News Scrapbook 1986-1988

*Toreros----- conlmued From C-1 ::Z tJr3e5"' "He's a kid who plays best in the big games," said Egan, recalling Means' team-high 18 points against Auburn. "He likes to compete." Means has a nice combination: He plays good one-on-one defense and can shoot the ball. He hit a team-high 85 percent of his free throws last sea- son and hit 47 percent of his three- point attempts. Cottrell, the other tentative starter at guard, is a 6-5 sophomore out of Tempe, Ariz., who averaged 3.2 points last year. "He's a gifted kid," said Egan. "He runs; he jumps well; he handles the ball pretty good. But h 's young and he needs to get his intensity up to where it needs to be at the Division I level." Haupt, the one-time San Diego-CIF Section Playe1 of the Year from Mira Mesa High, has recovered from a back injury that threatened the 6-5 forward's career last season. He scored 12 points in 14 games. "Mike Haupt is a warrior," said Egan. "He gets the maximum out of his body." The other forward, Munn, is one of the more improved Toreros. A 6-6 senior from Salinas, Munn averaged 3.4 points last season. "Marty Munn is a scorer," said Egan. "He's one of those guys who's always thinking how he can get the ball in the basket. He surprised us this year in that he made himself a much better athlete. He got himself in tremendous shape." Pelton, a 6-9, 230-pounder, faces the unenviable task of replacing Thompson. While th~ University of Kansas transfer may not dominate mside like Thompson, he does run the floor well. Because the Toreros won't be as big across the front line this winter, Egan says the team will play a more up-tempo style. Nonetheless, don't ex~ct a UNLV remake.

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

OCT 2 O1987

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/8Xi< Egan not rebuilding but simply reloading with younger players a campaigns at USD, it may require his finest • The bulk of the remaining roster consists of burn. • f h The memories of that special eason may not coaching job ever Consider: six res men. be gone, b t most of the headline playe are. • Outside of returning starting guard Danny "I understand the limitations we have as far Four-fifths of the starting lineup has departed, Means, no other player has started a game for as the inexperience," said Egan. "But _I'm look- mcludmg 7-foot center Scott Thompson, the the Toreros. ing forward to the season. The best thmg about WCAC's 1987 Player of the Year. • The other four players Egan tentatively h~s sports is this: When you win, you get a chance to So around Alcala Park, where basketball penciled into the starting lineup - guard Craig prove it again. When you lose, you get to try practice tipped off last Thursday, the buzzword Cottrell, forwards Steve Haupt and Marty again. r always look for the next challenge.'' "rebulldmg ' The word, though. has yet to Munn, and center Jim Pelton - averaged a If Egan meets the challenge presently staring creep mto Egan's vocabul ry. , . combined 11 - 3 points last season. him in the face, Means most likely will have "Rebuilding says to me, 'Here, Im gomg to • Two of those prospective starters are not I t A . - f IA, A 1 h l 't pract·1c1·ng. Pelton suffer--' a disk inJ·ury work- been th e cata ys · Jumor rom nge es, establish before the season starts w Y can "" Means started all 30 of USD's game; last sea- wm,' " said Egan. "I don't want to establish any ing construction last summer. Munn took an . ht ts His t amm t 1 elbow to the Cheek du ring practice Friday and son, averaging e1g pom . . e a es a - reason why e can't win." d h elected h1·m captam · t d wa• to undergo surgery today. He's expected rea Y ave s · A plend1d attitude. But if Egan I o recor . Please see TOREROS: C-3, Col. 1

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HANK EGAN

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

OCT 231987

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

,A/Im•• ~.....!..-------------==========::::::.::=====::: /usn sy posium tackling changes ·- in att·tude on China missionaries P c e , , "

