News Scrapbook 1988

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v Egan sha Kirk Kenney 2q~ i;'

::ian u1ego, es up Toreros' lineup after first loss

look better.

Bar: Mi ·ng 'wrong' system right / would not have done anything for Contlnu d from B-1 :Zrqf":J tion and has 1,poo cases. Degallegas those c11·eots," Mitts said.

"They beat us because they played better than -,ltS,=" said Egan. ''But we also beat ourselves, and that's the part that bothered me. "We had some people who just didn't respond. So now what we're going to do is juggle the line- There will be three changes in the starting line- Sophomore Dondi Bell will replace sophomo'.e Keith Colvin at center, freshman Gylan Dottin will replace sophomore Randy Thompson at for- ward and either senior Efrem Leonard or sopho- more Kelvin Means Will replace freshman Way. man Strickland at point guard. Senior Danny Means will remain at off-guard and junior Craig Cottrelf still will play for~a.rd, although he will turn the small-forward position up: Cottrell is USD's leading scorer with 13 points a game, followed by Bell with 12 and Dottin with up." over to Dottm.

Tribune Spor/swriter'7'-

10.3. Ben also is averaging 9.3 rebounds a game: "I think the time a team has the most potential to develop is after its first loss," said Egan. "Ifit learns to respond positively to adversity, then it has a chance to grow." One person to watch is Strickland, who has been inconsistent running the offense. "Wayman Strickland has to respond to this and fight his way back,'' Egan said. "It's not that we're down on him, but the other guys have outplayed him and nobody has established himself as the leader of the ballclub." Cal State Fullerton opened the season with a_n impressive 59-57 win at Utah last week. The Ti- tans were beaten by Pepperdine 71-67 last night. Fullerton holds a 14-8 advantage in the series, including a 71.59 win last season. The Titans are led by junior forward Cedric Ceballos, who was the state's leading scorer in junior college last season, averaging 28 points a game.

Everything was running smoothly for t~. Ju.TS ....D- basketball team, what with a 3-0 start that includ- ed an upset win over New Mexico. Then the Toreros lost 76-58 Saturday to UC Santa Barbara. The loss is no cause for alarm, but it does change things. And changes will be made by USO coach Hank Egan when the Toreros (3-1) play Cal State Fullerton (1-1) tomorrow night at 7:30 at the "One win does not a season make and one loss does not a season break," said Egan. "We played pretty well against New Mexico and then we had to continue to grow. The next game against Cal Lutheran we won 90-64. It was a very bad 90-64 win, if there is such a thing. We went up to Santa Barbara and we just weren't ready to play." USO committed 27 turnovers against Santa Bar- hara and shot just 35.7 percent. The Gauchos are good, but Santa Barbara didn't need USD's help to USO Sports Center.

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last week lost · court bid to try to block the Stat Bar from taking over

program with liability coverage. "We'd llke to be able to do thmg 1mllar to what we were dolng l th county bar with some legisla- ''Th primary thing we're looking at i what i. happening to the cli• ents,'' according to Mitts, who said th local bar hi torically has acted much more quickly than the State Bar. De pile n •wly discovered limita- tions, Mitts 1d the 16-member d1 • ab1hty committee has as isted 85 lawye and 500 clients so far this year. Mitt! alone has made more th n JOO court appearances for ch- nts left in a lurch by their lawyers. He id h doesn't believe the com- nuttee has done anything wrong. ''Th tate Bar ha · accused u of trampling on attorneys' rights," Jtts id. "In the vast majority of ca es," he explained, "the attorney gr (to the committee's actions). U b ref . the State Bar is called" The key to the committee's uc- c ha been confidentiality, Mitts 1d any la yers would not admit a prob! m and agree to acccept help 1! they thought they would be report- d to the State Bar, he said. He understands that the "State Bar d n't want local bars going out and domg th 1r own thing," Mitts said, but t the same time, "We're not in- volved and don't want to be involved m di iplin ." Many of those on a state and local level dmit the help ts valuable, but they recognize the potential for abus by attorneys who have selfish rather than altruistic motives. The concern JS that with hundreds of volunteer bar associations in the tate, client-hungry lawyers could nm amok, targeting attorneys as "di.sabled" and pilfering files for th m elv Such a nario is envisioned by Prof Robert F ellmeth, State Bar dis- j ciphne wa c , o works from the Center for Public Interest Law at I the Umvers1t of San Diego. J.'ellme h said the S ate Bar needs to know when there is evidence that •n attorney may be mcapable of practicing law, and be advocates wr1tmg checks and balances against j nti•trust violation into any new l w. me- tive bl ing," h aid

Both Wied and Fellmeth sai believe the differences between the local and the state bars can be re- solved and Wied said he and others ey

his caseload.

