News Scrapbook 1989

hn Diego, Ca.11Jla ( ll1 "6Q Co_)I MJLl ll!A:ffll'l:fll

t::s ona t'lo, -ant Oa•ly Times AOIIOQlt~ (Cir D 27 4.;Q\

San Francisco, CA (San Francisco Co.) San Francisco I Banner Dally Journa (Cir. sxW. 1,500)

San Diego , CA. (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341 .840) OCT 7 - 1989

-1989

OCT

OCT 8 - 1989

OCT 5 - 1989

1 89

5

," ,,u

p C. B

Jllln. ·•

P, C. 8

f,1. 1888

Jl/l,,i'1 P. C. B

far. 1888

/ Th• USO ln • tltuJ• for Chriatian MlnltfriN 1111/I hold 8 class In "Shifts In Spirituality" from 10 a.m. to 3 p,m. Oct 21 with Franciscan priest Fran- cis B. Rothleubber, co-director ot Coiomblere Center In ldyilwlld. The program wlll Include guided Imagery and meditation. Deadline for registra- tion Is Oct. 16. Calf 260-4784 for In- formation. ?-'j's~ ./

...A.lloi

• • •

P. C, 8

F..1. 1888

/voffio'f~fare needed for a study being conducted on ilelp- ing spouses and caregivers cope with behavior of Alzheimer's dis- ease victims. Volunteers should have one family member diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease who is be- tween 50 and 80 years old and has noticeable but not severe memory loss and problem solving difficul- ties. Both caregiver and patient needed. Call Dr. Mary Quayhagen or Dr. Patrician Rothe at the University ol§MDi•go AW,eimer Proiecl of- fice - 491-4515 or 260-4578.

- The USD uxiliary today hosts C'est Chic, ,ts 32 annual fundrais- ing luncheon and fashion show in the Town & Country's tlas Ballroom. The luncheon's lr.t of chevaliers is like a who's who of San Diegans: Ned Baumer, Bruce Moore, Mike Dolan, Mike Yeatts, George Lattimer, Sandy Strong, Paul Grasso, Bill Feeley, Vmce Bartolotta and Walt !f...aryr, to nameafew. / . . . ../

E. Reed

San Diego, CA. (San Diego Co .) San Diego Un ion (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir . S. 341 ,840) OCT 7 - 1989

Jl//.,,i ', P. C. B

1888

f

/patience paying off for USD's program, Fogarty By Tom Krasovic "'l 5'S- not just because Cahill is a priest. s1arr Writer O I

Had one said yes, Fogarty would have taken an approach dramatical- ly different from his plan for USD, he said. Not that Fogarty would have cheated, but he would not have counted on having four or five yeat'6 to win. "That's why there's so much cheat- ing in Division I," said Fogarty, whose former assistant, Dan Henson, the offensive coordinator at San Jose State, is one of several friends who coach in Division I. "Coaches find they need players right away. They get desperate." In his first year at USD, Fogarty inherited a senior-laden team tbat went 5-5. He could have ensured vic- tories by continuing the program's practice of relying on community college transfers. But he stuck to his plan of recruiting high school play-

OCT 6 - 1989

ers. The result? USD went 1-8-1, beating only a club team, UC Santa Barbara. "We knew we'd take our lumps, but no coach expects to win only one game," Fogarty said. The plan took root, though. USO went 5-5 in 1985 and 4-5 in '86. In 1987, what Fogarty calls the turn-the-cor- ner season, the Toreros went 6-3-1. Last year's team went 5-4. Fittingly, two young players have had big parts in Fogarty's best start. Fallbrook High graduate Greg Fri- nell, a freshman, is averaging 33 yards per kickoff return, and sopho- more kicker Dave Bergmann is 9-of. 11 on field-goal attempts. Pomona-Pitzer is 1-1. Next week, USO will play Occidental (3-1).

