News Scrapbook 1988

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

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) MAR 5 1988 Jlll~n '• P. c. a

San Diego, CA (San Diego C~.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) f AR 4 1988

San Diego; CA (San Diego C~.) San Diego Union (Cir . D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) ~AR

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

S, n Di .go, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir . D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) MAR 4

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

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Concert upd te: English guitar virtuoso Richard Thompso_n, w_ho ts E lvis Costello, David Lindley coun h' 'l and Don Henley among is mos f rform at La Paloma ardent ans, pe T' k ts for the Theater March 20 •-• ic e Alarm';March 22 concert at USDJO on sale today at all Ticketmaster outlets· tickets go on sale tomorrow for Whitesnake's April 12 Sports Arena concert.

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P, C. 8 Est. I 888 Crew _ SDSU's novic~ ~igbts team finished in 6:31 to wmm the Parker Cup races in ~ewport Beach. In dual-meet racing, the UCSD women's varsity eights beat USC's challenger by three seconds in San Pedro. The men's freshman eights Ateam also won. Th.e USQ.. men's team won every event on Mission Bay against Cal Poly-Sa? Luis Obisbo, but the ~w<>~ s tea.Jll:!on only on::::c_;;e·- ~-;_..~ ~ -

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Notea - The first Division I Volvo Tennis/Collegiate Rankings are out. San Diego State's women are tied for 16th with Arizona State. Sen- ior Jennifer Larking of the Universi- ty of San Diego is 45th in singles. SDSU freshman Julie Tullberg is 48th. USD's men are 22nd ... Anyone interested m coaching San Diego's representatives in the National City boys' and girls' team competition in August should send a resume to Bill Scott of The Bishop's School at 7607 La Jolla Blvd., 92037. Phone: 459- ,...,.

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/ rennia - Steven Jung won in No. 1 singles and No. 1 doubles to help Nebraska defeat USD, 5-3, in the con- solation semifinalsor the College Team Championships at Corpus Christi, Texas ... Monika Wanika de- feated Kristin Hill 6-1, 6-1 in No. 1 singles to lead Oklahoma State's women past SDSU, 6-3, in the ITCA National Indoor Championships in Madison, Wis. )._ C( ?, .....--;--:___;c..----~ ~~-

. ./ Canad11n environmentalial Wayne s speaks on "Sustainab e Develo m Our Common Future .. 7·30 P-"l· March 5 a omon Lecture Hall. Information. 565 _ 7167 , International Women's Day features , • ists discussmg different aspects or six pan~l- tOda • · . women m ,., Y s society, mcluding women and pu bl' i e, women and education women and ic ployment, and women, he~lth and Alose'"i P m. March 8, Fletcher Reception Area US Law School. Information: 2 83 • 8222 _ .:f'tt>-!!f P ent: S I '

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USO - Fine 1rt1 dep1rtm nt prt1tnl1 y guitarists Lisa Smith Anthony Lu• pica nd John Lyon. 8 pm. March 5, Sacred Hea,t Hall room 104. Tickets. general, $7, chlldr n nd senior citizens, $3. Inf mat1on. 260-4456 / co

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co .) San Diego Union (Ci r . D. 217,089) (Cir . S. 341,840) AR 6 19

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) S,1n Diego Union (Cir . D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840)

Jlll.11'• "· C B ,u, o d-s ooting USD sted by St. Mary's Et1

_COLLEGE !BASKETBALL/THE WEST

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little bit irritated 1s a nice way to put it," USO coach Hank Egan said. "I have never coached a team that gave this bad of a performance this late in th a on. ' Walking off the floor today I was tell.ng myself it's time to evaluate where we stand, where we want to go as a program and bow we're going to get it done. I'm talking about ev~ry- thing and everybody. The ball might not go in the basket and we might turn 1t over, but we can compete. We can have that fire m the eyes and go after tl I don't know why it wasn't there today. "All of it is on me . . to get a performance like this, tbls late in the season, we have to look at coaching. personnel, everything!' The Toreros, although seeded sev- enth In the eight-team tournament after going 11-16 overall and 3-11 in the WCAC, had come to Toso Pavi• See WCAC on Page -7

SANTACLARA SD didn't get a hot off m th S<'Cond ha fof yester- day' West Coast Athletic Conference Toumam nt opener until it had com• milted three turnovers and 3:53 had el p d When the Tor ro ' first hot came, from thr point range it did not la din the k t It took U D 5 45 to get its first ba kct of the game and 613 to score In th econd half. Th Toreros m1 th ir fir t even shots of the game and. not surprisingly, lost, 68· 48, to t. Mary's and were eliminated from the tournament The Gaels, who will play tournament host Santa Clara tonight at 5 m one semifinal had lost to USD by five m Moraga and won by on in San Diego durmg the regular eason "There is no reason to have a 20- point ballgame here. To say I'm a

Palo Alto, CA (Sant Clara Co ) Penm ula Tim Trlbun (Cir D. 60,288) (Cir, S 60,011)

