News Scrapbook 1988

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

JU 1 1988

Jl./(f! 11 's

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JUN 2

years as athletic director at US · Now it's time to help othe~:--. - Cahill, 55, announced he 1s leaving USD to accept the invitation of h\s religious order to become an assoc1• ate pastor at Guardian ~ngel ,cath~- dral in Las Vegas. He will be m reSi- • dence at _Gorman High Schoot·l. T!~ change will take effect some ime SD tween Aug. 15 and Sept.bl,£ aft~~ U has completed a searc or I new "It's kind of exciting to · h" sa'd Cahill. "It's a chal• the s~nse that you're dealing with a wider range of helping people. fef ::l~ "I think it's kind of tune. I ve in athletics for 25 years and here: nine years;, Maybe USD and I n n gomg O . ' bee athletic director. be . t

USD w~s a Division II sch~! when Cahill arrived at Alcala Par~ ~n 1979. He was respo~sible for g~1dmg Toreros' athletic program mt? Divi- sion I in the West Coast Athletic Con•

,

ference.

Cahill said his two most memora•

'87

'84 and

bl moments were in

w~en the Toreros men's basketball

the NCAA Tourna-

d •

1

team P aye m

ment.

.

"Working with Father Cahill was a pleasure," said USD hask~tball coac~ Hank Egan. "He's a stra1ghtforwar and honest guy. He's also a guy who red about the people who worked ~~th him. That's absolutely as good

as you can get."

/

-

new blood.

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

JUN 1 5 1988

olla Debutante Ball:

, Erie Slraumfjord

BJ JE Ught

laff Writer Some traditions are made even better with a few modern adjustments. The tradit:on of presenting young ladie to society in a grand formal ball has been updated from virtually an announcement of their eligibility to a celebration of vibrant young hves on the brink of exciting careers and achievements. Last aturday night at the Hotel Del Coronado, 36 young women each made a deep formal curtsy on the ballroom stage and were presented by their fathers. Their biographies told of hopes, dreams and plan for the future in fields as diverse as surger>, the stock market and international relation In tht 27th annual La Jolla Debutante Ball, the beautiful images of the traditional presentation sur- vned. Debutantes in flowing white gowns, with their fathers in white tie, made charming couples during the traditional first waltz. Midshipmen from the aval ROTC unit at SDSU and USO, in their gleaming white uniforms, brought eac girl to the stage and later made a formal arch of swords for the debutantes and their fathers. The ballroom was decorated with masses of spr- ing fl~Yters in whites, pinks and peaches. On each table, tall mirrored platforms held flower ar- rangement topped by film reels (which came directly from the American Film Institute festival in Washington, D.C.) and standing photo cut-outs of movie tars carried out the evening's theme, "Magic omen ts of Film." For many fathers, the activities surrounding the ball were a time to get to know better the young women their daughters have become. Thomas

Social Scene Lloyd, husband of a committee member, whose daughter Ann Margaret Lloyd served as a post debutante advisor this year, remembered it as "a special time." "It's great to be a dad," enthused Paul Sanchez. "I think all the dads got closer to their daughters." Susie Bruun served as ball chairman and Anne Rifat as debutante chairman. Adrienne Boroff is president of the La Jolla Debutante Ball Commit- tee, and committee members included Celeste· • Usler, Maxine Bloor, Mary Wayne, Tracey Barrett, Frances Ramage, Barbie Lewis, Loraine Slack, Brownie Kniff, and Barbara Hancock. La, Jolla girls making their curtsies were Roslyn Delaine Cole, a senior at La Jolla High School,· daughter of Berneil and Donald Cole, escorted by . Gregory McKee; Amanda Kent Hench, a senior at The Bishop's School, daughter of Barbara and Dr.· Kahler Hench, escorted by Trace Wilson; Donna Jean Gardner, a senior at University of.S Die o : High School, daughter of Lois and Harry Gardne~ escorted by Michael McCarthy. Also, Deidre Lynn Farr, a senior at The Bishop's • School, daughter of Diana and Dr. Donald Farr, escorted by Mike Whistler; Theresa Louise San- chez, a junior at La Jolla High School, daughter of Edith and Paul Sanchez, escorted by Todd Lehr; Paige Dolores Patridge, a senior at La Jolla High School, daughter of Ginny and Joseph Patridge, escorted by Scott Presti; Vida Tanya Reiss, a senior at The Bishop's School, daughter of Claire and Robert Reiss, escorted by::~J le Tremblay.

