News Scrapbook 1986-1988

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

Oceanside, CA (San Diego Co.) Blade Tribune

(Cir. D. 29,089) (Cir. S. 30,498) MAY 18198 t..Afl.'1 P. C. B Est. ISU

Sunday, May 17, 1987 ew entries brighten picture ~---- .....

j!lt2,.!i~~et worth $13 million

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one who bought a lotto ticket in Campbell will only have to share a $13,130,393 jackpot with Uncle Sam, but 14 people will split the second prize this week in the California Lottery game. The jackpot ticket was pur- chased at the Stop N Go Market at 1857 Bucknall Road in Camp- bell, near San Jose. Identities of Lotto 6-49 winners are not known until they deliver their tickets to state lottery offices. Meanwhile, a retired Air Force officer, "too nervous" to spin for himself, won a $4.1 mil- lion annuity Saturday when his daughter spun the prize wheel for him and hit the grand prize on the lottery's "Big Spin" tele- vision show Two other spinners, one a Vietnamese immigrant, won an· nuities worth $1 million each. The lotto jackpot is not the biggest ever awarded by the state lottery. Gordon Pivar of Oceanside won $17.9 million playing the number-guessing game late last year. Winning lotto numbers picked Saturday night were: 3, 9, 34, 42, 18. l and the bonus number, 25. The jackpot winner guessed all of the first six numbers. The lottery will deduct 20 per- cent of the jackpot for federal income taxes. Fourteen people correctly picked five of the first six lotto numbers and got the bonus number as well, to win second-

bottom to let out the sand and water, yet trap the crabs." He says the crabs are easily spotted bubbling in the sand How does a novice "read" the surf and determine which spot to fish? ''I like to find a mixing of the wav " says Heard. "Maybe a froth and then a reforming of a wave. That means deep water, and it's a good place to target." "I look for the tidal cuts in the sand, which I call canals," says George. "The fish lie m these cuts and wait for bait sweeping past." When floating debris is a problem. just move I00 yards north or south to a clutter-free area. These experts use 20-pound line, generally (though lighter on their "short" rods), spinning reels, two- hook surf leaders and sinkers rang- ing from 1 to 6 ounces, depending on the strength of the ocean surge. They u~e hooks in 6 to 1-0 sizes. \\here do they fish? Black's Beach a favor -and not for that rea- on - but any of the state beaches from San Onofre south. and almost anywhere thats safe (with an ab- sence of kelp/. Some rocky outcrop- pings m Baja also are favored. How do they keep bay mussels on the hook? •·r scrape the insulation off leftover electrical wiring around the house, thin wires, tie onto the eye of the hook and then wrap the wire around the bait. Fish don't mind," says Neuneker. Others use thread, eel grass and dental floss. Other tips: Paint the long rod tip white or mark it with a white cloth to make it visible at night; best surf fishing is in April, May and June; don't forget to carry extra leaders, line cutters, a bucket or a stringer for the fish, sunburn lotion, extra bait if one prefers razor clams, squid, bloodworms, Innkeeper worms, ghost shrimp, salted anchovies. Cut the Innkeeper worm mto stnps. "I like to put a cut-off strip of an orange balloon on the hook with my bait," Neuneker says. "This repre- sents the eggs from a sand crab, which fish don·t seem able to resist." Sly anglers, these surf fishermen. Things are looking up in the out- doors.

olla Will1ams ... on the outdoors

tuna catches o good last year? le- cause these fi ·h migrate from he So th and can. and did. duck insje Dr. Jim Squire, a billfish expe-t, al o spoke at the meeting. and he ,e- scribed "long-line" fishing, whrh most think of m the vertical serse rather than laterally, which is he "What they do," he said, meanbg the Japanese proponents of this rt of fi hmg. "ts set a 60-mile-long l11e, between 2,200 and 2,500 hooks ba1L'

have been mad , by a commcmal net boat m the Central Pacific in the

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place prizes. Each won $94,689, lottery spokesman John Schade said Sunday. There were 357 tickets with just five numbers and each wins $1,913. Tickets with only four correct numbers totaled 16,707, and each is worth $37. In the bot- tom category, there were 279,485 tickets with three numbers, worth $5 each. Lotto sales for last week total- ed $12,418,268. The "Big Spin" grand prize winner was Tom Hedrick, 61, a former Air Force major who retired in 1970. He stayed home in Merced and sent his wife, Mary, and daughters, Camilla

Weed and Melissa Proietti, to Sacramento for the "Big Spin." Weed spun the wheel and landed m one of the two grand prize slots on the 100-slot wheel - the first spinner to do so since March 21. Hedrick will get an annual check for $164,000 for 20 years. Twenty percent will be deducted for federal income taxes. The $1 million winners were Son Tran, 31, a physics student at the niversity of San Diego, and Debbie emen s, , a book- keeper from La Mirada. Each will get an annual check for $40,000 for 20 years.