MAR 6 - 1988

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Loyola and Pepperdine join CU, St. Mary's in semis

lead nrter Portlnnd gave the na- tion's I 8th-ranked team fits throughout the first half. The game remained close through the middle of the second halt before the Qons, No. 6 in the nution In scoring, eventually in- crensed their le d to 17 points. "We got our verage," Loyola conch Paul We head said of his team' offensive performance. We ·thead explained his team's !neon lstent play in the first half and agam In the closing mlnuteli. "We played h rd at times and dazed at times," be said. "Especial- ly, when we got the lead. Toe pace or the game was typical, but nor- mally we do a better job offensive- ly." Toe PIiots kept the game close by breaking Loyola' full-court press. Portland coach Larry Steele, n former NBA player, was pleased with his team's performance after finishing his first eason as a coach with a 6-22 record. ''I'm very proud of our team," Steele said. "They showed a lot of character and played their hearts out." Hank Gathers led the Uons with

Associated Press Dan Curry (25) of St. Mary's takes control between USD's Marty Munn (left), Randy Thompsor WCAC: Toreros lifeless in 20-point loss to Gaels Continued from H-1

Paul Westhead ... "We got our average."

5:46 left in the first half, tied the score at 23 with two minutes remain- ing. But the Gaels scored the next five points, including a 30-footer at the buzzer by forward Robert Hau- gen, to take a 28-23 halftime lead. St. Mary's scored the first 10 of the second half, and the rout was on. The Gaels, sixth nationally in scoring de- fense (586 per game), were led by Haugen (17 points and forward Erick Newman (13). St. Mary's was 22-of-47 from the floor. Junior guard Efrem Leonard led USD with 19 points. do it because of Hank Egan," Gaels coach Lynn Nance said. "Hank is one of the top coaches in the country, and he's done more with less talent than anybody I know. This year he had a very, very young team and still he did a lot with it. "I know he's feeling bad right now, but I'm sure his kids learned a heck of a lesson from this game. Knowing Hank, I wouldn't want to be the first team they play next year." In other games: Loyola Marymount 110, Port- land 104 - Top-seeded LMU, al- though extending the nation's longest winning streak to 22 and scoring 100 or more for the 2oth time this season, was unable to pull a •ay from eighth- seeded Portland (6-22). Center Hank Gathers led the 18th-ranked Lions

(25-3) with 33 points. Teammate Bo Kimble, overcoming a 1-for-12 first- half shooting performance, scored 23. Adam Simmons led Portland with 28. Santa Clara 90, USF 88 - Dan Weiss hit two free throws with 55 seconds remaining and the score tied at 86, and Mitch Burley sank two with 13 seconds left for third-seeded Santa Clara (19-9). Sixth-seeded USF {13-15) was Jed by center Mark McCathrion, who scored 20 in 22 min- utes of play.

Pepperdine 81, Gonzaga 70 - Center Levy Middlebrooks, the league's player of the year, scored 22 for the Waves (17-11). Forward Tom Lewis scored 17 to help set up to- night's 7 o'clock game with Loyola. In two previous games with the Lions, the Waves were defeated 107- 95 and 142-127. Gonzaga (16-12) was seeded fifth. was down by four to the fourth-seed- ed Waves at the half. The Bulldogs were led by forward Danny Roe's 22 points and guard Doug Spradley's 17.

lion here reiuvenated after beating Pepperdine and playing Loyola Mar• ymount tough a week ago. They also had taken heart in their tournament draw, knowing they were matched well against No. 2 St. Mary's (18-8, 9- 5 entering the post-season), All that went sour, however, when USD's offense fell apart: • Senio orwa arty unn, the Toreros· leading scorer who had 24 ' · ts in too~in SL Mary's, scored six yesterday and was .3-for-11 from the floor (USD was 19-for-51). • Senior center Jim Pelton, count- ed on heavily inside because of USD's many freshmen and all-too-shy shooting forwards, freshmen Randy Thompson and John Sayers (a com- bined 1-for-2 from the field), also scored six. • Junior guard Danny Means, the Toreros' best player, was benched for the final 8:31 for failing to mea- sure up to Egan's playmaking stand- ards. "I knew what was coming in the locker room when the game was over," said Means, who had seven points. "Coach Egan was upset and ashamed. I know he was very dis- couraged. He was even past the point of yelling and screaming." Egan, dismayed by his team's Jack of emotion, said, "We weren't in the ballgame at any time in the second half. This one was over early." The Toreros, trailing by 23-11 with

33 points, Bo Kimble scored 23 and Corey Gaines had 20. Adam Sim• mons led the Pllots with 28 points and teammate Gaffney Adolphus contributed 23. San Diego, the defending WCAC reguiiii'mson champion, trailed St. Mary's at halftime, 28·23. Robert Haugen led the Gaels with 17 points, followed by former Riordan High star Erick Newman's 13 and Dan Curry's 12. Former Bel- larmine Prep star John Sayers, the conference's freshman of the year, was held to two points.

"We were in a position to wi.j)C them out in the first half and couldn't ~ ~-------------- -----------•- 111111

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