News Scrapbook 1988
San Diego, Ca lif. S.W. Jewish Pr ess Heritage {Cir. W 3,81 O) APR 1 5 1988
Solana Beach, CA (San Diego Co.) Solana Beach Surfcomber (Cir. 2 x W.) APR 15 1988
Carlsbad, CA (San Diego Co.) Carlsbad Journal (Cir. 2XW. 16,049) APR J 5 1988
Rancho Santa Fe, CA (San Diego Co .) . Ranch Santa Fe J imes (Cir. W. 500)
Oceanside, CA (San Diego Co.) Oceanside Breeze (Cir. 2 x W.) I'
Encinitas, CA (San Diego Co) Coast Dispatch (Cir. 2 x W. 30,846) APR 1 5 1988
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P. C. B. Est. 1888 Judaic lecture series cont·nues at SDSU
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CD,OM,ASF,CJ,oJ" Presenters annollnced for Entertainer awards
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A wide range of social, histori- cal, religious and politi~al issues will be discussed by dis- tinguished speakers this spring in the concluding half of the Judaic Studies ~cture Series at San Diego State University. The weekly lectures, which are open to the public without charge, are from 4 to 5 p.m. Wednesdays in room 221 of Hepner Hall, SDSU. They are spon- sored by SDSU's Lipinsky Institute for Judaic Studies in the College of Arts and Letters. Following is the chedule for the second half of the series: "Ethical Aspects of Innovations in Reproductive Techno- logy," Rabbi Eliezt:r Brei owitz, direc- tor, Kollel of San Diego. "Who Read the Bible? A Comparative Perspective," Prof. Aprll 13 Aprll 20 -
M it·h11 tnm• und th R dumian, a home.- inger and actor who went on to the big s an ctor on ''The Young ti as," will b ''pr eentn" at Monday night's North ou n ty F, n le rtu iner Awards. I o pr . ntmg wards will be former Charger Ed White, and di c jockeys Jim Mclnni and ue D hm y (KGB) and Hilly on (91-Xl. Th Mar D l , Dolton -Dalla , Notice to ountry will pl y !iv at the rcr •mony which t.ur ut 7 p m al the La Paloma 'l'he11ler in Encmita . Ticket.a are $10, ndall ofth proceeds benefit th M11ry Lou lack enter for hnnd1cnpp d children in Vista. For mor information, call 942-1901. Ruin Parud , th Lo Angel . band root d in the pre ml po t- psychedchc 'hO , ppcur at th n ·lly Up Tavern unday night with 'o d For F et. f:verybody with I collt•gc l.D. 1 adm1tt d for half pric • Aleo ttheB,·llyUp'T'av rnth1, w • k, The Mar Del n•hve tho oldie hut goo Tamar Frankie!, Department of Reli- gious Studies, UC Berkeley. April 27 - .. Canadian and Ameri- can Jews - Some Historical Compar- isons," Prof. Michael Brown, U niver- sity of Toronto and UCSD . "Glasnost, Human Rights, and Soviet Jewry: The Road from Here " David Waksberg, executive direc;or, Bay Area Council for Soviet Jews. "Jews in New Religious Movements ,,. Prof. Susan Garfin- Bettelheim, Department of Sociology, Sonoma State University. "The I egal Profession m Israel," Dr. Yosef Edry, Faculty of Law and Business Sthool, Tel Aviv University, visiting professor, USD_. La Sch.Q.QL For more information, call Paula Tschetter at 265-5262, May 4 - May 11 - May 18 Jack Mack and the Heart Attack, a blues rock group that also backs up TV star Bruce Willis, is set to play the Belly Up on Thursday. Another local singer who has gone big tim., ·s Michael Damian. Damian, whose father lives in Encin- itas, stars in the soap 'The Young and the Restless.'' He will be one of the presenters at the North County Entertainer Awards Monday night. San Diego , CA (San Diego Co.) San D iego Union (Cir . D. 21 7,089 ) (Cir. S. 341,840) 7 1988 D San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) La Prensa de San Diego A R 2 ..Allot', P. C. B far 188& ;,; LOCAL BRIEFS Toreros stop Broncos after losing to no-hitter .;?JI~? Santa Clara's Greg Gohr walked records to help the Lady Crusaders eight and hit a batter but managed a (101 points) win a five-team meet, no-hitter against the visiting Univer- defeating UCSD (69), C~rist College sity of San Diego to win the first (22), Biola (11) and the ~aster's Col- game of a West Coast Athletic Con- lege (5). Reddic cleared 5 feet, 9 inch- ference double-header, 10-1, yester- es to win the high jump, and Navarro day. won the 100 meters in 12.34 seconds. won th!) second game, 8-0. In the men's meet, Inar Cronstedt In the first game, Broncos fresh- won the javelin (175-4¼) and the pole man Drew Miller doubled home vault (14-5) to help the men's team three runs in the fourth inning to beat UCSD, 127-83. San Diego, CA (San Diego Co .) San Diego Union (Cir . D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341 ,840) 19 8 1nformat1on c,.......i....