News Scrapbook 1988

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

San Diego CA (San Dieg~ Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217 089) (Cir. S. 341,840) B 19 1988

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

San Francisco, CA (San Francisco Co.) Progress (City Ed.) (Cir. 3xW. 158,219)

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Jll~~ "· C. 8 Est. 18U /4rera • basketb llo ~ Ma earl had 14 poin ·ltnft-'Chrish English had 13 and nine rebounds to help the USD...J!2..men beat Santa Clara, 59-47, at the USO Sports Cen- ter Jane Gilpin had 11 points, seven rebounds and seven assists for USO (9-15, 5-5). Dorinda Lmdstrom led Santa Clara (9-13, 3-7) with 15 pomts. raul~

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The Rel1pH, or Virtue in Danger" - Sir John Vanbrugh's late 17th century English Restoration comedy, presented by USD{Ofd Globe Theatre Master of Fine Arts acting pro- gram, 8 p.m. Feb 23 and 24, 2 and 8 p.m Feb. 27, Camino Theater, USO. Tickets: gen- eral. $4, students and senior citizens, $3. 1n- format1on: 260-8888. ..z.C/85

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the hometown folk. It isn't even to avenge the Toreros' 56-54 loss to the Broncos earlier this season. "I always thought a lot of it would ht wanting to beat them to show th m something," said Sayers, who's averaging 7.4 points and 4.0 re- bound . "But I want to beat them be- cause our season hasn't gone that well." Sayers ventured out so he could explore the unknown, much as USO ha this season. It's been anything but ea y for Sayers or the Toreros. But they're learning. Sayer was thrown into the start- ing lineup this year along with two and ometimes three other Toreros rr hm n. T e rly part of the sea- son was spent learning what is re- quired of a college basketball player. "Coming in we were so young that we had no idea what it was going to be like," said Sayers. ''I kind of trug- gled for the first three or four or five le gue games. Then Coach (Hank) Egan pulled me aside and told me something that he's had to say to som of the other guys. He said, 'The only way you can get through it is to go after it yourseU.' If you make a bad pass or take a bad shot you have to overcome it. "I think we're finally realizing how hard we have to play." The learning process continued in last Saturday night's 78-73 loss to Gonzaga. The game had its high points. Sayers discovered be could put the ball in the basket, scoring a career- high 19 points. nd the Toreros learned they could overcome a 17-

point halftime deficit, closing within three points in the final seconds. But, ultimately, it was another loss. And it hurt. It hurt Sayers more than others. He missed a three- pointer with six seconds left that would have tied the game 76-76. Sayers said USO is out to prove something this weekend and next week when the Toreros conclude the regular season at home against Pep- perdine and Loyola Marymount. He said he believes anything can happen when USO gets to the WCAC Tourna- ment, which just happens to be in Santa Clara. "l think we could surprise some people at the tournament," he said. "We at least want to show that we haven't given up. It will be great if we can prove that we can win now when we're still a young team!' It won't be easy, but Sayers wouldn't have it any other way.

F IVE USP seniors will play the last home games of their college basketball careers tonight and tomorrow when the Dons host St. Mary's College and the University of San Diego. Starting guards Rodney Ten• tlon and Keith Jackson, starting forward Patrick Clardy and reserve forward Pat Giusti and reserve center Joe Seager bid farewell to Memorial Gym after this weekend's games. USF will be looking to change its luck and snap a seven -game losing streak. "There's still a long way to go In the season, we're trying to reach our peak for the con- ference tournament," said USP coach Jim Brovelll. "Our team showed a lot of pride the way they battled back to give Loyola a fight last Saturday. If we can continue to play with that kind of intensity, we'll win our share." USF will have to adjust from the run-and-gun approach used by Loyola and Pepperdine the past two weeks to the tactics of defensive-minded St. Mary's and San Diego. St. Mary's is one of the Bay Area's biggest surprises this season. The Gaels have compiled a 16-6 record, including a 61-51 upset of California Tuesday night. It marked the first time since the 1972 season that St. Mary's had beaten Cal. The Gaels are 7-J In conference, one game behind second-place Pepper-

