News Scrapbook 1988
San Olago, C1' (San Diego Co.) San 011190 Union (Cir. o. 217,089) (Cir. s. 341,840)
Rancho Santa Fe CA (San Diego Co ) ' Ranch Santa F~ T (Cir. w. 500 L ,mes
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.I La Prensa de San Diego
Carlsbad, CA (San Diego Co ) Ca_rlsbad Journal (Cir. 2XW. 16.0491
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Ci_~?:.~~~,~~,,~ to friends, Figueredo said. She wrote one lo Figueredo and her husband, retired pediatrician William Doyle, from Oslo. Norway, on the day she Figueredo spoke about the nuns faith "It's absolutely solid and backed by utter conviction. She knows God will take care of 1t, what- ever the need is. And He does." Figueredo, who was instrumental in bringing the Missionaries h~re, was a bit surprised by their first local effort: helping elderly homeless men. "l was focusing on the menta~ly ill roaming the streets, ' she said. Some of them are occasionally rounded up and put in jail because there IS no place else. An appropriate facility, however, will soon bE: b_mll for the mentally ill and the Miss1on- anes of Charity may provide the staff. received the prize in 1979. ,
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Oceanside, CA (San Diego Co.) Oceansicfe Breeze (Cir. 2 x W.)
Cardinal Sin Says He Wi ll Bring Message of Unity to
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San Diego lime we gather to ce ebrate the Eucharist," the ·ca,dinal wrole. "The Eucharist invites us (to be one) with Christ and one another his is why lhe Eucharist is the pe>rfect sign of " Cardinal Sin said he hopes his visit will 'foster even more the spirit ol unity a'ld fralernIty in the Diocese ot San Diego ." The Filipino community in the San Diego area is large and diverse There ar more than 100 Filipino organi7at,or s in Ire area "This will be a very special opportunity to acknowledge the presence of the Filipino people In the diocesPs as well unity
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a rd In a(" In, archbishop of Manila, said he is coming to the Diocese of San Diego in June with a message of unity among all Catholics here. including more than 100,000 Filipinos . Cardinal Sin was inviled for his first pastoral visit to San Diego by Bishop Leo T. Maher in conJunction with the Filipino Catholic community. Cardinal Sin will celebrate a Mass with Bishop Maher and priests of the diocese at 4 p.m Saturday, June 18, at the University of San Diego foolt..icrtl stadio111 in l:inda Vista Since the stadium can only hold 5,000 persons for the outdoor liturgy, tickets and souvenir Mass booklet , to help people participate in the liturgy, are being distributed through the 98 parishes of the diocese An optional donation of $5 or more is being requested to defray the expenses of the event and to help Cardinal Sin's charitable projects in the Philippines. Persons interested in attending the Mass should contact their parish . Following the Mass, "An Evening with His Eminence Jaime Cardinal Sin" featuring dinner and entertainment will begin at 7:30 p.m. at the San Diego Marriott Hotel and Marina, 333 West Harbor Drive. Some 800 persons can be accommodated for the dinner, which is being sponsored by Bishop Maher and PUSO Philippines, an organization assisting charitable projects through the church in that country. Reservations at $60 per person can be made by writing to PUSO Philippines, P.O. Box 881891, San Diego, CA 92108 Proceeds lrom the dinner will help fund charitable projects in the Philippines which PUSO helps support. In a message released in conjunction with his upcoming pastoral visit to San Diego, Cardinal Sin told Catholics of the diocese,"You have chosen the theme 'One Bread, One Body, One People' forth is visit, aware of the great need for oneness among us. "We are not simply individuals, only concerned for ourselves... As God's people, however, we belong to one community, and we are bound to one another in the Lord . "The invisible unity of the believing community - Christ's Body, the Church- becomes visibly present each a Im e USD "A God to Believe In," a three- part lecture series, will be held June 28, 30 and July 5 from 6:30-9:30 p.m. In Serra Hall, 204 Father Michael Scanlon, OSA, wil I be the keynote speaker. Cost is $25 before June 22 or $10 at the door per night. Call the Institute for Christian Ministry for details, 260-4784 "Creative Kids '88," a program to help students stretch their creative abilities, will be held July 11-22 and July 25-Aug. 25 Cost is $5!x>O plus $150 for special afternoon acllvities. Call 260-4585. "University ol the Third Age," a program of pnyslcal exercise and classes for persons 55 and older is set for July 11-28. Cost is $55. For details, call 260-4585. Sports camps for boys and girls ages 8-18 will be held in June, July and August. Cost is $295 resident camp per week or $165-$200 day camp per week. Sessions In tournament and basic tennis, competitive swimming, baskelball, soccer, football, volleyball, baseball and outdoor wilderness will be offered. For more, call 260-4593. San Diego, Calif. Southern Cross (Cir. W. 27,500) JUN 17 1988
as their cultural background," Bishop Maher said referring to lhe cardinal's visit. Father Roque "Khing" Vario, chief coordinator of the execulIve committee planning the visit, said, Cardinal Sin's first pastoral visit to San Diego is an opportunity for a ll Catholics of the diocese " to express our concern and solidarity for our brothers and sisters who have withstood the chaIlenges of the Catholic faith in the Philippines." Information about Cardinal Sin's visit, the Mass and dinner are available by calling Our Lady of Angels parish, San Diego, 239-1231.