President-Elect's Clients All Have Own Convictions J y uar omgtopn n"tho ta 'GetOutofJatl fr · card, do 'I forget to take Alan Ellis' phone nu bcr Wl" h yo . As a crnunal defen e attorney who specializes 1~ po t conv1Ct1on law, El s accepts collect ca ls every day from r d ral pn oners a I over the United States f ur years ago, he found one of only a dozen post- nvtct on law finis m the country, reprcsentmg clients n such matters a appeals, plea neg tiat1ons, sentenc ng parole and p on designation. E first got to federal cnmmal defense work when was aske to lecture on federal sentencing m 1980 M overs & Shakers byJessica Guynn for th ational A socrat1on of Cnmmal Defense Law• 'I didn't kn w much about 1t at the time and I rea ize

Preparing for the long haul has worked: If USO beats visiting Pomo- na-Pitzer College today (1:30), Fogar- ty will even his coaching record at 31-31-2, and will ensure his third straight winning season Already, the Toreros (4-0) have achieved their best start since 1981 and have earned a No. 4 ranking in the 55-team Divi- sion III Western Region. Fogarty's saga would seem to bol- ster the argument that the system, not the coaches, is to blame for most improprieties in Division I. When he left La Canada St. Francis High, where be compiled a 28-18-2 record, Fogarty pined for the big time. But none of the Division I schools gave him more than a rejection letter. "I coo wallpaper a room with them," e said.

If Brian Fogarty had been coach- mg at one of America's football fac- tories, the boosters would have burned him in effigy, the athletic di- rector would have announced that "it was time for a change·• and Fogar- ty's hat would have been handed to him. Sure, e, ery coach needs time. But four years without a winning record? Try another profession. coach. Seven years ago, Fogarty became the head football coach at USD, a Division III program Whenhe decid- ed to change the program's empha- sis, Fogarty knew the Toreros would lose often in coming years, but he knew also that athletic dirPCtor Pa- trick Cahill's assurances that his job would be safe could be tr ted aad

.Jllloi', P. C. B

fat. 1888

,/ The Ahce Marquis Collection c French prints, "People and Event of the French Revolution," is 01 exhibit now through Oct. 25 ,in !h Copley Library at U , C.:?}/,55 _ ... -;::;:::---

Carlsbad CA !San Diego Co J Ca_rlsbad Journal (Ctr. 2 x W. 16.049) OCT 6 - 1989

...A.lloi' I

p C. 8

f a 1818

~f}l!~~?.~~ B•~h~"~'t!,~~!!~~ religious institutions in social issues and social policy in the United States will be the topic of a panel discussion at 7·30 p.m. Oct. 16 at the Manchester Executive ( 'onfcrence Center at the Univer- sit of San Diego. - board for People for the American Com Way and former Alabama Uni, congressman; Cal Thomas ing ( nationally syndicated newspaper ,:---,

San Diego, CA. (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840)

OCT 7 - 1989 F,1/B;~ The Chenging Shepe?,-J.ugion in Society will be the topic of a roundt- able discussion at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 16 in the Manchester Executive Confer- ence Center On the University of San Diego campus~ - Hoddlng Carter Ill, former assistant secretary of state for public affairs under President Jimmy Carter, will moderate the discussion. Panelists will Include John H. Buchanan Jr., chairman of the board of People for The American Way and Ef'former U.S. representative for the Slith District In Alabama, and Cal Thomr natlonaJly syndicated columnist. Other/speakers will rn;;J:;tJ!h Bankl, associate national director of lnterrellglous Affairs of the American Jewish Committee; the Rev. Robert c. Ard, pastor of Christ Church of San Diego and chairman of the San Diego County Human Relations Com- mission; the Rev. Dennis Mlkulanls, ecumenical officer or the Catholic Diocese of San Diego and president of San Diego County Ecumenical Conference; Robert L. Simmons, pro- fessor of law at USO School of Law; and California State Sen. Larry Stirl- 1,,. The program Is co-sponsored by the American Jewish Committee, the University of San Diego Continuing Education Program, the National Conference of Christians and Jews, People for The American Way and the San Diego County Ecumenical Conference. Tickets are $15 per per- son. Call 546-8777 for lnformatlo~ J

