News Scrapbook 1986-1988

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

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

oEC 16 1987

DEC 12 J w,

.)Ut.,.', P. C. 8

Esr IBU /Azt~s-Toreros clash falls f8r'~hort of a true rivalry

onent in Boise State

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s1 ts. He averaged 311z vear econd ID the nation among vision Is~ oomo\e of a scoring thre~t. He's averaging 1~.8 pomt s~ore than addition to dealmg ou steals l~t 1- , , h I Means 1s . . t game ID Senior forward Marty the Toreros in scoring, averagm g 17 po~e1th Colvin, .usdo~is6;!k~~a~~nn~ day night against Puget Soun , m center who sprame d ade three a ists. Munn leads . ts

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t rter from last year t 22 8 and advanced to

st;rt. The freshm~n has st~~s far. f th Toreros games fouUrSoD a:d Boise State have onde common op~on~~he Loggers 64-60 eUaSD beat Puget Sound t Puget Soun .

r turn three team that v. en

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('ond round of t e USD com m 2-2. Bois, talc' three re ur

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College Notes

he'd be on all the All•A~erica lists with the top 10 players m the na- tion." Coaching stress : The next time you think you'd like to be a coach, think again. . Take the case of North Caroln~n State Coach Jim Valvano and_ his counterpart at North Carohna, Dean Smith. Valvano has bee_n joking about his popcorn and ci- gars diet during the offseason t hat helped him lose 25 pounds. According to an N .C. State spokesman, it was more t han a laughing matter. Valva~o was told to lose the weight by his doctors. The reason? A checkup revea)ed many of the clasbic early warmng signs of potential hea rt t rouble - work -related stress, too much weight and high blood cholesterol. Meanwhile, Smith had been troubled by nosebleeds. T he cause was his previous two- pack-a-day smoking habit. Local update: Former Poway High School volleyball standout Deanne Anastas was named to t he West Coast Athletk Conference all-freshman team Monday. Anastas, a former CIF Player 9£ the Year was selec!Rd after a sohd season ~t the University of San Francisco. Anastas played on three SA CIF championship teams at Poway. She was voted the CIF Player of the Year in t he 1985-86 season, and twice was selected to the All-CIF team. • Michelle Greaves, formerly o San Pasqual High School, was named to the Division III All-America volleyball secoi:id team recently. Greaves, a 5-8 hit- ter/setter, helped Elmh_urst (Ill.) College place secon~ nationally a~ ter losing to UCSD m the champi- onship game recently• The senior was also na1;1~d. to the District Five College Div1s1on All -Academic volleyball team, Greaves compiled a 3.~4 _gra1e point average while maJormg i_n pre-physical therapy and athletic training. Notable quotes: Maryland freshman Brian Williams on ~e• cently wearing a hockey goahe· type mask to protect a broken nose: "I felt like Jason," the mur- derous ghoul in the "Friday the 13th" movies.

t ning start-

When the basketball tea_ms ~f San Diego State and the Umversi- tx of San Diego meet Saturday at ihe San Diego Sports Arena~ t~ere will be the usual talk of the nv~l- ry~ between the two sch_ools, city bragging rights and_the_hke.. One simple questwn immediate- ly pops to mind when such talk . The SDSU-USD game 1s not a r,valry because it has failed to c~p- ture the imagination of the city. How can it when the Aztecs hold a 15 _7 edge in games? The Aztecs won six in a row from 1979•84 be• fore USD finally snapped the string in 1985. Former San Diego State Coach Smokey Gaines once said ,"A rival- ry? Take a look out ther_e ,and there's 1,800 people. That amt no rivalry." . Another reason the game 18 not a rivalry is that too many _people view it as a lopsided marriage. It has traditionally been seen a~ poo!, littlt u D trying to beat its big brotlier, an iego State, and rare - ly succeeding. Even hen the To- reros have beaten the Aztecs as they have the past two sea; on: - they don't get much credit s1~ce the Aztecs have been n h?rn~le team the last two years, wmnmg just 15 games. . USD Coach Hank Egan ?as it right when he said, "It's a rivalry that has to be developed and nur- tured.'' Part of that process means de- veloping quality program~ at both schools. That in turn will create the potential for better basketb_all from both sides of town, and with 1L more interest. Under Egan, the _Tor~ros are headed in the right direction. Two consecutive NCAA playoff appear- ances the past two seasons help create credibility. . . For San Diego State, the hmng of Jim Brandenburg appears to be a smart move. He is not only a smart, no-nonsense type of coach, but the 52-year-old Brandenburg knows how to build a top-notch program as witnessed by the suc- ce of Wyoming, his former place of employment. But until both school~ reac:1 that higher level. talk of a rivalry 1s nothing more than talk. . The talk of the town: The nse of Arizona basketball under Lute arises: What rivalry?