dine. They have won five straight and eight of their lafJt nine. Playing key roles In the St Mary's lineup are a pair of former San Francisco preps. Erick Newman, a 6-foot-4 for- ward from Riordan High is averaging 13.J points and 6.8 re- bounds a game while 6-foot-3 guard Sly Hunter (Lowell High) has been contributing as the Gaels' seventh man. San Diego won last year's WCAC regular season champi- onship, but the Toreros have fallen to 2-8 in conference and 10-13 overall. Sixth man Marty Munn is the team's leading scorer at 14.3 points per game and last year's only returning starter, Danny Means, is averag- ing 12.3 points. Junior center Mark Mc- Cathrion, who was benched for two games because of disciplinary reasons, ls expected to play tonight. So is Keith Jackson, who set a new USP single game scoring record of 47 points in last Saturday's 118-109 loss to Loyola Marymount. The 6-foot-2 Portland native landed 20 of 29 shots from the floor, 1 of J attempts from the three point line and 6 of 8 attempts from the foul line. He broke Bill Cart- wright's record of 43 set Dec. 8, 1976 vs. Florida State. San Francisco State, in a battle with Hayward State and Stanislaus State for the Northern CallfornJa Athletic Conference ti- tle, hosts Chico State tonight, then travels to UC Davis tomor- row night. ./

San Diego CA (San (?iego Co. ) Sa~ Diego Union (C!r. D. 217,089) (Ci r . S. 341,840) £,EB 19 19 8

San D,ego, Calif. Southern Cross (Cir. W. 27,500) J:"FB 19 19 B

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LOCAL BRIEFS sifh 5 ___ • sweep 10 tennis Scott Patridge defeated Craig Brown 6-1, 7-6 and Jennifer Larking beat Kns Anderson 7-6, 6-4 at No. 1 singles yesterday to help the USO men's and women's tennis teams down _Loyola Marymount by 8-1 scores ID West Coast Athletic Confer- ence dual matches at USO. Rick Matheson aeTeafed Jayvee Regala 6-4, 6-2 at No. 2 men's singles and teamed with Curtis Dadian to beat Brown and Tony Tsunoda 6-2 6- 4 at No. 1 doubles. ' The Toreros (5-3) play Tuesday at San Diego State. Loyola Marymount is 7-6. At No. 2 women's singles, USD's Aby Brayton beat Denise Delgado 6- 4, 7-5. The Toreras improved to 4-3. _/' as

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"The Relapse," will be presented by the Master of Fine Arts in Drama program Feb. 24-27 at B p.m. In Sacred Heart Hall. For further Information, call 260-4524. Pastoral visitors training, an Institute for Christian Ministries course, will be held Feb 27 from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. In Salomon Lecture Hall, USO. Presenter Is Sister Patricia Heaney, OLVM. Fee is $15 before Feb. 20, $20 after that date. To register, call 260-4784. A Law School lnformallonal seminar will be held Feb. 27 at 9:15 a.m. For details, call 260-4600, ext. 4436. Business Update Seminars will be offered by USD's School of Business Administration March 4, 11, April B, 15, 22 and 29. Continental breakfast Is served at 7:30 a.m.; talks begin at Bam. Cost Is $15 per session. Darlene Pienta will speak on ''The One- Minute Manager. AQuestion of Time or Timing?" For further informallon, call Kathie Hare, 260-45B5.

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

Concert Update: Tickets are now on sale for Rodney Danger- field's March 12 co cert at the Civic Theatre ... Ticke go on :;ale today at all Tick~tmaster out els for Kiss' April 1 Sports Arena concert; and to- morrow for INX Marc 31 Sports Arena concert ... Tickets go on sale next Friday for the Alarm's March 22 concert at the USO S rts Center

Oceanside, CA) g San Diego Co. ceanside Breeze (Cir. 2 x W.) FE 19 1988

Encinitas, CA (San Diego Co) Coast Dispatch (Cir. 2 x W. 30,846)

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

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

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Escondido CA l~n Diego' Co.) T1,:nes Advocate (C!r. D. 32,685) (Cir. S. 34,568)

