News Scrapbook 1988
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unday, Dec mber 11, 1988
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LOCAL TENNIS/KAREN FRAWLEY
oriega overcame clay feet to excel at hardcourt game Now he's not hy about coming m. He's learned to cl off points (at the net) and tak adv nta e or his groundstrokes." Last w , or ega won the U D All-Col- l g urn m nt mgl final, def atmg en- 1or t ·mmat 1 r"k r arr n 6-S, 6-4 En route to title, Non ga d teated five opponents m ra1ght ts, dropping only 23 games. Th top-s ded doubles team of Noriega and U. D nior Dav t wart defeated San Diego tale ophomor Joe McDonough and Woody Yocum 6-3 6-1. Locally - Diane Matzner of Texas won the women's 40-and-over National Hardcourt Singles championship last week, defeating Bonsall s Sally Huss 6-4, 6-7 (7-5). 6-4 in a three-hour match 'at the La Jolla Beach and Tennis Club. Matzner, a newcomer to the women s-40 division, outlasted her opponents by playing "backboard" tenms. Her steadiness proved too much for Huss, the 1984 women's 40 Na- tional Hardcourt singles champion, who has classic groundstrokes and a consistent serve. title for the second straight year. They won 6-3, 4-6, 6-2 over Jane Willens and Harry Wil- son of Los Angeles, finalists in 1987. In father-son doubles competition, Gil Howard of Daly City seems to have the an- swer. He won the 1984 and 1985 National Hardcourt father-son doubles titles with his son, Mike. But this year, he won the tourna- ment with his son, Scott. The Howards de- feated Doug and Douglas Lancaster of Mora- ga 7-5, 4-6, 7-6 (7-3). nd-volley game, won the tournament in 1979, 1982, 1986 and 1987. "No one has evel" done that before," said tournament organizer Ralph Trembley. "It's remarkable to come back year after year and still win the tourna- ment."
USD's -
Chris /Jenkins E very so often, the sports savage needs soothing We seek respite ftom dispatches of haggling between baseball milhonaires over "lockout" clauses. We weary from waiting, too, for a local l'j'FL team's breakthrough to mediocrity We crave sanctuary from wire reports of CAA investigations and drug busts and steroid and Prop. 48. . We've got the perfect place. Take a walk through Alcala Park. Gratefully, you never hear tho e sorts of stories coming down from perpetual proof you can have big- time athletl without any of the mess and very little of the fus Actually, it's been even quieter than usual around the.lISDJiports Center th past few days:ll'inals week Santa Ana notwithstanding, few people are using the sun- splashed pool and deck, or the softball diamonds, soccer fields, tenm and ha ketball courts. And ju t as the placid cene outs1d belle th fact tudent are engdged el ewh nmortal academic com!: t, the cahn and patience m 1de the new athletic director's office 1s misleading. ' Underneath," Dr Thomas ' Iannarone said from behmd hi$ desk, ''I'm paddling like bell." Three months ago, Iannacone, 47 officially took over for the Rev. Patrick Cahill, who left USD after mne year to become a parish priest and high sch I guidance counselor m Las Vega~. of all places. Therem is the most obvious difference betw n Cahill and his successor Iannacone, formerly the AD at St. Franl.?i College m central Pennsylvania, wears a diff rent type of neckwear around h 11r The fact that he wa • t and I m not," Iannacone s;,ii , wry smile, "means that ma. r n say some things he couldn't l'• ' Iannacone's non-relut l:lu , speak up may have cont bl! , to the biggest of USD's thrt" basketball victories, that . ll!nning 64-53 road upset of New Mexico at The Pit. the Uruve of ie o
Perley, ranked No. 4 in men's 45 singles for Southern California, also won the men's 45 singles divis10n of the San D1eguito Semor Championships in October. An upcoming event - The Hilton Hoh- day Bowl Tennis Tournament is Dec. 15-18. \1en's and women's singles (Open A, B and C divisions) and mixed doubles (Open, Band C) will be played at three San Diego locations: the San Diego Hilton Tennis Club, La Jolia High and Colina de! Sol. Proceeds will bene- fit the National Jumor Tennis League Pro- grams. For information, call 224-5746.