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bacore' neker believes, "from the low to a one tagged f1 h traveled 3,000 miles - half-hour before the high." He wis m a str ght hoe from the mid• not disputed by others on his pan•I. P c1f1c to Vancouver I land in five Heard. Rus Hansen and Al George months That averages 20 mile a The surf fisherman. the pare! d y, nd tuna ar known to move 50 agreed, usually takes at least tvo nules on occ ion overnight rigged rods with him to the bead!. Last year's catch of about 27,000 One i a longer pole. up to 13 fett, alb1 , most of th m off Central and with which Jong casts can be mafe orth rn ahfornia, 1 on of the and the wave action hurdled whm poorer annual cores, particularly the rod is placed in a sand spike. Tie when contra ted with 1984' 211.284 shorter pole can be like a ramoo.v count (160,154 off San Diego) which trout 'tick, lightly weighted and ca;t m.iy be an iverall record for sport- horter than the other. boat though an unofficial 229,314 "Often.' says Neuneker, "a sirf catch w. s post d in 1962. fisherman will cast too far and mi;s Lau ugg ts the 1987 catch will the close fish. That's why you ne~d be "about average" That figures one for short casts." about 110,000 albacore tuna Long ca ts, because of the higbn La t y af s catch was poor be- arc are able to dodge some tom cause there w a a 100-mile•wide grass and kelp that fouls lines am band of cold, dirty water off San hooks cast off shorter rods. Diego and extending down to mid- Bait for the surf fisherman 1s BaJa The alb1 , heading in from the cheap. "We dig our own on the west would not cro s thi band. T ey beach" Hansen says. "Sand crabi; 1 fmally rea hed the coast around have a bucket to scoop the sand and Morro Bay But why were bigeye I've cut screened holes in sides and w11nmmg. Laurs said that

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Daily Transcript (Cir. D. 7,415)

Solana Beach, CA (San Diego Co.) The Citizen (Cir. W. 20,000)

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MPr't' .2 O1987

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',' The Wine and Roses wine tasting charit-- benefit is set for May 30 at l.SD's Camino Patio. The fifth annual event, with tastings at 3 p.m. and 5 p.m., is put on by Juniors of Social Service and the local California As , 11f Nurserymenc~a~ter. r (' , /

/HE'S HONORED - Rancho Santa Fe resident Rufus Young Jr: h~s ~een se~ected as co-recipient of the county ?ar a~soc_1at10n s Public Lawyer of the Year Award. Young 1~ active 1n the current RSF incorporation campaign and sits on the boards of the regional American Red Cross LEAD San Diegojlnd the \.!SD Law School Alumni Ass~cia- tlon. C( 5' "5 ,,./'I

Riverside, CA (Riverside Co.) Press Enterprise (Cir. D. 125,053) 1

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Tuesday, May 19, 1987

D-5

The Press-Enterprise

UCR AT THI CROSSROADS

Solana Beach CA (San Diego c~.) The Citizen (Cir. W. 20,000)

