser, member of the Religious Studies Department of the University of San Diego, will lecture o n the formation of the conscience. The youth rally Father Dolan has planned will include a presentation of the CCD program; a performance by the Dameans, a folk group from Notre Dame Seminary, New Orleans and celebration of the Eucharist. Bishop Leo T . Maher of San Diego will concelebrate Mass with Archbishop Timothy Manning of Los Angeles, Bishop Harry A. Clinch of Monterey and Bishop Hugh A. Donohoe of Fresno. THE CONGRESS will close SAN DIEGO - Steber, benefactor the Univers~of San Diego and many Caohc " cmfi'1tles died Monday after an illness. The founder of a Chicago lighting and engineering firm, Steber retired in La Jolla in 1967. The Steber Education Development Center at USD is the result of one of his gilts to the University. He was also one of the first laymen appointed to the board of trustees and had been an active promoter of the union between the two colleges on the USD campus. SINCE 1928 he had been in- volved in Catholic charities in Chicago, and in 1933 he set up the Steber Foundation to con- tinue his interests. He served on the board of directors of Catholic Charities of the Chicago arch- diocese and on the boards of colleges and hospitals in the area. Born in St. Louis, Mo., in 1893, Steber was educated at St. Louis University Academy anii College. He had five children by his first wife, Helen, who died in 1966. He married Frances Duesser of San Bernardino in 1967. IN OCTOBER, 1970 he and his wife were invested in the order of Knights and Ladies of the Holy Sepulchre and at the subsequet;lj; investiture of their pastor, Msgr. :'James Gilfillan, at Mary Star of the Sea Church, Clarence L. of
Registration for the three-day congress is $10 and may be arranged through parish congress representatives or the CCD office 291-7614.
from the dead.
was
assessment
The
presented by the Rev. Antho-
•
Clarence L. Steber, 78, a Roman Catholic philanthrop- ist and the first layman to be appointed to lhe University of San Diego hoard of trustess. died last night. Mass will be said at 1I a.m. tomorrow 111 ;\farv Star-of- thc-Sca Catholic Church. Mr. Steber resided at 2585 Calle de! Oro, La Jolla. La Jolla Mortuary is in charge. Born in St. Louis, Mo., :\Ir Steie r w~s educated at · St. Louc Lniversity Academy ;ind College. He founded Ste- ber manufacturing Co. in Chi- cago in 1933. The firm pro- duced outdoor lighting equip- ment. Tn the Ch icago area, he served on the advisory boards of Rosar) College, Oak Park Hospital and the Stritch School of Medicine at Loyola University. He was named to the board of direc- tors of Catholic Charities for the Archdiocese of Chicago in 1960. Although .\Ir. Steber never was graduated from college. he was presented the alumni merit award from St. Louis Uni\Crsity and was named an honorary alumnus of Loyola University of Chicago. Mr. Steber sold his firm in 1958 and retired . He estab- lished a home in La Jolla. His first wife. Helen, died in 1966. In late 1966, he was married to Frances Duesser. contributed $16,750 to the Educationa l De- Yeloprnent Center at the Uni- versity of San Diego College for Men in 1968. The same year, he was appointed a trustee. Last year, the Most Rev. Leo T. Maher. Bishop of the San Diego Catholic Diocese, named Mr. Steber a Knight of the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem. The pa pal honor, given to dis- tinguished persons in the Catholic community. has a tradition of 871 years. Mr. Steber·s wife was made a Lady of the Order. Ir. ..Steber was a member ol the La Jolla Cou:1trv Club. La Jolla Newcomers Club and Marv Star-of thl'-Sea Pari~h. . Surviving 111 addition to his widow is a son, William. Mr. Steber
theology
ny T. Padovano,
Catholic Resources Large, Must Face School Crisis Southern Cross Reporter SAN DIEGO - Catholics themselves troubled.
professor at Immaculate Con- ceplion Seminary in Darling- ton, , ·.J.. m a talk at San The mushroom idea came John Allegro British author and former Methodist from Diego State College.
