News Scrapbook 1989

San Francisco, ~) (San franclseo · Asian Week (Cir. W.)

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DEC 7

DEC 8 - '

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._/ JACCC Board Of Directors Names Three New Members LOS AN~\'?ss.. Steven

wasn't until 14 years later that he completed his undergraduate education at USC. He was ap- pointed by Governor Deukmejian to the California Health Policy and Data Advisory Commission in 1987 and chairs !he American Hospital Association Political Action Committee. He is also president of the Japanese Com- munity Foundation. In other actions, the JACCC board voted to re-elect the following members to new lhree- year terms: George Aratani, Marie Doizaki, Noritoshi Kanai, Masam1 Kitano, Frank Kuwahara, Edward Nakata, Toshikazu Terasawa, Kathryn Doi Todd, Tatsuo Frank Yamane, Leonard Yamasaki and H. Carroll Parish. Toshikazu Terasawa was re- elected president, and Frank Kuwahara, chairman of !he board, of the cabinet to serve !he one- year term ending in October, 1990. Olher officers re-elected were H. Carroll Parish, Koshiro Torii, Les Hamasaki, Edward Nakata, Kathryn Doi Todd, Akemi Miyake, Ronald Akashi, Minoru Tonai, vice presidents; Frances Hashimolo, secretary; Ethel Kohashi, assistant secretary; Katsuyoshi Ogawa, assistant treasurer; and Haruo Yamashiro, historian. Newly elected to the cabinet were Richard Sherwood, Koji Yamashita and George A.ratani, vice presidents: and Henry Y. Ola, treasurer. The board also elected William Clossey. Reiko Fukawa, Eiichi Hamanishi and Takashi Maruyama to three-year tcnns on !he board of governors.

Awakuni, Alan Furuta and Yoshi Honkawa were newly elected to !he Japanese Ame, can Cultural and Commumty C , ter board of directors at th November meeting of the t ,rd, it was announced last we oy JACCC President Toshika I Terasawa. They will all se ! three-year terms. Awakuni, an s1stant vice ic Heritage Bank, is a gradual.l of California State University, Dominguez Hills, with a major in finance, with postgraduate courses in California banking at the University of San Diego. Active in the Japanese American Opumist Club, he is also a two- dan in !he martial art of aikido. Furuta, manager of the Sumitomo Bank of California's West Los Angeles office, served as general chainnan of the 1987 Nisei Weeldapancse Festival. A graduate of the University of lllinois with a major in history, he taught for a year in Chicago before coming to Los Angeles and joining the Sumitomo Bank, where he has worked for the past 17 years. Honkawa is vice president for government and indusuy relations at Cedars-Sinai Medical Cenier, a position he has held for 15 years. Before Cedars-Sinai sought his skills in 1975, Honkawa served the Los Angeles County Health Services Department in a number of admini trative positions for 20 years. Born in Billings, Montana, Honkawa was auending the University of Washington at the outbreak of World War II. He joined the armed services, and ii president of Pa

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n Iii go stud ot and faculty at candlelight v1g1

''By invoking their names and say- ing 'presente,' we lnV1te them here into our presence,• the Rev Pat Ar· nold said. He said the message of the slain priests to the Uruted States IS o e of peace. University President Author Hughes praised the vigil. "It is extremely important that our students, and students ev~ry- where be sensitive to the atroc1t1es that have occurred in El Salvador,'' Hughes said

it's 1mportant for me to be out here making a statement about the cour- age of those people." One by one, 15 students, faculty members, pri ts and nuns walked up to a m1crophone to read a para- graph describing the crrcumstances that brought the pnests and other slaying victims to El Salvador and how they were killed. After each speaker said the name of the d ad person. the audience re- sponded by saymg "presente," which means present" in Spanis

h r daughter, Celina, 15. Members of the country's right· m d ath squads w re lmmed1atcly pected of killing them. One w1t- n 1d he w about 30 men In uniforms enter the priests' donnltory befor the sl yin . The Umted Stat ha spent more than $3 b1lhon in aid to prevent a r bel victory In El Salvador "There ts a e of wanting to say som thing to San Diego and to the camp community to ere te an awaren " Smith said of th deaths ''Those people faced d ath daily, and