Boise State last Saturday. 71-66 on Monday.

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Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co) Times ) lSan Diego Ed . (Cir. o 50 ,~j~? (Cir. S 55 ,

Olson has been the story of the cur- rent season. The Wildcats moved up to the No. 2 spot m the country this week behind top -rated Ken- tucky. One of the big rea ons for the Wildcats' success has been the play of forward Sean Elliott. The.6- foot-8 junior has drawn pra1se from around the country. "All I can say, I hope the Bulls draft him when he is ready to leave hool b . . · y opinion, _he's a first-class NBA player nght now" said Chicago's Michael Jor- dan• the NBA's leading 11corer last sea~on. Jordan ran a basketball camp in North Carolina which El· liott attended last summer. . "I played against him. He drives with great intensity, can score from inside or outside, and ha~ de- termination I haven't seen m a young player in a long time," J or- dan added. . Elliott, an All-Pac 10 selection last season , has also drawn the praise of a man who just loves to gush over talented players. "Mr. Elliott, I will s_ing" yo1;1r praises all over the natwn said ESPN color commentator Dick Vi- tale. b A . After Syracuse wai; upset Y n zona in the Great Alaska Shootout championship game, . S~rac~se Conch Jim Boeheim said, Elhott was the key. We cou,dn't cover hi;11 with one man and when we did help with him, he', such a good passer that he always found the open man." The last word on Elliot goes to the man who always gets the last word - Vitale. "He·s a mini-Mag- ic. He's unselfish . . guaranteed ~o be a first-round choice.... If this kid got more expos re nationally,

1888

oise State's 70.3% From Floor Too Ho~or USD (51%), 70-54 Th ~fi~1ty of San Diego hit Junior forward W1!. on Foster 51 o o,rnnnmie-'fr'""'-thc-field but sc ed 13 of hi 19 pomts m the first still lo t to hot- hooting BoISc hall and was 9 of IO from the field Uite, 70-54, S turday ma noncon- for t he game. Forward Arnell ference m n's basketball game in Jones led all scorer. with 20 points, front of 6.804 nt Bo , Ida. and guard Chns Chllds had 15 Bot ta e (5 0) shot 70.3% points and 7 n s1sts for BoISe State. from the floor, and rts pressure USO was the first team to shoot d fen e produced 22 USD turn- better than 40% thIS a. on against ov~rs. Boise State. Freshman John Sayers Ber e tat I d, 44-26, at the hal f I d the Toreros with 15 pom on 16-of-20 hooting from the floor Danny feans scored 12 and Marty nd 7-of-10 shootmg from the line. un added 10. The Broncos wcr 26 of 37 from the · I like the Bo1 e State team.' field for th game U. D Coach Hank Egan sad. "The) Th Bron os held therr biggest don't m e many mistakes and 1 d, 56-33 with 13 35 left m the they pl ay with a great deal of gam . USD (2 3) pulled to w1thm intensity. We played hard, but we Gl-47 on n three-point shot by didn't play as hard as Boise State arty Munn with 6,30 remammg. did." soc1JEIT~ Season Off t~a Merry Start Continued from Page 1 chairman, Eileen Bugbee.

Los Ang les, CA (Los Ang les Col Times (S n Diego Ed .) (Cir. D 50,0101 (Cir. S 55,5731 DEC l 71987

, .Jill~.. ·• " C B .. '" .1.(1.1U1-11«-------- David Nelson/ Society Is Off to Merry Start ----..FL=--~~-- SAN DIECO-'T1s lhe s a on, all righl, and with a veng ance, a anyone who has venlurcd even the most tentative of toes onto the social circuit reccr,tly knows only too well. Chri.,tma trees have sprung up like weeds in b, Urooms around the county, to the pomt that one fror. turning green at the •1ght of another lavishly decoraled pine. Carol r~ have b n m full voice, aggre s1ve po111sct- t1J l1av1: JU~ ;,;u d 11: ...,.,. ~,, ings and, all mall, Jl's b n quite a season. The Can

