News Scrapbook 1988
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217 089) (Cir. S. 341,840) APR1 O 1988
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,092)
San Diego, Ca lif. Southern Cross (Cir. W. 27,500) APR 8 198
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--'------- UCSD sweeps Whittier; Nowak strikes out · 8 UCSD junior Rick Nowak struck , us ark Graffiti had both out 18 1n the second game to help the gcime-winning RBI in Loyola Mar- ourth-ranked Tritons sweep Whit- ymount's sweep of the host Toreros, tier, 4-3 and 15-2, in a Division III 6-5 and 5-4, in a Western Coast Ath- double-header yesterday at UCSD. letic Conference double-header. The Tritons are 20-9. Graffiti doubled in three runs off re- Henry Jimenez' seventh-inning liever Lou Skertich in the seventh for tnple drove in Brian Crawford with Loyola in the first game. His two-run the winning run in the first game. single beat Skertich (2-6) in the sev- Winner Dave Adamson (4-1) pitched enth of the second. Reliever Darryl a complete game. Scott (7-2) won twice. USO (17-22, 2-9) Right-hander Nowak (6-3) allowed and the Lions (34-9, 7-0) play again 5, 12-2) defeated Grossmont, 5-2. Winner Paul Anderson (6-1) pitched 6½ innings . . Ron Howard had four of Palomar's 19 hits m the Comets' 14-0 rout of host San Diego City. Tino Lozano hit a two-run homer and Fallbrook High alum Mark Ring- kamp (7-4) pitched a five-hitter. The Comets are 19-8 and 13-1: the Knight. are 6-20 and 4-10.
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7 ~U.SMchoolofLaw names acting dean ALCALA PARK- Grant H. Morris, a UniversityofSan Diego lawprofessor since _1 973, has been named acting de'W,eJA:he School of Lawbeginning Aug 1-:1...'7':J~ USD President Author E. Hughes has formed adean's searchcommittee expected to convene in April for the first time. Plans are to have a new law dean appointed by July 1989, according to a USD news release.
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four hits and struck out the side in the third, seventh and ninth innings to win the second game Jim Mar- linez had four RBI, including a three- run homer in the third. Whittier is 9-
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celed a Western Athletic Conference double-header with Air Force m Col- orado Springs. The teams will try to
Pacific Coast Conference - Mira Mesa High alum Essex Bur- ton's fourth-inning triple drove in two runs as host San Diego Mesa (21·
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play two games today.
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Mission Valley , CA {San Diego Co.) San Diego Weekly News {Cir. 2 x M. 20,000) APR 131988
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,092)
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Tribune photo by Stan Honda
JUDGE RE DY f OR ECOND HEARING OF PEYER CASE opcrlor Court Judge RI hard Hurrmao, at orrice de k, di cu es his thoughts on the law !SS ne ne IW Huffman in spotlight again
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P, C. B F.,1, 1888 Y'Aprtt 13--Father Lawrence Martin Jenco, who was abducted in 1985 by Shiite Moslem extremists in Beirut, will discuss .his . 19 months of captivity and the current s1tuat1on in Lebanon at USO's Center F_orum~ p.m./ Info.. 260-4682 ·- 'r l C:, /
U~Jobe graduate drama • degree program, will direct. "The Foreigner," by Larry Shue, a play about a group of devious characters dealing wi_d1 a stranger who (they thmk) knows no English, run • through April 17 at Lamb's Players Theatre. The production is directed by Kerry Cederberg, a direc- tor, actor and playwright for Lamb's ~layer resident stage. The cast includes resident company actors Deborah Gilmour Smyth, David Cochran Heath and Rick Meads, along with associate guest artists Tom Stephenson Kenneth Wagner and Darlene' Trent. Curtain time is 8 p.m. Tues- day through aturday, with Saturday and Sunday matinees at 2 p.m. For more informa- tion, call 474-4542.