went to TiJuana m February to es- tablish the order there. The sisters will soon move mlo a new building where they will care for hom~~ess elderly men in TiJuana. ln add1llon, the head of the ew York-based Mis- sionaries of Charily Fathers - 30 priests and semmarian also associ- ated with Mother Teresa - 1s here to plan the order's move to San Dieg?. Figueredo, n addition to working tn her own medical practice has been busy trymg to fmd furn1Shings for the T11uana house for the home- less and a San Diego residence for the pr1 ts. Last week, Figueredo re- flected on her friend, Mother Teresa, and on her own life. "Mother" as fnend refer to the 1979 Nobel Prize winner, smiles
Encinitas, CA (San Diego Co) Coast Dispatch (Cir. 2 x w. 30,846) JUN 8 1981
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1 el Mar woman ~nored for · ~rary service ;" . 'd-':\ (j'') .anan Holleman was Honored ntly for her 16 years as head ~rian for the University of San Diego and six years with theSan - Diego College for Women. The Del Mar resident, an associate profes- sor in library science, is scheduled to retire June 30. USD President Author Hughes hostted a May 15 dinner ti>r Holle- man on campus. On behalf of the USD board of trus e&, he presented her with a University Libraria ;Emeritus certificate for her "llignificant contributions to acaden ic life at USD.'' Holleman came to the campus in 1966, six years before the San Diego College for Women and the San Diego College for Men merged to become USD. Her first job was cataloguer for the College for Women. In 1972, when the two colleges merged, Holleman was named USD librarian and engineered the merger of their two libraries. She was instrumental in establishing Friends of the Library, a much- needed support group, a year later. In 1984, she directed the move into the new James S. and Helen K. Copley Library and7ls helped design the building.
Mother Teresa: Visits San Diego, Tijuana this week. gist - and a native of Costa Rica. "l wanted to help m any way that I could. Somehow I heard about the problems they had and the needs," she said. She found lo of ways to See Teresa on Page -3
Figueredo has been concerned about the needy of Tijuana, of San Diego, since moving here_in 1947. She Is a phy ician - a surgical oncolo•
Palo Alto, CA (Santa Clara Co.) Peninsula Times Tribune (Cir. D. 60,288) (Cir. S. 60,011) - 198
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Penasquitos News (Cir. 2xW. 4,000)
1111 VUWII P. C. a E,1. 1111 -'Mother n-r,,P m•••ag• SAN DI~~lllons of abor- Uons performed worldwide each year pose the largest tllreat to glob- al peace, Mother Teresa told thou- sands or admirers after receiving an bnnorary doctorate degree for her service to the poor. "Abortion bas be<:ome the great- est destroyer or peace because It destroys two lives, the 111e of that cblld and the conscience of the mother," e said Tuesday at the UnlversltY of San Diego. Mother Teresa, who In 1948 formed the Missionaries of Charity, an order wltb nearly 3,000 mem- bers worldwide, also asked the au- dience of 6,000 people to "share the joy of loving with each other" by giving nece ltles and excess 1 possess.Ions to the needy. Times Tribune newa Mrvlctt ••
JUN 23 1988
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,092)
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Organ workshop at USD Father Jose Enrique Ayarra, professor of organ at the Conservatory of Music in Seville, Spain and Cannon of the Seville Catherclral will conduct a worksh~p at the University of San.Diego on July 9 at 10 a.m. The cost !o.r day-long wor s op, designed for organists and church mu_s1c1ans, is $15. Registration will begin at 9:30 a.m. · Room 131 ofCammoHallon the campusofUSD. ,;;:z_ '1. at~1:~mation call Fr. Reveles at260-4600, ext. 4456, orjohn Nunes ~-L
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San Diego, C.ilif. Southern Cross (C,r. W. 27,500)
