News Scrapbook 1986

Escondido, CA (San Diego Co.) Times Advocate (Cir. D. 32,685) (Cir. S. 34,568)

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

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454) DEC 8 1986

DEC8 1986

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- / 11s try to get off ground against visiting Air Force_ fj ,t;;,< me last season and is averag~g Tr~netsm :::O·s basketball team ~tter than 20 in t ee games this will : 0 after its ~1rst WID: of se~:- Toreros (2-1 suffered their son at home tonight wh1l~ a frst loss of the season Saturday temp to overcome its first loss urr ~ight at vada-Reno whe~ Darryl the road. . ished a three-pomt hot USIU will play host to Air Force at ~:~ou~wseconds remaining in over- Gold n Hall, a ing at S: taf"m~fu':: to give the Wolf Pack an 81-80 Gull (~2) lost to Boise e .

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/ AIDS neglect allef«',b~ expert on the deadly di~MDS says the county is lagging behind in providing care for those suffering from it. r.Allen 1: Cutchan, an associ- ate profe or of immunology at UC an Diego, said the Board of Su- pervisor, should provide at least 300,000 immediately to organize a program to care for AIDS patients at home. Speaking Saturday at a conference on AIDS and Mental Health at the Universi~ of SAD Di~~a·UMcCutchancite what he cal e a tremendous problem in lack of support at the local level" for AIDS patients. In addition to giving money to the county Department of Public Health for an at-home care pro- gram, McCutchan called on the Board of Supervi ors to finance a skilled nur ing facility specifically for Alrf: patients. He al o"' ~p.1.$ the county, or ~ome oth ocy. to pay salaries to olunteers wh~ are "becoming burned out and stretched to the max" working with AID patients. Vic 11tchan specializes m AIDS patient care and AIDS drug test- rng. He and others intend in .Febru- ary to present a proposal to the count), for additional financing in the next budget for the County Task Force on AIDS. /

~e Ferch brother too much for USD Trib-£ sZ,fi:~ Oh, brother Ob, brother. When tb.e USO rnen'.s_basketball team wasn't hurting itself with its own shooting last night, Montana State's Ferch brothers - Kral and Sbano - were hurting the Toreros with theirs. USD endured its poorest shooting night of the season, hittmg just 40.3 percent (29 of 72) of its shots from the field at Bozeman, Mont. The Ferches, who grew up just 10 minutes down the road from Montana State in Li\ingston, combined for 39 points on 13 of 19 shooting from the field, four of seven from the three-point line and nine of 15 from the free throw line. They each scored seven first-half points as Montana State assumed a 34-26 halftime lead. The combination was right for Montana State to hand USD its second straight loss 76-66. The Toreros (2-2) suf- fered their first loss of the season Saturday night when they were defeated 81-80 in overtime at Nevada-Reno. Montana State (2-2) entered the game with 6-foot-8 junior forward Tom Domako shouldering the scoring load. Domako averaged 21.3 pomts in the team's first three games, but was limited to four points with Toreros forward Nils Madden guarding him. The Toreros also were able to limit the effectiveness of Bobcats center Clamon Jacobs, who scor just seven points to go with his seven rebounds. But U n Montana State didn't need its inside men when th n were going so well outside "They were quicker than us and we were bigger than them," said USD coach Hank Egan, whose team had a 39- 32 edge in rebounding. "We didn't take advantage of our size enough. "Montana State is an excellent outside shooting team. And they made the shots when they needed them." Kral Ferch, Montana State's senior forward, scored 19 points, one less than the game-high 20 scored by younger brother Shann, the Bobcats' sophomore guard. Junior guard Ray Willis added 15 points for Montana State. Madden scored a team-high 17 pomts along with a team-high eight rebounds, followed by guard Paul Leon- ard's 12 points. The Toreros watched center Scott Thompson get hel I o nine points, snapping Thompson's string of 13 games scoring in double figures. "We got a good performance from Madden, but offen- sively we didn't sustain anything." Egan said. USD was within seven points with 8:50 remaining when forward Steve Krallman's free throw completed a three- point play. The Bobcats went on a 9-2 run over the next 1:39 to grab their biggest lead of the contest 65-51. Mon- tana State's nine points came on three-pointers by Sbano Ferch, Willis and Kral Ferch. Montana State which hit 54 percent of its shots for the game (27 of 50), was five of 12 from three-point range. The Toreros, who hit 10 of 15 three-point s"ots against Nevada-Reno, found the mark just six of 22 times against the Bobcats. · The Toreros drew within 73-66 with 47 seconds remain- ing, but were forced to foul to stop the clock. Sbann Ferch hit three free throws to complete the game's scor- ing. USO was whistled for 24 fouls to just nine for Mon- tana State, which helps explain the Toreros being out- scored 17-2 at the free-throw line. Madden scored 12 first-half points to offset seven each from the Ferch brothers as Montana State assumed its eight-point halftime lead. /

v1~~iwing the game, USD returns to San Diego for its annual showdown ·th San Diego State. The teams :eet Thursday night at 7:30 at the San Diego sports Arena

day night in overtime 89-83 at

Southwestern College.

