News Scrapbook 1986-1988

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. o. 123,092)

½~ :~~~1~,,, 5''> Burma Airways Friendship Fokker 27 plane in less than four months, and the worst air disaster in this South- east Asian nation smce 1978. mong the 14 Americans on board were Reeve J. Jacques, an attorney from La Jolla, and his wife, Carolyn, who friends said had been on a plea- sure trip with one of their three daughters. Jacques, 45, was an attorney with the San Diego law firm of Mcinnis, Fitzgerald, Ree , Sharkey & Mcln• tyre, while Mrs. Jacques taught at the Evan School m La Jolla. Their daughter Jennifer, 18, bad begun the trip with her parents but returned to the United States after visiting Hong Kong, the initial stop on an itinerary that also included slops in Tibet, Bangkok and Burma. An official passenger list said 36 of the victims were foreigners - the 14 Americans, seven w1ss, five Britons, four Australians, three West Ger- mans, two French and one Thai. Nine Burmese passengers and four crew members also died The victims included the parents of an administrative attache at the Australian Embassy in Rangoon, ource aid. Several of the American victims were part of a tour arranged by a San Franc1 co travel agent, who also was killed, relatives said. Edith Daile-Fe te of Kentfield. Calif., had been a travel agent for more than 30 years before starting her own agency, Cosmopolitan Trav- el, about 20 year ago. One of the agency's employees, Juhe Ann But- ler, 45, of Calistoga, was among the victims. Jacques, a graduate of Stanford University and the Univ i of Southern Califorma Law Schoo , ha been involved in several prominent trials, including ones in which he de- fended fellow attorneys accused of malpractice. In 1985, he defended the Sunshine Little League of East San Diego in a suit filed by a parent seeking to in- clude boys in the all-girl league. Superior Court Judge Alfred Lord igned an order barring Little League officials from enforcing a ban on coeducational teams, but lim- 'ted the order to the one league for just that season. Jacques successfully persuaded lhe judge not to extend the order ,tatew1de. James A. Mclntrye, a partner in

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Dai ly Transcrirt (Cir. D. 7,415 OCT 12 1987

OCT 12 1987

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Vietnam whose medical school re- cords haven't been released by the Vietnamese government will have their cases reviewed by a six- r member advisory council thanks to the passage of S.B. 1358. Signed by the governor Sept. 29, the law is designed to force the st~ Board

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of MedicaJ Quality Assurance to consider the special case of these physicians who have generally been unable to obtain licenses in the state. The council must be created by BMQA by Feb. 1. It wjll be composed ·of five former pro- fessors from the University of Saigon and one BMQA member. BMQA has come under fire from a number of groups, includine; USP Center for Public Interest Law, which this year filed a $13.3 mil- lion lawsuit against BMQA fqr its refusal to grant licenses to these physicians. The suit is still pen- ding. • • •

LA JOLLA COUPLE KILLED IN BURMA AIR CRASH Reeve Jacques was a lawyer; his wife, Carolyn, a teacher

Jacques' law firlll, said today that the couple enjoyed traveling and had left San Diego about three weeks ago on their latest trip Jacques had been with the firm for 15 years, and had been a partner since 1976. Mclntrye described him as a first- rate lawyer "with a phenomenal memory" to whom the other attor- neys turned for advice. Before joining the firm, Jacques worked in the criminal division of the San Diego city attorney's office. A Navy veteran, he also had lectured for the Continuing Education of the Bar, the San Diego Inn of Court and the county Bar Association. ln 1978- 80, he taught trial techniques as an adjunct professor at the University of San Die o Law School. - . acques taught nglish and social studies, and also taught Amer- ican history to sixth-graders, whom she took each year on a study trip to Washington, D.C. All three Jacques daughters - Jennifer, Julie, 16, and Alison, 14 - attended the school, and Gale Baer, the Evans School headmistress, said Mrs. Jacques had been associated with the school for 11 years. Both Jacques were strong support• ers of The Bishop·s School in La Jolla, and Mcintrye said Mrs. Jacques was very active in the Girl Scouts as well.

The plane in which they were killed was on a two-hour, regularly scheduled flight from the national capital of Rangoon, about 300 miles south of Pagan in central Burma. Pagan, with a population of about 5,000, occupies 40 square miles of mo tly flat terrain on the east bank of Burma's major artery, the Ir- rawaddy River. Pagan's kings and governors ruled from 1044 to 1369 and built thousands of Buddhist shrines and temples. The buildings make Pagan an archaeo- logical treasure, a holy place for pil- grims and a top tourist attraction. Because of poor roads, however, tourists can reach the city only by air or river boat. Authorities have not said what caused the June 21 Butma Airways crash, which killed all 45 Burmese on board. The plane slammed into a mountain minutes after takeoff from Heho, about 280 miles northeast of Rangoon. In Burma's worst air disaster in recent years, a Burma Airways plane crashed five miles from Ran- goon airport on March 25, 1978. Twenty-three foreigners were among the 48 dead. That also was a Friendship Fokker 27, a Dutch-made medium-range air- craf

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Los Angel es, CA (Los Angeles Co) Times (San Di ego Ed .) (Cir. D 50,010) (Cir. S 55,573) oc 1 1987 .JI.IL~"'• P C B fa t

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,092)

