News Scrapbook 1984

fflE TRIBUNE

1984

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National City, CA (San Diego Co.) Star News (Cir. 2xW 3,336) (Cir. S. 3,301) MAY G

1'eil ~an

1984

...Allen'• P c. B , " · 1888 SB_}\iwanis Club o7.-"tba~derson, associate professor of economics from the University of San Diego, will speak to tll Imperial Beach/South Bay Kiwanis Club Tuesday at 7: 15 a.m. at Denny's restaurant, South San Diego. Her topic will be "Economics of Cen- tral America."

...Al~n'•

P. C. B

F.sr. 1888

RBAN UFE: Parking is pro- du ing prime conYer ation at. rger an Diego hotels. Sheraton II rbor I land spill over into an Jot aero the treet. Valet rking, long the standard at La Valencia on La Jolla's crowded Pro pect Street, i an option at th new Inter-Continental at $6; a lo g walk can be the alternative. en 500 members of the UCSD 1edical Center Auxiliary con• veued there, Pres. Joan Ward re- port , the cost of parking became program topic. . .. Bet y and D g Manchester contributed to tll the gap so that the USD ours- i chool benefit at loter-Cooti- eo tal on Saturday cleared $150,000.... It's like this down- town: "H you haven't heard a new Roger Hedgecock rumor by n," says one city hall depart- nt head, "it's your duty to

Imperial Beach, CA (San Diego Co.) Imperial Star Beach News (Cir. 2xW. 2,730) (Cir. S. 2,568)

CRO TOWN: The Institute , the bold new bi t UC D for h mi ph rte under- tandmg, ha a t ntative dedic • ton d t · Nov. 17. Ben factor Ted G1ldrcd 1t becoming a $10 m1lhon institute rving a th cornerstone of a hoot of Int r-American relation .... Two Gaynors are due in town on Sat- urday. Janet wlll be at the Spreckel . for F ·tival of the rt honor and a screening of her 1933 "State Fair." Mitzi will be doing h r on -woman how at th Fox ... Bumper sticker on a Honda Accord in Mt ion Beach: I'M SO BROKE I CAN'T EVEN PAY ATTENTION.... The res- taurant guide listing for Piret's in n Diego Magazine calls Piret' "a on of-a-kind place," and then Ii ts four location . f th Am ric

MAY 6

1984

...Allen',

start one."

P. c. e

1:<1

1888

SB Kiwanis Club ~~~nderson, associate pr~fess

ENGAGED ;zqg5 A garden ceremony i~ planned for the Ma}' 26 wedding of Lisa Gaye Blankenship ano James D. Bender Jr. ·n the Camp Pendleton Navy Base, Oceanside. The bride-elect is the daughter of Charles Blankenship of Brawley and Lucy Alvarez of Fa//brook, Calif. She is a 19 77 graduate of El Camino High Schoof ,n Oceanside and a 1979 graduate of Imperial Valley College. She is employed as a business manager of Modern Furniture in Oceanside. The prosp~ctive bridegroom is a law student and legal mtern at the University of San Diego.

Chula Vista, CA (San Diego Co.) Star News (Cir. 2xW. 12,544) (Cir. S. 12,739)

MAY 6

19:·4

Things were looking up down on Harbor Drive

,Jlllen'•

P. C. B

1<1. 1888

0 h, this old place," jo~ed Audrey Geisel, grin- ning as she surveyed the splendors of San Diego's spanking new Hotel Inter-Continental. "L" she said, "have been down here every day. I love it'" Party followed party after party last week as the new Harbor Drive lar.drnark declared itself officially open, and lots of the same faces turned up at all of them. Reba Brophy, for instance, swept into the Grand Ballroom Saturday night wearing the white dress she had first worn Wednesday afternoon in the same spot - modeling for the All Hallows Women's Guild at the lotb annual "Spirit of San Diego" fashion show. Saturday's gala was a benefit for the Philip Y. Hahn School of Nursing at the University of San Diego. The Inter-Continental people and Douglas Manchester (his firm built the new caravansary) picked up the lion's share of the party costs, and other benefactors took care of the rest. Every penny of it. In a thank-you toast, USD President Author Hughes disclosed that the night will add "somewhere in the neighborhood of $125,000 to $150,000" to the school's nursing scholarship fund. Midshipmen in snappy white unifonitS were on band to steer the 500 guests to a champagne reception

Beverly and Bill Muchnic doo-wahing along with the band's doo-wahs. Ballads like "I'll Never Smile Again" made dancing •partners of Maureen King and Tom Finn, Agnes Crip- pen and Jack Lewis Powell. And when Lanin cut loose with some raucous rock, Ruth Mulvaney and Charles Melville had no trouble keeping up with the youthful midshipmen and the junior hostesses. (The juniors - who handled the party's check-in chores - included Molly, Katy and Sally Manchester, Jennifer Schultz, Courtney Crockett, Jean Comito, Kim Middleton, Nicole Johnson, Amy Cavanaugh, Theresa and Kristin King and Kimberly Amory. Among the 19 midshipmen were some from this area, including Douglas Sanvictores, Dalour Younan, Daniel Mishler, Patrick Maloy, Michael Casper, Brian Clark, Lawrence Laughlin and Stephen Smith.) It was a big night for short dr~. Mary Hazard and Marie Dunphy chose above-the-ankle hemlines, and so did Rosemary Logan, Donis Lovett, Jean Paige and Suzanne Figi. (Suzanne had just returned from cooking classes taught by Wolfgang Puck, the Los An- geles chef who made his name at Ma Maison, then went on to greater glory at Spago and Chinois. "I'm actually going to start having dinner parties again," See BURL on Page D-2

SB Kiwanis Club D~nderson, associate professor of economics from the Uni~r.sitl:......2[ San Diego, will speak to--rli:e Imperial Beach/South Bay Kiwanis Club Tuesday at 7: 15 a.m. at Denny's restaurant, South San Diego. Her topic will be "Economics of Cen- tral America."

