News Scrapbook 1989
s n Diego, Calif. (San D ego Co l S DIEGO T IBUNE
Sun D ego, Calif' •. (San .::>1ego Co) DAIL rRA!iSCRIPT
Palm Desert. CA (R 1verside Co.I Palm D ••rt Post (Cir. W. 10,400) NOV
NOV 6 - 1989
- 1 89
ov 4 - 1989
Jlltn.',
P C. B
F Jlllnt ' 1 P. C. B fat 1888 USD adds 1-2 punch Transfers now playing active roles for Toreros 0/.~~ for Districts 1 and 5. V t" ~Ks~ open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m " ddre88CB a luncheon meeting of the about "The Cha, mg City Club at the Hilton Rote . f perations for Marriott Hotelskftal;8It', at 7:30 a.m. : the C THURSDAY Ed Fuller, v.p. o o" t "- USO continental brea as . w rmation. Face of the Hospitality b:!:!~: is $15 and call 260-4644 for mo:~~Y Suit.es Hotel. The Manchester Conference. meets at 6 p.m. at th~ La Jolla E h ad will be discuseed. 0 THURSDA y The Planning Forum . ~or leaner business times a e d t nd planning '' l . · defense bu ge a · S Diego dee inmg 172 £ r more information. .II be honored at the an Call 566-2000 ext. o General C. Everett Koop W1 TURDA y Former U.S. Surgeon D" Marriott Hotel & Manna. [] s:ospice Testimonial Dinner at the S:n ~::tional Stamp CollectingMonth. rl November is Aviation History Mont an [ TUESDAY O mg h f"JustEnoughRope, a TUESDA y Joan B~aden, au\ or o By Kirk Kenney Tribune Spcrt,wr,ter order to satisfy NCAA requirements. Jerome was forced to sit out one year because he transfe~ed from another NCAA DiV1Sion I school. Thom~ missed the fall semester while gathering enough umts to register at USO, so he sat out the spring semester as a redshirt. · rac They still ma~e an impact on the program m p . tice and on the 1delines . ,, . "His "Anthony is a tough competitor, said Egan. im act was more on the floor by just ho:W hard he we~t after it. There was a big difference_ m the way e racticed when he was out there. He Just brought :ve~hing up a notch playmg like a demon everyday. "John was very important to those players beea~ we had a young team. They were just out of ~1gh chool and we asked them to do a lot of changmg. When things weren't going well (the Toreros _funshed 8-20) John was there to tell them these thmgs are nec~ary and they're the kind of things that are done in other places." · t The imme<:liate goal is for Jerome and Thomas o learn what to expect from thei_r teammates. ,. . "It's still kind of a feeling-out process, said Jerome. "Wive got to start reading pe_ople to know what they do. That way there's no surpnses 10 games into the season." • • • NOTES _ Toreros senior forward Cr~ig Cottr~ll joined Jerome in double figures with 10 pomts. Juruor guard Pa Holbert, another transfer frOJ? M~, scored five points and passed out a game-high eight assists in a strong debut. Sophomore guard Gylan Dot- tin (nine points, five assists) and sophomore forward Kelvin Woods (sii points, four rebounds) also played w~\·reshmen Brooks Barnhard and Eric Lochtefeld were the only players on the Torer?S' 15:man roster who didn't play. Egan said a decision Will be made within the next two weeks whether to. reds~irt Barn- hard a 6-foot-8 forward from Escondido High. Egan la~ed to play Lochtefeld, a walk-on guard from ~estmont High in Menlo Park, but didn't _want to put him in when the Australians started pressmg. . John Jerome and Anthony Thomas pa_ssed the time at n5p bas~etball games last season hke most fans sitting m the lands ' We ot on the referees," said Thomas. The g will have considerably more say at _Torer?5 ameith1 sea on. The difference is the1r actions w~l g peak for them. Jerome is playing center. Thomas is Playing forward. . els I t d Thomas spoke the1r lrrst wor as Jerome an ' 91 81 win over Easts1de Mel- night m the Toreros · bournc Australia at the USD Sports Center. . J 6-foot-8 . enior transfer from Anzona erom!~~ a team-high 21 points in just a mmutes. ~~t!;!