News Scrapbook 1986

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Magazine (Cir. M. 20,324) DEC

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Magazine (Cir. M. 20,324) DEC 1986

1986

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P C 8 1888 ·o · mphon_)' Orchestra- A concert of mu- Sic by Bach, ~~Beethoven is presented by lhe Unrvc/'\'ify' t~ Diego Symphony Or- chci;ira, with featured

but have lunches that handily fit the bill. Incidentally, the closest any restaurant listed in the guide can get to the archai blu plate is $1.96 ($1.85 plus tax) for chicken pie, a roll and a choice of mashed potatoes, cole slaw or vegetables at the Chicken Pie Shop in Hillcrest. The paperback, published by Torch Publications, sells for $6.95 and is available in area bookstores. -DAN JA~ECK

food restaurants. Besides old standbys like Cafe Broken Yolk and Kansas City Barbeque, the book features a number of smaller, family-owned dining spots that are easily overlooked, such as Ponce's Mexican Restaurant, Coo Coo Bottle · ' Beef and John's Waffle Shop in La Jolla. Also included are places like Kung Food and Garcia's of Scottsdale who list dinners that exceed the $5 maximum

and a not-so-empty wallet. Compiled by USO sociology professor George J. Bryjak, The San Diego Budget Gour- met lists 73 diverse eateries- from down-home American barbecue to ethnic, with a smattering of health food- vegetarian haunts in be- tween- where the tab, sans tax and tip, barely exceeds $5. Bryjak rejected at least 30 places he didn't like and chose not to include fast-

FIVE-DOLLAR DINNER _:7q55 Escalating food costs'long ago forced that quintessential superbargain, the $1.98 blue- plate special, off a majority of menus and relegated it in the main to mom-and-pop eateries hidden in nondescript shop- ping centers. However, a locally published dining hand- book illustrates that it's possi- ble lo leave a nice, sit-down re taurant with a full stomach

San DI go, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Trlbun (Cir. D 127,454)

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DEC 1 1986

:l'iil&QE!iatle'd Stud nls al the -~~~-,~-~".'~ Diego will present Night" with actor Larry Linville laJor Frank Burns) at 8 p m. tomorrow in the Camino The- tre n campus The event is free. For !nlonnation, call Cathy Fleming at 802

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Clairemont Linda Vista

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454)

Star News (Cir. 2xW.)

1988

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1986

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P C 8 8; USO launches holiday drive ,,. Donati?ns"of food, clothing, toys an~ f~ture are needed for the Uruvers1ty of San Diego's fourth a~ual Chris mas w'ive for its neighbor:; in Llnda Vista. Donated items must be dropped o_ff at one of several campus loca- tions before Dec. 5. The holiday drive is part of the university's Neighborhood Program. Donated items can be dropped off at~ School of Law, the faculty loun~e ID the School of Nursing, the Cammo Hall dining room, the Serra Hall student union, the Cr~ssroads or the public relations office, Desales Hall 268. On Dec. 11, the wrapped gifts will taken to two Llnda Vista loca- tions for distribution: Holy Family Church and Bayside Settlement House. ! 0 YS are needed for the 75 child~en; aged six to 12, enrolled in Bayside s after-school program_ For more information, please contact Ms. Finn at 260-4681 or Maureen McDonald, student dkec- tor of community services, at 260-4600, ext. 4715. / r

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San Diego, Wednesday, December 3, 1986

THE~1RIBUNE UCSD gives USIU lesson in humility Gary Zarecky has been saying all along that his USIU basketball team doesn't deserve to be the No. 3 team in the county behind San Diego State and USD. '.'Sa~, Di~go State is front page, USD js page two and we're local bnefs, said Zarecky earlier this year. "We're number three and that's got to change." It changed last night. USIU is No. 4. ,UCSD, a Division III, non-scholarship team, embarrassed the Gulls with a 106-95 wm at Golden Hall, reducing the normally effusive Zarecky to a hwnbled, hollow shell of a man. ''This is the lowest point in my coaching career" he whispered "An awfully big bubble has just burst. I feel horrible." ' · ~rom local briefs to ~he ?bituary page one dreadful evening. Not qll:1t.e what ~recky had ID mmd when he envISioned the season opener at thIS convention center arena. Zarecky's game plan called for an overflow crowd a three-point shoot- ing blitz and a win. ' Instead, it was a m~ing audience, myriad misfires and a massacre. Acongregation of 246 witnessed an early burial by the Tritons as they ran away and hid at halftime with a 54-38 lead and the Gulls could never fix sights on their guests aga· . "I just can't believe this happened,'' Gulls guard Joe Yezbak said. "It was embarrassing." Hailed by Zarecky as one of the best perimeter shooting teams on the ~est ~oast, USIU's deadly outside bombers were deathly erratic, making Just five of 26 three-point attempts. Yezbak, the nation's second-leading scorer last year, was 1-for-11. From the field, the Gulls shot a basket above 40 percent while UCSD made 53 percent. "We did everything wrong," Zarecky said. "It was ugly." UCSD had more baskets, free throws, rebounds, assists and blocked shots. USIU had more fouls. "This shows that you can't take any team lightly," Gulls guard Mark Moses said. "I'm not going to lie. I took them lightly." So t~e mental edge w~s the diff~rence, eh? The Gulls were thinking of ~pcommg opponents while the Tntons were ... wait a minute ... think- mg of ... final exams? "Every~y's bogged down with finals this week," said UCSD guard John Samtignon, who scored 24 points. "School has been on our minds more than anything else." " ~eammate _Greg Kamansky, who scored 28 points, agreed, saying: Fma~ ~eek IS next week and when that happens at our school, you're not thmking about games, you're thinking about classes." Oo~s. The mental theory misses like a USIU jumper. Lets guess some more. Could it have been because it was USIU's first game and UCSD's fifth? Because the Gulls were playing at Golden Hall for the first time ~his year and there was no real home-court advantage? Because expectations were too high and the team felt pressured? Be- cause the team was nervous? Too sky high? Too relaxed? How about too pathetic? "We cou)dn'.~ s~oot, we fumbled bal~ and we gave up 106 points," Zar~ky said. ThIS game was not us. It s not how we practiced. It's not the hIS~ory of the players we recruited. It's just not us." _Thats good. Because otherwise, all those backers Zarecky corralled this past year might be calling him for refunds. By ;,Jeff Savage Tribune Sportswriter

D-11

DEC' 4 1986

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Fu. 1888

Uni'? 5 Soccer Coach ame Besf in the West by ICA it} or ~,n IJtego the time.

, {d<'adden, 3.3, · h~s co2ched the USD team for 7 seasons. USD plays at the ·c All. Did• sion I Jew! d spite not award• in.;: any athletic scholarship in SO<'C'<'I'. The Tc 1cro · rrgistcrcd win numh r 19 in the We t Coast Athletic ConferencP. Champion ·hip Tournament. USD lost to the U. of San Fnmci co 2·0 In th• n ·1.· to fint h thr- ~c r ir:. second pl, ce b the l'On• icrenc.•

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