News Scrapbook 1989

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USD adds 1-2 punch Transfers now playing active roles for Toreros

to 8p m for Districts 1 and 5• a.m, h & ." ddresses a luncheon meeting of the

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[1 TUESDAY Voting boo H8 are open from C TUESDAY Joan Braden, authorof"Just Enoug

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order to satisfy NCAA requirements. Jerome was forced to sit out one year because he transferred from another CAA Division I school. Thomas missed the fall semester while gathering enough units to register at USD, so he sat out the spring semester as a redshirt. They still made an impact on the program in prac- tice and on the idelines. "Anthony is a tough competitor," said Egan. "His impact was more on the floor by just how hard he went after it. There was a big difference in the way we practiced when he was out there. He just brought everythmg up a notch playing like a demon everyday. "John was very important to tho e players because we had a young team. They were just out of high chool and e asked them to do a lot of changing. When things weren't going well (the Toreros finished 8-20), John was there to tell them these things are necessary and they're the kind of things that are done in other places." The immediate goal is for Jerome and Thomas to learn what to expect from their teammates. "It's still kind of a feeling-out process," said Jerome. "We've got to start reading people to know what they do. That way there's no surprises 10 games into the season." • • • 'OTES - Toreros senior forward Craig Cottrell joined Jerome in double figures with 10 points. Junior guard Pa olbert, another transfer from Mesa, scored five points and passed out a game-high eight assists in a rong debut. Sophomore guard Gylan Dot- tin (nine points, five assists) and sophomore forward Kelvin Woods (six points, four rebounds) also played well. • Fr hmen Brooks Barnhard and Eric Lochtefe\d were the only players on the Toreros' 15-man roster who didn't play. Egan said a decision will be made within the next two weeks whether to redshirt Barn- hard, a 6-foot-8 forward from Escondido High. Egan planned to play Lochtefeld, a walk-on guard from W tmont High in Menlo Park, but didn't want to put him in when the Australians started pressing.

By Kirk Kenney Tribune Sportswriter John Jerome and Anthony Thomas pa ed the time at_M,,ll,L..IJ"""4elball gam last eason like most fans t gm th tand . ' W got on the referees," s 1d Thomas. Th y will have considerably more ay at Toreros gam th ason. The difference is their actions will pc k for them Jerome 1s playing center. Thoma is playing forward. J rome and Thoma poke their first words last n ht in the Toreros' 91-81 w n over Eastside Mel- bourn Au tralia at the USD Sports Center Jerome, a 6-loot-8 enior tran ·fer from Anzona late, cored a team-high 21 points in just 14 minutes. He 9-lor-10 from the held, mcludmg S-for-3 from thr point range. Imagine, a big man who can shoot th trey. ''I've always been three-point hooter," said J rom "I haven·t been hooting that well the past two I dec1d d to com out tonight and just hoot ithout thlnkin abo t iL I wanted to have a hltl fun out there It' be n awhile." It ppear d a 1f Jerome had never been away. "A lot of John I not so much what God gave him, but wh t he developed," said USD coach Hank Egan. He's got great hand-eye coordination and he's a f1 rce competitor" Thom , a 6-4 junior transfer from Mesa (Ariz.) ommumty Coll ge orcd eight points. He was 3-for- 11 from the held, 2-for-2 from the free-throw line and bad four rebounds Those tats don't sound too impres- 1ve, but 1t buts lttmg in the lands. I thmk he wa a llttie uptight," said Egan. "He was trymg to pr and do too much 10stead of playing the gm Sald Thoma "I believe my offense is gomg to come round I'm not worried about thaL What I've got to do I get my defense together. I want to become one of the better defensive players on the team. I have to because 1f you can't play defense here, you won't play at all ' Jerome and Thom didn't play at all last season in Serving an ace Peggy Freeman/Ranch Spotlight The next big event coming up at the Rancho ant,1 Fe Tenni Club 1 the 7th annu I '"Calcutta" and Intra-Club Tournament, which l'.111 be played ovember 11 and 12. Th big Calcutta party which pr c d the tournament will be