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Sister Koh Do Yim of Korea, a USD student, joins In lbe vigil

San D1c(Jo. CA. (S.1n D, go Co .) S,111 Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir . S. 341,840) DEC 7 - 19

San Diego, CA. (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840)

DEC 8 - Aztecs end drought l ....... :;2-~giinst the Toreros · vt~::t--1--~ Jlll ... _ Pc_. B _Ft, 18 - 86 1.989

San Diego , Calif •. I an Diego Co) ~- -IH TRIBUNE

with 85-75 victory By Chris Clarey laff Wriler Four seasons have passed since ~ San Diego State beaU.ISll__in a en's bas etball game - four seasons, too, since the Aztecs won four games in a row. Last night, they put an end to both droughts - defeating therr cross-

DEC 8

1989

. lflr Afier experiencing mus1c, "LJ dance eggs and mar- ion ttes from the Soviet Union, 1 u no.... have a chance to hear its ~tories. The Storyteller• ol San Diego will share trad11Jonal talcs from the diverse regions of the Soviet Union rn tomorrow's presentation at the Manchester Conference Center on th.!Ll.[ni: ver.;11~ of Sanvd{~f° campus. The concert WJ art a :30 p.m., and 1s recommended for older kids and adults. Tickets: $5.

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"USO _ Fr. Nicola• Reveles conduct • U~D Coiiiinun ly Choir ,n "A Festival of Lessons. 8 P m Dec a and 9, Founders Ch~ 260· 4600. ext 4486.

.z.t~~ __..::::: :.-.-------~ San Diego, CA. (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089 ) (Cir. S. 341,840) DEC 8 1989 Jllk11 ·• P. C. B F.

town rivals, 85-75, before a bipar- tisan crowd of 3.535 in the Sports Arena. The Aztecs (4-2} won with timely defense and by putting together their best offensTve performance of the young season "I think we're just starting to come together," said guard Arthur Massey, one of eight new players on the Az. tees' roster. ''We're starting to under- stand what each of us can do." SDSU's highest point total in its first five games was 67. It surpassed that last night with e1 ht minutes to play. Center Marty Dow, forward Shawn Jamison and guard Michael Best led the offensive surge. Dow and Jamison scored 19 points apiece. Best finished with 18 points, five as- sists, four steals and - most import- ant for him - zero turnovers. "I thought this was a game where we did some good things and other things not so good," Brandenburg said. 'Truthfully, the ball bounced Brandenburg wasn't just being gracious in victory. The Toreros (2-4) actually outplayed the Aztecs in sev- era! phases of the game. USD shot 50.9 percent from the field"foSDSli's 47.8. It also out-rebounded the taller our way tonight."

San Diego, CA. (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840)

-...:..-==::::==:=::===::;.;;,---~ Aztecs, 38-34. SDSU's defense that dealt USD its third straight defeat. The Aztecs fin- !shed with 10 steals. six in the second half. On several other occasions, they \ disrupted USD's offensive rhythm by knocking passes out of bounds or back toward the center line. "They kept trying to go in there in the second half," Brandenburg said. But down the stretch, it was

DEC 8 morrow In uso·s Founders Chapel. Tickets are $3 and $5: 260-460~ El

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Allegations of . ra_c1sm surfaced after the May 20 mc1~en~, and park rangers had reported_ fmdmg at least eight other crosses 1~ the preserve over a two-year period. Shizas wrote a statement denying the cross-burning was a racial mat- ler. He said it had a pseudo-religious purpose and was not tied to the Ku

hours of community service. Robinson said 26 other members or initiates of the Sigma Chi fraterni- ty chapter who participated in the fraternity ritual weren't charged be- cause of a Jack of evidence. However, under an agreement

day against the only U:niversitx of Sall Diego student charged in connec- tionwillithe cros.s-burning incident in Torrey Pines State Park. Patrick dismissed the charge against Jeffrey Schizas, 21, at the request of the city attorney's office.