"If the county bar had not set up its (telephone) hotline (for Degalle- gos' client mquiries), the State Bar

meeting with Stirling.

will

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.I Evening Tribune (Cir, D. 123,064) DEC 6 1988

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.•~. 0 £J}!t:~~!c!,,! ?.!.~.~,!!~ 1 With Fttd W. Frie,dly" will he held defe,,e allorney Ram.°' Cast

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!~~~PBS~~•~e~l~i~oo~!tioo wdh SDSU, UCSO a,d USO. fuket, are a,a,lable "" $20-tlmlogh KPBS J

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ty '"""'"'" S"""_Gold,~g on,s,1. Hi"" Flete>e, & Mack; U~,emty

of Sao O,eg, prof~ llenru, Roh,. ,,. s., Diego Uruo, """'' Gecald The fo'"m • he,og P"""ted by _ .

taot """""" Good°"' "'"" E. M•· ohaels, ebiefdepoty di,t,iet altorn!y, Tdb,oo ofito, Neil Mocg,o; e,ty Wa,ce,. sehoob s,penoteodent Thomas W.

from 7 to 9 p.m aOOell W"" Ceote, fo, the Pe,. Conning Artut2910 La JoUa VUlage CBS News, is Edward R. Murrow °'"' Fde,dly, fonne, pn,side,t of president emeritus at the Columbia University Graduate School of Jour- nalism. He will lead a panel of 16-San Diegans in a discussion of moral is- sues facing today's society. Panelists include Patricia D. Benke, California Court of Appeal; San Diego Stat' University professor tomo,row in the

He,b L. C.wtho,ae, P"'''"'' of the Sao Diego U,hao Leagos Terry M. Clnttebill, ,iee p,"1deot of Pacllie Bel( UCSO prof"'°' Ge,ald D. Dop

Solana Beach, CA (San Diego Co.) The Citizen (Cir. 2 x W. 20,000) DEC 7 1988

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

San Diego CJ. (San Diego Co .) San Diego Union (Cir. D . 2 17,089) (Cir S. 341 ,840) DEC 8 1988

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~ N - DIEGO c;-qoKPBS, in coopera~ion with 1 s~e University, University of California, San Diego, an~ Uni- versicy~ Diego, is preseiifi: ng "A i:;an l>1ego For um on Ethics with Fred W. Friendly," Wednesday, Dec. 7, from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Mandell Weiss Center for the Performing Aris. Friend-- ly, Edward R. Murol\v Piofessor emeri tus at Columbia University Gradua te School of Journalism, will lead a panel of 16 prominent San Diegans in a provocative discussion of some of the press- ing mor al issues fac ing contem- porary society. The panel will foc us on two case studies : one on personal ethics, the other on ethics in crimina l law. Tickets are available for $20 through KPBS. Call 594-2574 for tickets and information.

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P. C 8 Eu 1888 / New starters hope ?-,5?" to restart Toreros By Hank Wesch Slaff Wriler

way we want to play, and the exact same way Santa Barbara plays," Egan said. "They get after you with a man-to-man defense; . they're very physical and aggressive. "I'm interested to see how we re- spond to that kind of defensive pres- sure. We didn't respond well the last time, and it's important we be able to do it this time." Against Santa Barbara, USO failed to get off a shot on eignt"Ottts first 10 possessions. Finding themselves in a hole, the Toreros tried to rush back into contention by playing at a tempo beyond their capabilities, Egan said. ._ill;D committed 27 turnovers and shot only 35.7 percent from the field. "I told the kids the worst thing you can do is to hurry through a butt- kicking," Egan said. "You may as well slow down and let it come to you. But we just played faster and faster and made it worse and worse. "It's not so much that I'm disap- pointed with the Kids that have been starting, it's just that we have others who have earned playing time and spots on the floor." Leonard came off the bench and produced a team-high 13 points and five steals against UCSB. Bell con- tributed 12 points, eight rebounds and four blocked shots. A Crawford High alumnus, the 6-9 Bell has aver- aged 12 points and 9.3 rebounds this season.

Having experienced a first-degree bubble-bursting Saturday at UC Santa Barbara, the young University of San Diego basketball team gets an early test of its resiliency tonight. Coach Hank Egan's Toreros, who saw a 3-0 start besmirched by a 76-58 dismantling at UCSB, take on Fuller- ton State in non-conference play at 7:30 in the USO Sports Center. And Egan~ who has revamped his starting lineup, is curious to see how his predominantly freshman and sophomore squad bounces back. "I don't think we're as good as the win over New Mexico (Nov. 27 in Al- buquerque) may have indicated to everybody," Egan said. "I don't think we're as bad as the loss at UCSB might indicate ... "Santa Barbara is a good team, and I just think they exposed our in- experience. I don't think our kids went in looking past them; tliey just showed what an immature team we are. That's why I think it's important we come back against Fullerton and fight the battle. We didn't fight the good fight (against UCSB)." Thus the new starting lineup. Of the five starters in the first four games - forwards Craig Cottrell and Randy Thompson, center Keith Colvin and guards Wayman Strick- land and Danny Means - only Cot- trell, the team's leading scorer (13.0 ppg), is in tonight's tentative starting lineup.