lay preacher. 'Sacred Mushroo In his book. "The :'11ushroom and Allegro says Chris an colossal deception the
financially
Yet other private religious education, without this lower cost had made realistic assessments of costs and are coming through. "There is a greater need for Catholic education today," said Dr. Kirk, who is a Catholic. "IT WILL be a very bad thing for religious schools to close. The Catholic population is more affluent than formerly, and I am puzzled why they feel so desperate about it." He said that federal and state aid would be coming along , as it is already in several states, including Michigan, where he lives. "The aid is almost around the corner. " Dr. Kirk said there is a great need to study what he calls "moral imagination" - a full understanding of human nature derived from historical and theological studies which "teaches us what it is to be a man.'' "IT ALSO teaches us how we live wlth order in the soul and how we live in an ordered society. This has been much neglected, to our sorrow." too little vocational training in recent years. "We have been closing down programs instead of building them up," he said. "We need released time from the schools in which students could go to school for hall a day and spend the other half in some form of industrial or com- mercial apprenticeship." DR. KIRK spoke on "Decadence and recovery in American education" when he addressed a public forum sponsored by the USD Political Science Club in the Camino Hall theater. "There has been
have been too easily dishear- tened over the financial plight of their schools, according to Dr. Russell Kirk, noted columnist, author and educator. In an interview with The Southern Cross at the ~ rsitY.Qf_ San Diego, where he spoke '"Tuesaay, Dr. Kirk said: "I think the resources that Catholics still possess are larger , not smaller, than for- merly, and that Catholics might face up to the problem that Lutherans and other Christian groups have previously - that one can make ends meet." HE SAID Catholic schools, with their past reliance on the low cost of priests and nuns as faculty members, now find the Stebers led the offertory procession. Clarence Steber played a prominent part in the negotiations regarding merger of the two colleges on the USD campus . He headed a special sub-committee of the two boards of trustees early in the negotiations. A Mass at Mary, Star of the Sea Church yesterday was concelebrated by Msgr. I. Brent Eagen , chancellor of the diocese,. Msgr. John E. Baer , president of USD and Msgr. James Gilfillan, pastor. There will be a further Mass followed by Interment in Chicago tomorrow.
1
invented
bv a cult of Palestinians who venetrated a species of mus room known as Amanita mus- caria, which had narcotic and
erotic properties.
that
contends.
Allegro
" Jesus" was the code name
the mush- they got
cultists used for room from which
their kicks.
CLARE'.',CE L. STEBER Knight in Catholic order
1f Allegro takes first prize in the science-fiction category of religious scholarship, run-
be
must
honors
ncr-up
awarded to Soviet writer V.
Zaitsev.
'Cosmonaut Jesus Christ' Zaitsev published an article "revealing" that the star of spaceship from another world. Jesus, he said, was aboard. 'Jesus was a newcomer from space, a representative of a higher civilization," he said. "We should re[cr to him It was a prelate of Church of England, Canon (now Bishop t Hugh Monte- Jesus may have been a homo- sexual. He based this notion the fiore. who suggested that that Jesus never married. Marriage Hot Issue But Dr. William Phipps of Davis-Elkins College in El- kins, W. Va .. has written a married. basing his chieny on the fact that the Bible, nowhere says he was theory Bethlehem really was a as 'Cosmonaut Jesus Christ.' " on the biblical indications book claiming Jesus was
C.L. Steber, USD Benefactor Dies
not.
to think the
Phipps seem
most likely candidate is Mary
:'llagdalene.
-
An El Cajon seminary pr ident, however, says t trib- Jesus' marriage is ~vbe,re,,~ir.:,;. 0; Jesus. No other figure mentioned in scrip ure, it's in I tory has had such an en- more logical to assume he d g grip lln e. imagina- was not marri,.._,.M:H · ot After 2.000 • view of the Re y~ar.s, pcopl~re still trying Reese of Linda Vi to fmd some 'natural" e:.- Biblc College and mmary. planation is extraor- Now comes Prof Leonard d f d Swidlcr of the Temple Uni- inary Ii e an personality. versity religion department, whose article in Catholic World Magazine describes t °Jf impressive left-handed
•
Monday, February 22, 1971
Jesus as a "radical feminist" who was crusading for wom- en's lib 20 centuries before Bettv Friedan or Kate Millett waded into the fray. 'Feminist Crusader' Swidler says that in ISi cen- tury P Jestine, women were re ar so unreliable h '/, ill allowed to e~ 1tnesses in any trial. Bu Jesus chose to flrS p,pyearanc af- ter . resurrection to a group of women. This, he
Student Dies Of Injuries In 1967 Crash A student, semi-conscious E. Hartup, 31, who resided aq Ricker said Hartup fell from since he was injured in a traffic 1275 Eureka St. at the time of the hood of a moving car in the accident nearly four years ago, the accident, died .of head in- j6400 block of Linda Vista Road . died yesterday in a hospital, juries at 8:50 a.m. He was a He underwent brain surgery in the coroner's office reported. student at the University of San Sharp Hospital and was trans- Deputy Coroner Richard W. Dlego when the crash took 1 terred to a hospital in Santee on Ricker said the victim, Harry pace on May 22, 1967. Oct. 13, 1967. -~--
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