~

• • •

columnist; Judith Banki, associ- ate national director of interreJi. gious affa rs of the Amencan Jewish Committee; the Rev Robert C Ard of Christ Church of San Diego nd chairman of San Diego County Human Relations Commission; the Rev. Denms L. Mikulanis, ecumenical officer of the Diocese ofSan Diego and pres- ident of the San Diego County Ecumenical Conference; Robert L Simmons, law professor at USD School of Law; and l\lunmpiiT Court Judge Larry Sin-ling Similar programs have been done successfull; in Washington D.C and Dallas The progrnm will be open to the public at a cost of $15 for general admission. Space 1s limited to 250 people. Advance ticket purchase is required For more information.

Eug ne Majeski, !l d ng ,>artner of !l.< laje ki, Kohn, Bentley, \\'agner & Kn ,ha be nnamed tna lav.1 er the year by the California chap- fo r , In 1950, Maieskt founded the first Ropers Maicsk1 office rn Red• wood City with the late Har Id Ropers whom he had m t wh e associated with Bro s , Bronson & McKmnon te of the Boar~ of Tnai Adv0cates.

Los Angeles.CA (Los Angeles Co .) Times (San Diego Ed.) (Cir. D. 50,010) (Cir. S. 55,573) OCT 8 - 1Q89

The program, "The Changing Shape of Religion in Society," is sponsored by five prominent national and local organizations: the American Jewish Committee, the USO ~ontmu111g education program. the National Confer- ence of Christians and Jews. the San Diego County Ecumenical Conference and People for the American \\'ay Hodding Carter Ill, former o istant secretary of state for pubhca!Tairs ,n the Carter admm- is1ratton will be moderator in the discussion, which will bring together prominent figures from the fields of politics, public affairs, religion and media. The panelists include ,John H.

Chula V,sta CA 15.in D1euo Co Star News (C ir 2 x W 24.4 18)

1

OCT 4

..All..., ,. c. a

E11. 1888

._A//n, 0 1

P C B

/ "

rlU

/ Tennis Patrons to hold auction for Junior Tennis ~c;½ The Tennis Patrons of San ll,ego will hold their fi t annual uuction, "An Evening at Wimble- don, ,\uction '89" Saturday, Oc- tober 14, nt the University of an Diego, University en er. II pr'occcds will benefit the new Ju- nior Tennis Development pro- grum. Festivities begin at 6:00 p.m. with an open bar, hor d'oevres nnd a Silent Auction, followed by a dinner at 7:30 p.m N tionally renoened auc- tioneers from Texas, Oklahoma, and Cnliforma, will call the Live Auction, which will include two tnp to the U.S. Open; dinner for three couples with Tommy La- sorda; nn all-expense pa,d trip for four to the Nick Bollettieri Ten- nis Academy; a doubles clinic with Jim Pugh and Rick Leach; nnd many more surprises. Co-Choirper on Audrey Phil- lips tnlked about what the bene- fits of the auction really mean. "I feel excited that any child who wants to play uennis, can," she said "I am thrilled by that. As a psychologist, I coll ,t primary prevention, helping the kids feel good about themselves. And that's what all ofth,s means."

A~ t-4;s~ separated the one-two finish by UC San Diego's Mike Fox and Roger Webb at the Biola Invitational in La Mirada. Fox covered the 8,000 meter men's course in 26,26 for the top individu- al time-Webb ran a 26,27-to help the Triton team take first in Divi- sion I. CS Fullerton and Pepperdine were second and third. USD won the Division II team title. - UCSD's women took the Division I title, ahead of CS Northridge and SDSU. USD was fifth in Division II. Michelle Conlay of UCSD was sec- ond in the 5,000 meter race (18,27), behind winner Genevieve Graff of Christ College Irvine ( 18,26 I.