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1 1988 < quf'n 's P C B I I 8 t PAIR OF ACES: Timothy Costa finished first in his USD graduating class with a 4.0 aver- age. Number two in the class: his t~in brother, Christopher, who missed by .02 of a grade point. (Christopher is used to running second. Timothy beat him into the world by seven minutes.) CITY SCENES: Mexicans talk wisely of the "tears of the bull " and Arthur Oilman was spook~d at La Gran Tapa the other eve- ning when a bull's head mounted on the wall began dripping tears. So was the management. They shut the place down, because water was pouring through the ceiling just above the bull. ... At- torneys general from throughout the Southwest U.S. and Mexico are convening at the Bahia for a border-crime conference. Yester- day tl1ey skipped a session on trans-border car theft to watch SWAT members and police dogs and horses in a training demon- stration on the Mission Bay beach. , .. San Diego LEAD cele- brates its 10th anniversary to- night, graduating 60 more poten- tia I leaders. The program thrives: 129 are competing for 60 spots in the 1989 class. WHEELER DEALER: Thieves stole ad writer Dan Trumble's '66 Mazda last November. In Decem- ber he bought a '77 Toyota Celica. Four days later, police found the Mazda in Carlsbad. In March, the Toyota was stolen. On Monday he bought a '68 MG. And yester~ day police informed him that the Toyota's been recovered - in New York City. ~"lion Yaltosa assists with the Neil Morgan column. -~ -- ~1·ve never been n r tmng JX'rson, as you can probably gu ," she 1d "I always felt my obhgatlon lo boulder as much as poss bl " -----------•~•,.'!."'_-_ Photoa by ;:Aau~n NUHca I H P' CONGRATULATIONS - University of San Diego President Author Hughes congrat• ulates Jeanne Ditzhazy at the 35th undergraduate commencement ceremony held May 22 at USO. Over 3,000 attended the event, including San Diego Mayor Maureen O'Connor and Padres owner Joan ' don t thmk n will smk 1n until nex1 fall when I realize I don '1 have to go batk to school. ' At the naduate commencement exercise held last Sunday morning 235 IT!aster s and 10 doctoral degrees 'were conferred . Forrest Shum.... ay, retired cha,nnan of the board and chief execul ve offi er of The Signal Companies, received an honorary degree for his dedication 10 the de,elopn ent of higher eclucauon and research Contlt 1mg rem.irks were 1(1vcr b) Bishop :\1ahcr Betau5e you gro1d.iate /Jave de,e,oped leader fop skills prarncccl voluntal"SM and because of v<.1ur eouc i on ynu possess a pre ti to .nnuence lt1t"rs for t~t" com,non ood C.rcat the moral responsibiiity of you graduates who are to be 1ht gu1d111g orce for 1he common good ," the bishop aid 1he l SD School of La" graduat, d 35'• udents :Vt y 21 at th~ ii s a nual USO Pres1dtn• Author Hughes congra1ulated the 746 ll'raduate. for their involvement m volunteer work and called th m ·'change all' ms." "II 1hi umver ity ha clone an}'thing to help you, I smrerel) hope that II 1s helping you to apprenarr the power ol th• rolt· ol change agent 'J he challenge is to make the world a lutJ, b l bet1er for ha, mg been a part of 1t Hughe, said During h1 valcd1c1ory acldre s, CoMa aid " At USD "e have leilrnt'd to develop logic fc.,111do111on for our hef Our educ wn t n- t: nc t been a fr ud Hopefully wt eave tt 1s un1vt'r I y with lht commencement program. John Han Ely, a professor at Stanford Law School was given an honorary degree for distinguishing himself as a teacher, scholar. law school administrator, Supreme Court aw clerk and lawyer, both for the government and for the indigent Ely urged the graduates to be their own persons and not to be conformists. "Live the life you want Be selfish in an enlightened way and use the choices you have to obtain fulfillment in life "he said. " I am ecstatic about graduanng I've been m chool since I was six vears old; 11 • s abou1 ume I !(Ct out and lace the rchl \\arid said law school graduate Rob Rochelle. Depamng Law Sthool Dean Sheldon Krantz asked the graduate, to pledge to use their 1,300 Some •
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