News Scrapbook 1988

San Diego, Calif . Southern Cross (Cir. W. 27,500l AP

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D Wedne day was the signing date for all college sports except football and women's volleyball, which sign In February. There was an early signing period for basketball in the fall Among the other local athletes v;ho have signett, or who plan to in the next few days, GIRLS' BASKETBALL Julie Dona, a 5-7 guard from San Pasqual High School, committed two months ago to the University of San Diego. Lynda Jones, a 6-2 center from Mt. Carmel, also will attend USO. Leslie Elhs of Santana will at- tend Eastern Montana College, a DIVISIOn II school in Billings. Kr1 ty Patterson of Helix signed in ovember with Northern Arizo- na University. BASEBALL After bemg contacted by more than 20 schools, Sean Rees of Mission Bay decided Tuesday on Ariwna State Rees, a left-handed pitcher who also plays first base and 1s a solid hitter, turned down offers from Oklahoma, Illinois, Brigham Young and California, among others. TRACK Charles Huff of La Jolla said he will sign with Washingten State. Huff, a long jumper, triple jumper and sprinter, also was recruited by Washington, Oregon and Or gon State Distance runner Goshu Tadese of Crawford plans to attend Point Loma Nazarene. TENNIS Andy Potter and Scott Hulse of San Pasqual have committed to Kentucky. Potter, who considered Anzona, USD, Colo:-ado, Utah and Alabama, firushed 12th last week in the F.aster Bowl tournament in M1am1. University City's MiJm Burgos w1 1 attend Clemson. She 1s rated 58th in 18-and-under singles. Sue Hawk of Patrick Henry, a member of The Times' AU-Co nty girls' basketball tea.'11, plans to attend San Diego State and play tennis. GOLF Christy Erb of Bonita Vista said , sj).e has dce1ded on UCLA after ~eing contacted by 10 to 15 schools. The top two Junior boys in the · ,i;elson o University f San Diego High School and Harry Rudolph of La Jolla, made their decisions long ago. Mickelson 1s headed for Arizona State, and Rudolph will attend Oklahoma State SWIMMING Allison Maxwell of University City, who has qualified for the US. Olympic trials, IS signing With Clemson. Contributing to thia story were Steve Beatty, Chris Ello and Scott Miller.

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HOUSE BUILDERS - Ken Stonecipher, associate director of the Office of Youth and Young Adult Ministry, and Marianna Gamboa. a Universl of San Diego student, construct the roof of one of three houses built last weekend for families In the Loma Bonita district of Tijuana. Food and clothing were also distributed. This marked the first time USD volunteers and young adults from throughout the diocese joined forces to build shelters for poor families living in Tijuana. Tealllwork builds houses in Tijuana By Maureen Nuesca Southern Cro11

concrete floors and glass windows were constructed in two days. Because the group completed the job so quickly, they painted the dwellings and attached 10-foot bunk beds to the walls. The families had been living in shacks made of lumber scraps and tires. One family of six shared a tent. Through private donations, the young adults collected $1 1 300, the cost of one Please turn to t.age 3

the diocesan young adult ministry, said, ''I think it was good for the USD students to see young adults out of college getting involved.'' "It's been something that has brought us together," said Greg Cabana, head of the young adult group at The Immaculata. Located in the border city's Loma Bonita district, a former garbage dump, the 20-foot-square structures with

TIJUANA- The joint efforts of 45 University of San Diego students and young adults from local parishes resulted in three new houses for Tijuana families. Although the project is an annual event for CSl2Jh pril 9-10 task was the first time both groups combined muscle and money Ken Stonecipher, associate director for

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Daily Transcrirt (Cir. D. 7,415 APR 18

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San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) APR 15 1988

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S cial networking ·n be discussed at 8 managementt1 at the University' a.m. this Fn ay -~Con- Di ..-o's Mancne""'' J of §_an,_ .!...: 'l'he hour-long ference Center.receded by a 7:30 seminar will b\\ akfast. Cost is' a.m continenta re $15. * * * 1 o

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things that are helpful to San Diego, such as monitoring local bay pollution levels or changes, study- ing the offshore regions." He said the program is unlike those available at UCSD or San Diego State University in combin- ing science with non-science stud- ies and drawing heavily on local oceanographic and marine indus- tries experts for teachers and ar- ranging student internships. "We are supporting this project because none other like it exists," said F. Seth Brown, Oceans Foun- dation president. Hughes said students with the master's degree would be prepared for management-level positions within various marine industries such as fisheries or aquaculture (harvesting of aquatic plants and animals}, as well as paleoceanogra- phy, maritime history or marine management.

The San Diego Oceans Founda- tion, which promotes research and management of ocean resources, has promised a $10,000 donation toward a scholarship fund for the new USO program. A fund-raising benefit has been set for June 24 at the San Diego Marriott Hotel and Marina. "If we combine the foundation's involvement in university pro- grams with these other activities, the community cannot help but be• come more aware of the ocean's importance to our economy and to our quality of life," Hughes said at a press conference outside Sea World's "A Place to Meet," former- ly the Atlantis Restaurant. Richard Casey, director of the USO Marine Studies Department, said he hopes to bring about 20 stu- dents into the graduate program. "It will be mainly research-ori- ented," Casey said. "We want to do

