News Scrapbook 1989
S..m D iego, CA. (Sa n D iego Co .) San D 11~90 Uni o n (Ci r D. 217 ,089) (C ir . S. 341 ,840) OC T 5 - 19ti:,
San Diego, CA. (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) OC T B - 1989
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LOCAL BRIEFS--'0,7~ - ~lf~ USDmenWin • • again 1n soccer
is seminar tonic
Unbeaten ..Alim'• I'. C. 8 E,r 1886 ,oreros outclass Pomg~ • ,,
Wu_y und form •1 Aluhama Universitv of an Diego continu- congrPs mun; Cal l'homafi 1ng ducatwn office, 260-4585.
nationaflv ynd,cated nPw,pap,:, I columni t; Jud th Ba11k1 a sori- } ate national du·er or f rntt·neli- gious uffair of th American/ Jcwi1'h C'on11r11tt1 c the Rev ' Ard of 'hn~t Church of San Diego and cl1airman of San Commis1 COLLEGE FOOTBALL 2! '&, By Tom Kras ~c Start Writer Every football player at USD achieved better than a 2.9'-er-m!!="'"1 point average in high school and at least a 900 on the Scholastic Aptitude It did not take a Ph.D., though, to observe, as one player did yesterday, that Pomona-Pitzer College "isn't a good team." l The Sagehens, who played with gusto all the way, failed to parlay three first-half interceptions into any points and gained minus-7 yards rushing in the first half. Little wonder, then, that host USD beat them again, 31-6. The Toreros now lead the series, 17-1-1. 'We didn't take them lightly," said USO fullback Todd Jackson, who car- ried 17 l!mes for 117 yards and two touchdowns. "I was hoptng we wouldn't have a letdown today." The history of the series notwith- standing, USO had cause to be ready. The victory kept the Toreros unbeat- en (5-0) and ensured that they will be ranked for at least anot!J r week. In Test. Court JudgL' L.in-y St11hng Similar progra m h1nc been Women' • • occ•r alumn N cky Roch Santana High . cored one goal to I ad host done succcssfu!J.l- m Washington I led on th oth nd D.C and Dallas. USI 2-0 wm ov r Cal Lutheran. Chul11 Vi ta High alumna Kelly P1et la ·or d the Gulls' other goal J nnifer Swanson had five ve.s en route to h r ccond hutout of the n U IU i 4-7, Cal Lutheran 3-5 • . Soph El Cajon, CA (San Diego Co.J The Californian (~ast County San Diego Edition) (Cir. D. 100,000) OCT 6 - 1989 The San Diego Union/Chris Cavanaugh Tight end Brad Leonard celebrates a TO catch in USD's 31-6 victory over Pomona-Pitzer. • No. 1 Notre Dame escapes Stanford,27-17-H-9 • USC's passing game quells Washington, 24-16-H-10 • Indiana running back's 32 points break Big Ten record-ff-a • Brigham Young dumps Wyoming, 36-20-H-12 • Instant Replay: Officials eject 'phantom' player In Texas ~&M-Texas Tech game-H-12 Oceanside CA (San D!ego Co.) O~eans1de Breeze (Cir. 2 >c W. 3,750) JU.,~ "· C. II E,r, uu OCT 6 - 1989 OCT 6 • Scoreboard, summarles-H-8 1989 See USD on Page H-12 1888 " · C 8 Eu 11,, eljgious institutions in social olicy is seminar to ie n'i:'~ontroversial role of Buchanan Jr , cha1rn1an of thp c a ll the American Jewish _ __.-..____ religious institutions in social board for People for the American Committ ee office, 546-8777. or issue. and social policy in the Way and former Al ah am a lJmversity of San Diego continu- Unitcd States w1ll be the top1c of a co~gressman ; Cal Thoma s t ng_siucation office, 260-4585 panel discussion at 7:30 p.m. Oct nationally syndicated newspape -~ ~ - ----~ .,..... 16 at the Manchester Executive columnist: Judith Banki , assoc1 - • Conference Genter at the Univer- ate national director of interreh si ty of San Diego. gious affairs of the Amprican The program, "The Changing Jewish Committ eP, th e RP v . Shape of Religion in Society," is Robert G. Ard ofr.hl'lSt Church of ponsored by five prominent San Diego and cha irman of Sa n national and local orgamzations: Diego CountJ Huma n HPlatJons the American Jewish Committee, Commission; the Rev DL>nms L. the PSD continuing education M1kulanis, ecume rn cal officer of prOKr'am. UieNational Confer- theDiocescofSanD, egoandprcs- ence of Christians and Jews. the ident of the San Di ego County San Di ego County Ecumenical Ecumenical Conference; Robert L. Conference, and People for the Simmons. law professor t USO American Wa_v. School of Law and l\funie1pii1 Rodding Carte r III, former CourtJ"udge Larry Stirling. assis tant secretary of state for Similar prog rams h a vc been public alTairs in the Carter admin- done successfull y in Washi ngton · the D.C and Dallas. Rancho Santa Fe, CA n g The program will be open to the San Diego, CA. (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) OCT B - 1989 ..Alina~ P. c. e Fu 1888 _., Construction is jQ JIPl'cent com- ~lete on