the Toreros'
tournament ended
Th
In the women's 4~ doubles final, second- ed d 1aryMcclean of N"w York and part- ner Bunny Smith of Miami defeated third- seeded Judie Lome of Corona de! Mar ard Barbara Mueller of Rancho Mirage 7-5, 4-6, 7-6 (7-3). It came a no surprise when the defenoing senior mixed-doubles team of Jim Nelson and Ellyn Bryant of Corona del Mar won the
p a n competition, which also included the IT A/Volvo Collegiate Championship in Athrru , Ga , and the ITCA/Rolex South rn California Regional Championships at UC Ir- vm on Jan. 27 al U LA Th n xl day, USD hosts UC R1ver- sid U D open 1ts tennis
IUon from clay courts to more th n Norie a
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Second-seeded Jim Per-
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ley of Coronado won the men's 45 singles division of the La Jolla Beach Club Invita- tional last weekend with a 6-3, 7-6 (7-3) win over top-seeded Leland Housman of San
Diego
Pcrley, a left-hander with a strong serve-
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"He was a very c;r;.~ sure all he passionate person an . t help d · g was trymg o ?.maid Janis Andersen, chair· w~s communicationsddetrm~~use she w s distraught or she was E . would have been there, ••If she neede e p d nk ,;'1 h, s e would not comment on Su ms Goodwin. who has beent~cuday sed final exams spen Subin family at their_ Sadn me where Enc hve . 1 !~h r.'Dr. David S~tbi 1 n, has a ear Mercy Hospi a · d the SubinS had al- e fro; w1 · ready lo~t one son tocrt~~d;r r~h:~ Their third son, w_ . Eric, also has the disease. h t:: prac~1ce n Friend sa1 . fib · ~--,-~-~~~- if the university's speech nc added. . d Subin's parent b' , death Goodwin an h
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"Enc was a fantastic gu~ 1 very much m ove, and helly wer oodwin's roommates, 0 ~a~~i~t "They had plans to g t married. Everyone Ith~:; d~i th m a the perfect coup e. ·tt also a graduate stude~t, t rned from m· id Su~in had JUSd_ r:1uschools on the Ea t Coa t. He was p~ea cd d au he thought the interviews ha gone wt, sh~i~'sa1d Goodwm told her of ~u~i:~: aticeptcd after she gradu• Hamm1 , . t t rv1 wing at me ic bee se 'd am find ork wherever ,, thing together" very
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through all the har~ ti~esh:~~d~~ Hammitt said Goodwin and "u were th kind of couple that gave tre lul times at sc oo ! S bin
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) . San Diego Business Journal (Cir. W. 7,500) DEC 12 1988 «~fl 's P C B / , n~ ...,v,,v,, o1 \.lvv~Jco-oovc:: THURSDAY,OECEMBER15. Unllf.@l'slty of San o· trnguisnec! Speam 8
San Diego, CA (San Diego co.) San Diego Business Journal (Cir. W. 7,500)
,ego as a part of its Drs- Fernandez, who wi;~s/n:s, rs..hosting Rodolfo- '" Mexico" from 8 to 9 ea on Doing Business Conference Center A a.m. at the Manchester be served at 7:30 a· c;ntinental breakfast will For more inform • .m. here 15 a fee to attend at 260-4644. at,on, call Continuing Educatio~ --......__.._~.a~-1!:..&A.a.e_a • c_ - //'
OEC 12 1988
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Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles C.l Los Angeles Daily Journal ) (Cir. 5 x W. 21 ,287
1ogue with six _Asia\ al economic, security explore the social, po illc n~ of u .s.-Asian rela- and technology d,met~er associate dean of uonsh1ps. Or. Miles aSch~I tor International the UCSD Gradual~ Relations and Pacific Relations and Pac, 1~ the discussion. The Studies. will modera e n the Forum at USO. event, which will be ~~ldn~heon will follow The will begin at 9 a.m. ~or information and res- cost 1s $15 per per:n.ld Affairs council at 26~- ervations, call lhe or .il.~ 0111
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.} Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,064) DEG 131 88
DEC 1 i 1988
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San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,064) DEC 1 11 qaa
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• The MISL's weekend warriors 1 L IFE on er al . ISL style. It was a sleepwalking band of 16 Sockers that trudged Conference first team. Toreros for- wards Jason Pearson and Bob Welsh made the second team. . . • The claim by Sockers m1df1elder Paul Dougherty that he kicked a
William Vogeler
