News Scrapbook 1988

San Diego, CA (San · Co.)

La P1 San I

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man Faires, w o repeat she played in 1985. "Orient ~r~s has become a standard m this town," she said. "Not all parties are fun, but people always have a good time at this one knowing tha~,their support ~elps so many others_. San Diego Charger Eric Sievers, who with his wife, Diana, is honor- ary chairman of the local Kidney Foundation, offered a simpler ap- a ro e "I always have as much fun at this party Express as I h~ve at a golf tournament, and I like golf tournaments," he said-which was a nice way of saying that the Ori~nt Express chugged through its The guest list included master of ceremonies Bill Griffith and his wife, Jenny; Susan and Michael Channick; Judy and Tom Carter; Linda and Mel Katz; Martha Hall with Eric Lundgren; Hilda Sugar- man with Harry Evons; Doris and Roger Lindland; Jeanette and John McSweeny; Jill and Tom Hall; Beth and Richard Benes;Mary Michaletz with Rolf Benirschke; John Faires; Joan and David Ward; Janne An- derson with local Kidney Founda- tion President Don McVay; Valerie and Mike Weaver, and Linda Car- roza and Francisco Herrera. • .More than one observer 5U$8esl- ed that a flock of exceptionally well-dressed penguin$ had come to roost at Friday's Unbcersil:y of San Iliego Deans.' Ball, given for Pleue seeSOCIETY, Pag preciation of the gala. course well under par.

altogether mu.ch more tame than the cheetah Embery brought to a previous Orient Express gala. , The dinner itself supposedly was modeled on actual recipes served aboard the express in its heyday; the Omni interpreted these mto a menu that commenced with salad in a dilled dressing, and a novel surf 'n' turf of fish filet and filet mignon. (Alice Toklas, the doyenne of 1920s gastronomes who knew the French cuisine of the era like few other Americans, once asked quite plain- lively if railway meals were cooked Dinner aside, the guests largely alternated between dancing to the Bill Green Orchestra (which frankly outdid itself that evening) and roulette and blackjack in the casino. The casino draw, beyond the allure of chance itself, was the opportunity to win chances on a handsome array of prizes. The party's major drawing, however, was separate and limited to 200 tickets; this was for a trip for two aboard the modern Venice Sim- pion-Orient Express. This prize is awarded annually by Keith Renni- - son, a representative of the railway company, who said: ''Everyone's been so delighted.by our participa- lion in this party each year that we've just kept going right along with it. It's an important event to supporL" That the event has great import (it rais~ about $65,000 for Kidney Foundation research, educational and patient services programs) was a thought stressed by chair- ' -· in the locomotives.)

casino gambling, amusing enter- tainment and a dinner chosen to reflect the cuisines of the countries along the express train's route. The dinner tables, usually named for railway stations in European cities so obscure as to panic the geo- graphically insecure, this year bor- rowed monikers from the b1Stros and boits de nuit that gave Paris its enviable reputation during the Fitzgerald-Hemingway era. The evening's final destination traditionally has been Istanbul's fabled souk, the Marrakesh Market, but chairman Christi Faires this year chose to concentrate upon the London-Paris leg of the route, a choice that allowed for plenty of 1920s Gallic bacchanalia as exem- plified by the Can-Can and le jazz hct. Much of this was offered by the Karizma Dance Company, which during a surprise dinner show first sent its members on the floor as jazz-crazed flappers, and later re- turned for a leggy can-can that enlightened some of the younger guests as to why "great gams" used to be a favorite expression. The exhibition dance team of Felix Chavez and Sandi Renee stole the show with a sizzling post-entree tango so hot that it threatened .to melt the baked Alaska desserts. Later, the San Diego Zoo's Joan Embery, who was honorary dtm,et chairman, showed up with .a black-and-white ruffled lemur,, in tow, an amiable critter tha( was

