News Scrapbook 1986

la Jolla, CA (San Diego Co.) la Jolla light (Cir. W. 9,040)

DEC 4 1986

l/.ll,11

p C B

r

I

People on the Mov~ "

Jack H. Morse Jack H. Mon,c was elected \Cnior vice pre\ident of the Navy League of the United States by its board of directors at its winter meeting in Pensacola, Fla., in November. Morse now becomes the heir apparent to National President Bernard Bennett and is expected to be elected to succeed Bennett at the League's annual conven- tion April I987 in Washington D. C. Morse, a resident of La Jolla, is a public relations executive with the San Diego Gas and Elec- tric Company. He holds a bachelors's degree in engineer• ing/economics and a master's in Business from San Diego State . University. He served in the Navy during World War II and the Korean War. Morse has been active in the Navy League since 1965, serving as council, state and region presidents. He was elected a na- tional vice president in 1984. He currently is vice president of finance for the League. He has received numerous pro- fessional and civic awards. In ad- dition to those, he is the recipient of the League's Distinguished Service Award and the Navy's Distinguished Public Service Award.

aridra Van Zant S ndra Van Zant has been named vice pre ,dent of finance and dmiru trution for Dal'id on ommunit1c\, - \~nt will b r spon~ible for upcrvi,mg all finance and uc• counting activiue~ and over cemg of , c admmi tration. !'nor to joining David\on ommuniti s, Van Z nt served a audit manager for th~-_-_sj_~ I Diego office of Kenneth

TRE TO BO ER their three children live in La Jolla. Bonner joins the San Diego of- fice after nine years as a sales representative specializing in in- dustrial and investment proper- ties in Coldwell Banker's Dallas orth office. Be ore joining Coldwell Banker, Bonner was a flight in- structor for Boeing Aircraft in Seattle. P_rior to joining Boeing, he hved m the San Diego area while flying in the Navy. Gordon Tudor Gordon Tudor has joined the Golden Triangle office of Col- dwell Banker Commercia!Reai Estate Services as an of rice and research-and-development leas- ing specialist. Tudor worked for 4\/2 years

Hamilton is responsible for the residential lending function. He started two years ago with Bowest. A graduate of Fon Hays State University, Kansas, he has a bachelor's degree in business . Anna Glowak Anna-Marie Glowak has join- ed Coldwell Banker Residential R~Estate as a realtor-associate working out of the Sears Finan- cial Network Center at University Towne Centre. Prior to joining their sales staff, she was director of The La Jolla Welness Center. Glowak has a master's degree in educaton and a bachelor's degree in nurs- ing from the University of San Diego. She is a resident of La J oila and has practiced nursing for the last 20 years.

with Daum Johnstown American before moving to Coldwell Banker's newest commercial real estate office. Prior to that he was a residential developer for nine years with the J. Stephen Penner Co. of La Jolla. Tudor earned a bachelor's degree in communications from P 7 pperdine University. Kelly Hamilton Kelly Hamilton has been nam- ed assistant vice president of the La Jolla-based Bowest Capital Corporation. Bowest Capital Corporation provides residential and commer- cial financing and is a wholly- owned subsidiary of Bowest Cor- poration, one of the nation's largest mortgage servicing firms.

Martin Colby Martin M. Colby, vice presi- dent and general manager of XETV Channel 6, has been elected chairman of the newly formed Fox Broadcasting Co. et.,·ork Board of Affiliates. Col y and ei o he b oad- astmg ex u11ves were selected for the new board from more than 95 Fox Broadcasting af- filiates nationwide. XETV joined the F9x Broadcasting Co. Net- work earlier thi year. Before joining XETV in 1974, he was a sale executive for 11 years for Blair Television a divi- sion of John Blair and 'co., ,·n ew York City. He also served as national sale manager for the Walter Annenberg. _ Colby owned and operated his own televis10n production com- pany in New York City from / 1954 to 1957 and produced tele,i- I sion programs for the American Broadcasting Co. Network. He has a master's and bachelor's degree from Columbia ,U'niversity. -Colby and his wife Marilyn have four children and reside in , La Jolla. ! T · 1 p bl' · nang u ,cations and was resp~n_s1ble for sales for seven televmon stations owned by

~any, where she supervised audits of major cor- porations. Prior to that, she spent six years with Iouche Ross & Comoapv, where she held a position as audit semor. Active in many professional associations, Van Zant is a member of the American In- ti~of Pubiic Accountants as well as the California Society_of Certified Accountants. Davidson Communities is a San Diego-based homebuilding firm founded in 1978. Trenton Bonner Trenton Bonner has been nam- sales manager of the downtown San Diego office of ed

.

C

B k

Television and Radio Division of Cold 11

ommerc1al

an er

~e

Real EstateServ1ces.