mas Tree Lane netted some $40,000, much of it from raffle tickets sold on the 14 extravagantly decorated·· trees that lined the walkway to the ballroom and gave the event its name. All the trees also sheltered heaps of gifts, which along with the trees would be delivered to winners' homes the morning after the party. Grand and Traditional Underwritten by Escondido businesses and individ- uals and designed by some of North County's top decorators, the trees ranged from the grand to the traditional to the clever; in th!! latter category would- be decorator Kathleen Horwath's "Chile Colo- rado," which decked a pudgy spruce with chile pepper-shaped bulbs and bouquets of brightly colored Indian corn. But the most popular, as always, was the tree called "All is Calm, All is Bright," since a package bearing $1,000 in cash sat at its base. The event was co -chaired by Ruth Mangrum and the aptly named Susie Snow, who spent a last minute in the ballroom ·g · the gilded angel cen- terpieces just before the doors were thrown open to the gala guests. "When a group of people decide to come together for a good cause, the event becomes beautiful," Mangrum said. "Thal is what has happened with Christmas Tree Lane." Included on the committee were Christal Carter, Maryann Eagleson, Janace Miller, Mel Carrillo, Diana Morris, Diana Golec, Lorna Olson, Judy Seale, Fran Hancock, Dee Dee Just, Jean Stenstrom, Sheri Murphy and Cindy Cargill. D SAN DIEGO-The Christmas cavalcade continued Dec. 6 with the 13th annual Christmas Tree Dansant, given by the Assistance League of San Diego County in the La Jolla Marriott ballroom for the benefit of the organization's several philanthropies. decor, opting instead fo r centerpieces of Raggedy Ann and Andy dolls, the popular toys that were introduced to the public 55 years ago, although they seem much older than that. The holiday theme was present, though, in the form of live and silent auctions that offered guests the chance to buy some rather special gifts for loved ones-or for themselves. Top-featured items were a Boehm porcelai n Nativ ity scene, a pair of press box tickets to the Dec. 20 Chargers-Colts game, and a reservation for one of the acclaimed Great Chefs cooking seminars given at the Robert Mondavi Winery in Oakville. Luncheon chairman Jane Pentelei-Molnar said that the luncheon replaced, fo r this year only, the popular USO fashion show that normally attracts about 700 guests. The show had to be canceled when the department store that formerly supplied the fashions discontinued its arrangement with the auxiliary. However, the ladies did not have to go without models and fashion-the ReviJlon fur salon from Saks F ifth Avenue showed a line of furs just right for the current season, including an extravagant lynx wrap that surely was mentioned to numerous husbands over the family dinner table that evening. The attendance included auxiliary President Fern Murphy, Lee Maturo, Mildred Cody, Carol Alessio, Alison Tibbitts, Pam Palisoul, Theresa Cluck, Marge Hughes, Betty Hubbard, Gloria Melville, Linda Alessio, Rita Neeper and Doris Hughes.

D C1 7 1987

Arriving guests were flung into the holiday spirit well before they hit the ballroom; the Crusader Bell Choir manufactured echoes in the Marriott lobby when it rang out carefully harmonized carols that cheered the party-goers as they headed upstairs. More music waited in the ballroom-which, thanks to the almost exclusive use of candlelight, had a golden glow, as 1f it had been basted with melted butter- where the robed Evans School Ensemble sang to an audience that included more than a few parents. The music continued after the dinner of squab salad, veal tenderloin and chocolate Bavarian cream when Lew Malin and his Sounds of Music invited the guests onto the dance floor. The guest list included Auxiliary President Gingie Hunstead and her husband, the Rev. Gary Hunstead; hospital President Brent Eastman and his wife, Sarita; Scripps Memorial benefactor Marianne cDonald with Adnan Jaffer. Frances Burgar with RandaJJ Phillips; Georg Borthwick with Tom Fleming; Jeanne Jones with Scripps Memorial Foundation director James Bowers: Barbara and Martin Fricke; Connie and Vincent Galluzzi; Carol and Harold Shively; Kris and William Halsey; Eva Hough; and Gail and Chuck Conners. D RANCHO BERNARDO-Described by its organiz- ers as the Escondido soiree of the year, the annual Christmas Tree Lane has become such a hit that it has evolved mto a trio of events spread over two days. This year, a total of some 1,000 guests attended either the Dec. 4 brunch fashion show, the luncheon that followed the same day, or the Dec. 5 gala dinner dance. All three were held in the Bernardo Ballroom at the Rancho Bernardo Inn, and because of a wedding reception given between the Friday luncheon and the Saturday gala, Il meant that the committee had to mount the intricate decorations lwice. Given for the benefit of the Boys and Girls Club of Escondido and themed "Heavenly Holidays," Christ- Christmas Tree Dansant offers its guests the chance to bid on trees, wreaths and baskets designed by its membership as a pr~ude to an evening of dinner and dancing. This year, the tree selection included the improbably ,1arned, but cleverly executed, "Incredible Inedibles" pine contributed by the league's provisional members, as ''"'II asp, ,vhlte-and-rcd fantasy named "Strawb::r• rics in the Snow." The themes of both these trees s,.rved to sharpen appetites for the dinner of roast sirloin and hazelnut Bavarian cream. Pat Tapp chaired the gala, and the committee incl uded Rita Sprague, Jeanne Lockwood, Joan Broughton, Carol Dickinson, Mary Ann Blair, Carolyn Waggoner. Norma Hayes, Mary Jane Bennett, Dorothy Lord and Jinx Pitrofsky. Among the guests were Chuck and Timmy Blake, lwyn and Ann Graves, Griff and Barbara Hayes, Ed and Fritz1 Johns, Dick and Barbara Sewall, Ron and June J<:eiber, Roger and Arlrne Miller, Daryl and Vickie Milsap and Peter and Sandy McCreight. D The University-.,.Qf San Diego student scholarship fu nd benefited from °TJi'iirsaay's "Christmas Past and Present," given by the university auxiliary for some 200 guests in the ballroom of the Omni San Diego Hotel. This luncheon actually avoided Christmas trees in its