By Pauline Repard [ J Two new graduate programs in marine science and ocean studies will open next year at the Universi- ty of San Diego, school offlc1als an- nounced yesterday. USO President Author E. Hughes said the master's degree programs are being created "in recognition that San Diego is a major oceano- graphic and business center and fast becoming an mternational cen- ter." Starting in the fall of 1989, stu- dents will be able to enroll in either the ocean studies or marine science programs in a double major with other disciplines such as business, communications, chemistry or biol- ogy. The new curriculum is de- signed to complement the school's three-year-old Marine Studies un- dergraduate program of 40 stu- dents. Staff Writer

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Daily Transcrirt (Cir. D. 7,415 APR 19 1988 ...Allo.'• P. c. 8

Mission Valley, CA (San Diego Co .) San Diego Weekly News (Cir. 2 x M . 20,000) APR 201988 ..Alkte '• P. c. 8 l'•t I U8

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Relocation of sea otters to San Nicholas Island will be discussed by two government experts 7 p.m. tomorrow in USD's Room 204 of Serra Hall. Bob ardy, project manager for the seat otter research program of the state Dept. of Fish and Game, and Carl Benz, his counterpart at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, will discuss the political and legal reasons for the relocation. It's part of "San Diego and the Sea" seminar series co- sponsored by USD and the San Diego Oceans Fo~ ndatio And it's free.

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

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

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By Bud Maloney Tribune :portswr,ter When Madison High's softball team was playmg iml Valley in the miflnals of the Canyon Tourna- ment of Champions In Anaheim three weeks ago, June Andrews, the Warbawks second baseman, bobbled a relatively routine grounder for an error. "That's June's error for the year," commented Madison coach Steve Miner. One wa n't sure whether Miner wa serious, but everyone who fol- low the Warbawk knows that the diminutive Andrews doesn't make many. Miner, however, wasn't kidding. That wa indeed Andrews' first error of the season and she bas made one smce for the 15-1 Warhawks. "The ball kind of came up on me," Andrews says "I should have

's P. C. B l:.<1. 1888 USD launches graduate p·rogram in marine science, ocean studies ..zq&S By Joseph Thesken Hughes said. "We fully expect that Tribune Education Writer our graduate and undergraduate de- The University of San Diego an- gree programs will help the region nounced yesterday that-it has estab- continue to flourish in these areas." lished new graduate degree pro- The San Diego Oceans Foundation grams in marine science and ocean will contribute $10,000 to USO as studies. seed money to inaugurate a graduate The master's programs are de- scholarship fund, said the founda- signed to complement the universi- lion's president, F. Seth Brown. ty's undergraduate program in ma- The foundation also will donate to rine studies, USD President Author USO a part of the proceeds from its Hughes said at a news conference at annual fund-raiser June 24 in the San Sea World. Diego Marriott Hotel, Brown said. "San Diego is a major national He praised the USO program for oceanographic and marine research stressing interaction with the San and business center and is fast be· Diego community "in a· new and coming an international center," unique way:•

On the contrary, she rarely strikes out, and with a runner on third, can be depended upon to put the ball in play. She's also an adept bunter and very selective. When Madison beat Thousand Oaks 1-0 in the Canyon tournament, it was Andrews who drove in the winning run with a bases-loaded single. When Debbie Corbett broke up the Foun- tain Valley game with a two-run homer, it was Andrews who started the rally by drawing a base on balls. Andrews, who plays basketball and tennis at Madison, will enroll at the U ·versity of San Diego next fall, but not on sc o ars 1 . She hasn't been offered anything for basketball and USD does not have softball scholar- ships. "I'm not sure whether I'll play bas- ketball or softball," she says, "but as a walk-on, I'll be able to do whatever I want."

made it easy for them. Andrews, who stands 5-feet-2, bats ninth this season after leading off or hitting second a year ago. "I batted ninth when I was a sopho- more, and it doesn't bother me. It's fun being on base when those big hitters are coming up. I know some- thing will happen." Miner has her down there because be feels the first, second and ninth hitters fit the same mold, and he coaches that way from personal ex- perience. "I hit first or second for years and then one year we had two burners on the team," he says. "I dropped all the way down to ninth and learned to appreciate the value of a No. 9 hitter." When Andtews steps up to the plate, she presents the appearance of the little girl at the end of the order, the one needed to fill out the roster.

spectators buzzing. In the second in- ning, she made a diving stop of a ball beaded for center field and got the force at second with a quick toss to shortstop Wendy Choisser. In the fifth, she retreated diagonal- ly toward the right-field foul line to make a diving catch of a ball that would have fallen safely. She went skidding across the line after making the catch and then received the larg- est ovation of the evening as she trotted off the field. In the sixth, she again went back, this time straight back, to easily get to a blooper that appeared to be a base bit all the way - until you saw how Andrews was playing it. By that time, the crowd was taking it all in stride. Andrews' award came in a catego- ry that is usually ignored. But this tournament committee was a little sharper than most, and then she

charged it more than I did." Furthermore, Andrews, in her third season as Madison's starting second baseman, ma,:.e only error when she was a soj,bomore and just three last year as a junior. To further emphasize that the mis- play against Simi Valley was a shocker, consider that last Saturday, Andrews was named the best defen- sive player in the 32-team Canyon tournament, which the Warhawks won by beating Fountain Valley 4-0 in the championship game. Canyon High coach Lance F.ddy, who made the awards presentation, said in essence that he and bis com- mittee bad expected making a defen- sive choice would be tough, but after watching Andrews play in the cham- pionship game, it was no contest. Andrews, a senior who turned 18 on April 2, made three defensive plays against Fountain Valley that had the

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