-------~ v4 ll~ri ·• P C 8 I. r 188/J / 1988 Independence Awards ~ 56 oinner/Ball Slated The Community Service The fo_rmer place kicker for the San which CSCD presents Diego Chargers, T.V. news Independence Awards to those reporter, Lena Nozizw_e and individuals and organizations Intern at Ion a I Bus Ines s that help promote true Mac_hines Some of th.e independence for people with previ_o~s recIpIents of this disabilities. prestIgIous award are news Independence ANard Center for the Disabled nominees for this year include presidential candidate ~enator Robert Dole, Rolf Benirschke, (CSCD) announces the annual Independence Awards Din- ner/Ball, an important event at S;in Diego, CA (San OIC!JO Co.) San Diego Un ion (Cir . D. 217,089) (Cir. S . 341,840) APR 22 1988 Est. f 888 - ,---- Jlll.11 • P c a £,r 1888 l \JNIVERIUJX OE. Dll;GO CON- the Joe I ne -surf mu. 1 CERT CHOIR - The chorus, directed • . by F ther Nicolas A v les, w,11 present ·A Sacred Concerl ot Early American blistering guit Music' I aturlng anthems and splnlu• rlou " "Th, at by Am rlcan composers and ar- •oni(• band, will both perform. Dalt known for h1 work with "Mi • overcome a l-0 Toreros lead. Miller added two more doubles in the game. The Toreros got their run when Rick Doane's grounder scored Sean Baron from third. Gohr (4-2) struck out five. In the second game, Parris Sori- anelo drove in four runs with a home run and a double for USD (19-26). Andy Roberts went 2-for-4 for the Toreros, and Mark Trafton had a bases-empty homer in the third. Jim Westlund (3-1) went the dis- tance to win; Victor Cole (8-3) lost for the Broncos (27-14). Running record - Steve Myhro of the Chart House team completed the Fontana SK course in 15 minutes, seven seconds, to set an American record m the 42-and-over division and win the masters competition in Fontana, Calif. Chart House team- mate Ozzie Osgood, who placed sec- ond, ran 15:40, also bettering the old record of 15:43. Track record - Jackie Anderson of Mesa College set a national junior- college women's record with a 42- foot, 4-inch triple jump in a track and field meet at Bakersfield College. The old mark of 42-1 was set by El Camino College's Renita Robinson in 1986. Anderson also won the long jump with a leap of 17-8. Shawndel Reddic and Connie Navarro broke school PLNC track - PLNC baseball - Second base- man Javier Murillo had five RBI, in- cluding a two-run homer in the sec- ond game, to help 13th-ranked Azusa Pacific (29-8, 11-4) sweep host Point Loma Nazarene, 11-2 and 8-3, in an NAIA double-header. Third baseman Tony Nobinsky homered with none on in the first inning of the second game for the Crusaders (11-25, 4-12). USIU baseball - Pitcher Wally Trice struck out nine to earn his 11th victory, and the host Gulls beat UC Riverside, 11-6. Ray Plantier and Al- berto Rodriguez homered for USIU (16-22-1). PCC baseball - First baseman Mike Thomas had a two-run homer in the seventh and drove in five runs as Mesa (15-2) beat host Palomar, 17- 4, to take over first place in the con- ference. Catcher Mark Robert hit a grand slam in the fifth and shortstop Geoff Martinez hit a two-run homer in the sixth for the Olympians. Paul Anderson (5-0) won in relief. PLNC tennia - Shannon Anderson won both her singles matches to help Point Loma Nazarene take second place, with 28 points, in the Golden State Athletic Conference tourna- ment at Cal Lutheran in Thousand Oaks. Westmont College of Santa Barbara won the team competition with 35 points. w d • , ran d "L t's G Tr'· rs 1 8 p.m today in the lmmacu- " CfS~ / I ta P rl hChurch 1 PP 10 • ,o an , g was th(• Big Kahuna wh nm tru / mental urf mu ie flourished ir. -----------, ~---~-----, th early '60 . Th Slo Ponies, broadcasters Bree Walker and Hal Clement, Hewlett Packard Corporation-;- Community Activist and-LISP law,orofessor Robert Simmons, Cyndi Jones of Mainstream magazine, and Channel 39. Following the dinner and awards presentation, there will be danc ing to the Big Band sound of Gus Reinhold and his Orchestra. Individual tickets to this exciting event are available for $75.00. Opportunities for corporate hosts, patrons, sponsors and table sponsors are also available. San Diego, Calif. Southern Cross (Cr. W. 27,5001 A R 8 r vi w d h re a few weeks ago, are creating their own ver ion of modern surf mu ic, defined by their wild frat party tage show. The "Big Wednesday" urf stomp I h ·mg produced hy the , 1gma Chi fraternity. Tickets are , available only ut the campu e of USO or SDSU. D Meg Winchester, Omni Hotel's catering sales director, is chairperson of this year's fund raising event to be held in the La Jolla Marriott Ballroom on May 7. The funds raised at · the Independence Awards Dinner/Ball support CSCD's programs such as the Spoke Shop, housing, benefits counseling, employment and personal assistance services, as well as the construction of CSCD's long-awaited new facility that is already partially funded. D eified: Monsignor I. Brent Eagen