the National Association ofInsurance Commis· sioners meeting Dec. 11-16 at the New Orleans Hi,lton Riverside and Towers. West Virginia Attorney General Charles Brown and Yale University profess?r Geor~e L. Priest will be featured p~elists ~e ~s- cussion on the insurance ind~try s li:11 1ted antitrust exemption and pending antitrust litigation. More than 1,600 regulators, insuran~e com- an and consumer group represe~ta ves are ~~cted to attend the five-day session. Over 90 committ8('A;, subco~ttee~ and ~k forcei: of the national association will meeting dunng the week to disuss 15 pieces of proposed !110.del legislation and amendments to ex1stmg legislation. · Special committees will continue e~a- tion of long-term care insurance,. a unif~rm notice and consent form for AIDS Vll"US_ testm~ minimum surplus requirements for remsure and solvency protection requirement~ rr healthmaintenancy organizations. Associa ion members will also elect new officers on Dec. 12. The International Association_of Insurance Fraud Agencies, Inc.. is holding !ts alfirsAstme~t: ing in coajuncti.on with the r:1a~on SOCla tion of Insurance Comm1ss1on_ers. That ting will be heldDec. 13-15, and 1t will focus mee t tory au- on the role of law enforce~en , re . b t- thorities and the insurance mdus m com a ting insurance fraud. F '-"ormation call (811) 842-3600. or more llU' , ••• MICHAEL SHAPffiO, professor at the ~SC LawCenter, has given numerous presentations and offered wide-ranging con_unen~ recent· ly on bioethics issues at seminars, m ne"'.5pa- pers articles and for radio and televJS1on programs. Shapiro gave presentations on gene therapy, death and dying and biotechnology ideas on human identity and practice at se'!11nars at th~ Universi~Jl!San Dieg~the California Instif· fute of eCllilology an 'the USC School O Medldne.. 1 . . pear He also made radio and te eVJS1on ap : ances discussing John Doe transplan~, Cali- fomm'•s e~~o/5ia initiative, genetics and reproductio/
use LAW CENTER alumnus s~111nnas and his wife Audrey received recogrub?n ~m the law school recently for their con!1"1butions to the Public Interest Law Foundation. The Irmases provided matching fun~ for foundation stipends that permit students inter- ested in public interest law to accept s~er clerkships in agencies unable to com~ete An~ firms that pay high summer sal~es. while many top graduates of prestigious:~ schools are getting $70,000 to start at Street firms, many USC Law _Center stude~ts are taking public interest lawJobs at one-third the salary. In fact since the Law Center created the Public Interest LawFoundation tw? years_a~o, many USC students have worked m public .in- terest firms. Last summer, the found3:tion helped students to take jobs _at the ~encan Civil Liberties Union, the Asian Pacl?c_Leg~ Aid Services Bet Tzedek, which specializes in protecting the rights of the elderly poor, the Center for Law and the Public Interest, the Immigration Rights Project ofthe LosAngeles Legal Aid Foundation, the Labor Defense ~et- work Protection and Advocacy, Inc., assists the mentally ill and disabled,. ~d lie Counsel, the Iargest_pro bono publicmterest law agency in the nation. The Law Center bas also established l~ ayment and assistance program, which _JS rep f n1 14 similar loan forgiveness/assJS· one o o Y h pursue tance programs for law students w o ublic interest law careers. Und~r _the pro- pgram graduates employed by qualifying athge~- , th' ·gsto ell" cies apply a portion of ell" earrun ual obligations for educational loan repay- =nts and the Law Center advances funds to cover the remainder. The Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles d the Western Center on Law and Poverty :refounded at USC. The Law Cenfiter curretudn~ rovides a clinical program or s en !;Jed the Poverty and Public Interest Law Pro.. ect which allows students to le~ !egal ~cipies by working on cases for indigent pli ts The students serve as advocates before fm~ption, welfare and disability agencies. •••
