News Scrapbook 1974-1975
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FOR CAGE SUCCESS UWlv T oreros Need Lift From Newcomers
Modern Living
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THE NEWS, Me xico Cit~ Saturday, Marc h 2, 197-t
Joan Bordas MexicanInfluence At San Diego U. A good hostess and a good Ohio, but admits. ruefully, public relat~ons woman arc that she was the only girl at really one and the same the academy who was nev- thing and women il} i, ~Wv er sounded out by the nuns business world are for the religious \'OCation. that specia l knack to ' make "I came to San Diego with a party go" quHe success- my husband severa l yea r::s fully , in mi opi111crr- ago aft e r he left the . a vy Sura Finn, public rela- but for me , a husband and lions representative for the fou~ children uren t enough University of San Diego who to keep me busy unless I whi tied through Mexico take tranquilizers," she !,1st week, i u fme case in laughed . " So I went to work, point. doing public rela tions for Hauling a slide projector, the San Diego City \1aga- books, p,1pers and photo- zinc. graphs. she is equipped to Se\'eral years ago I was share her own lo\'e affair offered a job with the uni- 1Hth the college so en- \'ersitv . Intermsofthework thusiastically that even I do, the difference is slight senior: citizens have to but, in terms of the satis- rest rain themsel\'CS from faction it gives me, the dif- racing off to California for fer enc e is enormous . post-graduate courses. There ' s something ex- A Sara Finn (pronounce it hi 1 a rating about the fast) with a eherubic face is academic atmosphere that amusmg castmg for a Cath- keeps one young and posi- olic uni1ersity . "The uni- l i ve-thinking . All those \'ersity was founded as a marvelous youngsters Roman Catholic institution preparing themselves for for higher learning," she the future plus the contact carefully explained,' " but it with the new kind of profes- is run along open . ecumeni- sors , those to whom teach- cal lines , In the field of ing is a special joy instead of religious ·tudies, we have a drag, are good for my own Prote tant ministers and mental alertness. " Je1\ _ish rabbis and 14 San Diego University is an rehg10ns represented. Stu- extraordinarily beautiful dent of all fmths are we!- school and it combines come and there is no at- Mexico and the United le m Pt to .Prose 1 y ti z e, Stat~s most deftly in its \I hatsoever architecture. The campus Mrs. Fmn wus convent- church, for instance, is an reared at the Sacred Heart exact copy of the lovely one Academy in Cincinnati , in Tepoztlan .
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Col Stott Northrldge GI Azusa Poc1f1( at Bakersfff:ld Tourney ot Wa hlngton State ot Univ Of J Sally Finn-- PR Person for USD J7 J8 J17 J18 J2J J17 J28 ~I F6t F7 FIi FU ~1 P11 Fn F25 F28 to he believed It wa s na nwd ;ifter J ames Copley 1\ ho owned t he Cop ley :\c 11 s Service. Uc was a wonderful _perso n who d ied bst ), l';.rr. Mrs. Copley is one of t he patrons of t he library and .a good friend of mine. The librar\' wus naml'd in h is honor und set up \'i a donations from a ll the people who knell' a nd admired him . The bu ria I service was he ld in th e u·nivcrsity chu rch a nd Billy Gra h am de li vere d t h e eulogy," Saru F inn was ench,int ed with Mexico and ho pes to be back often. she ever left Wisconsin. I'll ·admit that we learned how to handle the subjunctive but 1t doesn't seem to come up in my bouts with chambermaids and waiters very often." l\trs. Finn's visit to Mexico -partly for a world reunion of Sacred Heart Colleges alumns - university and meetings with the high school graduating ch1sses and or their parents. to discuss th<' curriculum and the entrance requirements, the costs and the possib l e scholarships thut are open to Mexican students . The library has to be seen Since the city of San Diego is close to the border, the Mexican population is large and the Mexican influence, point of view , language and history has become interwoven into the daily life of this American city. Mrs. Finn, while in Mexico, was despairing of the quality of her Spanish and determined to take courses ut the university. "When I think that I had two years of Spanish in school, it embarrasses me lo discover how little I know and how badly I say it but my teacher was from Milwaukee and I don 't think Nuns To 'Be Honored The Religious f the Sacred Heart, the teachmg order of nuns who founded San Diego College for Women and ttday are a part of the University of San Diego, wm be honored dur- ing a Mass at 5 p . tod ay in Founders Chapel / I (A{t05) 5 J-CJ 71/ I • j~f..