OCT 231987

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aid was given the tamp of approval by the governm nt, which also is partially underwritmg Xu's tu1t1on co ts here. "Right now tht> government feels many Chinese in llectuals are inter- ted in Chnshan1ty,'' said Xu, add- ing that the revival of intere t in the mi ionaries 1s part of the overall d - fort "to attract foreign visitors and oversea~ investments " Yung-chen Chiang. an assistant professor of history at USD, will give a talk on the training of social scien- h ·ts before the revoluhon at Yench- mg University a missionary college founded by the Rockefeller Founda- tion m 1898, later taken over by the communists an renamed Beijing Umve 1ty. During the half-century that Yenchmg Houris ed, Chiang said, the chool unabashedly pursued its goal of reforming Chinese society and gu1dmg the nation's development. Alter the communists won in 1949, the government tried to purge every element of Western thought and in- fluence from society. It became fash- ionable for scholars - even in the United States - to criticize Yench- ing and the other Christian schools for imposing an alien ideology on the nation while exploiting China eco- nomically After the revolution, the missionary school were closed, amalgamated or renamed, and only within recent years have alumnae associations started to form. "The general tenor was that Amer- ican missionaries were agents of American imperialism and spread- mg bourgeois ideas under the cloak of religion," noted the 78-year-old Durdin. Chiang, a Harvard graduate from Taiwan, advocates a more balanced view of Yenchlng·s contributions. Far from taking a condescending at- titude toward the Chinese, he said, Yenching-trained social scientists journeyed to the countryside to study the peasantry. This was in triking

contrast, he said, to the scholars trained in Chinese universities who stayed within their ivory towers in the comfortable coastal cities. The United States International University-sponsored symposium was organized by Patricia ·ells, a h1stury instructor at San Diego State University, to acknowledge tht ~h1ft that has taken place on both sides of the Pacific on this touchy issut! Today the role of the missionaries is seen as more complex. While the missionaries have always had their defenders - Neils mentioned their opposition to infanticide, the impor- tation of opium and foot binding - critics have backed away from the simplistic view that the foreigners were insensit ive to China's tradition- al beliefs and smug in their mission of bringing Christianuy to the ·pa- gans." "There's some truth m both," Neils said. ,ufhey did do some good. They are seen as less harmful, 1f not good. By the time they came back to the United States, they appreciated Chi- nese values, genuinely loved the Chi- nese and tried to promote Chinese- Amencan relations." The impact the returning m1ss10n- aries had on the development of American foreign policy toward China 1s another focus of the confer- ence. One example of the overlap be- tween the private educator~ and pub- lic policy makers was Dr. John Leigh ton Stuart, a president of Yenching Umversity who later be- came U. . ambassador to Chma in the critical post-World War II years. The links persist today: J Staple- ton Roy, the leading State Depart- ment expert on China who recently testified before Congress on the un- rest in Tibet, was born m China to missionary parents. So was Demo- cratic presidential candidate Paul Simon, who has said he will appoint an Asian-American to a key Cabinet post. Other topics that will be discussed are missionaries who tried to com- bine Confucianism and Christianity and American missionary efforts in China today. The lectures began at 2 p.m. today and continue through to- morrow afternoon at the Manchester Center of the university.

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Streaking Toreros take act on the road By Rick came to an end against Menlo 295 yards and three TDs. He moves the team."

Castillo is a junior, having trans- ferred from San Diego City College,

"Braulio seems to have an edge when 1t comes to the intangibles,"

USD coach Brian.Fogarty contin- ues to alternate Braulio Castillo and

TribuneSportswriter

Clairo>rnont-Mudd-Scripps College, to Menlo College 13-9 last weekend, plays host to aspiring USD in a Divi- sion III football game tomorrow at 1:30 p.m. The Toreros, who are taking aim at their best season since a 9-1 mark m 1981, are coming off a 42-6 rout of Pomona Pitzer at home last Satur- day. Led by Ty Barksdale's 101 yards rushing and two touchdown runs by Don Maclnnes, USD gained 310 yards on Lhe ground against the outmanned visitors. · Tomorrow's game, however, opens a stretch that will have the Toreros (4-1-1) on the road three straight weekends. They're 1-0-1 away from home in 1987, tying Occidental 13-13 in the season opener, then defeating Redlands 28-0 a week later. The Stags (3-2), meanwhile, were dropped from the Division III top 20 as a three-game winning streak

said Fogarty. "He gets the job done. while Murphy is a freshman.

ranked 12th nationally before losing Brendan Murphy at quarterback.

