News Scrapbook 1989

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Trail end of the season

t 388

Jlll,11

I . /unbeaten!:§P .sits Oaremont V\ ?-:-if j~-0 record USD's football team w~ the season today, at into its fmfroad ga~e at 1 p.m. Claremont-Mudd !~{e~iive in several ways;; U D has been . 2.4 6 win over Azusa the Toreros' openmbg k Brendan Murphy comh· ·1· USD quarter ac 9n ards. Murp y ct 1c, f ~ 1 passes for 1 " Y • over le ed 14 o " · USD's 19·0 wm ~truggled last wee~ :~nning backs Todd Jack· Whittier College, ~u mbined for 161 yards d Todd Whitley co son an . to rushing. M dd Scripps is 0-1, \osmg Claremont· u k 10-s / Menlo eonege last wee , P.

I 8S8 JHl~11 • , / USD centerf ·~nam d

e

ahn o p\c's donations, fund-raising cffo~ helped build fac1bty B ich I ott· 1 ir t fl rll r

for

The san Diego Union RUSS Gilbert ·ty of san Diego. ing ettorts tor the u,~'1~~~'op Leo T. Maher.

!scona;do, Calif. Daily Times Actvocate (Cir D. 27.4 ,01

seated next to them

ear at a ceremony

E rn

t and Jean Hahn ap~ r their fund-rals- h norlng them o

.

.

the drawing boards. member of the Hahn has been19a8~ and has served

yest rday

year the university is av~1lable only to

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·1c principles, ol President AU· led to a "uni· ther 1 have ever

h

USD board since as vice chairman .

fees ol ~.5 not elitist or wealthy ami a l

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om

The

. Uy quahhed stu·

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eded by Bishop 51 who has been

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have

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Maher w1

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SEP 2 5

lack of money. . ppome we receive Robert M. Brom~luth Minn., since

d lahn.He has serv bo d that inc\ud

f the bishop of D11 auto'matically be- rom be of the trustees. come a m_em I trhe center's renaming B w1 1983

t of the lee me

16

Kirk, le~, and Chad Hanson at the beginning of the Pacific Crest Trail. Hikers reach goal, finish 2, 700-mile trek By Kath rme mada Correspondent Hilung the Pacific Crest Trail, which stretches from the Mexican to the Canadian rain and snow. Their journey was com- plicated by the fact that Kirk, who has diabetes, had to give himself insulin injections three times a day. points along the trail. The end-of-September de- adline to complete the trek was a firm one as UCLA's fall quarter begins Thursday. Kirk, a 24-year-old graduate of the Univerdith oi San Diego,

percen I om the families o doe not com~ ~omes from grants.

·ta1esr in Southern Cali·

d nt fl

tudents, it

the

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f ms of stu e

[ honesty. morality f the everv·

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said he was "espe-

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loans and othert,, ~ahn said.

"The spmt o

yesterday, Hathn t hi.s family's name

hair

.

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ty are part o

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One of Hahn m tinue a $47 .5 roil-

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day \lie of our campud .respect each

far will be assoc1~te nderful so is a \aw

n Wlll be to con lion campaign_ ~1 rai ed $2.4.7 m1lhon. ma

h ere an

'

lb ry is wo

d ·ve which has so

an atmosphere of feel as you walk to a degree 1 camdp on any other uni· is

are happy

lding but the stu•

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will go to expand sup-

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school or otherlt uc1enter' is the living

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ified for its th_ird con ecutive World Cup, beating Peru 2-0. Colombia advanced to the final round of qualifying when Ee ador beat Paraguay 3-1. Co· lombia now plays a home-and- home series with Oceania champi- on Israel, with the winner gaining a World Cup berth. • -11S.D...heat Texas Christian 3-0 at the UNLV Invitational in Las Vegas. The Toreros are 8-2. • Cal State Fullerton scored with five minutes remaining to edge USIU 2-1. The Gulls are 0-8. • Fans of two rival soccer clubs hurled rock , bricks and home- made bombs at each other follow· ing a match in southern Ban1?la· :desh and more than 100 people, in· •luding 12 policemen, were hurt.

trust that you can

·t LS the heart

dent and facu y room of t_e c h and sou , 1 let their feelings - laugh_, cry, shal~me honor," Hahn said. . h IT dow a l t the p

b lk of the money

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borders, has been a goal of Chad Hanson's since he began tramping through the High Sierras as a young Boy Scout. This week he reached his goal when he and his brother, Kirk, completed their 2,700- mile odyssey in one season. Waiting to greet the Manning Provincial P Canada were parents D

.

por

m oc1ated w·1th CSD," he

The Hanson brothers grew up in Glendale and attended Keppel Elementary, Toll Junior High and Hoover High schools.

scholarships an The remainder w1

said he tume t e rek into his own challenge to rise above the restrictions of his diabetes, which was diagnosed when he was 14. He said his biggest problem was finding a way to protect the insulin from the weather. At the beginning of the trip, through the lower eievations of California, he packed it in ice to keep it cool. Kirk said that toward the end of the season, he was tucking it into his sleep- ing bag at night to keep it from . freezing.