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Solana Beach, CA ~ San Diego Co.) olana Beach Surfcomber Cir.2xW.) 8 19 19 !.AU,,.', P. C. a f,r. ,au Carlsbad. CA

Ra ncho Santa Fe, CA (San Diego Co.) Ra nch Santa Fe Jimes (Ctr. W. 500) 191 Ill.,.'• , " • .... .•.• Del Mar, CA (San Diego Co.) Del Mar Surfcomber (Cir. 2XW. 1,845)

ArtFacts by Priscilla Lister Schupp

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Sa n Diego CA (San (?iego Co.) Sari Diego Union. (C!r. D. 217.089) (Cir. S. 341,840)

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TUESDAY/23

USD's mailter of fine arts acting program operated in conjunction with the Old Globe Theatre pres- ents the second production in that program Feb. 23, 24 and 27 in the Camino Theatre at USD. It's "The Relapse, or Virtue rn Danger," a late 17th century English Restora- tion comedy. Old Globe ac- tor/director Norman Welsh, who starred in the Globe's recent pro- duction of"Holiday," will direct. The play will showcase the MFA program's seven students who are charter members of the 5-month- old program. Tickets are $4 general. * • *

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/dofd-shooting Toreros smashed by Santa Clara . Jens Gordon scored 15 points f1·d pulled down nine rebounds to ead Santa Clara to a r.,6 40 . t ov· rsJ . ' . VIC Or_y ~rlin the West Coa&1 Ath Jet1c Conference. Santa Ciara im- pro,,,ed !ls record to 7 4 · I and 16-8 O\·er · · m eague f II . all, while San Diego e t~ 2-9 and 10-14. Santa Clara held San Diego to only '>J h • . - percent s ootmg from the floo t· h r or t e e. r_, rem Leonard Jed th T _ reros with nine points. ;)._ 'l 5\-..:-: gam L' t· •

(San Diego Co.} Carlsbad Journal (Cir. 2XW. 16,049) 19

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

. U.SD base~~Jla~ark Trafton scored three r~aad drove in one to lead the Toreros to a 6-3 victory over visiting Long Beach State. James Ferguson (1-0) won in relief and Mark Manor got the sav7 The Toreros (4-6) visit ltong Beach State (2-8) today. · - "}'"\ s y

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

. FEB 20 1988 '

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v Toreros run out of ammo in 1 §pootout with Broncos

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guard Danny Means (2-for-9) and for- wards Randy Thompson (1-for. 6 ) John Sayers (l-for-9) and Munn (2: for-11). It's no wonder the Toreros were 12-for-56 from the floor. The story wasn't much better at the free- throw line where the USD was ll-for- 18,~bile Santa Clara was 20-for-23. Santa Clara plays gOOd defense but lately our shooting has been ; problem and everyone has been in- volved in it," said Egan. "We've got an awtully young team and we tend to pamc on offense at times." Sayers cut Santa Clara's lead to seven l_)Oints 25-18 with two free throws in the opening seconds of the second half, but that was as close as the Toreros could get. The Broncos who were led by forward Jens Gor: don's 1~ points and nine rebounds, then bmlt a 41-22 lead with 13:24 to play. USO located the basket m?mentarily, closing to within 10 points, then went cold again. The Toreros scored just five points over the game's final eight minutes A three-pointer by Means was th~ To~eros' last basket from the field. Keith Colvin made a free throw with 1:13 to go and Means concluded the scoring for the Toreros with a free throw with 34 seconds remaining. . USO co~clud~ its two-game so- Jou~n tonight ID San Francisco against USF. The Dons lost to St ~ary's las_t night 58-48. USF has lost eight straight games since beating USD in San Diego last month 75.5 9 _