NEW S.D.: Atty. Micky Fred- man, who was the TJ.S. ambassa- dor to Expo in Montrtal in 1967, learr.ad a lot about staging big shows as head of the U.S. Pavi- lion. Now he's expected to be Mayor O'Connor's choice to chair the city's new arts commission, which will have a lot to do with the Soviet arts festival ... The guest list for a Friday rPception at UCSO's University House would be the env · of any hostess. It's jammed with CEOs (Eastman Kodak, Phillips Petroleum, Clo- rox) and unlver 1ty presidents (UC, Texas, Colorado, Tulane, Colgate, Pitt, Columbia, USC). for the Busi- ness-Higher Education Forum ON GROWTH: Home Federal's Bob Adelizzi and Lionel Van Deerlio, the former congressman and Tribune columnist, are among San Diegans who've teamed as the Coalition for a Balanced Environment. Van Deerlin will speak at a breakfast forum next Tuesday. The Coali• tion's aim: to "promote reason- able, balanced and creative solu- tions" to the city's growth prob• lems - and derail "no-growth" measures on the November bal- lot. FILIPINOS: The Philippines' No. 1 Catholic, Jaime Cardinal Sin, makes his first visit to San Diego this weekend, conducting a Mass on Saturday afternoon at the USD Stadium at which the es- timated 150)00 Filipinos in San Diego County will be well repre- sented. On Sunday evening, de- veloper Tawfiq Khoury opens his home and fabled wine cellar for a $50,000 Filipino benefit. The host- ess: Richel Khoury, a Filipino who came to the U.S. in 1961 to complete her residency as a pedi- atrician, and married Khoury in Ch_icago in 1966. They're in town - them, all together - about 80 of

ole, m nda Hench, l:liLabeth Teel, Donna Gardner, Trace) Tadde}

t:.venmg 11

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(Ci r. D. 123,092)

1988

JUN B

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

National City, CA (San Diego Co.) Sta r News (Cir. 2 x W. 3,336) (Cir. S. 3,301) JU 2. 1 88

Chula Vista, CA (San o,cgo Co.) StarNews 24418) (Cir . 2xW. ,

San Diego CA (San (?iego Co.) Sa!"' Diego Union (C!r . D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) JUN 3 0 1988

JUN 2 --- Capa ity cro d hears i988 Jl ll«n '• P. c e F.,r ,au • Jl./l,,.'. p r D

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./ Join hands 5 4' As president of the Ur; t'teague and as a leader of the black commu- nity, Herb Cawthorne should under- stand that unbridled growth hurts, rather than helps, his constituency (June 19). The new jobs that are being created in the overheated housing industry and San Diego econ- omy are not being filled by unem- ployed blacks and Hispanics in south- east San Diego, but rather by new entrants into the city. Nor are the revenues being gener• ated by new growth being spent in low-income neighborhoods and the out-migration of the poor and disad- vantaged. In contrast, the Quality of Life initiative gives preference to af- fordable housing and will prevent growth from driving the poor out of the city. Cawthorne's constituency and the Urban League would be better served if he joined hands with City Councilman Wes Pratt and pressed harder for job training programs and subsidized housing for minorities, and severed his well-publicized con- nection with the misnamed Commit- tee for a Balanced Environment - a front group for the development and banking industry whose sole purpose is (to) protect developers, not the disadvantaged.

UP AND COMING Zoo's puttin' on the RITZ

other Teresa at U D tru tee and a Mi sionarie, of Char,ty co-worker. J"iguercdo, who has known \!other feresa ince her visit to

RITZ, the fifth annual Rendezvous in the Zoo gala, will have guests tal~- iig to the animals June ~8. Th~ _tradi- tionally sold-out black-tie (or Jungle elegance") party will benefit a new habitat on Bird and Primate Mesa for the zoo's gorillas. Cocktail hour is 7 p.m. Hosted drinks . and ho~s d'oeuvres will be served m the Chil- dren's Zoo. A seated dinner done by J.B. Catering will be served at 8:30. Dance music will be hy Gene Hartwell's Special Events and the Cradit Union. Jan Madigan is chair- man. Tickets are $250 each, $5,000 for a special box seating 10. For more information, phone 291-1133 or 231- • 1515. San Diego Oceans Foundation will host its annual dinner dance and auc- tion June 24 in San Diego Marriott Hotel. Cocktails will he served at 5:30 on the docks of the hotel's marina, where Stars & Stripes and other boats will be displayed. A seafood hors d'oeuvres buffet and silent auc- tion will precede the 8 ~.m. dinner. A live auction, prize drawing and ~anc- ing follow. Proceeds ~ill ~eneflt ~he Univgsity of San _Diego s marme studies program. Tickets are $125 each. For more information, phone 237-1221.

an Diego 28 years ago, praised her for re ohing to lect\e a se~ure po ition to go' out into the \)um, and try to help the poor. In introducmg her, Figueredo aid, '' 'he i an example to C\CI'} one ID 1hc \\Orld " "\!other fere,a saw poverty and decided that she must do somcthmg about it," she ,aid Mother Teresa. who heads the Ii ion.me ot Chant>, nmvea hortl} Iler chedulc and ...,,,, gr,cccd w11h \\<1vc from a l:rO\\d ot young and old. In traditional Indian garb, Mother Teresa, thin ,ind v.cathercd, addressed issues ra~ing the Roman Catholic ( hurch today 11110 t immediately, she took a tirn stand against abortion. \burtion, according to Mother l ere .1, destroys bo1h the life of 1h cluld and the comc1cncc of the mother.

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San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.~ San Diego Business Journal (Cir. W. 7,500) JUN 27 1988 .Jlll,m's P. c. B

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/4i;e~~;t of Diego has applied for a perm1 to uild a 5,67 4-square-foot school build· ing at 6120 Linda Vista. The permit has a~ assessed valuation of $300,722. Neither con tractor nor designer were lis..!,e;t ~,t application. t,?V'/;):?_ _.-,,,

PETER NAVARRO, Member Citizen's Advisory Committee L,._____ Univer!ty of Sa!!J)ieg~

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