Jltl~tt

P. C. 8 [<> 11/n / State Bar OKs disciplinary P olicy changes :)...0\ 5 s""- SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) - State Bar leader h av m· proved major chan~e~ lil e much-criticized discipline sys- tem for lawyers, includin& the hiring of full-time professional judges to replace volwiteers . At a meeting Saturday, the bar's Board of Governors en- dorsed key proposals by Robert Felhneth, a Universit.l'.--of_ San Diego law professor appolllted by ~ orney General John Van de Kamp as a monitor of the discipline system under a recent state law. .ti Felhneth has issued two en · cal reports of the system ~ut said it could be greatly. un- proved by hiring profess1?nal JUd~es. He said. there was little trautlng , no unifo~ standard:S and a lack of cons1Stent deci- sion-making among the vol- W1teer lawyers who now Judge most cases of lawyer nuscon- duct along with a smaller roup of retired judges and ere erees. Some bar leaders, including President Terry Anderlini of San Mateo, at frrst r esisted the change, saying it would force a prohibitive cost in lawyer dues. But Van de Kamp and other critics of the bar indicated they would go to the Le~islature if the bar didn't act on its own. The board tentatively agreed at a retreat last month to order the hiring of full-time adminis- trative law jud~es, and made the decision official Saturday. Adopting another Fellmeth recommendation , the board voted to replace the volW1teers on the State Bar Court's Review Department, its appellate branch, with salaried Judges to be appointed by the sta e Su- preme Court. The board did not put • cost on the changes. But in a related action, the board appr9v~d _an additional $554,000 for discipline staff for the first three months of 1988 to attack the persistent backlog of cases. The money will eventually come from cutting other bar proa:rams or from asking the Legislature to mcrease dues from the state's 110,000 lawYers, who currently pay up to $27, V year in dues. • / j

L. A. TIMES

DEC 1 '3 1987 NEWS FINDERS

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D . 217,089) (Cir. S . 341 ,840) 11FC 8 1 987

UNIVERSITY OF SAN DIEGO FOUND- ERS GALLERY (Desales Hall, USO) : Contemporary paintings by Clint Stoddard. Show runs through Jan. 15. Hours are noon- 5 p.m. Monday-Friday.

Jllfot', P. C. B

E.u__.:: 18::_:8:_:8_ _.:._ _ ____~-~---------

Atherton is named Ci y (:oJ!ege chief By Michael Scott- 1Jr ') 5 Trustee chairman Gene French de- Staff Writer scribed Atherton as the "overwhelm- Jeanne Atherton has been selected i~g choice of the city college facul- as the new president of San Diego tf' Almost 100 of the 151 full time City College, the board of trustees faculty members at the campus has announced. s gned a petition urging the trustees Atherton, 51, is the first women t select her. ever to head any of the district's City College history instructor three community college campuses. Ternot MacRenato described Ather- She has been employed with the local ton as •·a faculty-oriented adminis- district since 1973 and is currently trator who is creative and open to the director of rnstractional student new ideas." services at the City College campus. The trustees had conducted a na- She will-take over ,ne est ency tr:mwfde search for a new president. of the 14,000•student campus Jan. 4, Commented French: "It is encourag- replacmg Robert Arnold, who has ing to see that from our own ranks been interim prestdent since the re- we have strong, qualified leadership. tirement of Allen Repashy last J anu- S e is the right person at the right ary. time for the right college."

Always planned to be low-key but jolly (the group broke with tradition this year by desig ating the dress black tie-optional; it has always bee informal) , the Please se~ S 'TY, Page 33 SOCI~ff-Season Off to a Merry Start Continued from Pase 32

Atherton will receive a salary of $67,272. The range for the position currently goes from $58,116 to $70,632 a year. "I am delighted with the appoint- ment, and I thank the trustees," said yesterday. ''I am sure that the faculty will join me in first working toward tighter educational plans for stu- dents to help them better structure their college courses toward specific career goals," she added.

Atherton the district as dean of instructional resources at Mesa College in 1973 and transfered to Miramar College as dean of arts and sciences in 1980. She took over as director of instructional and student services at City College in 1984. She has a doctorate in education from the Universit 1Jf Sap Die o, a master of arts in commt1')ications from New York University and a bachelor of science in education from State University of New York. / joined

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