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UST SAY NO: Actor Richard Dreyfuss finally did, after battling cocaine addiction and winning. The actor has revived his career and he will talk about the struggle at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Camino Theatre at the UlliYersity of San Diego. Drey- fuss will speak for an hour and then answer questions from the audience. Cost is $5. C II 260-8ll88 for ticket j information. '1 S . / I
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mtellectually stimulating to try to deal with the law as a subject than battling out a particular case." Huffman's career may be destined for greater heights. He i con idered a top contender to fill a vacancy on the 4th District Court of Appeal created by the retirement in February of Justice Ed Butler. Tom Beermann, assistant press secretary for Gov. Deukmejian, said an announcement on Butler's re- placement Isn't expected for several months. Even though the law has been Huffman's career, his decision to become a lawyer came during ca. ual talk with a friend while he was attending school at California State College m Long Beach. At that point. he said, the idea of doing anything other than working at the grocery store where he had been employed since high school sounded attractive. "It was a dream kindled. l thought that it would be wonderful, but I didn't think I'd be able to do it because I had to work to get through school," he said. "I was married and had virtually no money at all. I didn't even know a lawyer." He attended law school at the University of South- ern California, graduating in 1965. After passing the bar m 1966, bis best offer came from the state attor- ney general's office, so Huffman started his career as a prosecutor Please see HUFFMAN: B-5, Col. I
La Jolla, CA {San Diego Co.) La Jolla Light (Cir. W. 9,040) !\PR 7 1988
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union {Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840)
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~ G'M• etting arned," George Bernard Shaw's comedy about a young bride-to-be who \\ants to call off the wedding after she finds a pamphlet th at_ ex~l~ns what legal rights she is giving up, will be staged through April 9 b USD (iC, graguate S!!!9ents in the Sacred Heart Hall Perfornfing Arts Center of USD. Craig Noel, The Old Globe Theatre's executive producer and architect of the --
San Diego, CA (San Diego.Co.) San Diego Log (Cir. W. 40,000)
NCAA event ahead ~?l~.~:~ _L_a_rkJ_i_n_g_ discuss it. She's afraid she'll jinx her LOCAL TENNIS chances. What she's reluctant to say is that CHRIS CLAREY 1988 might be her year - finally.
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"She was very unhappy and look- ing for a place in Southern Califor- nia," said Stephens, who took over the program in 1984. "It didn't take a lot to convince her. I think she real- ized she'd get a pretty good educa- tion. I also think she realized I'd keep my promise to improve USD tennis and make the schedule tougher." There were some adjustments to be made, however. "It was totally, completely differ- ent from Oklahoma," Larking said. "At Oklahoma, if you're an athlete, you get the royal treatment. You don't have to wait in line for books or worry about classes. The athletic de- partment secretary punches you into the computer weeks before every- body else. At USO, the school's so much smaller. Plus, they don't take athletics anywhere near as seriously. Academics are a big deal. Athletes wait in lines here." Larking played No. 2 singles for the first half of her sophomore year, then moved up to No. 1, where she's been ever since. Her powerful, consistent play from the baseline has been a major factor in USD's rise to respectability. The team was 14-10 last year and could finish 13-8 this year by sweeping its final matches this week against Lon,.g Beach State, UC Irvine and Universi- ty of Pacific (although an NCAA bid is unlikely). Larking, who will graduate next month with a degree in business ad- ministration, has no regrets. "I'm really happy, because I love San Diego and I love the school and I just love the coach and all the girls on the team," she said. "I couldn't have picked a better place to be." Except UCLA on May 15. College update - The field for the men's and women's Division I team tournaments has been expand- ed from 16 to 20. Despite the in- crease, it appears unlikely any San Diego-area teams will be included. USIU's women (12-9) may have the best chance. They were ranked 24th with five matches remaining, includ- ing two against second-ranked Stan- ford. USIU's Kefi Binyamini, a native of Israel, is ranked 48th. UCSD's men's and women's teams should receive bids to the NCAA Division III championships next month. Both are 7-0 against Division III opponents. The women are 12-4 overall and ranked second by the Intercollegiate Tennis Coaches Association. The men are 16-8 and ranked seventh.
In two previous seasons as the top women's tennis player at the Univer- sity of San Diego, she failed to receive an invitation to the NCAA Division I individual championships. This season should be different. Barring injury or upset in USD's last three matches, the senior from Poway should be one of 64 singles players at UCLA on May 15 for the first round of the nationals. "It really means a lot to go, just because it's my last year," said Lark- ing, who is 58th in the latest Volvo national collegiate rankings. "The last two years I've had good wins, but it was hard because USD really had no name. They don't just pick anybody and put them on the com- puter. They put on people they think should be ranked because of reputa- tion. They see UCLA and they say, 'Oh yeah.'" USO (10-8) toughened its schedule this season, and Larking is 14-4 in singles with wins over SMU's Jen- nifer Santrock (No. 9) and Califor- nia's Karen Shin (No. 32). "She definitely should make it un- less something crazy happens," said USO coach Sherri Stephens. "I've been fighting for her for a couple years. I'm on the NCAA selection committee, and regionally she's ranked very high - in the top 20. Last year, they took 26 from our re- gion. She's really had only one bad loss." That was last month to Pepper- dine's Carrie Crissell (ranked 62nd). Larking's only other losses came against Pepperdine's Ginger Helge- son (No. 10), North Carolina's Ann Stephenson (No. 44) and Shin. "I think Larking has had a great year," said U.S. International coach Dave Trebisky. It's not her first. As a senior at Poway, Larking won the girls' CIF-San Diego Section sin- gles-title and led the Titans to their first team championship. She gradu- ated in 1984 and accepted a scholar- ship at the University of Oklahoma but stayed just one school year. "It was fun because it was such a big sports school, but I didn't like the coach, so I quit the team and just attended classes after the first se- mester," Larking said. "There was a lot of dissension on the team - half the players bated him (the coach) and half loved him." She came home to Poway in the summer of 1985 and accepted a half- scholarship offer from USO, whose team had won just four matches the previous season.