the finaG ~ °df a $5 mil- Former San Diego State NBA r Michael Cage d the Seattle upcrSoma will play the Los Ange- l Clipper in a pr son game Oct. 12 at th ports Arena. Tickets are n sale t th arena box office and II T1cketMa5ter locations, or by calltng 278-TIX SA DIEGO <.ia wa re dy t hrow ,., footb II\\ n't ft n n'\,m Out of hap ovem t d rs1z d Garcm w u un- ii-Cen- ugu tino 1 fr hman at University r S tral L , gu t High h had n o ·go. A r B • a ball - Former Padres out- at • fielder Johnny Grubb has igned to extremely sue play 1th the Orlando Juice of the • nior Profe 1onal Baseball Associ, ation. which begins play Nov. I. Grubb, 41, led th Padr with a .311 b tting average 111 1973 and was an All-Star selectlon In 1974. c ful p p care But the glory days \I. ere over. And the, Iran 11100 from high i;chool to coll~ football was akm to cahng Moun~ Evere t in a pair ofloafers • I didn t know what to expect from coll ege football at al, " aid Garcia, no a thi rd-year starter for the unbeaten Torero "I think It happc to a lot of coll ge freshmen who e v ry u ce ful m high chool and who were al- way all-somethmg.' 'All of the sudden you come to col- lege and vou realize you re going to have a tough lime starting. Dunng th first few practice you begm to wonde 1f ,ou·re ~<>mg to make 1t to th end of thcweek' It would have been remarko.hly easy for Garc.,a to quit. As a D1v1sion Ill . chool, USO docs not offer scholar- hips. ut when Iorero head coach Brian Fogarty offered Garcia a chance to d1scu. the matter, the 6-foot-l, 250- po und eruor listened. . .. ''He came awfully clo e to qu ut mg said Fogarty, whose Toreros are cur- rently 4-0 and ranked fourth in the NCAA We t Region Div1 10n Ill _rank- mgs. "But he' hung in th re and m he last tw v ars h bee m a very eady o ffe·n 1ve lineman ' He's pi ayect out and ng this yea r. He's been banged up 11 tie with an an- kle injury thats t 1 ho h ring him from last year, but it ha t stopped him." Garcia, along with former Grossmont II .,.h standout Gene Fontana now pl ay- ing center for the Toreros, anchors an offensive line at USO that is helping to p roduce an average of :!33.3 yard ofto- tal offense per game The Tore ros are o ff to their best tart in eight years, and th i week face a Pomona-Pitzer team they've lxatcn 17 yea rs in row. "1111 1 the most succes ful progmm I've ever been a part of' Garcia aid. " Personally I'm 1U trying to figure out how this fe I I hmk 1f vou say you're urprised (by ou cord) then that d,is- cred1ts you as a pla.i, r If you say you re not surpn eu, then it makes you sound cocky. "We're trying to treat ea ch week as a one-name eason. If we \l.1n, we're cha~p1ons. You go out e, ery Saturd~y and play hke it was a champw.~sh1p game That the way It got to he 110~ exp~nsion and remodeling of the Unive~~~- ~•n Diego Kettner Law Library,~ Park, 5905 Ma- ;an Way. The general contractor is (San Diego Co.) Rancho Santa Fe Times (Cir. 2 x M. 5,000) 1989 om irs, public at a cost of $1 5 for genera l admission. Space is limited to 2,50 people. Adva nce ticket purch ase is required . For more information , r_epte 0>nstruction Co. Inc. The ar- chitect is Schulnik, Gerber & Simp- son. A 25,000-square-foot addition has been completed. Completion of the 30,000-square-foot remodeling phase IS scheduled for April 1990. j ns · n social policy is seminar to call the American Jewish~.-- _,_ • ·· · _ r --·---• , • · - ~- -===:::::;;;;;:;;; Committee office, 546-8777; or I University of San Diego continu- ing education office, 260-4585. US01 ·R-ot1s to its fifth victory ii; Continued from H-1 H Coronado, CA (San Diego Co.) Journal (Cir. W. 5,237) OCT 5 - ..Al/,!11 •• P. C B f• r 1666 ~eJigiotff instituti Ths~tel-tontroversial role of Buchanan Jr., chairman of the religious institutions in social board for People for the American issues and soc ia l policy in the Way and former Alabama United States will bethetopicofa congressman; Cal Thomas . panel discussion at 7:30 p.m. Oct. nationally syndicated newspaper 16 at the Manchester Executive columnist: Judith Banki, associ- Conference Center at the Univer- ate national director of interreli- sity of San Diego. gious affairs of the American The program, 'The Changing Jewish Committee: the Rev. 1 Shape of Religion in Society," is Robert C. Ard of Christ Church of sponsored by five prominent San Diego and chairman of San national and local organizations: Diego County Human Relations the American Jewish Committee. Commission; the Rev. Dennis L. the USD continuing education Mikulanis. ecumenical officer of program , the National