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Joseph (Mitts) and others are he- ," he said. "We want to make ure they are protected and the pro- they set up can'f be abused by oth rs. "Although they (in San Diego) are totally well meaning," he said, "they arc competitors ... Some things are best done by a state agency." One of the biggest complaints about the State Bar has been its gla- cial pace in investigating an~ disci- phning lawyers. Fellmeth said that next year, with an injection of mil- hons of dollars and dozens of staff members, the State Bar's speed and efficiency should improve. On the other side, Mitts touts the ' local bar's good judgment, crediting it with the State Bar's recent move to take over the busine:ss of Richard Degallegos, a San Diego attorney whose practices are under investiga-

The San Diego Union/Dana Fisher USD's Molly Hunter looks for way around Aztec Julie Evans. Aztec women rout USD, 82-47

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The San Diego State women's team defeated USO last night at Peterson Gym, 82-47. The Aztecs {6-0) were led by sen- ior center Chana Perry's 31 points and USO transfer Julie Evans' 18. The Toreros {l-2) got 10 points from Cathy Perkins. The Aztecs advanced·from No. 20 to No. 15 in the NCAA poll. The Point Loma Nazarene women's team de- feated visiting Whittier College in a non-league game, 88-53. The win was the Crusaders' 14th in their last 15 games against NCAA schools. Point Loma Nazarene competes in the NAIA. Point Loma Nazarene (5-1) opened a 9-2 lead and never Crusaders win -

LOCAL TEAMS

trailed. Forward Shannon Ander- son was the leading scorer for the Crusaders with 21 points, and also added a team-high four rebounds. Guard Camille Armijo had 15 points and Shawndel Reddic 10 for the Crusaders. Despite dominating the Poets {1- 5) for most of the game, the Crusaders were out-rebounded, 27- 19. Pat Palmer led Whittier with 16 points and 15 rebounds. The Crusaders outshot the Poets, 51 percent to 30. The Crusaders go on a two-week road trip starting with a game against Redlands Friday.

Sa n Diego, Ca lif. Southern Cross (Cir. W. 27,500)

"Dondi Bell has improved more from last season to this than any player I've ever coached since I've been around basketball," Egan said. "Without him, we would have had real problems at Santa Barbara. Dondi wouldn't let go and kept us in that game for a long time." Probably the most significant as- pect of the lineup changing would be Danny Means' absence, if that proves to be Egan's choice. The senior guard has started 62 straight games, begin- ning with the first game of his sopho- more year, 1986-87. "I'm not disappointed in Danny," Egan said. "He did a heck of a job defensively against Carrick DeHart at Santa Barbara, but I think Danny lost a little bit offensively in the pro- cess."

Freshman Gylan Dottin is expect- ed to start opposite Cottrell at for. ward. Others likely to make their ini- tial starts this season are sophomore Dondi Bell at center and senior Efrem Leonard and freshman Kelvin Means at guards. Fullerton is 1-1 under first-year coach John Sneed, a former assistant at San Diego State under Tim Vezie. The Titans are led by 6-foot-7 jun- ior forward Cedric Ceballos. The leading scorer among California community-college players last sea- son with a 28-point average, Ceballos scored 18 in a season-opening win at Utah and 29 in a loss to Pepperdine. "Fullerton plays the exact same

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Business Seminar Serles, continues Dec. 16 with "Managing Crises." Cost for one session is $15. Each seminar Includes presentation materials and continental breakfast. For further information, call Jackie Frieberg, 260-4644. Distinguished speakers series, a lecture series focusing on the business activity in the United States, the Pacific Aim and Mexico, continues at the Manchester Executive Conference Center, Dec. 15. Topic for December is, "Doing Business in Mexico," conducted by Rodolfo Fernandez, a managing partner for Touche Ross and Company In Tijuana. Cost Is $15 per session. Call 260-4644.

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Oceanside, CA (San Diego Co.) North County Blade Tribune (Cir. D. 29,089) (Cir. S. 30,498) DEC 8 1988

La Jolla, CA (San Diego Co.) University City Light (Cir. W.)

/ . Solana Beach, CA (San Diego Co.) The Citizen (Cir. 2 x W. 20,000) DEC 9 1988 uf/~ ', P, C. B Est. 1888

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1988

Lu. 1888 . • The Unh;erslly..Q{_§ao Diego C:ommunity Concert Choir · ·present a traditional service 0 ·Lessons and Carols. Perfor- manc will be at 8 p.m. 0 11 Dec 9-l n Founders Chapel on cam: pus. For information, ca!!_ / 260-4600, ext. 4456. ~',t~

..---oNi"ve~iiv' OFv, A 0 N"o,ecio~C()MP,,UNfTY CON- CERT CHOIR PresenJs a tradit1ona service of lessons and carols on Friday, Dec. 9, and Saturday, Dec. 1 o at 8 .P rn. 1n Founders Chapel Admission iW&l{vjei Public, $3 for seniors Information: 260. 4600 ,'exf. 44 ~

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