City Club atthe Hilton Hotel. erriott Hotels, talks about "The Chai mg D THURSDAY Ed Fuller, v.p. of operabonsUS~Dor ~.:"a tal breakfast. It'd at 7:30 a.m. v the · a1·t I dustry" at co......-n · Face of the Hosp1t 1 Y n . $ 5 nd call 260-4644 for more information. Manchest.er Conference Center. Cost ia 1 a t t h L Jolla EmbBllSY Suites Hotel. The 0 THURSDAY The Planning Forum m~ts at ~ p.m. ab ':a times ahead will be discussed. declining defense budget and ~lanmng for eaner usme Call 566-2000 ext. 172 for more 1nformat1on.C E tt K p will be honored at the San Diego SATURDA y Former U.S. Surgeon General . ve~e oo . HoApice Testimonial Dinner at the San DiegoMarriott Hotel & M~rm~ th D November is Aviation History Month and National Stamp Coll ctmg on . .

JOH JEROME 6-8 senior transrer

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San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Business Journal (Cir. W. 7,500) o 6 - 1989

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THVf'!~DAY, NOVEMBER 9 / Unlvers~ of 3'" Diego's Dlstlngulsh_ed Speakers erles will present Ed Fuller, Marriott Hotels & Resorts' vice pre_s1dent of oper_a11ons for the Western/Pacific region, who will discuss "The Changing Face of the Hospitality Indus- I " The presentation will be made from 8 to 9 ry eded by a 7 .30 a m co_ntinental break- am prec · ·· · 11 f~st: The cost is $15. For more 1nformat1~a

Los Angeles,CA (Los Angeles Co.) Times (San Diego Ed .) (Cir. D. 50,010) (Cir. S. 55,573)

~ Ran ho mta re CA IO D, :g, co; ' mch S; · • (C W O int,, " Tunes tr. . 500)

ANTHO ·y THOMAS 6-4 junior transfer

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Jackie Frieberg at 260-4644.

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San Diego, CA. (Sa n Diego Co .) Sa n Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341 ,840 ) NOV 5 - 1989

L~mn~~wo goals to lead the the Uoivcrs1ty pf San Diego to a 4-1 West Coast Conference vic- tory over Loyola Marymount at USD. The Toreros are 14-6-1 ~nd 2-3-0, Loyola Marymount 3-13-0, 0-5-0.

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E•r 1888 1/. At lL D, students taught les o of a different kin s By Sharon F. Griffin . laff rlter Nobody wanted to be there talking abo th L The room was rife with tension number whites. It Just bothered me But now I have a MeXIcar. girl rlend and it's cool. • Why do blacks ant heir own

Group that meets monthly and has different speakers. ' The topic this month at the ~ncho Santa Fe Group meeting will be "A Look at the Future of the Supreme Court" and the speaker will be profe •sor Bernard Siegan from the School of Law This well-known profe sor w~s nominated as a justice for the Supreme Court, and is obviously well-informed and very knowledgeable. . A_t the end ofthe talk, guests are invited to ask que~tion,. It i usually very timulating a thi create· the opportunity to interact With your friends and neighbor concerning topic that we frequently don't di~cu s in our bu everyday hve . If you are intere ted m these educe tional presentations call Ann Hoover 260-4681 Peggy Freeman reports on events around the Ranch each week in her column Ranch Spot- light which appears every Friday in the Rancho Santa Fe Times Item.• for Freeman should bo ressed to the Rancho Santa Fe Times, P.O. Box 749, Rancho Santa Fe, CA 92067. dd " a

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held at the home of uzy and Rob Schaef r. Th,s i undoubtedly the most fun event of the year at th Tenni Club. Teams of eight ire made up from the sign-up he t by club pro Dave Bennett who ha th Herculean ta k of trying to make the te m as equal a po 1ble. There nre four men and four women on each team. On nrnvm at the party, you 1ro told which player· are on your te m La t Y ar there were eight te m of eight. Each team wa given a color to wear A captain i cho en for each team. And, each team pick a name. That is where the fun really begin . Some of the ri que names that have been cho ·1•n over the year had to be chan d o the information could Ev n more hilarious is the 1 , mg and the ideas for th play- er costumes. If you have never been in a real- t:: •:::;;;;;:::~:: Invi ible University is a won er- ful organization that wa started many years ago by the umver ity and I pre ented monthly in your neighborhood at member's home . The Rancho Santa Fe Group will meet at the home of Sandy and Bob Brue Sundav tth USO lnvis1bl~·Universi- ty pre entat1ons, the speakeri; are usually faculty membern and tafT who are authorities on a particu- lar ubjcct There I al o a La Costa Group. a Coronado Group, a Point Loma Group, and a Rancho Bernardo b dd be Rent to the pre~s!