Oh, well, at least everyone's _in th~ same boat when it comes to diaboh· cal scheduling. Last weekend, . the Tacoma Star played at home Friday night then caught a 12:30•a.m. red- eye for Kansas City. Fog delayed their departure, however, _and they missed a connecting flight m Dallas. The Star. reached their K.C. hotel at 10 a.m. Saturday, nine hours before kickoff to what would become a 5-4 loss to the Comets. "I protested back when th~. tenla· tive schedule came out, said Tacoma coach Alan Hinton "As usual, the league office list~ned with a deaf ear Trying to mollvate ~e team before the game was like trying to wake up the dead." • • • RICK-OCHETS - l>amir Harami• na a 39-goal scorer last season in K.C., wa clos to getting back in the lineup after knee surgery when d~- tors discovered be had a herma. Haramina who has yet to play this sea on, ha'd more urgery and won't play until February. The Comets will be in town to play the Sockers Satur• day mght in the Sports Arena. • USD mjdfiel~ong guyen {m -e goals, three assists) has be~n na ed to the All-West Coast Athletic
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vigil t/ by MAIJD..Jlraws'-0 150 ta\\tcipants~ Nearly 150 friends and relativ~ ~f victims of drunken drivers part1c1- pated last night in the sixth annual candlelight vigilsponsored by -Moth- ers Against Drunk Drivin~)-. MADD's vigil, he{aqii1lie.J.!!!iY.fil'.!ll· ty of San Di~j.O'S Unjyersit! ~enter, comcided with the group's kicking off a drive yesterday to in!olve bars _and restaurants in a designated-driver program. . _"We are launching the designated- driver program to resolve the prob- lem at the source, before it becomes a tragedy," said Cynthia Roark, pres• ident of the MADD county chapter. "We want to work with bars and res- taurants to find positive ways of keeping alcohol-impaired drivers off the roads." . At the two-hour candlelight vigil, a single red candle was lit i~ honor ?f all victims of drunken drivers, said MADD spokeswoman Jane Sawyer. White candles were lit as the names of about 85 local victims were read aloud, she said. Pictures of those victims were displayed. Ac'cording to the highway patr?l, "211 people were killed and 5,000 m- jured by drunken drivers in the coun- ty. last year. Nationwide, more than 23,600 people were killed in 1987 by drunken drivers. Another 560,000 were injured.
aboard a flight bound for Baltimore aturday mormng. Most had been up past midnight the night before, some- how unable to wind down instantly and lade to dreamland following an overtim toss to the Wichita Wings. Then, just when sleep finally comes, a 5:30 a.m. wake-up call. Stumble through the lobby of the Wichita Marriott, shuttle to the air- port, wait an hour for the bo_ardm~ call set sail for Baltimore (via Ch1- cag~' O'Hare, the world's bu iest airport, of course). It's now 7.30 a.m. Jeep? Sure, a good a 1l gets back there with the masses in coach cla Land in Balhmore at 1 p.m. Two hours later, players have checked nto the Omni Hotel and had lunch. Ther 's ju t enough time for a nap urning one can nod off instantly) before the next wake-up call. A team m ting is followed by the short walk to Baltimore Arena, followed by the inevitable - a comatose first half that eventually becomes a 4-1 to the high-flying Bia t (8 1 r ord) Th bottom hn : lousy tart, r ov- ery, good fin sh, yet till another 1 to drop to 3-7 and further Into la t pl e "I think," said d fend r Go Mokal , " hen th gam begms, we'r till back at lh hotel a I p" But·that's what the chedule' all about in the MISL thi winter. Want to v1 1t som of the nation' garden pots includmg Tacoma and Wich1• ta" On weekends" Whirlwind tops? Play am on back-to-back nights m c1li 2,000 mil apart? Boy, does th Ml L have d al for you Oh w lm t forgot to mention: The Socke hardly made a beeline for Wichita Thursday. They went non• top to Chicago fi t, then dou- bled back to Wichita
Rick Davis Soccer
loose ball when Tacoma goalkeeper Mike Dowler suffered a fractured lit- tle finger in a game Nov. 26 has ~n supported by veteran referee Gmo Dippolito. Said Dippolito: "Th~ b~II was free and I saw the player kick 1t. I didn't see Dougherty kick Dowler. I offered to watch the tape with Alan (Hinton) anytime." • Countered Hinton: "Well, what else would you expect him to say?" Dippolito did not whistle Dougher- •
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Under the designated-driver pro- gram, participating restaurants a~d bars will serve free non-alcoholic beverages to the person In each din- ner or drinking party who agrees~ drive the others home. /
APANEL DISCUSSION entitled "Alto~ General Antitrust Litigation" will be part
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