(.., ,1-1 Woman na1ned Charlotte VtrgJma Henry of Linda V1 ta ha been named to the countv Grand Jurv to replace O. J W~eeler, who re u:ned . She formerl y wa. personal ec retarv to Bishop Chari . Buddy at the Umvers1tv of San Diego. Streak Ends For Toreros S~lol to TM san Oieoo Union DOMINGUEZ HILLS - 1 Phil BaJO pitched a four-hit shutout in the opener, but I University of San Diego saw r its six-game winning streak l snapped in the nightcap as the Toreros split a double- header with Dominguez Hills State yes erday. Bajo, now 3-1 , nned seven and walked non while raising his record to 3-1. Triples by :\lik'.e Mulvaney and Jim Williams capped a three-run USD third in the 3- 0 Torero y,1n. Williams (now hitting 1 .378), catcher Rick Garner 1 (.371) and Ted Schultz all ! had three hits t First Gome USO ....... .. .003 000 0-3 S 21 oom. Hills •.. ...... 000 000 o-4 4 f Bolo and Garner; Crissman ond Hordson. SeconCIGoM8 USO....... ,. • 100 OIO I~ l g Dom Hills ... . . 240 000 1!2x , M~lvony w oc,ner 11), Bertrem 0), r McGee (8) ond Garner; Clear, McMur- r. ,av (3), Hughes C8) ond Hord5on. Ecumenical Center for the Study of ~Vorld Religions Church of the Immacu/a,t~ Scientists begin digging into area man's history By LOLA SHERMAN Scientists set up a fenced camp on a bluff · overlooking the Pacific Friday, the fence went up to protect the site. Over the weekend, students and other volunteers under the direction of Prof. James Moriarity of La Jolla, professor at University of San Diego, began the laborious work of sifting the grains of sand. They're just north of the mouth of the San Dieguito River. Not too long ago, the bluffs site was proposed for a major apartment project. James Scripps, a sometimes Del Mar resident, through the Scripps .Foundation, put up $125,000 to help the city buy the bluffs for a natural preserve. City officials trod the exact site of the archeological dig when they visited the new park and when they erected the sign identifying it. The dig is just below that rustic sign. The bluff itself has suffered quite a bit of erosion since 1929, as pictures from the museum attest. Archeologists have promised the city they'll restore tile ite to its before - the - dig state once they're through. In the meantime, they'll explain their work and offer visitors a short tour. Two University of San Diego students , Brian Smith and Richard Coyer, and Patricia Reifman, a biologist at UCSD, comprise the managing search team. Work will be carried on from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m daily, Ocean · last weekend in hopes of finding some clue to life almost 50,000 years ago. They're digging at the site of the " Del Mar Man," oldest known inh a bitant of the Western Hemisphere. Del Ma r Man, a new name, was discovered 45 year& ago but wasn't considered all that significant. The late Malcolm J . Rogers, then an archeologist for the San Diego Museum of Man, found Del Mar Man 's skull eroding out of the face of a cliff. Three years earlier, some bones had been unearthed by a steam shovel filling a lagoon for the La Jolla Beach and Tennis Club in La Jolla Shores. Scientists figured the remains were about 20,000 years old -- no big thing at that time. Last May, along came Jeffrey L. Bada of Scripps Institution of Oceanography and his new method of dating bones from the presence of amino-acid molecules. He discovered that the bones found in La Jolla and Del Mar were ~8,000 years old -- more than twice the age of ~ny other authentically verified dates for mankind in the New World. The museum, owner of the skull, got Del Mar's permission to dig on city-owned property, the Bluffs Reserve. Terri Briden and Prof. James Moriarity of La Jolla work at the site of 'Del Mar Man,' oldest known inhabitant of the New World. The archeological dig is on the City of Del Mar's Bluffs Preserve. ( Staff photo by Steve Zimmerman) · · J)c,._ 4 //cl L I J; 7/
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