News Scrapbook 1988

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Crr . D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) MAY 19 1988 ..Alt... ·• ... C • Et,

Los Angeles.CA (Los Angeles Co.) Times (San Diego Ed.) (Cir. D. 50,010) (Cir. S. 55,573) y 1 1 R8

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) La Prensa de San Diego

9 1988

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T ....__am~~ime %tun Is on the Right Track r ·-.1 .. .. . ... . ,,, • d · . '·· ·ether much more tame than F Ki ney ,•;.• !heetah Embery brought to a <~ ious Orient Express gala.

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man Faires, who repeated a role she played in 1985. "Orient Express has become a standard in this town," she said. "Not all parties are fun, but people always have a good time at this one knowing that their supporthelpssomanyothers." San Diego Charger Eric Sievers, who with his wife, Diana, is honor- ary chairman of the local Kidney Foundation, offered a simpler ap- preciation of the gala. "I always have as much fun at this party Express as I have at a golf tournament, and I like golf tournaments," he said-which was a nice way of saying that the Orient Express chugged through its cours_e well under par. The guest list included master of ceremonies Bill Griffith and his wife, Jenny; Susan and Michael Channick; Judy and Tom Carter; Linda and Mel Katz; Martha Hall With Eric Lundgren, Hilda Sugar- man with Harry Evons; Doris and Roger Lind!and; Jeanette and John McSweeny; Jill and Tom Hail; Beth and Richard Benes; Mary Michaletz With Rolf Benirschke; John Faires; Joan and David Ware!; Janne An- derson with local Kidney Founda- tion President Don McVay; Valerie and Mike Weaver, and Linda Car- roza and Francisco Herrera.

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

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e dinner itself supposedly was :led on actual recipes served express in its heyday; •. >mru interpreted these mto a 1 that commenced with salad '"' , ",rt of fish filet and filet mignon.

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Mother f eresa Is coming to theU~n Diego on Tuesday, May 31, her first visit to San Diego since 1960. The world-famous nun, who

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establish a San Diego-Tijuana chapter of Mother Teresa's mission. two years , Dr. Figueredo has met with Mother Teresa, requesting she dispatch sisters to ministe r among Tijuana's Impoverished residents . (For many years, Dr. Figueredo donated o~e. day a week to a Tijuana clinic and free medicines.) In February of this year, four of Mother Teresa's Missiona- ries of Charity began their special work in Tijuana. The nuns are supervising the construction of a shelter for homeless men in Tijuana, which Mother Teresa is expected to visit on Wednes- day, June 1. ticket orders, please send a self·addressed stamped envelope to Mother Teresa Visit, University of San Diego, Alcala Park, San Diego, 92110. The order shou id include name, address, phone and number of tickets. information and for large groups planning to Mtend, please call 260-4791. Every For For additional

SAN DIEGO-There are_ many who· e Toklas, the doyenne of 1920s would_pe content to toss a shiny quar~er-to::>nomes who knew the French the porter and, as the A ndr ews SiS t ePS .1e of the era like few other suggested, shuffle off to ~uffa!Expo.Not 8g~;icans, once asked quite plain- patrol'\$ or the annual Orient insist on more exotic destinations and more cosmopoliian pleasures. ress a group that oyer_ the years_ has come_ .:locomotives.) Nearly 400 supporters of the N~tio~-- ireen Orchestra (which Kidney Foundation of Southern ~orma:, outdid itself that evening) (San Diego Region, no less-how 6 th at !°:., ulette and blackjack in the · a mouthful?) tum~d out ~t;.: The casino draw, beyond urday at the 0~ San_ Dieg~: ire of chance itself, was the ·-t

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/ A KIDS' SUMMER: Are our,;:h Charity, Is sched_uled to speak dren brimmmg with left~~ at 2 p.m. In what 1s expected to from the school year? we'["gL?t;;~_ be 90-minute ~rogram in involved in some summer activ1tie USD s Torero Stadium. t from learning about personal corr .Although the special even puters to building a dinosaur. SDSU will be free and open to the SummerYouthAcademyrunsweek public, ticket_s must _be days from June 22 to 29 with class, obtained to gain ad~iss1o_n in computers, puppetry, drama, avi, because stadium seating 1s lion and rocketry. Cost 1s $575 with, limited to about 6,000 discount for the second child. Cali Winner of the 1979 Nobel Erin Grady at 265-5152 for informa• Peace Prize for her work and tion. Build a 16-foot stegosaurus dur- her organization's work with mg the Natural H1Story Museum's hundreds of thousands sick, one.day "Build-a.Beast" event in poor and homeless worldwide, Balboa Park. From 10 to 11 a.m and Mother Teresa is coming to again from I to 2 p.m. July 9, chi!- USO at the invitation of Dr. dren ag~s 5 to.,1~ will hunt for polys- Anita Figueredo, a US D tyrene bones m the !Iluseum and Trustee and a Missionaries of ~hen put together the dinosaur. Cost Charity co-worker. Dr. Figueredo, on the USO for others. Call 232-3821 for more m- Board of Trustees since its formation. The mu eum_ also _has founding, met Mother Teresa summer classes about birds, dmo- in 1960 , when she came to San saurs, geography and desert ecology . s· th t t'me Dr for younger children as well as a Diego ince a 1 , • 1s $3 for museum members and _$5