Confer- the Diocese ofSan Diego and pres- ence of Christians and Jews, the ident of the San Diego County San Diego County Ecumenical Ecumenical Conference: Robert L. Conference. and People for the Smunons, law professor at USD American \\,-ay. School of Law; and l\fonicipal Rodding Carter III. former Court Judge Larry Stirling. assistant secretary of state for Similar programs have been public affairs in the Carter admin- done successfull_v in Washington 1stration. will be moderator in the D.C. and Dallas. discussion. which will bring TheprogramwiJlbebpentothe to,e-ether prominent figures from public at a cost of $15 for general the fields ofpolitics. public affairs. admission. Space 1s limited to 250 religion and media. people. Advance ticket purchase The panelists include John H. 1s requjred. For more information, ] /'=> - ~rKiwal}\s_Jp~l~(jtiOn Lt. Joht\PrihJt6'iliis, head of the Legal Studies Department of .the > Navy, at the ~2nd Street s.iauo?, wa~ inducted as a new Ki"lams / rr,~mber by AndyYem~. his swnscr r and al ·o on/the U:S. N~aJ Legal Staff and ATdy Zafis, president of the local Kiwanis Club. John is a member of the Califor- niJ and Pennsylvania Ilar Associa- uons, and a grad1~11c of the Uni- vers11y of Marylan,l,with his law degree from Temple University. He has a wife, Jill, and a son, John. President Zafi~ announced con- tinued cooperation with the Diabete$ ssociadon planning it's drive opening on LIS. The Kwani Foundation has ,._ granted $225. 10 the Coronado Fire , Department for it's annual poster contest to be held in Coronado Schools lhig fall. An 1ntercl11b inecting with the Clfc!e K Club of Un~ ity of an Diego wa held 011 Scp1.27. -Sam-fee, Jntcrnmional Relations chairrrian, announced that his com- n11uce efforts 111 Mcx1 o have been approved by "World Opportuni- ties" and as a result, they will soon send to Sam two trucks loaded with clothing and mt:dicul supplies all of which will he i.iken into Mexico wilhout tar1fls bcmg charged. TI1is apparcmly will be continued from time 10 tune. L,_ 111 half. Murphy was not the only inaccu- rate passer. Earlier, defensive back Scott Bradley nabbed the first of three USD interceptions, setting up a I-yard touchdown run by Jackson. The Toreros, aided by a 6-yard punt that landed 20-some yards be- hind the Sagehens' bench, took a 21--0 halftime lead on Ty Barksdale's 8- yard run. "Defensive play is what won the game for us," said Fogarty. No change there. USD has allowed just 42 points in five games. No surprise, either, that senior defensive tackle Dave Dunn again out-quicked his opponents. Dunn had five tackles at or behind the line of scrimmage in the first half. Jackson, while crediting the de- fense for the victory, said the offense is pulling its weight for the first time since he has been at USD. Jackson did much of the pulling yesterday. After Murphy threw his third interception, Fogarty put the onus on Jackson. He responded with runs of 15, 12 and 17 yards, and the 29-yard touchdown. Jackson, who attended high school in Placentia in Orange County, has 574 yards on 102 carries. this season's first NCAA Division III poll, coaches last week voted USD into the No. 4 spot for the 55-school Western Region. Four of the region's teams go to the playoffs, which USD has visited once, in 1973. USD coach Brian Fogarty had said his players might be looking ahead to Saturday's game at Occidental. They would have had cause to do that. The last two times USD has started out with at least three victories, it has Jost to Occidental - once on national television, to boot. The game in 1982 was aired by CBS during the NFL strike. Will the looking-ahead lectures crop up again this week? Not if Fo- garty does not tell his players that Occidental (3-1), which had a bye yes- terday trailed Pomona-Pitzer last week ~t the half before winning, 24- 14. He also may want to keep quarter- back Brendan Murphy from thinking back to yesterday. Three of Murphy's fint seven passes were intercepted. The other four were incomplete. But after the first two intercep- tiobs, both of which came in the first quarter, the Toreros allowed 2 yards on six plays and forced two punts. The San Diego Union/Chris Cavanaugh USO fullback Todd Jackson bulled his way for 117 yards and two touchdowns. After it intercepted Murphy a third time, Pomona-Pitzer (1-1) botched a handoff and USD linebacker Lenny Territo recovered at the Toreros' 21- yard line. That set up Jackson's sec- ond touchdown, a 29-yard run that made it 14-0 with 10:05 left in the
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