/

ugene . A Ph, Beta K,,ppa graduate of De Paul University. hool of Law m 1940, Ma1esk1 bas practiced ovd tnal work throughout hts career. a es

la Jolla, CA (San Diego Co.I la Jolla li gh I (Cir. W, 9,336) OCT 5 - 1989

.._A//n, ', P C I

Eu JIU

E'lclritas Calif. -Oft t tcfi

/4inny Lee ;+- 4

Ginny Lee has qualified for the Top Producers' Circle fot midyear 1989 at Glencourt Pro- pcrtie,, placing her in the top IC percent of 700 sales associates ir. the network. Lee is a graduate ol USO aod specializes in residential and income property in a Jolla and th beach communif s.

I I

I I I I I I I

...Alloi ', P, C. B

Est. I 888

Religion

~~==-~=-=--~-====---===~~~~~~~~~~m~~-

-:;----

I I I I I I I

·

icy ·

•-

t -

/.Q.~Jjgious institutions in st t~i·liii~~!t ;r.tn.".""'"''"'"' "" ., ·••h•oo" ,, •h••=•· "h " (Ci,. D.1,1170521 re igtous institutions in social boardforPeop°i'efortheA O . e ca t_he American Je• (Cir. S. 1.022,423)

IS seminar op1c ~I _

mer1can Committee office 546-877 ormer Alabama University of San 'Diego con

d f

issues and social policy in the Wa UnitedStateswillbethetopicofa 1 scuss1on at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 16 at the Manchester Executive Conference Center at the Unive . Id. . pane

cony an nation II

r~ 6 - 198Q

.

ed

gressman · Cai Thom

as, i:::;m.;g;::=u:ca:::t::.1_o_n_o~ffi-1_ce_,:_2_6_0_._:_45E

d

d.'

colu :. y syn wate n~wspaper f m 1st, Judith Bank,, associ- au, nation".! director of interreli- g1ou_s affairs of the American Jewish Committee; the Rev. Robert C. Ard of Christ Church of San Diego and cha·r . ommtsswn; t e Rev. Dennis L t u_ anis, ecumenical officer of t~e Diocese ofSan Diego and pres- ', ent of the San Diego Countv fcumenical Conference; Robert L. tmmons, law professor at USD CSchool of Law; and Municipal ourt Judge Larry Stir! 11111 ar programs ~ave been M·k I · • s· . 1 · mg. Diego Count H t m~ of San C . . J h uman elations

E.t,-11~,__..:--~:tr---===.=====--;::;~;;;;;~;;:::_:_:_~Y.::

™:~:::.

r

s,ty of San Diego.

...Al/oi i , . c. 1

Tne program "The Ch Shape of Religi~n in Socieat"~~g .

'Vale, Swairthmore Raltked No. I y ·ews - agaztn b N M • e

ts

_Y,

sponsored b

f

w~"'"'"

San Diego, Calif. Sou thern Cross (Cir. W. 27.500)

ive prominent

Y

.

nat10nal and local organizations: the American Jewish Committee

ranked the schools based on qualityofstudentbodyand faculty, financial r p ourccs, ability to retain and to graduate studc.1ts and. reputation for acad, ,me cxccUencc. Statistica' measures and a o ,n Yof college leaders were w,ed in determining tke rankings. RANK AND SCHOOL 1. Yale Univ. (Conn.) 2. Princeton Univ. (N.J.) 3. Harvard, Radel fie (Mass.I 4. California ln...,t. of Tech. 5. Duke Univ. (N.C. ) 6. St'anford Univ. 7. Mass . Inst. ofT ch. ---- 8. Dartmouth ~00 (N.H.J 9. Univ. of Ch. g (Ill.) 10. Rico Univ. (T x.) 11. Cornell Univ. (N.Y.) 11. (tie) Columbia Univ. (N .Y.I - 13. UC Berkeley 14. Johns Hop ins Univ. (Md.) 15. Brown Univ. (R.I;)_ ___ 16.UCLA ~-L 17. Univ. of Mich1 18. Univ. of North C'-'ro!ma at Chapel H1'I 19. Northwestarn Lniv. (I!!.) 20. Univ. of Pennsy v.:inia 21. Univ. of.Vi,n1e1 22. Washington I.Ji iv.(~ 23. Univ. of No,re h me ( ndJ --~-

·

.