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"We got our ha See Aztec. on

The San Diego Uruon

Municipal Court Judge Charles L. May 20 cros.s-burning as part of a

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n Diego State's Shawn Jamison, who scored 19, drives past the To..

DEC 8 1989

Schizas' attorney, Mitch Robinson, with the university, the students said the charge was dismissed after were to perform similar volunteer Klux Klan .

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/~~;;~;'";;avej to UCLA tomorrow for another learning experience b USO guard Gylan Dottin, for one, :::::::::::::::::::::::------------- If Egan could have what he wants • Sophomore forward Don Ma- d n't believe the Toreros will be- it would be to play teams such as St. cLean leads UCLA with 20 points a have a poorly against the Bruins as John's and UCLA every year. He just game. Senior forward Trevor Wilson they did against St. John's. 'We need to wouldn't play both the same week. (17.3 points) is the only other player -=-- "I don't tblnk It will affect us as "I wouldn't like to do that," said in double figures for the Bruins. much playmg UCLA," said Dottin "I expose the kids to Egan, 'but you don't get a lot of op- MacLean and senior center Kevin gu its because of that East Coast that kind of caliber portunities." Walker give the Bruins a pair of 6-10 and W t Coast thing. Everyone says • • • starters. Sophomore guards Gerald Ea t Coast teams are more aggres- ofplay. Hopefully, Madkins and Darrick Martin com- 1ve." we can a-et them to NOTF.S - Dottin. sophomore for- plete the starting lineup. Of the 13 Dottm doesn't figure to be intimi• e ward Kelvin Woods and senior center players on UCLA's roster, 11 are dated by the 10 NCAA championship ;.A~~ rise to the John Jerome have solidified their from the Los Angeles area. banners hang1 from the rafters, ei- occasion., spots 10 the startmg lineup. Junior • Pauley Pavilion is celebrating its lber forward Anthony Thomas and Junior 25th anniversary. It's been a nice 'We used to play there for Slam · - Hank Egan guard Pat Holbert are attemptmg to home for the Bruins. UCLA is 350-37 Jam league tournaments in the sum- complete the starting lineup. (a .904 winning percentage) there. mer," id Dottin. who grew up in Jerome leads the Toreros with 18.3 ./" Orange County. "It is going to be dif• ------------------------- points and 8.0 rebounds a game. Dot- ferent Back then, they would section tin is the team's only other player in ------~~----- 1t off and have two or three games "I wanted to give the WCC an op- "The minus 1s you're playmg double figures with 11.1. Woods going at once_ This time we're the portunity," said Harrick. "I offered somebody on their home court with- scored a season-high 18 points in mam attraction. and if they accepted, fine. U they out a return game. There's a good Wednesday's 85-75 loss to San Diego "But I like big crowds It gets the didn't, fine We've got Santa Clara chance you don't win." State. Thomas has averaged 10 adrenalin pumping. We're due for and San Diego this year and Pepper• Winning isn't el'erything. Of points the past four games and Hol- one of these big games. Hopefully, dine and St. Mary's next year course, it would make the experience bert has taken over for Wayman this will be the one" ''It's a good game for USO. You get more enjoyable. Strickland at point guard. USO can thank UCLA coach Jim a lot of ink in the L.A. Times, it's "We need to expose the kids to that Hamck for th opportunity. Hamck gomg to be on Prime Ticket and they kbd of caliber of play," said Egan. ' was an a i tant coach for the Bruins get a good guarantee. When I was at '·Hopefully, we can get them to rise in the late 1970S before getting the Pepperdine, that's the way I looked to the occasion head coaching job at Pepperdine in at it. It helped my recruiting, it was "We have to make a respectable 1979. He returned to UCLA last sea- a very visible game, and we offered showing for them to have you back. son, but hasn't forgotten his roots in it to Hank because he's a good friend You can't be a complete pushover the West Coast Conference of mine. because that's not what they want."

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