to Santa Clara prepared to battle the Broncos in last night's West Coast Athletic Conference men's basketball game. Trouble is, t~e Toreros forgot to bring ammuni- throughout the evening be- fore finishing the game shooting a season-low 21.4 percent from the field. Santa Clara shot 42.9 percent. In fact, all the numbers favored the Broncos, who outrebounded USO 42- 31, outshot the Toreros at the free. throw line 20-11 and outscored them overall 56-40 for the win. It seemed like a bit of d~ja vu for USO coach Hank Egan. Last month the Toreros missed their first 14 s~ots in a 68-64 loss at Portland. Last mght, the Toreros missed their first 13 attempts before forward Marty Munn scored off a rebound to make it 7-2 with 12:04 remaining in the first half. USO (2-9, 10-14) was 5-for-31 in the first half as Santa Clara (7-4, 16-8) assumed a 25-16 lead. "~e start of the game seemed like an instant replay of our Portland game," said USO coach Hank Egan "I tbo_ugbt ~ur, shots were gOOd, but they Just di~n t go in. Overall, we broke down in our offensive execu- tion." Junior guard Efrem Leonard led the Toreros with nine points. Com- pared to his teammates Leonard shot the lights out. He w~s 3-for-lO from the field. Consider the plight of tion. USD shot blanks - and threw bricks? -

rebounds to lead host Santa Clara to a 56-40 West Coast Athletic Confer- ence victory over the University of e Toreros (10-14, 2-9), who shot a season-low 21 percent (12-5S), were led by Efrem ~nard's nine points. They also got eight points and five rebounds from Danny Means. In the first half, USO shot 16 per- cent (5-for-31). ''The start looked like an instant replay of the Portland game," said ~nkEgan. "I thought Sa~tnight. - ·

the_ shots were gOOd, they just didn't go ID." _Ag~t Portland last week.JISD mISSed its first 14 shots. "~verall, we broke down in our of. fe~1~~ execution (last night)," Egan said. Lately, our shooting had been ptr?,blem and everyone is involved ID I . . he ~roncos (16-8, 7-4) also got eight pomts from Osei Appiah and ~oland H'Orvath. H'Orvath also had eight rebounds, four assists and two

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Inside Track/

Santa Clara shot 43 percent from th e floor and made 20 of 23 foul shots. . U~lays at San Francisco to- 01gbt. ------~-~.__.CJ

Ken Leig::.:ht.:.:o::..::.n::..a,....+-<---, Falk and Morrow alent, the Sol.ma Beach entertainment ,1gency mvolved in booking The Ma,· Deis, The Paladin;;, ,Joe Louis Walker, and Little Charlie and t ht• N1ghtcu ts has just entered into the college concert promo- twn end of the I mes,, by book- ing the Alarm concert at the l ,600-capacity ::ip,,rt Center Gym at th Umversit of San Diego. The concert, . et or Mardi 22, happ(•n to fall on the same day of the Sting show at th San Diego Sport Arena. Not to worry says .r'alk and Morrow's Mary Stuyve- nnt, wh,, ov rHees the agency's mlleg 11ccounts. "I don't think it will b • much of a conf11ct," she ay "I think the people who will cc Sting are mostly an older crowd. I thmk the Alarm will app •,ti more toward~ younger high chool and college age tudents."

Los Angeles.CA (~os Angeles Co.) Times

(San Diego Ed.) (Cir. D. 50 010) (Cir. S. 55,573) FEB 2" 1988

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

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San Diego CA (San [?iego Co.) Sa~ Diego Union (C!r . D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) FE 21 1988

Est. 1888 TBALL

Jane Gil in s ored 16 points and Candida Echeverria added 11 points and 8 rebounds to lead the Univers!ly of Sa~ego to a 51-39 West Coast Athle 1c Conference victory over the University of San Francisco at the USO Sports Cen- ter. USO 00-15, 6-5) limited USF to 25% shooting from the field (12 of 47) and moved into third place m the conference race. Melinda Har- rison led USF (7-16, 4-7) with 17 :,f')Omls.

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VSJL.J&,omen Jane Gilpin ieored 16 and Candida Echeverria 11 to lead the host Toreras (10-15 6-5) t a 51-39 vic~ory over the Unive~~i~~ San Frnncisco (7-16, 4-7). -

~D ~a • eball - Mark Trafton scored three runs and drove in one to lead the Toreros over visiting L Beach State 6-3 / ong ' . -,7..:,Y

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