·

the USO

con 1 nu111g education " e National Confer-

-

r .._

prog·"ra=mc-.-n,

J Ct 5'::J

·

OCT 5 - 1989

ence of Christians and Jews th San Diego Count E . , . e Conference, and leo:i~~:r"'t~al Hodding Carter !II t assistant secretary of state for public affairs in theCarteradmin. istration, will be moderator in the .d1scus.sion, which will bring . . ormer American \Vay. e

'1/ f.:, {.)

From Staff and Wire Reports Yale University and Swarthmore College were named America's best undergraduate schools for the sec.- and straight year, according to U.S. News and World Report rankings released Thursday. Yale was tabbed as best national university in the third annual as- sessment by the magazine, fol- lowed by Princeton, Harvard, Cal- tech, Duke and Stanford. Swarthmore won honors as. best national liberal arts college, ahead of Amherst, Williams, Pomona, Bryn Mawr and W:ellesley. Interestingly, the top schools were the alma maters of the 1988 presidential candidates-George Bush graduated from Yale and Michael Dukakis r1?ceived his un- dergraduate degree from Swarthmore. . In new categories, Harvey Mudd College, which along with Pomona College is part of the Clar.ellwnt Colleges, was tabbed as the b_cst school specializing in engineering and Babson College in Massachu- setts won honors as the best busi- ness speciality school. UC System In the national university cate- gory, the UC system did well. UC Berkeley was ranked 13th and UCLA 16th. Plus. UC San Diego was included in a list of "up-and- coming" schools selected by col- lege presidents_ and administrators, along with Arizona State, Carne- gie-Mellon, Emory, Rutgers and, the University of Arizona. San Diego State was named as one of the rising regional colleges and universities in the West, as were University of Nevada at Las Vegas and Western Washington University.

The schools were ranked on the basis of five categories, ciuality of student body-based on SAT scores and the ratio of students accepted to total applicants,_ lacult~ quality, academic reputation, J1- nancial resources and ability lo retain and graduate students.·, . The magazine said it used statis- tical measures for each category except academic reputation, which was determined by polling college presidents, deans of academic af- fairs and deans of admissions. Regional Colleges The best regional university or college in the West was Trhity in Texas, the poJJ said, followed by University of cdlands, anta Clara University, Loyola Mary- mount University in Los Angeles, University o{J¼'n Diego, San Fra~- cisco Stale, itt~egc, Um- versi[yof Puget Sound, Cal Poly San Luis ODispo, Uni".£!:!!,ityiiTThe Pacific in Stockton, University of Portland, Humboldt State, Cal 1 State Fresno, Pacifi.£..._Lutheran University in Tacoma, Wash., and Cal Stale Sacramento. Topping tRe lis~ for best regional liberal arts colleges were South- western University in Texas, Ever- green State College inWashington, Pacific University in Oregon, Mt. St_ ~s 'College in Los ,Angeles ana'l'exas Lutheran College. Among the 204 national univer- sities, Yale won top honors even though it did not finish first in any of the five specific categories. Harvard came in first~for aca- demic reputation and student se- lectivity, while Brown· won top honor~ for student retention, Cal- tech for faculty quality and Prince- ton fqr financial resources.

jl.{/,,.

I "8

I I

P. C. B

usn

;':;c;:~~~~y

in Washington

io~e

Th

res fr

_e program will b,, OP(>n to the p~bhc ~ta ~ost of $1_5 for general pace Is hnuted to 250 people_ Addvance ticket purchase IS require . For more informatH n, a m1s~uon.

ogethcr prominent Ii

the fields of politics, pufi:c affai~;

,

religion and media

Th,, panelist, in~lude John H

25. Georgetown Univ. 1D.C.) •

Made with FlippingBook - Online Brochure Maker