I 888 SDTries toKeep Another Streak - ,;ty-,.s---5 SAfli DIEGO-The University of San Diego football team, its str~ak of7:hree strnight shutouts havmg ended in a 23-18 loss to Azusa Pacific last Saturday, will try t_o extend a different streak when 1t plays host to Pomona-Pitzer at 7:30 tonight. The Toreros (3-1-1) have _not lost to Pomona since 1971. Smee then, USD has a 14-0-1 record against the Sagehens. USD won last year, 42-16. Pomona-Pitzer (1-3) comes into tonight's game with a three-game losing streak. The Sagehens have scored seven touchdowns this sea- son, and quarterback Ed Irick has passed for five of the~- Irick averages 232 yards passing per game. USD's defense has nine intercep- tions but had only one in last week's loss to Azusa. -CHRIS ELLO

OCT 13 1987

DROP SHOT Angel Lopez head pro at San Diego Tenni & Rae• quet Club, 1 among some 40 bache !ors put on the auction block to ~ne- f1t March of Dimes The event 1s set for Nov 12 at the downtown 0mm Hotel • San Diego's Beginning and inter• mediate young ters are urged to enter the Junior Satellite Touma ment · d Gro mont, start- mg Nov. 7-8, pon ored by the S.D Tcnm. Patrons For information, call Rob MarKay at 260-4600. • U,il.l will host $35-per-person doub es c 1mc for the area's top jun- iors Nov. 15. For information call Ed Collins at 260-4803. • The Volvo Tennis-Collegiate Men' Champion hips are set for Oct. 29 Nov. 1 at UCLA. Top seed is Pep- perdine·s Andrew Sznaider, (John Freeman's Tennis column appears every other Tuesday in The Tribune.) ;; -

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

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C ktail Hour" with special hors d':uvres from 7 to 8·30 pm. "Dinner at Eight" offering a five- course gourmet dinner naturally at the "As You Like It" Cabaret following dinner a nd • -· ' 8 and • • Playhouses last tve years. mong these guest artists wi ll be Roger r, A featuring performers from the

day in a lecture at Horton Plaza's Lyceum presented by UCSD Ex-

thherde arerttoodehw m9,Jt ortcon:oprana: ere o ap 1 ' rt. But that hasn't sto ped u ea qua ere

be held between audie nce members - and O'Brien, Metca ,e an That's no t all : a we st ern barbecue dinner will be served to 1 r d th t e cas . 0 . mner 1s me u e m 1 d d - - - atten ees. the $15 admission charge. d

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here Three Southern California real ·estate firms have come to the support of the San Diego Operas • oung nsem e. The Koll Company one of the West Coast's la rgel!t 'real estate property managei;nent firms based in Newport Beach, IS sponsoring three performances of th e opera s educational outreach progran:i, ~II for its employees and tenants m its office buildings in downtown San , Diego and Carlsbad. downtown properties are the Cen• tral Savings Tower, JYells Fargo Bank building and First Interstate Plaza. Koll Center San Diego is the mi xed-used office-hotel-residen- tial-relail complex planned for a three-b lock area bounded by Broadway, Kettner, E and State streets beginning construction in January. Koll is the largest down- town San Diego developer to date with $1.2 million square feet of Its three y E bl development acq~isition and '

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rea ,ltt1_es.. is styk eth,s tsurreas •1.sd1tco, be emotionally charged," humorous resu 1ng 1n wor s an provoca 1ve. a are a d t " The lecture is sponsored by The Hahn Company and Lenders Corp Admi ss ion is $6 general.

ArtF.acts

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by Priscilla Lister Schupp

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" Shout Up AMorning_"

Camino Theater on campus. Ad-

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Tickets which will benefit the Playhouse are $100 for "The Cocktail Hour" only, $250 for all three acts, and $500 for all three acts, seat1·ng at a celebri ty· tabl e and reserved seats at the Cabaret. Meanwhile, Playhouse Artistic Director Des McAnuff has taken his "Silent Edward," a one-act musical for which he wrote the book, music and lyrics, on a tour of San Diego schools. Community organizations and businesses who also wish to schedule a perfor-

mi ssion is $4 general.

The Kidzartz Festival

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place tomorrow m fering hands-on, close-up experi- ences for children with several I hundred performing an v1sua ar- a oa ar o - d ·

Solana Beach's North Coast Repertory Theatre celebrates its fifth birthday tonight al the Lomas Santa Fe Country ' Club. Tickets are $30 a nd $75 for. patrons; those purchasing patron tickets will be invited to the gal a openi ng of the The new theater opens Jan. 1, located across Lomas Santa Fe Plaza from its present location. It will feature a larger stage, new new theater.

lists.

Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co) Times (San Diego Ed .) (Cir. D 50 ,010) {Cir. S 55,573) OCT 181987

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1 USD Continues Its Domination of Pomona-Pitzer in 42-6 Win S~~I~~he University of, , go continued its mastery

in the first quarter and one-yard run in the third quarter. Quarter - back Braulio Castillo scored on a two-yard run, and quarterback Brendan Murphy scored on a five- yard run. Ken Zampese ran the second- half kickoff back 78 yards for a touchdown. The USO defense limited Pomo- na-Pitzer (1- 4) to a net total of one-yard rushing and 146 yards overall. Free safety Bryan Day and cornerbacks Daryl Jackson and Scott Bradley had interceptions.

~""e""rc-noi'i!ciiia-Pitzer with a 42-6 football victory at USO Saturday mght. The Toreros (4-1-1) are 15-0-1 against Pomona-Pitzer since 1971, which is the last time they lost to Pomona-Pitzer. USD raced to a 14-0 lead after one quarter, led 28-0 at halftime and 42-6 after three quarters. Tail- back Ty Barksdale gained 101 yards in 20 carries. Fullback Don Maclnnes scored on a 16-yard run

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