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San Diego, Calif. Southern Cross (Cir. W. 27,500)
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nars focusing on "San Diego and , the Sea" is scheduled for this spr- i ing at the University of San Diego. . The series, co-sponsored by the ; San Diego Oceans Foundation and 1 USD's Marine Studies program and , dcean Club, will target ocean is- i sues directly affecting local resi- t dents. All seminars will begin at 7 p.m. in room 204 of Serra Hall on t the USO campus. Admission is a free . On April 20, Bill Maxwell of the state oega8ment ..9L Fish and Game an arlBenz of the U.S. FiSh anaW7Tolife Service w1lldis- cuss lne recent California sea ot- ter relocation project. The two will talk about the legal and political reasons for the relocation of the ot- ters to San Nicolas Island, the methods used to capture and transport the animals, and how Southern California fisheries will Turn to Page\21
San Diego, Ca lif. Southern Cross (C ir. W. 27,500) APR8 1988
APR 8
1988
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< ~lien 's P. c. B ,,,,--- ,,.,, Liturgical drama to be scheduled at USD - . AL~ALA PARK- "The Pilgrim," a hturg1cal drama set to music, will be performed April 29-30 at 8 p.m. in Fo~nde~•s Chapel on the cam_pus of the Umvers1ty ofSan Diego. .,, The story deals with the resurrection of C:hrist. It was written by Richard Proulx, director of music for the Archdiocese of Chicago. Cost is $7, $5 for senior citizens and $4 for students. / r., 18~8
ALCALA PARK -Th;'oniversity of San Diego and the San Diego County Bar Association have signed a five-year pact that continues joint operation of the San Diego Law Center created in 1981. Under the agreement the county bar will provide $20,000 fo r 1988 and $25,000 for each of the following four years. This marks the first such agreement signed by both organizations. - Compiled by Maureen Nuesca
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,092)
from submitted informat~1/
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,092)
8 p.m. "The Be Ilea: Rare Tapes," Sh rwood Aud torlum La Jolla Mu um ol Contempo- rary Ar1 la Jolla Gull rl t Angel Rom- ero with San Diego Symphony, part ol Ova- tion Cone rt s rl s Symphony H II ' - Tr vor Pinnock harp ichord r cltal, s n Diego Early Mualc s 0 • clety SI James-by-the- Sea Ep1scop IChurch, 1..8 '10118 - SDSU "Layers Plus," Pam la Turnr , Cat Boll and M J Xander, d nee p rlorm nc , Studio Th t r, SDSU (al o Aprll 9) International Or- che Ira ol usru, · Mo- z rt Plu · cone rt, With violinist Atyze Ore ting. Coileg Avenu B pllst Church "The '609 how ol the Year," M k&-a Wish Foundation b ner,t, with R veils, H1tm n, Cool-
TUESDAY/12 7:30 p.m. - Prudence Carlson speaks on "The Postmodern Chimera, The Weight of History, and a New Symbolism," part or "Art Historicism: Nine Perspectives" lecture series. La Jolla Muse- um of Contemporary Art, La Jolla. "Tea," Cassius Carter Centre Stage, Simon Edison Center for the Performing Arts. Balboa Park. - "We Won't Pay! We Won't Pay!," Don Powell Theatre, SDSU. - Comedians Riek Rockwell, Dan Chopin and Malt Riedy, The Improvisation. 9 p.m. - League Zero, Top 40 and rhythm 'n' blues, Monk's. 8 p.m. -
WEDNESDAY/13 3 p.m. - Deborah Flem- ing speaks on "A Woman's Righi lo Pri- vacy: Latesl Develop- ments in San Diego," part ol "New View ol Women" lecture se- ries. Hepner Hall, SDSU. 7 p.m. - Father Law- rence Jenco speaks on his experiences as a hostage of Shiite Moslems in Beirut ~ vers1ty C~nter "A Product of Japan - Assem- bled in America," or- ganist Jerry Nagono. Theatre Organ Society of San Diego, Califor- nia Theater. - Jean Renoir's Forum. 7:30 p.m. -
