News Scrapbook 1986-1988
San Diego, CA (San ~iego Co.) San Drego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840)
Rancho Santa Fe, CA (San Diego Co.) Rancho Santa Fe Times (Cir. W. 500) 1987
Del Mar, CA (San Diego Co.) Del Mar Surfcomber (Cir. 2xW. 1,845)
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Founaei'"i,Galle,ry,_~~~. 2€0-4682 An art exhibition e i a ·co,ita Kent- Serigraphs," featuring 20 pnnts depicting love, hope and optimism. This artist has• created numerous works of art, her most famous one being "LOVE," depicted on U.S. postage stamps. Noon to 5 p.m., wee~ -~~---
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D cl orah A. Wolfe has joined the Law Offices of D. Dwt(ht W1rr)e J.lS an associate attorney . he will be practicing in the arl·o~ of ct vii litigation. perwnal i11jury and product liability Wolfe, who received her juri doctorate degree from the Univ.£rs1ty of San DJ.ego Low School in 1980, received her undergraduate degree from Texa Christ1;in University in 1977. Wolfe h.1 extensive experi- cnC'c as a sole praC'titioner in San Diego' Ga lamp Quarter in the field of crim111al defense law, personal injury law, prod- uct l1abil1ty and civil litiga- ho11 From 1983unt1l November 1986, sh was a partner in the law fmn of K1 emcr & Wolfe. Wolfe :n re ulesTn"iht• Tal- madge arcu of San Diego. Wolf. , am mber of the San Dae o ountv Bar As ociation, th San Diego County Trial Lawyc1 Association. the Cali- fornia Tnal Lawyer~ Associa- l10n, and the American Trial Lawyer A socrnt1on. She is co- ch, tr of he Community Rela- tion ('omm1ttec of the San Die o I awyers Club and is in- votv •d 111 the career awareness program on behalf of the Boy couts of America. She has been listed the .\ ho's Who of AmPrican Womer since 1984 and . an accomplished nauti ta, a member of the San Diego City Guard Band from 1981 a a member of the Grn mont .Sinfonia in 1982-83, and as a 111cm bcr of the Classical It's easy to overlook the Monte Vista High graduate. She stands just 5-foot-4 and doesn't ha~e a stereotypical athletic build. But the all-time greats overcome that sort of stuff with desire. Mascari, competing in the difficult ,port of b etball, mad up for n Louisiana Tech University freshm n Stefani Olow, a Mount Ma~ I High graduate, made a quick impre 10n on the NCAA softball coaches. She made second-team All- America honors as the Lady Techsters finished No. 2 in the nation. Olow, despite splitting time between left field and second base, led the team with 30 RBI and four home runs. Grossmont High graduate Michelle Hansen won the "I'll show you" award. Snubbed by everyone in the All-Grossmont League player-of-the-year voting despite having four 01;1tstanding seasons on the f'oothiller varsity, and snubbed again by college recruiters, Hansen walked on at perennial-power Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, made the starting lineup at outside hitter, won a scholarship and helped the Lady Mustangs to a national Top 20 ranking. Eileen Maul kept adding to her list of accomplishments in both diving and gymnastics. The Santana High junior won second-straight CIF titles in both diving and all-around gymnastics - as a freshman and sophomore. She also shared the Grossmont League diving champion hip with Monte Vista freshman Kristen Walls man event that wound up one of the biggest girls' athletics stories of the year.