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

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~rom the ~chool year? We I, ge them involved in some summer activities from learning about personal com'. puters to building a dinosaur. SDSU's Summer Youth Academy runs week- days from June 22 to 29 with classes i~ computers, puppetry, drama, avia- h_on and rocketry. Cost is $575 with a discount for the second child. Call Erin Grady at 265-5152 for informa- tion. Build a 16-foot stegosaurus dur- ing the Natural History Museum's one-day "Build-a-Beast" event in Balboa Park. From 10 to 11 a.m. and again from l to 2 p.m. July 9, chil- dren ages 5 to 10 will hunt for polys- tyrene "bones" in the museum and ' then put together the dinosaur. Cost is $3 for museum members and $5 for others. Call 232-3821 for more in- formation. The museum also has 3 summer classes about birds, dino- < saurs, geography and desert ecology r for younger children as well as a ) paleontology workshop for students = in grades nine through 12. Class ) times vary; costs run about $30 or $40 per session. Call 232-3821 ext. 203 for information and reservati~ USD qas a wide range of youth campsT6 ages 7 to 17. "Creative Kids '88" runs July 11 to 22 and July 25 to Aug. 25 for grades two through seven. Call 260-4585. There are also day and resi• dent sports camps for girls and boys all summer beginning in June. USD baseball coaches are offerin a ase- ball camp July 3 to 8. An adventure camp teaches students ages 10 through 17 _such activities as rappel- l~ng, canoeing and backpacking. Ses- sions run July 24 to 30. Call 260-4593 for information about the sports and outdoor camps.

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San Diego, CA (San Diego C

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Correc;tlon: The Richard J. and Patncia Carlson listed among county filings as being in default on a relatively ~all $1,200.43 note are NOT the Voice of America director and his wife, the Swanson Foods heiress. I figured it might have been their oversight. But Richard W. Carlson, an S&L executive before going to VofA, wouldn't even make a l 200 oversight. ... And the Carroll Rigbter column must've listed my horoscope incorrectly under Taurus on Monday: "Be sure you are correct where facts and figures are concerned." Too late. Gael Greene (not Gail Green) is food critic for New York Magazine (not the NY Times). Dept. of Stupid-Mistakes closed. Itemized: Arthur Oilman, the SD Museum of Photographic Arts director, is home from a show in Japan. And not a moment too soon. OIiman•~ econ~mic horror story: After friends picked up the dinner tab, he offered to spring for after- ~inner drinks. And so they went to a little club where a Filipino woman sang American jazz, and the prices were pure Japanese. Three drinks: $60.... Rep. Jack Kemp, who's abandoned his own quest for the Presidency, has told an SD Chamber of Commerce delegation he feels the chances of a Bush-Kemp ticket this fall are "one-in-five." Aired out: Aerojet's Tom Sprague reports international bartering

CITY SCE ES: Id GI be di- rec or Jack O'Brien will direct a play in Russia next year if he ~nd the Soviets can agree on time, place and play. Representatives of American/ oviet Theater c lniti n e, here during the week- end, p e nted the invitation. Soutbwes irlines, taking over sponsorship of the Sea World ~ky tower, has painted a 737 jetliner to look Ii a killer whale. It'll land at Lindbergh for the first time on Laturday. THE NAMES: Councilman "8ruce H nderson sponsored a ' resolution praising Howard Jarvis and the decade of Prop. 13. Then he left the council meeting before discussion (and unanimous approval) of Prop. Y, the bond issue that'll help fill the school construction gap left by Prop. 13. ... North County behaviorist Bar- bara Brown (she pioneered the term biofeedback) is writing her eighth book, "Smarten Up," on how to improve adult intelli- gence. It'll be out from Macmil- lan in the fall of '89.... Washing- ton journalist -Frank Mankiewicz talks to the City Club on June 10. CROSSTOWN: Ballyhoo for a proposed La Jolla who's-who ("Isn't everyone who lives in La olla a Who's Who?") is in the mail from something called the San Diego & Suburban Press