\.ror-10 from th field, includmg :Hor-3 f~o~ three-point range Imagine, a big man who can s oo th ~}-~';; alwa ,s bet'n a three-point hooter," said Jerome "I hiven't been hoot ng that well the past t ks I decided to come out tonight and Just ;~t without th~g about it.. I ':!anted to have a hltl fun out there Its been awhile. It ar d a if Jerome had never been away.. "A rtt\f John Is not so much what God gave bun, but wh t h developed," said US~ coach Hank Efan. "He 5 got great h nd-eye coordination and hes a fierce competitor " (A · ) Thomas a 6~ junior transfer from Mesa nz. Community College, scored eight points. He wa~ 3-for• 11 from the field 2-for-2 from the free-throw ~me and h d four rebounds. Those stats don't sound too impres• ive, ut it beats sitting m the sta,,nds_. • I lhmk he as a little uptight, said Egan. 1:1e ~as trymg lo press and do too much instead of playmg e gamed Thomas: , I believe my offense is goin~ to co~~ around. I'm not womed about that. Whal Ive got do is gel my defense together. I want to become one ~f the better defensive players on the team. I h~te 1 ° because if you can't play defense here, you won p ay ~an• . Je;ome and Thomas didn't play at all last season m JOHN JEROME 6-8 senior transfer 989 VS San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Business Journal (Cir. W. 7,500) 6 - 1989 Jl(l~,. •• p C. B / , 1888 THlJ"SOAY, NOVEMB~eg o's Distinguished /unlversWe of §Jin se~t Ed Fuller, Marrioll speakers erles ;"''.' pre r sident of operations Hotels & Resorts vice P e_ on who w,11 discuss for lhe Wesletn/Pacific rr~~e Hosp1tahly lndus- "The Changing Face O be made 1rom 8 to 9 try." The presentation;,~ m continental break- a m. preceded _by ~;-For m~re inlormati~all last The cosl IS $ . ->Dfj::> / Jackie Frieberg at 260-4644 ....... _,.., Los Angeles.CA (Los Angeles Co.) Times t' ! San Diego Ed.) Cir. D. 50,010} Cir. S. 55,573) ,, " '• <.IICUII P,, C. 8 1r1t,1 Fe CA R,rncho ANTHONY THOMAS 6-4 junlor transfer !San D11:!Jo Co.) ' R,1ncho S.111 ta t: 1, 1 ,rn s ICrr . W. 500J NOV 8 - 1989 ,Ill{,"·. P C 8 , ., / 86 Est. 1116 San Diego, CA. (San Diego Co .) San Diego Union (Cir. D . 217,089) (Cir . S. 341,840) / MEN'S SOCCER.,,,..- Serving an ace L o\.1n-;fs~)cttwo goals to lead the 11.nixcrsiLY of San Diego to a 4 _1 West Coast Conference vie• tory over Loyola Marymount al USO. The Toreros arc 14-6 1 and 2 _3 _0 _ Loyola Marymount 3-1/ 0-5-0. 5 - 1989 I U • R PeJ!gy Freeman/Ranch Spotlight The next b1gevent coming up at the Rancho antn Fe Tennis Club 1 the 7th annual ''Calcutta" and Intra-Club Tournament, which will be played November 11 and , . c. B Jlll~n '• e,, IUI At US , students taught leSJ uv rt ry m o Group that meets monthly, and has different speakers. The topic this month at the Rancho Santa Fe Group meeting will be "A Look at the Future of the Supreme Court" and the speaker will be professor Bernard Siegan from the School of Law. This well-known professor was nominated as a Justice for the Supreme Court, and is obviously well-informed and very knowledgeable. At the end ofthe talk, guests are invited to ask questions It 1s usually very stimulatrng as this creates the opportunity to mteract with your friends and neighbors concerning topics that we fr quently don't dbcuss 10 our busy everyday hve . If you are mtere ted m theRe educational presentnt1ons call Ann Hoover 260-4681. Peggy Freeman repor/8 on events around the Ranch each week in her column Ranch Spot- light wh,ch appears euery Friday in the Rancho Santa Fe Times . Items for Freeman should be addressed to the Rancho Santa Fe Times, P.O. Box 749, Rancho nnd Blhh1 ff rrmann won th t1ehreuker in th third t ofone of the NCV S - 1989 mo 1 exciting mntch m the 19 !I Rancho S ntu f e Tcnnl Club Double Club ( hamp1on hip Nuvcrt nd JI,,, rnmnn won the women's B ch mp10n hip title ofter h rd {ought battle with Donn Arl"hdal nd Holly Wil on who Ir t the fir t set 2-6, and came b k to win the second a ·t 6-1 Th lln I ct t1ehre11 kcr Wll Herr11111nn champion hip. vert and for the Larry Huu (,r and Tim Haidingt•r won them n' B title heatmg Doh Drive and Arni Yalum 5-7, 7-li, 6-1 Barbara Hau r nd f.'runci I- ree had n ev n rn t h Ii 7, 