\d d that -one of his Hahn stresse ·u be to contmue to major miss ons wi the message that

more than projec~ tha

pleted m the pas

te and charges

carry to the ~ubhc

----------------~~---

SD is pnva

though

rs were

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

i ed to

Connie Hanson, alo other family mem have been the tre port team thrt

the trek

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

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"We made good time even with the diabetes factor," he said. "I had lots of highs and lows in my blood-sugar level because of so much exercise, ,-fi_x'xxy"ut Chad would spot it when • · f blood sugar went down too

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178

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Est

J Sunday, Sepb!mber 24, 1989/Part III

San Diego Sports et Cetera u DWins our ~- 'S . . F

th Soccer Match inRow .- .,•/A~

,ow and make me eat. Fortunately, aside from a June snowfall that forced them to climb straight up Sierra Nevada passes with the use of ice picks, weather was not a severe problem. The hikers said that wild

(PairLeadsUSDPastClaremon All-American Candidates Provide Punch in Victory

. ..

-~

/

Flambouyant, which f)nished second in the Division I third race

defending NCAA Division 111

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~~~~i~;e~:ds;:p!~-~~c~ ~; 1°1~andrni~:or~s r::nJ~;~~ ::

The ~i::rs;~t-~al~~o~e~~ Texas Christian, 3-0, m ha e e nference men's soccer mate Winners of four con~ecutive USD (8-2) received two ma~<;1f~~m I.;eo Ronces, his seventh eighth, and one from. Brendan G 'f'in Vince Bianchi, Trong d Tom Crane had the !~d r1 • . nonco v Sunday at Nevada Las egas. . Wallace Whittier of U~ San red w1·th seven mmutes ·run· g to tie UC Irvine, 1-1, at ·ts goal on a D go seo ie . direct fr ,,e k ck in the first half. The Tr1tons (5-1-2) and Ant~at· 1 ed two 15-minute overtime ers podsaywithout scoring. UCSD, the pen -~~---~-~ , . ,.. . remai Irvine. rv1 e got 1 _ Ngu.yenan assist.'l. D

, ~

Pilg~. Griffin fimshed se~ond Ed O'Sullivan's Anthem Sprinter m --=-:---------- .:::iS~U~Rf~IN:G~------:-;-::::::: MikeLambresiofOceansi ewon his third title_on the 1900089BOudEaPrsot - - d Pilgrim was the Division II race. t.h._ir_d_.

1-0 loss to the Master's College.

moepeau with 10:41 left gave USO a 17-10 lead, Claremont drov 43 yards to the USD 22. Pressure on quarterback Mike Pembroke (16 or 36. 210 yards ) and good coverage m tn ~e"ondary (primarily by cor neroac Scott Bradley, who had ar interception earlier) res~lted m four consecutive incomplet1ons Two plays later, Jackson w11;3 plunging through the l~ft side of the line and mto open field where he outran Tony Ferrentino for the longest touchdown of his career. "I thought the offense was pick ing up and we were about to bre~~ .,omethmg open," Jackson said 1 got some good blocks and once I got through, I Just saw the end zone." With Claremont again attempt ing a rally, three Dunn sacks and an mco npletion negated the Stags dri e. , aving a defense like that, 1t s re.i lv reassuring," Jackson said "We rely on them a Jot." The Toreros rely on Jackson lot too. Said Fogarty, "I've beer saying it ail along. Todd Jack on 1. or, of the best backs in Di vision Ill

See HIKERS, page A-8

o

Quarterback Brendan Murphy added 98 yards rushmg. including a 28-yard score on an option keeper to close the scoring with just over a mmute to play. USD's offense is averagmg 24.3 pomts and 348 yards. Saturday's season-high 382 included 300 rush - ing yards on 50 carries. Dunn, a senior nose tackle, had four sacks, including three i~ four plays late when Claremont tried to rally, and he will probably need at le t that many stitches once he VISIIB a hospital. A kick to the chm on th first play of the second half left a length gash and a oloodied jersey, but Dunn's inspired pl y helped spark a defense that 1s allowing just 6.3 points per garn "I wasn't playing well up to tnat point," said Dunn, ith a bloodied gauze bandage covermg the wound. "We Just needea a boost and that was it. I don't know if we fell asleep or what, but we woke up." USO, which led 10-7 at the half fell behmd, 13-10. headmg mto the fourth quarter. After a one-yard touchdown run by Charles Tau -

tes left in the

.

.