~OLLA LIGHT

Thursday, May 19, 198B

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Photos b:~ Alison Wright

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otlal : * When the L11 Jolla Mu~cum of o111e111. por.ary Art unveiled lt plan for expan ion, the des1gn~r wa able to step forward, too. Robert Venturi of of Philadelphia' Venturi R11u h d Scott ~rown was the gue t of honor 'at a c~c:1:il ;c;r•on st )the mu cum. La Joli architect David . . nger w1 ave a hand in the major re true turmg of the Pro peet Street landmark. * _Black and white wa the theme for "An Evening o~ Enc_hantment,., the I 988 Dean' B 11 for the Umver 11r of_ San Diego j~~t Friday ev:n. lllg. Bia or wh11e tie for gentlemen, white and b.la~k attire for ladie~. thousands of black and :-'hit~ balloo~ dangling silvery streamers, dazzl- ing w h~te umforms for the Naval officers there as escorts, all made for an evening of el Am h egance. ong t e crowd to dine and dance to th Nelson Riddle orchestra were Alison Flem~ d Br?~k Rosenthal, Ors. Anita Figueredo an1;g an ~•!ham Doyle, Lilo and Glen Miller Bernard 0 S1egan and_ helley Zifferblatt and G~orge and onna VoJtko. * La Jolla deb_utantes Jill Finney, Amanda Hench, Tanya Reiss and Lisa Waitley and their parents hosted other debs and fathers for "T ~fats and Tails,., an evening of dinn~r and w~ftz_ mg at the La Jolla_ Marriott. The black tie even- mg was a perfect time fo r brushing up on dance steps, the annual Debutantc Ball will be M 28 ay . Il l

sta rted ~arly at Air/Space America. Club, which is equally unlikely. On opening day of the air show he . . . CCDC Pres. John Davies says, th e Harris Corp. and the • bucked the traffic to the Brown ~hinese government, on opposite Field air show along Otay Valley Sides of one big exhibit hall, worked out a trade. Harris traded a handful Road. He got there faster in 1949, of luggage tags to the Chinese for be reports, when Chula Vista use of their vacuum cleaner.... High was in_ temporary quarte~s Stand-up comic Rick Rockwell has at Brown Field, and he rode his been to the Air/Space Ame · bike to school. ... Simon Cardew, show, and he's impressed "~~: the English:born PR_ director at know," says Rockwell, "they . La Cost&, 1s_ reachmg out for actually have an Aloha airliner [ more San Diego patronage for wn there with th op on it." the spa's new Japanese owners, Sports Shinko.

Jlrn and Pet Tapp, and .Republic

Phllanthropi t f· lorence Riford th fi Dfstlnaui,hed I.a Jollan, was the;e for ~~;ner tooh With her typical 11enerosity she rived w;th c deck fo r $ l0,000 to the community fund no won er he's ~uch a popular dinner t J - a?d Ingrid Hibben underwrote cockt t bef~~e dinner, Roy Drew the or age for L p a ttendee . la Jolla Country Day ch I' atron~s ~~urbs u~owed they're learning early, id:r!e~~i~; s O uvrc for the evening. nt rt a1nrn lit the di tinctiv Ro , ki nd f arum - ~ame rom Mike De ent a ma ter of dc~rcmo_mes afnd Bill Trlbolct and Roy l.e sard' iscus 11,n o I.as Patrona "As We now It .. H~len funroe, ~xecutive d irector of the San. Diego Commumt~ Foundation, poke did fom Hall: ,:na!1ngrng director of the Oltl Gloh tw~ beneficranc . The Starlight ompan} 'iJ e, their ong-and dance. Donati?n from the Floren e Rif rd I a Jolla Comrnun11y f•und went to 1988 bencf1cian e the l,a Jolla Town Council Canine omp f Indepe d ( h . ' anion or 11 enc t etr polite yellow lab Rep bl" was one of the evening's mo t popu l~ g e~t ;c• the J a Joli Br,111ch l ibrary, the 1 own ou~cil\

Museums plans unveiled

Photos by Alison Wright

SALTED: At the Cove Theater, Manager Spence Wilson is cele- brating his 60th year as a La Jolla movie-house manager. An old friend tried to buy Wilson some popcorn as they talked the other night. "Oh, no!" Wilson said. "I really can't. I'm allergic." Alison DaRosa assists with the Neil Morgan column.

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