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As always, the Onent Express pulled ~ut of the station on schedule and bore ~ts

passengers, at breakneck spee_d. on .,!I . '.he modem Venice Sim- th at m - ent Express. This prize is the 1920s provided stylish passage from:: annually by Keith Renni- London to Istanbul (or Stamboul, :18 th ~: •resentative of the railway English style it), an~ currently ~es t.l:t 1; who said, "Everyone's well-heeled on a ~ty overnight JOurn_t. ~lightedJ>y our participa- fantasy .trip aboard the fabled tram

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is party each year that : kept going right along ·s an important event to ! event has great import bout $65,000 for Kidney research, educational 1t services programs) ght stressed by chair-

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from London to Veruce. The idea behind the event that the gala, at least as of this yeart • become engtaved quite impregnably the annual calendar. It is very m~ make-believe for adults, the pretense~~ carefully orch~strated travel advent.ui'e-'_.. that begins with the issuance of at Folkestone Station (actual photos taken on the spot, and ~ed to passport-programs), and co9es will!.: Pleue see SOC , Pa,elf - 80 fan J:id -A:

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imes vary; costs run about $30 or $4[ JCr session. Call 232-3821 ext. 203 fo1 ..,formation and reservati~USD has a wide range of youth campsTI5i"" ~-- ages 7 to 17. "Creative Kids '88" runs July 11 to 22 and July 25 to Aug. 25 for grades two through seven. Call 260-4585. There are also day and resi- dent sports camps for girls and boys all summer beginning in June. USO baseball co~ches are offering a base- ball camp July 3 to 8. An adventure camp teaches students ages 10 through 17 such activities as rappel- ling, canoeing and backpacking. Ses. sions run July 24 to 30. Call 260-4593 for information about the sports and outdoor camps. -----

San D iego, CA (San D iego C~.) San D iego Union (Cir. D. 217 ,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) MAY 1 1988

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

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pacing himself: At San Di~gc, State, the alumni office tries to update graduates through its quarterly "SDSU Report." And among the features is something called "Class Notes," which gives . alums an opportunity to report their , own progress. In the latest issue, one t laid-back grad availed himself of the copportunity this way: "George 1Edward Bacon, '84, is learning to ! surf, eating a lot of sus~i, a_nd. expects to find a direction m life by ~SVPs· are in fur all 5,500 invitations f, to hear Mother Teresa speak May 31 in Torero Stadium.... Fawn Hal; r, has canceled her San Diego appearance this month, but her ex- boss is coming next month. Ollie 8 . North is scheduled to speak June 3 at a $500·a•plate 01 cakfast si sponsored by the Rand,o Sa~ta Fe 01 Republican Women's Club at the o: Inn. (And do you uppose th~re's a u• Rancho Santa Fe Democratic s; Women's Club?) ... Mark Collins, president of Evergreen Nu~r¥, goes to the_Wh1te_ House toi;nor_row I with the W1l? Ammal ~a 7 k s Jim , Gibbons to pick up a National Landscape Award from Nancy Reagan. (It's for the WAP's gorilla enclosure.) Collins, whose usual business attire is shorts and a polo shirt is wearing a suit to the White Hou;e. A suit he didn't own until this c Unlucky • treak: America's Cup Skipper Dennis Conner was takmg the teasing pretty well after he . dumped his modified catamaran m SD Bay on Sunday. He was even signing autographs on ne~spaper photos of the disaster durmg the Padres game Monday mght. But Conner's bad luck continued. According to fan Cheryl Shaw, Conner was just passing through Section 28, Loge, when ush~rs first insisted he take a seat to sign autographs. Then he took a temporary seat in the reserved section, and they asked him to leave it (The Padr ay Conner had only eneral dniiss1on ticket.) ! 1990." F , th . Mother Teresa Sources mou o . SRO lJSD's John Nunes says •· week.