~9 Son Diego schools provide contrasting lessons -:t,\ By JIM ALEXANDER ,--------------------, • USD was able to get immediate affiliation in USIU's Palmiotto said his philosophy was to put The Press-Enterprise a conference with Pepperdine, Loyola Marymount, more emphasis on women's sports than other schools SAN DIEGO - In mulling the advantages of San Francisco, Santa Clara, St. Mary's, Portland and did. But the positive results in those sports were upgrading Its athletic program to Division I status, '"'"""""~""'·• Gonzaga. On the other hand, USIU, forced to fend overshadowed by the struggles of men's basketball, the p ople at UC Riverside can look to San Diego for for itself, has to scramble to put together a schedule, plus the novelty of having the only Division I hockey two h •ipful example . especia!ly after conference seasons begin. team in the southwestern U.S. from the Qlego, they'll learn Palmiotto acknowledged that trying to survive "What I didn't realize was, they (people) don't 110w to make the move. as an independent might have been a mistake. care about any other sports except basketball and From United Slate International University, "It's tough, tough, tough," he said. "If Riverside football," he said. "That was a mistake on my part." they'll I arn some things about how not to. can't get into a league, I would tell them to think USD specifically emphasized men's basketball, SD previously was a D1v1s1on II mdependent; twice, because February gets to be an awful dry although within specific guidelines (no special ad· 1n fact, the Toreros' Ia t Division II basketball game '!!!! month." missions policy, no booster clubs, no firing coac~ a lo lo UCR In th 1979 NCAA West Regional. ~~l!![S~!t:;!s~ USIU played more home games last year, 17, for losing). And with patience. D mov d directly into the West Coast Athletic i;;.,,..._,-., than in past seasons. And it played them all in one "I don't think you can expect overnight success Mt r nc (WCAf'.J during the 1979-80 school year place, Golden Hall, a 3,000-seat auditorium in down- on the Division I level," said Jim Brovelli, who w.as and has built 1t elf into a consistent contender. town Balboa Park. That is a sizable distance from USD's head basketball coach at the time of the Th chool has won two regular-season WCAC ' the campus, on the northern outskirts of San Diego. switch to Division I and is now head coach at San ti Jes, Including thts past year. Though upset by But it's still an improvement over splitting its home Francisco. "Each year we improved. And I was pp rd1n<• In the conference tournament, the Tore- schedule between UC San Diego, Southwestern Col- fortunate that we had a great administration (thi:it) rps iictvanc d to the 1987 NCAA Tournament and e--- .._____ .......J lege and high school gyms. understood ... how tough it is to compete on the n$1 g 1v heavily favor d Auburn a scare before losing, UNIVERSITY OF SAN OIEGO Still, USIU had to scramble for games, playing level." 62-61. two each against Pan-American, Coppin (Md.) State, That patience was rewarded when USD reached For USIU, conv rs ly, the NCAA tournament is Thomas Burke, Ivers of San _Die.go vice Bethune-Cookman, UC San Diego, Brooklyn, Utica the NCAA tournament in 1984, and again this year. stm just a rumor. president and West Coast Athletic Conference and Texas-Arlington. Each time, the Toreros lost in the first round, but the • USIU, formerly a memb r of the National Asso- president, near school's swimming pool. That sort of scheduling was what USD Vice money the school received as its share of NCAA riatlon for Int ·rcolleg1ule Athletics, moved up to President Thomas Burke wanted to avoid, and why receipts (nearly $200,000 this year) and the publicity D!Vl 10n I inctepenctcnt tatu rn 1979. The school has The reasons for the contrast may boil down to USD worked so hard to get into a conference. it received for reaching the tournament made tile had om · succc 1n low-prof1le sports, but it has two key differences: "There aren't many independents on the West commitment worthwhile. bi; n a corhtstt•nt failure in men's basketball, the • from the outset, USD emphasized men's Coast," said Burke, who is president of the WCAC in "Our university really didn't see much value in sport th ll mo t oft n d I rmln . the reputation of basketball. putting much of its resources into that addition to working in USD's student affairs office. playing Division II and spending that much money on program that do sn't include football. program. USlU, according to athletic director Al "You won't get any games out here after confer- for the lack of publicity and coverage that DivisiQn , In I l t a on n Divi. ion I, USIU complied Palm1otto, preferred to "spread the wealth," and the ences start, so you're going to have to fly East, and II gains for you," Burke said. "Division I has done 11 54-163 k th 111 rer rd. Th s year the Gulls were success of its other programs was overshadowed by that gets expensive. It's going to dilute the program what we set out to have it do - spread t11e 11-17, thl'ir mo. t v1ctonc a Ulv1 10n I school. the problems of the basketball team. to where it can't be competitive." university's message and name." /'

MAY 2 O1987

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DIEGO - The fifth an- nual Wine and Roses wine tasting will be held Saturday, May 30 at the Univer~ of San Diego on the outdoor Camino Patio. The fifth annual event will feature the first public announcement and tasting of the medal-winning wines of the San Diego National Wine Competition. ---. wrne and"Roses benefits chari- ties through the Juniors of Social Service and the San Diego Chapter of the California Association of Nurserymen. A debut tasting begins at 3 p.m. and costs $35 per person. The regular tasting begins at 5 p.m. and costs $25 in advance, $30 at the door. For more inf9.rmati,on, call 58/8- 5931. ~'1. ...,.-c;

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