went up against some top-notch performers at the big dinner salute to Steve Garvey at the downtown Marriott. And the Monsignor more than held his own. "I'm always a bit worried when I give the invocation at a Steve Garvey event," said Eagen. "I'm never sure whether I should pray for Steve or to him." The ciuinp • :-Th~ uru;~sp~~ting jogger who stopped to relieve himself the other morning in a beachfront porta-potty w11s none other than Judge J. Morgan Lester, who has a new definition of rotten luck. While the judge was inside, a forklift swung into action, picked up the porta-potty and began hauling it down the beach. The judge's screams and banging finally got the attention of the driver and saved Lester from cruel and unusual punishment. Life in the city: The Nelson Riddle Orchestra, led by his son Christopher, will play the downtown Marriott May 13 when USD holds its annual Deans' Ball. It~ gig for young Christopher, who took over the band when his father died in 1985, and moved to Carlsbad last_ year.... Jim Milligan, who made his fortune in Oklahoma crude, last night quietly closed his Bird Rock restaurant, Milligan's, after 17 months. "I'm a man with lots of experience in the oil business," he says. "When you've got a dry h?le, you plug it." ... Fred Mort, flymg home to San Diego from Dallas over the weekend, found himself across the aisle from a fellow seated next to an outsized silver-colored box in the first-class section. The fellow, it turned out, was Jack Keith, the former G-man who heads security for the America's Cup. And inside the box, he explained to Mort, was the America's Cup - which always flies first-class on a fully paid ticket Bottom line: At SD Magazine, associate editor Virginia Butterfield received the envelope from "Californians Against Waste." It came bearing appropriate postage and the group's non-profit stamp. And it came empty. I Jl/len's P C. B 8 r. 5 USD ~~ Rancho Santa Fe CA (San Diego Co.) • R~nch Santa Fe ,Times (Cir. W. 500) Information Hmlnar for prospective graduate business students will be held April 28, 6-7:30 p.m., at the University Center. For more, call 26 APR 20 1988 / Jlllai • ,. c. a , ,,, F.,,. Awards honor spirit of entrepreneursliip Nominat1 San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,092) APR t 2 1988 u4[L,,i 1 1 La Jolla, CA (San Diego Co.) La Jolla Light (Cir. W. 9 ,040) APR 21 1988 P. C. B F.sr. 1888 /VSD - The USO Community Concert Choil'im!sents "A Sacred Concert of Early American Music" 8 p.m. April 22, lmmacu1a19,- Parish Church, USD. Free-w II offering.~ ':l>. !! Jlt~•• P. C. B E. fo1 . . · C T D' f S d F San ~s Die/o·.. f the Year onday,accor~- f Nomin,t1ons ?, / Jesse Jackson supporters: Supporters in the 41st Congressional District, which includes La Jolla will hold a delegate selection caucus May I a~ U.§.D'Lllni,versity Forum A-B to elect candidates for delegates to the Democratic National Conven- tion in Atlanta. Registration begins at 2 p.m. and no person will he registered after 3. Proof of residency may be re- quired. Five delegates and two alternates have been assigned. Official allocation will be determined by the p_opul~r vote in the California primary election June 7, with delegates being taken from lists elected in the May 1 caucuses. For more information, call Daniel Thomas at 587-3698. caucus convener ') 't "?'5 / o~ . St1c~el, chairman and Hughes, president, University of !: chief executive officer of TCS San Diego; Tawfig Khoury, ch air- 1, an . 1ego-area oun_ ers o "En compames that are pnvately held or have recently gone public, Enterprises Inc. ~rep·~fn1eur 1 man P ~ific' Scene Inc · i. Asse~blywoman Lucy K ille~ '. ; Diego Daily Transcript· William Otterson, di r:actor, Connect prog- Thygerson, pre~ident, Imperial · • . . ' • - c ose ~war 'kwi along with individuals who have actively supported entrepreneur- ~o a ;n, a partner m o Arthur You~ ccounting anaconsultmg co- ponsonng the wnrd_ program with Venture h e oca o I~ 1rm t nt 1. h . . i°r& Winners will be selected by an Martin Kruming ed itor Sa~ . t f . fi independent panel of judges selectedfortheirleadershipin the . • d 1· 'bl · e or awar s m six ism are e 1g1 w· ·11 b · t ca egones. mners Wl nized at a June 6 awards luncheon featuring keynote remarks by e recog- fields of business, academia, ram at UCSD· and Ke nnet h government a nd th e media. m gazme. ___ I Corp. of America. They are: Myron Eichen, chair- man, B r ooktree Corp.; Ron Fowler, president, Liquid Invest- ments Inc.; Lee Grissom, pres- ident, Greater San Diego Cham- ber of Commerce; Dr. Author Those wishing to offer nomina- tions or receive- more information a bout t h e prog r am can call 238-1144. ;;::.;--
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