ByJI OGRE Todd Jackson and Dave Dunn are bemg billed th1 year as All· America candidates in the CAA's D1v1s1on l!I. The r team, the Umversit)'. of San Diego, IS malung an earlyo1d for the1vis1on Ul playoffs, some- lhmg It has not attained smce 1973. Saturday afternoon at Clare- mont, Jackson, Dunn and team- mat played as if being witnes.'>ed by a committee member for All• Amencan and playoff selections. It was John Zmda, Claremont's coach. a member of such commit- tees And he probably w enough to sway his vote as USO scored 20 fourth quarter pomts to defeat Claremont, 30-13 Coach Brian Fe- y's Tor ro , an mdependent, are 3-0 for the first time smce 1983. his first year at USO. Claremont 1s 0-2. Jackson, a s nlor fullback. rushed for 156 yards on 21 carnes, including a 63-yard touchdown run with 5:32 left to give U D Its first comfortable lead. 23-13.

With Sseven ~::i~ge scored the

t Fuller- elnterna-

S

teve

match,

winning goal ~\Cf U ton {6-1) taot uesru. Jo'n ·sveinsson alt kick for USIU scored on a pen Y t1onal, 2-1,

p

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{0-8).

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Surfing our m .u: II c afupionship at Sebastian Fla. Shane Besc~en of San ' ·

y ACHTING

mente finished third.

Flambouyant, skippered .by Chn·s Calki'ns, ·1s the over. l d r after three races m the an ea e y ht Club's Fall Series for Arbitrary Yachts. Craig d~ Pil Griffin and Frank Radfor s . gn· mare tied for see0nd. S Diego ac . W .ght's all points

n $6 450 • rall'

Lambresi, who wo

e

1

third place ov

moved into

ocal practice

of San Clemen and Jim H<

·

behind a . pair di surfers, Dmo An no

gan.

July of 1988. He resides in Chula Vista wit ·) lu s wife, Wanda, and their thre1 e ch l

d San_!l!.eg0 an we,t on to receive his M.D. from Crlorgetown Uni- versity at Washiigton D.C. in

\

Los Angeles.CA (Los Angeles Co.) Times (San Diego Ed .) (Cir. D. 50 ,010) (Cir. S. 55,573) SEP 2 41989

for economic sanctions against Chinese : a the Chinese democratic cause by ture pushing her bill through the nan Legislature and into the law books. nue "I felt the Legislature had to do what happened in Beijing. Speaking through an interpreter, she aid, "I think appropriate

man in China because of the strong centraliz.ed economy in that country, said Bentley. "The type of trade that will be af. fected by this bill never benefits. the common man in China," said Dr. Alice Tang, president of the Tianan- men Square Foundation. Tang, who also was at the press oonference and testified before the committee in behalf of the bill, said the Chinese government is con- cerned by this legislation because they want to keep the foreign in- vestment. In all the new~ reports and iropaganda put out by the Chinese government about the uprisings "the only consistent thing (the govern- ment) says is, they want to keep trade with the west,' she said. As if to punctuate Tang's statement Bentley released a letter of

opposition she received from the Consulate General of the People's Republic of China which said this bill would "punish the Chinese government...the victim of the in- pdent." Citing China's use of modem weaPQris against unarmed civilians Tang asked: "Can we knowingly continue to feed a tiger with modem technology?" According to Dr. Allen Jin, a member of the Economics Depart- ment at tbe-University of San Diego, divestment programs m South Africa actually help improve the state's portfolios. A recent study, comparing a port- folio which included New York Stock Exchange investments over 23 years and a portfolio that included South African divested investments,

found the portfolio of the South African-free investments ac- tually had an annual return 0.187 percent higher than the New York Stock Exchange portfolio, Jin said. Jin, in his testimony tried to waylay concerns of pension in- vestors that a China divestment would be more costly than the South African divestment. Bentley's bill cannot be acted upon until the Legislature recon- venes in January 1990. that

economic sanctions are the most ef- fective tool the west can use (against the Chinese government)." Bentley's bill would require state investment funds to be purged by January 1991, unless the Chinese government allows reform to occur in that country. "My ideal is not to have this law go into effect," said Bentley. If the government allows reform, then there will be no need for the divest- ment and the Legislature can repeal the law, she explained. Unlike the South African divest- ment, proven to be ineffective in stopping apartheid, this divestment would have a greater affect upon the ~overnment and less on the common

mic something more than just voice our isive objections to the Tiananmen Square ~ed ims.sacre," Bentley told a Capitol press conference Tuesday, shortly before her bill was heard in the com- - mittee. of Liu, who was a student at Beijing in- Normal University at the time of the student Democratic demonstrations, said she, and all of the people who

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Vin~~tnd Leo Ronces scored second half goals a~ (6-2) came from behind a, L&S Veg to upend Cal State orth- n g , 2-1. It was the first loss of the ason for orthridge (3-1-2). •

vestments in China, was sent to in- teriin study after it garnered only

one affirmative vote in the Assembly participated in the Tiananmen Public Employees Retirement and Square uprising, want to see bills Social Security Committee, ~ch as this one passed into law. Tuesday. Liu, still recovering from her long With Yan Liu, one of the Tianan- hunger strike, ignored doctor's or- men Square hunger strikers who ders not to take long trips and came escaped to the West sitting solemnly to Sacramento because she wanted at her side, Bentley vowed to help to relate to the committee members

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