News Scrapbook 1985
s n Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454)
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I XHS Tuition costs going up
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454)
Palm Desert, CA (Riverside Co) Desert Weekly News (Cir. W 30,000) JUL 181985
UL 1 81985
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Ann~'2e~ ggoner of Indio was graduated cum laude from the Univenlty of San Diego with a bachelor of arts • degree in Spanish and' a minor in business admini!ltration. She plans to continue her education at Arizona State University at Tempe and to work on her masters degree in yitin American historv and publishing.
Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co) Times (San Diego Ed.) (Cir. D 50,010) (Cir . S 55,573)
9 1985
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column Monday. DOPEY: The David Allen Lucas prelimina ry hearing grows tedious. And so yesterday when a court clerk asked defense attor- ney William Saunders if he want- ed the marijuana that's to be used as evidence, Saunders had a quick reply: "I might need it for medicmal purposes, but not for evidence." MONEY: Developer Doug Manchester says he has 72 days left to refinance his Hotel Inter- Continental. That's when the $30 million runs out that Beverly Hills Savings and Loan put up to operate the hotel. (S&L exec Don- ald Tipping projects the money will last no more than two weeks.) Manchester confides he's scrambling to find a lender, but low occupancy rates and nega- tive publicity about the hotel's fi. nancial losses are making .it tough. Prudential Life Insurance backed out of one proposed deal yesterday. If no new deal is struck, Manchester says he'll lose his 50 percent interest in the hotel. If Beverly Hills doesn't as- sume the debt, the hotel then goes into foreclosure, says Man- chester. THE NAMES: Jean Philippe Junot, nephew of the playboy ex- husband of Princess Caroline of Monaco, has enrolled.at USO.... Jean and Ernest Ii'ahn are co- chairmen tomorrow evening of the Patrons' dinner in the cour t- yard at Mission de Alcala. Pro- ceeds will go to paint the com- pound. . . . Linda Smith, wife of the Padres president, is guest conductor tonight at Summer Pops. . . . George and Piret Munger are scheduled for a three-week tour this fall with their yuppie "Piret's" cookbook. Houghton Mifflin has ordered an initial press run of 42,000, with an Oct. 28 public ion date. . .. On his Sunday ming TV show, Charles Kuralt will focus on fam- ilies burned out by the Normal Heights fire. - -
Added Murder Trial for Lucas D-;;1~cas was ordered Thursday to stand trial for murder in the deaths of two women and a 3-year-old boy. Lucas. who is already facing trial on three other murder charges, was ordered by Municipal Judge Her- bert Exarhos to stand trial for the deaths of Gayle Roberta Garcia, 29; Suzanne Camille Jacobs, 31, and her son, Colin. Garcia, a real estate agent, was killed Dec. 8, 1981, in a vacant Spring Valley home that she had been showing to a prospective buyer. The bodies of Jacobs and her son were found in their Normal Heights home on May 24, 1979. Lucas' 12-year-old niece and her stepfather testified at the 12-day preliminary hearing that Lucas was at a birthday party in Santee at the time that Garcia was killed. The party was held to celebrate the girl's and the man's birthdays, but Exarhos ruled that there was enough evidence to try Lucas for Garcia's murder. Exarhos ordered Lucas to return to Superior Court on Aug. I for arraignment and setting of a trial date. Lucas is scheduled to go to trial Oct. 1 for murder in the deaths of Rhonda Strang. 24, and Amber Fisher, 3, whom Strang was baby s1ttmg on Oct. 23 in Strang's Lake- side home; the Nov. 20 death of Uru.versjty of San Diego honor student Ann Catherine Swanke 22 and for attempted murder m' a~ attack on Jody Santiago, 29, of Seattle on June 9, 1984. All of the victims' throats wer~ slashed. __/
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San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454)
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Letter from Washington Hunter .making impression as a bad guy in Soviet Union press tt-Cf c;? . By Dori Meinert A. Nassif as ambassador to Morocco ed the two senators meet to mull op's Schools in La Jolla said the most Copley News Service has been confirmed by the Senate. over the idea of piping water from difficult part of the program has Spe
"We were cordial, but.I pointed out a number of problems," such as load- ing fees charged for food at their docks and disruptions of volunteer camps including one where 20 people were killed, Lowery said. "There are enough problems that are acts of God. We don't need to deal with the acts of man," Lowery said. Amare concluded the meeting by inviting Lowery to visit Ethiopia, Lowery said, "which is something I'd like to do, but not at the invitation of the Marxist government."
Wilson had just finished testifying in support of a negotiated water agreement that would free up to I million acre-feet of water for Cali- fornia residents. An acre foot is enough to supply a family of four for a year. "Being a Californian, the mere sight of water makes me salivate," Wilson joked as he grabbed for sev- eral water glasses on the table in front of him. Murkowski, likening the idea to a developer's proposal to pipe water down the Rocky Mountains, suggest-
* * SCIENCE FARE. . . Another Del Mar resident, Karl Rumelhart, 15, arrived here last week to begin six weeks of lectures and research as part of a highly selective program operated by the Rickover Science In- stitute. During the second half of the pro- gram, he will do field work with a researcher studying computer voice recogmtion. So far, the senior from The Bish- *
JOB OPENING. .. Frank Collins, Hunter's legislative assistant, is re- turning to San Diego to take over as Hunter's district representative. Col- lins 1s replacing Jay Wilkinson, who retires Aug. 9. * * * "ON THE ROAD TO MOROCCO" . .. The appointment of former San Diego attorney Thomas
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