Burl Stiff

in the foyer, and then on to their tables in the ball- room. Forty-four waiters were lined up at attention when Maestro Lester Lanin played the first fanfare. Then the band slid smoothly into "Just in Time." Round tables were centered with bamboo poles supporting bursts of dendrobium and cattleya orchids, gardenias, moss, galax and ti leaves. (Credit Richard Widney with those fantasies.) The menu ran to vichys- soise, seafood crepes, medallions of veal, and a salad that involved Boston lettuce, chopped walnuts, cnun- bled goat cheese and a dressing of walnut oil and lemon. Three dance floors - three, count 'em, three - were packed the whole night long. The Walter Zables and the Robert Adelizzis found "New York, New York" irresistible, and "It Don't Mean a Thing" bad Marlene and Bill McElroy, Isabel and Bob Morris and

TIit Sm DleOO l"1b,/ Joe Holy

Audrey Jnd Ted 'Dr. Seuss' Cieisel

Tuesday, May 1, 1984

Los Angeles , CA (Los Angeles Co.) Los Angeles T imes (Cir. D. 1,072 ,500) (Cir. Sun. 1,358 ,420)

Burl Stiff----- Continued from Page D-1 Suzanne promised.) Lanin hats, Presto! pillars of the community turned into Preppies. (Bruce Hazard, Evan Jones and Art Hughes got red hats; Art Rivkin got green.)

MAY 6

1984

J lllen ', P. c. e

Est. 1888

The crowd included couples like Marilyn and Kim Fletcher (Kim recalled the 25th anniversary celebration of the Inter-Continental in Lisbon), Kirk and John Butler, Sally and John Thornton (John recuperating from back surgery, and walking with a cane), Karen and Christopher Sickels, Virginia and Jack Monday, the George Pardees, Martha and George Gafford, Phyllis and John Parrish, 113arbara and Frank Hope, the John Whitneys, and Susan and Harry Summers. (Susan and Harry were married a couple of months ago at Lake Tahoe; now they're looking forward to finishing their new oceanfront house in Del Mar - next door to Joanne and Frank Warren.) Elsie and Frank Weston were there to support USO, and so were Edna and John Alessio, Maggie and Dr. John Mazur (Maggie masterminded the party plans), Sue and Dr. Charles Edwards, Mavourneen and Dr. Tom Kravis (Mavourneen in satm-stnped chiffon by Bill Blass), Jane and John Murphy, Connie and Bob Golden, Esther and Dr. Edmund Keeney, Richel and Tawfiq Khoury (Richel in strapless black by Nma Ricci), the Dan Mulvihills, Jane and Rear Adm. Herb Stoecklein, and Jeanne Jones with Dick Duffy and the Ted Geisels. (Audrey and her best- elling, Puhtzer Prize.winning spouse are off to Washing- ton soon for a White House dinner.) When the bandleader handed out his traditional Lester

/_ USD Computer Camp schedules 4 residential summer sessiOJlV / The University of San Diego Schk'o~ ~nt?nuing Education will concluctacomputer camp for girls and boys ages 10 to 15 this summer. This residential camp will have four two-week sessions: June 17-29, July 1- 13, July 15-27 and July 29-Aug. 10. The camp will feature a hands-on approach to com- . puter literacy. Three levels of instruction, taught by ex- perienced computer educators, will be offered: intro- ductory, intermediate and advanced. Testing will be provided at the beginning of each camp session to de- termine the level of instruction appropriate to each camper. In addition, campers will have a chance to develop skills in a wide range of sports activities, which may in- clude soccer, basketball, volleyball, softball, swimming and field sports, all supervised by camp counselors. Jr

Doug Manchester sported a Lanin hat, and his black- and-white bow tie was a conversation piece, too. (It was a subtle plug for the upcoming Jewel Ball - "White Tiger & Tails" - planned by chairwoman Carol Baumer, who saw to it that her husband and Manchester and Jon Bilger all wore tiger-striped ties to the party.) Dr. Irene Palmer, dean of the Hahn School of Nursing, voiced brief but eloquent thanks ("I never knew we had so many friends!"), and Manchester proposed a toast to the memory of Muriel Hahn, "the inspiration and driving force" behind the nursing school named for her husband. "Muriel Hahn is here tonight in spirit," said Manches- ter. "That's why we're having such a good time." • • • T he Padres' Steve Garvey was master of ceremo- nies for a fashion/luncheon that packed the Inter- Continental ballroom earlier in the week. It was the annual salute to San Diego club women staged by the All Hallows Women's Guild. Saks Fifth Avenue supplied the clothes, and Marianne Gotfredson and Helen Pickard were the women in charge. The models of honor - representing organizations like Children's Hospital, Junior League, Las Damas Latinas, Globe Guilders, and more - included Tish Breihan, Katy McKay, Nell Waltz, Sue Teasdel, Maude Butler, Laurie Blackington, Dawn Mattiesen, Karen Nelson and Donna

Betsy andDougManchester, honorary clwrrnen

Doyle.

Others in the spotlight were Juanita Whisenand, Beatriz Mort, Nancy Johnson, Thania Griffiths, Carol Shively, Molly Loomis, Carol Tuggey, Susan Garfin, Alli- son Tibbitts, Reba Brophy and Kit Parkinson with her daughter, Christel (representing the National Charity League and Ticktockers). Ginny Gistaro was an honored volunteer, and so were Leonor Craig, Victoria McIntyre, Viola Rusnak, Jean Watson, Nancy Ogilvie, Maria Taggart and Yolanda Walther-Meade.

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