News Scrapbook 1988
Escondido, CA (San Diego Co.) Times Advocate (Cir. 0. 32,685) (Cir . S. 34,568}
JAN 30 19
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Jam Nel
Th new 1 y refurbished stadium and field will present a pretty picture for spectators and television viewers of Super Bowl XXII at San Diego Stadium.
Stadium stage set for Super Sunday By John Shea mes Ad\iocate Sportswr ter
SAN DIEGO -- Bill Wilson has had a hand in all three of the Super Bowls played in Pasadena. He has een the game prog- ress - or, perhaps. regress - from a sim- ple championship football game into one of the most spectacular events in the free world.
"For the first game in the Rose Bowl (1977), we had one guy running things and one as istant,~ Wilson said. "We had five people in the whole operation. There was no Super Bowl Task Force, just a junior ._________________, chamber of commerce. "Now, the NFL bring.; in its cast of hun- dreds. "
"Each year, this event gets bigger and bigger," Wilson said. "It'll collapse under its own weight if it keeps getting bigger. It'll be non-functionfl. But it has probably Please see Stadiu1, page C2
Now, the Super Bowl is a major specta- cle. And Wilson -- manager of San Diego Stadium, the site of Super Bowl XXII - has seen it all.
stadium ext ras down:"-c--,----,~a=e I rmun e k t big even t? In a few (Cir. D. 29 ,089) btocross is coming. So (Cir. S. 30,498)
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P. C. 8
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Est . 1888
action," Fellmeth said. . Fellmeth said a olutlon to_ the problem is the proposed legisla- tion ~B 1498 authored by ~tate Sen Robert Presley, D-R1ver- side. h It would be the key _to _t Patton situation and any like it, he said. Through an mcrease in at- torney bar dues, •·the Lar woul~ have enormou, resources . it never had," such as a special prosecution ynit. • See Bar, P~e A-7
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mt> 1s~1pln June and November he 1 m t de ense law_ er Bradley• ~:esented report. critical of the Pattou moie than two years_ agof .b 's practices Robe t Fellmeth. Up1vers1ty o ar .ill Dier&-J.iw profcS~ He concluded the bar does ~ot he t.1te b r 1s overwhelmed ~y have the resomces needed to m tne number of cases it must m- vestigate the large number_ of vestlrate complaints it . r~ce1ves a~amst heY take the easy ones lawyers. And !t 1s poor;Jy. s\ruc- ir ·Fe nmeth said, ' the dif- tured to investigat~ the ~1~f1cult f cult Jnes sit on the bottom of a cases" where d scidplmhar)d~c~on might be warrante , c a e · tack . . , There are ooo meritorious Ff.I meth wa-; appom\~d tgff~he cases just sitting that deserve a state Attorney Genera s ·'tee hearing and se ere disciplin r; m .J nuan 1987 to mom or , gd · g Watkfn:-, malung the max~·mum bar by the District Attorney's 11,e n prison without parole . i:l'l alkgatHm made ~'i~~uJ:i.'b;~~~u:ar!'d s~~e s_ent,..nce_he fa~es if fo und guilty
l A big crew is completing final preparations for the game
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X ne ....,-,c;ra:-r,;T mn.'-- vu the aspects of a trial, ' he said, ·'where witnesses would be call- iiGU.a.AU6
W:rtfdtisToss lfian7.WO --wecKS a ruling is still pending . If a complaint is filed, Patton's
P. C. 8 Eu 1818 dskins Notes
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As Redskms General Manage r Bobby Beathard said, "No one can say, 'Why were you so stupid? You didn't take Marino.' We were t he only team wit hout a chance t o t ake him." A postscript, however: Beathard admitted that even if Marino had been available, the Redskins still would have selected Green. Gibbs said the Redskins' offen- sive players will be introduced be- fore Sunday's game. "We flipped a coin after practice to see who calls it and then we flipped again to see who is intro- duced," Gibbs said. "Joe Bugel, our offensive line coach, called heads both times and won both times. So the offense will be introduced." Redskins quarterback Doug Williams, said his college coach, Grambling's Eddie Robinson, was scheduled to arrive here today and attend the game.
earlier cleared two painters off the top of an apartment on a hill above the field, said they had no jurisdic- tion over the students unless it was an emergency. The commotion finally ended when USD Dean Tom Burke talk- ed to tlie students. "I was aware of the chanting across the street, but it didn't dis- tract us," Gibbs said. "As I've said, you never can have a totally closed practice no matt er how hard you try." Outside of Miami, the Red- skins are the only team that doesn't have to answer the ques- tion: "Why didn't you draft Dan Marino in the first round of the 1983 draft?" Miami, of course, selected Mari- no after 26 other clubs had passed over him. The Redskins had the 28th pick in that draft, which they used to select cornerback Darrell Green.
holdout. "I didn't tell him anything," Gibbs said. "I think he made thitt decision on his own. And, I think his wife, Candyce, told him. I think her statement was, 'I'm going back to play m Washington. I don't know what you're going to do.' Dave went with her." Said Butz: "Coach Gibbs told me he would appreciate it if I would come back. That meant a lot. My wife said, 'You're.ready to go. I'm not going to put up with you if you don't go.~ The Redskins "had a normal Thursday workout," Gibbs said af- ter a two-hour practice at the Uni- versity of an Diego. There were two minor incidents at.., USD,_Qne involved students chanting and watching practice from the top of an outside stairwell at a dormitory across the street from the practice field. San Diego police officers, who
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