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454) JA. 8
1987
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Bill Ott's treasu, d Chrn .mas gifts 1s
handsome, coffee-table book, in the Life of America." The 1; tome features photos taken a( the br adth of the U.S., by 200 p c ographers, during a 24 hour period, or. But as enhghte photos arc, Ott figure am more from th small p ynght page -0 "A Day n t .\merica" It says: Pnnted m pan ' ENTRE NEWS: The Institute of the America tablished two ye ago at UCSD with a •~ million Gildred Foundation grant to promote Latin American studie• in a bit of a pinch, appealing for commumty contributions. But it president Joseph Grunwald, isn' baekmg off from future planning Grunwald says he's negotiating \I Raul Alfonstn, the Argentina president, to keynote a scheduled meeting here next summer of "demO<'ratically elected former chiefs of government of the Americas." Among the invitees expected: former U.S. Presidents Ford and Carter and ex-Venezuelan Pres. Rafael Caldera.... Ferd Fletcher this week became the last of the founding partners to retire from th<.' old-line law firm of Higgs, Fletcher & Mack. But retirement doesn't me,m abandonmen,. He'll continue "of counsel" to the firm be started mr 50 years ago.... Yachtmg, terday joined the ranks of commercialized American sports. Wendy's signed on a the "official liamburger o Stars & Stripes." (Our answer to shrimp on the barbie?) SAN DIEGO SHUFFLE: Council members come and go, but there's continuity m the Dist. 8 office. Natalie Crosthwaite, aide to rookie Councilwoman Celia Ballesteros, joined the office in 1975 and has served under four council members, two of whom resigned under fire in criminal c,1ses.... Two fellows who ought to be able to find some grounds for convefsation: Watergate felon G. Gordon Liddy chatting this morning with Roger Hedgecock on his radio show.... San Diegans with long memories who've been wondering if La Jolla's Top O' the Cove might ever make a comeback can stop. On a strip of real estate (Prospect Street) gaining a reputation as "Slaughter Alley" for struggling restaurants, owner Ron Zappardino has turned the trick (with a handsome assist from new chef Julius Seman). FOR ASONG: Julie Bowler, a talented country-western warbler, writes, too. She's looking for a publisher·for her newest effort: "You · May Be Winnin' that Game of Pool, but You're Losin' Me." The song is only semi-autobiographical. Her husband, Atty. Mike Bowler, is the title character. But he managed to win at pool and win her, too. During breaks from law classes at USD,_he says, be bought Julie a wedding ring with winnings from pool games at the old Dutch Mill bar. LIFE IN THE CITY: Besides a major story on San Diego's "twin- city" relationship with Tijuana, the Dec. 29 New Yorker has a piece on the Marine Corps' refusal to give its imprimatur to Clint Eastwood's "Heartbreak Ridge," and its decision not to use the film as a recruiting tool, as "the Air Force (sic)" used .,...., "Top Gun." (Don't tell the Navy pilots at Miramar.) . .. Meanwhile it's o!Pcial: "Top Gun," filmed on ' location here by Paramount, was the top grossing film of 1986 with receipts of $170 million. (There's no official word from the studio, but there is serious talk of a "Top Gun II," which likely would be filmed here, too.) BO'M'OM LINE: Tom Sbess tells of the La Jolla matron who took ill over the holidays and feared it might be a common cold. "She was relieved," says Shess, "to discover it
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1888
/ Hearings begin on consolidation of 2 L~casrials Superior C
ge William H. hearings on a
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lengthy consolidation motion that could result in a joint trial of both three-murder cases against David Allen Lucas. Deputy District Attorney Daniel Williams is expected to call more than 30 witnesses, primarily investi- gators, in an attempt to convince Kennedy that the circumstances of the six killings and one attempted murder are similar enough to war- rant a single trial. Lucas' attorneys, Steven Feldman and Alex Landon, are opposing the consolidation. In one case, now before Kennedy, Lucas, 30, is charged with murdering Suzanne Jacobs, 31, and her son, Colin, 3, on May 4, 1979, in their Nor- mal Heights home; and murdering real-estate saleswoman Gayle Gar- cia, 29, on Dec. 8, 1981. in a Spring Valley home she was showing to pro- spective renters. In the other case, Lucas is charged with murdering Rhonda Strang, 24, and a child she was baby-sitting, Amber Fisher, 3, on Oct. 23, 1984, in Strang's Lakeside home; murdering Uni~rsit,Jul! San Diego student Anne/ Catherine Swanke, 22, who was last seen alive Nov. 20, 1984, walking toward her disabled vehicle carrying a can of gasoline on Parkway Drive in La Mesa; and kidnapping and at- tempting to murder Jody Santiago, 34, a Seattle woman who survived a throat slashing, skull fracture and stab wounds June 9, 1984. /