Bonner, his wife Diana and

~olf tflits u ------- · n overtim

san Diego, CA lSan Diego C~-) san Diego union lClr. o. 217,089) lCir. s. 341,840) otc'Z

1888

______-:-

Jl[[en's

I'. C. B

1.,1

B D: Defeated by UNR in OT ~/2 Continued from H-1 man. and the shooter was moving sideways when he let it go. "He made just a super shot," said Allen. "and it's not like he didn't have anybody on him." If anything, though, justice was served that the game was decided on a bomb. At times the gym was more like a gunnery range, the two teams combining for 19 three- point attempts and sinking 13. And, of all teams, it was USD firing away most. Sup- posedly an inside team, the Toreros hit 10 of 15 from behind the line. Leonard was 4 of 6, fellow guard Danny Means 4 of 4 in leading the Toreros with 20 points. "No way we figured that," Allen said. "The other night • (agamst Boise State), one of their guards didn't even score, and the other had something like four or five points." Means, in fact, was the one blanked by Boise State. "I knew I could shoot," he said. "I just hadn't been shooting well, that's all. l'd lost confidence in my shot." But then - given the way Nevada-Reno was sagging on Thompson - Means and Leonard could tell right away they'd have to produce from outside. For all the effor of Means and Leonard and Owens, however, no guard were as effective as the Wolf Pack's Boris King. He was almost perfect, hitting 12 of his 13 field-goal att<-mpts, not missing until the last one. He also sank all four free throws to finish with 29 points. He was a King-sized pair, in the first half, scoring 19 points on virtually every sort of basket imaginable, in- cluding a three-pointer that gave the Wolf Pack its big· gest lead of the half at 33-28 and a flying jam that made it 35-32 at interm1Ssion. Most of King's damage was done off the fast break. USO was up by 10-4 when King hit a jumper off the break, then another, then another. Tie game. USO countered with Leonard, long-distance. The sen- ior guard sank his first two three-point attempts in USD's jump to a 10-2 lead. Back-to-back jumpers by Leonard brought the Toreros from a 20-19 deficit to a 23-

Toreros gamble with bombs and get their first loss, 81-80 By Chns Jenkins, Staff '\\ritu RE O - Round and rcund it went 'iik the oulette wneels spmnmg in nearby ca inos, until fmally th ball stopped. As usual, the house ViOn. The University of San Diego played another one of those games. the kind of heart-stopper the Torero had won the first two times out. But last night it was Neva• da-Reno (_2·2) hitting the clutch shot for an 81 80 over- time basketball victory at Lawlor Events Center. Certainly, what went around came around fop Wolf Pack guard Darryl Owens. He couldn hit the Circus Circus from the free-throw line 11 of 6 vet swished a circus hot from beyond t pomt cfrcle ,~1th four seconds rema1m. g in overtime to he 'l'n,,,.,.."'-· USD which forced OT a 7 -76 on Marty iunn t pointer with 11 seconds Mt, still had a hot after Owr: heroics Running along tne baseline, Mark Manor fired a long pass to forward Nils Madden the forward who'd beaten Boise State at the buzzer two nights earlier o such luck this time. His 25-footer was :ibo ·• 5 feet short. By thcn, nobody with any sense in the crowd of 3,400 would've left. unless it was out of exasperation with he home team. "The way lt ended, we were fortunate." said Nev..da- Reno coach Sonny Allen 'We should've put 1l away ear• lier, much earlier. If we'd hit the free throw , we'd have been up by eight or 10.' Indeed, the Toreros might well have been buried. Therr 7-foot center, Scott Thompson, had fouled out with 1:10 left in regulation Before overtime, guard Paul Leonard also departed with his fifth foul and 16 pomts. Which brings us back to Owens, who stepped up to the free-throw line as Leonard headed for the bench. As long as Owens was stationary with a ball in his hand U D was alive. "I had to win the game," Owens -said. "I was the one who put us in the predicament.' Indeed, after Mann's tying shot, Owens dribbled the off his foot and allowed USO to kill the clock. Owens missed two more free throws in overtime, and because he as 6 for 16 from the field at that point, he wasn't what you'd call a cinch bet to hit, or even get, such a decisive hot. But it was as pretty as an ace and a fac:e. Moving sideways across the top of the key, Owens was off-bal- See USD on Pag H-4

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.} San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) OEC 7

1986

Jllleri'•

' "

P. c . e

1888

Perry

?

Perry-Hoffman

Blizabeth Anne Hoffman and John Forrest Perry were united in holy matrimony on Oct 4 in Founders Chapel at the University of San Diego. The bride, daughter of Mrs. Brandt Hoffman, graduated from California Polytechnic State Univer- sity, San Luis Obispo, and is current- ly a graduate tudent at USD. e bridegroom. son of Mrs. ee Perry and the late Lee Parry of Orinda also graduated from Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. He is an engineer. L

20 advantage.

Made with FlippingBook Learn more on our blog