7-5 until the fate- ful third t with Murion Hinchy nd Su.,y St·haefer Jo ing 1-6 in the worn n' A r1es Rob Schaefor and Dick Doughty took Kevin Sweeny and Jim Brown m the men's C div1s10n nd th" wmn, r ofmen's ries were Georgf" ,ind Frank chulte, who heat Larry tein- bcrg tnd John Connolly 6-7, 6-2, 7 5 12. The big Calcutta party which precedes the tournament will be held ot the home ofSuzy and Rob Schaefer Thi 1s undoubtedly the most fun event of the year at the T •nms Club. Teams of eight ure made up from the sign-up he t by club pro Dave Bennett who has the Herculean task of try mg to make the teams as equal os possible There are four men and four women on each team. On arriving at the party, you urc told which players are on your team Lu t year there were eight teams of eight. Each team was given a color to wear. A captain is cho. n for each team. And, each team pick a name. That is where the fun really begins. Some of the r1sque names that have been chosen over the years had to be changed so the information could ~;~: t:::~;;;;,~.m~:::::~ [nvisible University 1s a wonder- ful organization that was started many yeara ago by the university and is presented monthly in your neighborhood at member' homes. The Rancho Santa Fe Group will meet at the home of Sandy and Bob Brue Sunday. be sent to the press! Even more hilarious is the bidding and the ideas for the play- ers' co tume8. If you have never been ma real- Jl/fnt '• P C. B Fst, 1888 'Abortion: Cons der the pro~ancons A fetus 1s , lifeless tis- sue; it is a vmg and unique human bemg. Genetic infonnatlon fro the _parents is passed on to the new 10d1- vl a at he time of conception. The heart and eyes of the unborn baby are forming just 18 days into the pregnancy. At 24 days, the heart begi115 to beat. A week . later t~e bram has human proport10115· bram waves have been observed after only 40 days. About this time, the sex or- gans begin forming. The body becomes sensitive to touch during the 10th week, and pain can be felt. At 10 to 12 weeks, the baby has fmgerprints which change onlv in sue as the person grows. These formations all take place within the first three months of the existence of the fetus. Is it really true. as pro-abortion groups would lead to beli~v~, ~at abortion is more an issue of mdividu- al "nghts" than it is of killing an innocent baby? I hink not. In fact, the $150-million- ) ear abortion. in- dustry, spearhea ed b organizat!ons such as Plannr Paren•hood, feigns ethical outrage h n 1t mentions there actually are pe pie m today's ''educated" societ ho would have serious doubts abo SlDlply 'termi- nating" an unwanted pregnancv. . Join with me, a f rmer abortion advocate, in learning more about fetal life and positive al ernabves to abortion. When enough people wake up to this tragic genocide ~nd_ make their feelings known, abort1omsts no longer will be making a killing. GREG WAUSON Mira Mesa Kristiile Strachan, dean of tl\e USO~ law school, IS "under fire" due 'riilier" belief ID pro-choice (Tribune article, 10-24-89). She described herself as student unions? Don't you think that will offend a white person' By blacks wanting to form their own groups, it just seems to me to create more problems. • I don't have a problem with pro- grams to let more minorities into colleges, but it just i;ce like there are a lot of Asians. And: • OK, we were wrong. But it was a private thing. It wasn't intentional; it wasn't racially motivated. No one was supposed to see us burn the cross. The four-hour session on racism in Some f dg ·ted qu etly, dechrung to take part. Others iipoke, but with re- luctance. Voices strained with frus- tration few appeared angry, ap- parently because they believed they had been falsely accused and were being unjustly punished. The subJect was racism. And close to 50 students (and a few faculty members) at the Univ~ San Diego approached the mandatory diSciiSSIUU last week with great ap- prehension. Here are some of the observations aired: • I used to get scared when I'd read that Mexicans would soon out- Tbe San Diego Union/Cindy Lubke Romero USO students gave Dennard K. Clendenin mixed reviews. ______\ _____ See R • ci1m on Page B-4 Los Angeles.CA (Los Angeles Co.) Times (San Diego Ed.) (Cir. D. 50,010) (Cir. S. 55,573) Santa Fe, CA 92067. Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co.) Daily Journal ~----~--~ Jl/~'• ... C. I fsr. IIU /Ttfei~~ of San Diego dropped'il West Coast Confer nee match to Gonzaga. 15-8, 15-9, 15-9, • at the USD per Center The Toreras were Jed by Heather Dal- Jey's six kills. .-::::::::::-1 0 7 - 1989 At the USO Invisible Universi- ty presentation , the speakers are usually faculty member· and staff who are authorities on a particu- lar subJect. There is also a La Costa Group, a Coronado Group, a Point Loma Group, and a Rancho Bernardo P. C. B I 888 Fs<. San Diego, CA. (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341 ,840) (Presiding Judge ApJ>oi~d Linda Lancet Miller b!~ appointed to a one-year term as presiding judge of the North Orange County Municipal Court. Miller, a former Los Angeles County deputy district attorney and Newport Beach private practitioner, was appointed to the bench in 1983. She graduated from the University of California at Berkeley in 1970 and from the U~versity of Sao Piego School o~ Law in 1973. Roger B. Robbins, a former Riverside County prosecutor and Santa Ana private practitioner who was elected t~ the bench in 1986, was elected ass1start presiding judge for the North Orange County Municipal Court. • From Staff and Wire orls NOV 5 - 1 Q"p b"IS 9id t),at her ~,-~....... ~--~~-.......,,.,_,~ - ,..~--,~ ,,~~- ~'"'.l...,...r-.,,.._,--.__...,r..l'......._~~ .....-..-..........,....,......., r-,, .... ,.. ...... •,,. ~~]? m ~?.men's soccer team advances to regional finals t. ~omas won tn ~ 987 i! pr:;ail,ed m laS( years game c:::~ge 10 ftt I d 0 en I to lead u D' Westmont edged Pl Loma Nazarene 53-59, to win the team competition of the women's NAIA District 3 Cham- pionships, also in La Mirada. Annette Ronnerman was PLNC's top finisher Women'• volleyball - Cal Poly San Luis Obispo beat San Diego State 15-8, 15-5, 14-16, 13-15, 15-7 in a Big West match. Michelle Hansen led the Broncos (14-11, _7-8) with 26 kills. Amy Erben had 20 kills for the Aztecs (15- 14, 5-8) • •· Heather_Dalley and Cindy Sdldorff had s11 kJ!ls e~cb as USD with a time of 19:24.10. defeated visiting Gonzaga 15-8 15-9 15-9. Kelly Cunningham had 12 kill; Prep football - Marco Cabanillas threw three touchdown passes to lead St. Augustine over Christian, 36- 0. The win keeps the Saints tied with Lincoln and Crawford atop the Cen- Charger bu1 "rvic:e - San Diego Transit will provide bus service to and from next Sunday's game be- tween the Raiders and Chargers at San Diego Jack Murphy Stadium. for Gonzaga. tral League standings. scored 34 a nd Demetnus Laffitte 15 for. USIU, which opens its season ~g~Jnst Drake Nov. 24 at 7:30 p.m. at and UCSD un minut of ov Le r team to a 1 _0 worn n's h flJ'SI round of the West Regionals R th O ea O den Hall. W: os goa onces scor 1n L P ul Mmn The win over host (11-3-2 w Pt. Loma Na- CroH country - USO lo a 4-1 victory over Loyola rarymount _(3-la). The Toreros also ad two ass1s~ from Jason Pearson te; Coll Macal ~rene College won the men's team title at the NAIA Dist~1ct 3 Cross ~o~ry Champio~hips 10 La Mira- e Cnisa d ers Goshu Tadese re- ma1?ed undefea_ted, winning his si~th a.. top-ranked Trtto!• 17th ~ut~~t t!~ they ar. th ll D (I 1-1) will play St. Thomas l4-6DeLa- :ir to:p~ov: n • i the Dl:is1i~ Veaga bad 31 pomts to help the Mel- 81 eve ••. a ~:ri:.i~1r~~:~r!=~l irs;r: ~~:ig3~\race w: an exh1b1hon ame last 'ni ht' at • . secoo 1n the re Iona! fin I f (9-3-2) t ! the right to advance mm- tl~e of 2 1H Final Four It will be the third ma a vane- . that th se two con cuttve ye r :,pt~ lheNNAI~ ~a~onalhCh;pwn- Serra lhgh Sch!,l Kevm Bra~haw hav met In th regional final lea 1s. . . . enos a, m ov. on
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