DEBORAH A. WOLFE Expertise in civil :itigation, personal injury and r ,duct liability Chamber Music Quartet of San Diego 111 1983
Worden is wcated at 740 Lomas Santa e Drive, Suite 102 in Solana Beach The firm served as City Attorney for the city of Del Mar from 1977 until 1983 and currently represents a number of government agen- cies and elected officials. With tne addition of Wolfe, the firm now has five lawyers- Worden. \\ Scott Williams, Tracy R. Richmond and James H Ellis. III. L
"We are ve11 pleased to have a 'awycr of Deborah's quality jorn our firm. aid Dwight Wor- den. a resident of Del Mar and a principal in the firm. "De- borah's considerable skills and experience as well as her com- mitment to her commu111ty and her clients will be a real asset to the firm.'' The Law Offices of D. Dwight
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Staffwriter Vince Denny
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it quits as vo le all coach after 12 years. In her tenure, Mitchell built the most successful of all sports programs at El Cajon . Valley. Monte Vista High coach Pat Forsberg rolled up her volleyball net for the last time, announcing an end to her 21- year career. She won a pair of league championships there, and masterminded a 34-match consecutive league winning streak from I979-81 that still stands as a record today,. though Grossmont could topple that mark next fall. University of San Diego basketball star Debbie Theroux concluded her career by scoring her l,0OOth point - the first Torera ever to do it. And she claimed the honor in only three seasons, playing her freshman year at Grossmont College. It was a pretty good ye!lr for basketball players. Theroux fared well at USD. Santana graduate Missy Rand concluded a good four-year career with nationally ranked Long Beach State and now is a graduate assistant coach there. And Grossmont College graduate Laura Mars, who at one time seemed to have finished her career with a serious knee injury, made a comeback with 25 points per game for the Griffins. She now participates at Point Loma Nazarene College.
El Cajon, CA (San Diego Co) Daily Californian (Cir. D 100,271)
4 4 At the other end of the volleyball spectrum, Grani e Hills graduate Leisa Hage and Christian High alumna Heidi Bruning, both of whom enjoyed excellent high-school careers, scraped the bottom with the Uniyersit~· ef San Diego. The Toreras struggled to an 0-21 finish The YSD.lmlleyball plight wasn't the saddest story involving the East County. The girls' soccer scene was hit hard in only its third year of CIF competition. El Capitan High forfeited five wins and a tie and Granite Hills lost eight wins and two ties to forfeiture due to the use of ineligible players. The most tragic moment of the entire year came when 16- year-old Eagle soccer player Laura Herron and her 13-year- old brother passed away in a car accident near the end of the season. Grossmont College had upbeat news. The Griffins are on the ver~e of starting traditions m two women's sports. The Fletcher Hills college, for the first time, had softball. And The Lady Griffins made an immediate impression despite playing most of the season with nine players. They finished second in the Pacific Coast Conference and made the state playoffs, ending their debut
1987
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F A anorama of stars in '86 .._ ., W -:ZC/!.::>---5" omen As most of us dismantled our Christmas trees. this week and hummed Auld I!,ang Syne, we bid farewell to L'986, a year that in athletics brought an end to several distinguished careers and either extended or ended several of the all-time best win streaks. Though people usually open the sports pages to locate news of their favorite football or baseball teams, girls' sports did not go unrecognized. Many all- time performances occurred in the previous 12 months. The top performance in terms of "all-time" was the tremendous success of Paula Mascari. • Wome 5B • I was a more La Jolla malady: Conspicuous consumptiqn."
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