Abortion: Consid r the pros an cons A fetus is mit~ ,bJess, lifeless tis- sue; 1t IS a IVlng and unique uman bemg. Genetic information from the parents is pa d on to e new ind1- vt a t me of cone uo . The heart and eyes of the born baby are form10g just 18 days into the pregnancy. At 24 days, the heart begins to beaL A week later, the bram has human proportions: brain waves have been observed after only 40 days. About this time, the sex or- gans begin formmg The body becomes sensitive to touch during the 10th week, and pain can be felt. At 10 to 12 weeks the baby has fingerprints which change only in S1Ze as the person grows These formations all take place withm the first three months of the existence of the fetus. Is it really true, as pro-abort10n groups would lead us to believe, that abortion IS more an issue of individu- al "rights' than it 1s of killmg an innocent baby? I mk not In fact, the $150-mdlion- ) ear abortion in• dustry, spearhea ed orgarnzations such as Planned Parenthood feigns ethical outrage h 1t mentions there actually ar pie iI today's "educated" socie ho would have serious doubts about simply termi- nating" an unwan ed pregnancy Join with me, a f rmer abortion advocate, m learnmg more about fetal life and positive alternatives to abortion. When enough people wake up to this tragic genocide and make their feel10gs known abortionists no longer will be making a killing Kristine Strachan, dean of t~ UJ!L law school, is "under fire" due o er belief in pro-choice (Tribune article, 10-24-89). She described berseif as pro-choice, but she has said that her "private conviction" is that "abortion is morally wrong." Considered hypocnt1cal by her col- leagues, Strachan IS not wrong in her ~liefs. One can be opposed to abor- tion and still allow personal choice. Abortion is the choice of the woman, not the choice of the entire world. There is nothing wrong with being opposed to abortion, but if you are t~ink from the woman's point of view If abortion was made 11legal, we would be set back into the "Dark Ages" of wire-hanger abortions and deaths. There also would be a lot of illegal abort10ns performed at a high fee. The point is: If you are opposed to abortion, don't gel one. 1/ I congratulate Dean Strachan on her sensible thinking. If we could just get more people to let certain things be as they are, this world would run much smoother. -HARRISON M. GOLD Mira Mesa -GREG WAUSON Mira Mesa

student unions" Don't you think that will offend a white person By blacks want10g to form their ow groups, it just seems to me to create more problems. • I don't have a problem with pro- grams to let more minorities mto colleges, but it just eems like there are a lot of As1ans. And: • OK, we were wrong. But 1t 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 fidgeted qu e ly. decl,ning to e part. 0th r.; spoke, but with re- uctance. Voices strained with frus- tration, a few appeared angry, ap- parently because they believed they had been falsely accused and were being unjustly punished. The sub1ect was racism. And close to 50 students (and a few faculty members) at the Univ rsity of San ~iego approached the mandatory d1M:ii:sSi011 last ~week with great ap- prehension. Here are ome of the observations aired. • I used to get scared when I'd read that Mexicans would soon out-

The San Diego Union/Cindy Lubke Romero USO students gave Dennard K. Clendenin

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Los Angeles.CA (Los Angeles Co.) Times (San Die.90 Ed.) (Cir. D. 50,010) (Ci r. S. 55,573) 5 -

Los Ange les, CA (Los Angeles Co. ) Daily Jou rnal

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0 dropped ii West €.oast Confere~e match to Gonzaga, 15-8, 15-9, 15-9, • at the USO por Toreras were led b enter The Jey's six k'll Y Heather Dal- 1 s. c:-::::::::::-7

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Sa n Diego, CA. (Sa n Diego Co .) Si!n D iego Union (Cir. D. 217,089 ) (Cir. S. 341 ,840) NOV 5 _ 1

(PresidingJudge ApJ>Oi~ d Linda Lancet Miller b1e:r. 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~ ot Sao Diego School of Law in . ' Roger B. Robbins, a former Riverside County prosecutor and Santa Ana private practitioner who was elected to the bench in 1986, was elected assistart presiding judge for the North Orange County Municipal Court. • Fram Staff and Wire orts

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ovember 5, 1989

Sunday,

NFL: WEEK NINE

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