Friends ol the Famoaa Slough Bird walk. begins at Famo- sa and West Point Loma boulevards From Far Away Places," Young Con- rvatory Players South Coast Reperto- ry, Founders Hall, Costa Mesa (also 4·30 Pm.) "Suda," Old Globe Theatre, Simon Edison Center lor the Performing Arts, Bal- boa Park (also 7 p.m ). "Folk Tales
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PR 12 1988
THURSDAY/14 7 p.m. - "Stage Door" O'Farrell School of ' Creative and Perform- ing Arts, SCPA The- atre. - "How limited Edi• lion Pieces Are Made and How to Identify Forgeries," Silver Cloud Gallery. 8 p.m. - Twyla Tharp Dance, San Diego Performances, Civic Theatre. - "The Liltle Foxes " Hahn Cosmopolitan ' Theatre. - "Nite Club Confi- dential," Gaslamp Quarter Theatre. - "Six Women With Brain Death, or Expir- ing Minds Want lo Know," San Diego Repertory Theatre, Ly- ceum Space, Horton Plaza. - "T~e Foreigner," Lambs Players The- atre, National City. - Richard Dreyfuss speaks on overcoming his cocaine addiction Camino Theatre, USO.
"Talent Show- case '88" dance recit- al, San Diego Dance Centre, East County Performing Arts Cen- ter. Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, with soprano Chris- tine Archer and bari- tone William Parker, Orange County Per- forming Arts Center Costa Mesa. ' - "April Allaire," lolk singer Sam Hinton and Jazz guitarist Rick Leighton, National University.
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7 p.m. - San Diego Brass Consort, Smith Recital Hall, SDSU. - Steve Fagin's "The Amazing Voyage of Gustave Flaubert and Raymond Roussel," screened as part of UCSD Video Arts De- partment faculty ex- hibit, Mandeville Audi- torium, UCSD. "Pralt's Fall," play reading, Cassius Carter Centre Stage, Simon Edison Center for the Per- lorming Arts, Balboa Park. - "Toby Tyler" Cali• fornia Performing Arts Centre, Palisades The- atre. - Spring "living Writers Series" con- tinues with poetry reading by William Stalford, Scripps Cot- tage, SOSU. 8 p.m. - Andrei Tarkov- 7:30 p.m. -
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"Aladdin and the Wonderful Lamp," Patio Play- house Youlheatre, Escondido. David Ogden Stier, conducts San Diego Symphony 1n Pension Fund Con- cert, Symphony Hail Takacs String Ou.rt t of Budapest, Mandevme Center Au- ditorium, UCSO "Exch nge," San Fr nclsco Art Institute, Sushi. "A Thousand Clown,," Coronado Playhou e, Coronado.
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3 p.m. - Gennaro Trio Silver Gate Concerts', Mississippi Room of Lafayette Hotel. 4 p.m. Stauffer Wind Quintet. opening con- cert lor SDSU's Wind- lest '88, College Park Presbyteran Church. 7:30 p.m. ._ 10K For MD.A, annual Muscular Dystrophy Association 10K run, Del Mar Race Track Del Mar San Diego Dance Design,, ballet choreography by Lau- rie Lowry, Judith Sharp and Erling Sunde, Studio The- ater, SDSU
8 p.m.
"Rules of the Game," part of "Top 10 Mov- iea of All Time" t,Jm series. la Jolla Muse- um of Contemporary Art, La Jolla. 8 p.m. - Toni Tennille, benefit concert for Im- agination Celebration, Orange County Per- forming Arts Center Costa Mesa. '
Neil Morgan is oa assigameat. THE A 1ES: A pair of out-of- towners on SDSU's annual piano competition during the weekend: Xiang Dong from Shanghai and Julia I from Taiwan.... Fr. Lawrence Jenco who was held hostage in Leba~ non, talks at USD tomorrow night. ... Liiiaa Smith's MEND" is going international with a chap- ter in India.
sky's "Nostalghia," part or "lnternalional Style" film series Mandeville Audit~ri- um, UCSD. - Fourth annual San Diego Lall-off compe- tilion continues, the Improvisation (also 10 p.m.).
rays nd Calllornla Girts C llfornl p r- lorm,ng Art C ntr · p II d Th atre production . Lyceum Stage Horton Plaia (op nlng n1 hi)
8 p.m.
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