In its most recent outing Saturdar night, Air Force lost to Northern Ari- zona So-77 in overtime. The Falcons have two returning starters from last season's eighth-plar~ WAC team. Sophomore Eric Kjon.t!, a 6-foot-7 forward and Junior Rob Marr, a 6-5 wingm~n. are the team's top re- tumef'I Montana State will host ~SD to- night after earning its first wm of the eason Saturday 102-79 agamst East- ern Washington. Montana State (1-2), which is favored to re~at . the Big Sky Conference champion, IS led by 6-8 200-pound forward Tom Domako, wh~ averaged nearly 13 points a

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

oEC 8 1986

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ces I ad marriages in count • Ill

By Li · Petrillo t ff\\ nt r

ell it's more he a ~tructure, ' aid sociologist John Weeks of San Diego Stat University and director of its Inte ational Population Cen ter "Its the baby boomers coming along and getting married young, and getting divorced." There are simply huge numbers of people aged 25 to 40, he explained, to do a lot more marrying, divorcing and reproducing. It is the post-World War II generation that is largely re- sponsible for the increase in births, marriages and divorces. Just take the peak of the baby boom, 1957, the year more children v. ere born han at a v other time m Ame ,can histc,ry This translates to more than mll ion 29 year olds at the pnme a e to marry, d1vor.:e and give birth. These yotmg people are most like- ly IJV1ng with lovers and putting off amage r are ending their first marriage ccordmg to Jaqueline W1Seman a UCSD sociologist who studies divorce. Still, the big number of baby 1:-oomers explains only one part of that 338 percent Jump since 1960 in mamages that have ended There are other factors to consider, such as Marines, yuppies, sailors, and the Califorrua 1fcstyle. • The yup;: e mentality leads to more dl\orce;, accordmg to Wise- man. 'The.ir philosophy is that any- thing that holds you bac must be gotten rid of. ven people." • The heavy military influence, now, accounting for 11 percent of the population, mean. more divorces, ac- cordmg to WE!Ejks ''Military marriag- es have a high ortality rate.'' • A big co centrat10n of young people means more marriages, ex• perts agreed The unty's 15 col- leges and uni ersity brmg the stu- dent populatio o 10 percent of the populal!on, almo t 200,000 youths. • Then there 1s the California life-

Marriages vs. dissolution * In San Diego Count,

In thousands

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El Cajon, CA (San Diego Col Daily Californian (Cir. D 100,271)

'60 '85 'Includes divorces, nullifications and legal separations. SOURCE: San Diego County '65 '70 '75 '80

DEC 9 1986

style. On the West Coast there is a higher rate of marital in~tab1lity, ac- cordmg to Weeks. ·'People here appear to have a problem with committment," ob- served USD's Pachenre. "Life is so freewheeling; there appears to be so many ways to seek gratification. "This is the kind of place where people say, 'I'll get back to you,' and you don't count on it." 1111, there are other fartors to bal- ance everything, say analysts from San Diego County Association of Governments (SANDAG). San Diego is where people come to retire, mak-

ing 11 percent of the population - 220,000 people - older than 64. Eld- erly populations make for marital stability, according to SANDAG ana- lyst Kim Pugh. It may be the rising age of the population or it may be the institu- tion itself, but statistics show that marriage still has a chance in San Diego. Both in 1960 and now, about 44 per- rent of the population was married, accordmg to Pugh, presenting a solid proportion seemingly unaffected by population doubling, war, peace. the sexual revolution and the baby boom.

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SD and SDSU square off in basketball The University of San Diego b~ea~, a squad filled with big- but slow - talent, will c1a'str''Mt1Hfan Diego State, a _squad that packs speed- but lacks size underneath. The team will meet Thursday in the battle for the Mayor's Trophy at the Sports Ar~na, starting at 7:30 p.m Both teams will enter riding two-ga~e l

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