OVR TIMES: Those new throwaway c.ardboard cameras from Japan are popping up along San Diego t':lurist trails. They're from Fuji. When the first ro o film is shot, thP camera's shot. , 'ow Bob Reddmg has found something he considers even sil- lier: a dispo 3blc stapler at Thrif- ty. When its 12D staples are used, throw it away. Bl.it it's "guaran- 11 f 'OTEP AD: In the fevered rush for college admission next fall, parents and students are ran mg campus 'S as Tough and Super- / tough. Tops among the Super- tough: UC Berkeley and Sw~rth- more, where a 4.0 ~ve~age 1s ~o guarantee. . . . USD s pubhc forum on June~r on leadership, and a panel will debate the roles of some quite familiar-sounding by- pothetical figures. The two candi- for mayor are William "Bill" Stucco and Howard Kleen- genes. Then there's Stucco's cam- paign manager, Mike Media. (Be- sides attemp s to Los Angelesize our city, there are issues of pot smoking and Other Women.) PICKETER: Proprietor Danny Royce 1s on watch at The Inn at Rancho Santa Fe. An ang~y woman called to protest Olhe North's misreported breakfast talk for Women Republicans, and said she'd picket the Inn on J.. ne 3. Royce didn't get a chance to explain that North i speaking on June 2. On June 3, she'll be pick- eting the annual Rancho Santa Fe School father son breakfast. Alison JJa1tosa a:;;,,;,.,, .. - - Neil Morgan column. • ethics and dates teed for bte."

Lt. Gen. Gene and Gwen Tighe

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Vic's turned into Casablanca; By JEA NE BEACH EIGNER Light Staff Writer

Eve1ybody Went to Vies

Social Scene Hwangs (their Universal Travel donated a trip to Paris for raffling). Sophisticated black table clothes were topped by lamps with fringed white shades for a cabaret feel, and white Bibles were at each place for favors, reflecting the black and white of Leonard Simpson's sketched panels around the walls. And in case any one was less than entertained by two dance bands and piano player, a roving magician, gaming tables, caviar omelets at mid. night and belly dancers, the film "Casablanca" ran, too. ••• It was, as La Jolla Rotary president Chuck Burges pointed out, "a very La Jolla evening." Gathered at the La Jolla Marriott for the third annual Distinguished La Jollan Award were not only the Rotarians bestowing the award, but the ladies of Las Patronas, the Distinguished La Jollans of the year. The award goes annually to the individual or organization best epitomizing the Rotary motto "Service Above Self." The testimonial dinner is the time for toasts (and roasts) and raises capital for the La Jolla Rotary's endowment fund benefitting the community. President Dawn Matthiesen, accompanied by husband Chuck and a battery of Las Patronas members - several wearing their past president's medallions - was there to accept the award. Las Patronas was founded in 1946 by 12 young La Jolla women with the express purpose of help. ing others. The first annual Jewel Ball in 1947 was a fundraiser for China R ief, and since then, has benefitted San Diego orga izations. The

"Everybody Goes to Rick's" was the original title of that cinema classic "Casablanca." After this weekend, the sequel could be titled "Everybody Went to Vic's." "A Night in Casablanca" was the theme last Saturday night as All Hallows Parish and Academy transformed Vic's and the Fisherman's Grill into a corner of the casbah for their annual dinner dance. Entering through a foyer of palm trees and minarets, guests were greeted by com- mittee members and excitement as a troupe of belly dancers and fez.topped musicians perform• ed. The atmosphere was lively, friendly and fun Chaircouple Gina and Frank C'rudo mingled as guests tried their hands at the gaming tables man- ned by croupier in the bar or sampled the fare at different stations. There was an oyster and seafood buffet downstairs in the grill, Moroccan grilled lamb and couscous on the patio, prime rib and grilled potatoes in Vic's. Chocolate dipped strawberries and lavish displays of fruit made for after•dinner grazing. There for dining at the black and white tables or dancing on the patio were Lt. General Gene and Gwen Tighe, the George Dewhursts, Walter and Elaine Stiedle, Helen Pickard, Dr. Max and Gloria Smith, Fred and Donna Widmer, Kay and David Rose, the Joe Parkers, Judge Jame~ and Jeanie Milliken, Joe Crudo and Jennie Lindgren, Driss Brite! (the head of L.A. 's new Moroccan tourism board), the Carmine and Susan Bua, Margaret and Walter Maund, the Bob Mawhin- neys, the Reindt Reinders, Teresa and Tony Crudo, Msgr. Patrick Fox, the Joe Fritzenkotters, Sara and Thomas Finn, Delores and Charles D'Andrea, Cari and George Damoose, Victor Fargo, Joyce and Arthur Edwards and the Philip

Photo by Alison Wright

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