~Braulio (Castillo) seems to have an edge when it comes to the intangibles. He gets the job done. He moves the team.' - Brian Fogarty Castillo has been in on more plays (101-77), but has only one more yard in total offense (450-449). Murphy has had more success passing than Castillo, completing 25- of-50 attempts for 384 yards and five touchdowns. Castillo is 17-of-36 for

San Diego, Calf. Unio., (C1rc D 2.l?,324) 1C1rc. S. 33<), , )

OCT 24 1987

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• "')-C\ '5~ m1ss1ona y effects told By Rita Gillmon Staff Writer Work of American missionaries in China led to the creation of a secular women's liberation movement and ultimately to socialist and commu- nist movements in what had been a traditional and conservative culture, a scholar from Fuller Theological Seminary said yesterday. Samuel H. Chao, a China specialist at Fuller, spoke at a conference of China scholars being held throw;h today at the Manchester ConferPnCP Center on the University 01 an Die~. --:, Tilled "The Impact of American Missionaries on U.S. Attitudes and Policies Toward China," the sessions are sponsored by the Asia Pacific Rim Institute of U.S. International University and· were arranged by Pa- tricia Neils, professor of Asian and American studies. Institute director Leon Sinder said it is the first time a large number of Chma scholars (from 65 universities) have gathered t(, exchange their ideas on this subject. "Missionaries or their children have been the greatest projectors of the images of China to Americans," Sinder said. "They had a dispropor- tionate impact on the way we see China." Sinder said U.S. government offi- cials got their view of China from merchants and church people whose ideas were colored by their particu- lar interests. "They didn't consult scholars," he said. "China had Confu- cianism, the Tao and Buddhism, but the Christian was assured he was •

Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co) Times (San Diego Ed .) (Cir. D 50,010) (Cir. S 55,573) OCT 215 1987

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~huts Out !/i;~hl Mmmount Vince ~h~ s~ed two goals to lead the Uni.1£Crsjty a[ San Diego to a 5-0 victory over Loyola Mary- mount in a West Coast Athletic Conference soccer match Saturday at San Diego. James Kyle, Bob Welsh and Steve Herman added goals for USD (10-4-2 overall. 3-1 in conference play). Loyola Marymount is 3-10-2 and0-3.

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

OCT 25 1987

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San Diego, Calif. Southern Cross (Cir. W. 27,500) OCT 231981

SD Defeats Claremont-Mudd 23-7 :+-tA5""' < ' Fresh!fian quarterback Brendan halftime lead. Murphy completed IO of 17 passes 141 yards and l ouchdown to e the Unlversity of San Diego's f tball team Co a ZS- 7 victory over Claremont-Mudd Saturday after- noon at Claremont. Claremont-Mudd (3-3) scored on a 15-yard run by tailback Chris Dabrow, the leading rusher in

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

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USD to host graduate school day for students ALCALA PARK - The ~ty of San Diego will host a graduate school day N bv . 4 !or students seeking information on graduate degree programs in 40 colleges and universities _!.!!roughout California. .;2f57

NCAA Division III. Dabrow had 70 yards in 9 carries in Claremont- ~udd's 90-yard scoring drive. He fm1shed with 137 yards m 27 Carries. USD increased its lead to 17.7 on a 27-yard field goal by Fenick. Todd Jackson added a 57-yard touchdown run with less than two mmutes remaining in the gam<>. Femck nussed the extra• J?omt kick.

On ~e first play of the game, Murphy s pass to wide receiver Jeff Mansukhani went 72 yards for a touchdown The Toreros (5-1-1) added to the lead when Ty Barks- dale scored on a 4-yard run late in the first quaiter Mark Fenick kicked extra p t.: on both touch- downs for USD, hich had a 14-10

,.___.~b_r_inging a better way."

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