News Scrapbook 1988
San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Dally Transcript (Cir. D. 7,415)
Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Col Times (San Diego Ed.l (Cir. D 50,010) (Cir. S 55,573)
San Diego CA (San Diego Co ) Sa!l Diego Uni~n (C,r. D. 217,089) (Cir . S. 341,840) FEB ~ £i
FEB 27 1988
2 6 88
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Jllkn', P. C. B
Est. 1888
ltrri •• ,xu At Confirmation Hearing P C B I ,,
USDHas Last Chance to Spoil Loyola's League Record ;).£,~s' Fro.,;·Tirlies Staff Writers immediate goal is to go 14-0 m the Hank Egan, who IS in his fourth two seconds left beat Santa Clara, WCAC and take a 21-game wm- season TheTorero hot56% from 94-93, two weeks ago, and his
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SieganDenies He Would Push Agenda OfThe Right By,IOH L'PI Court R,pnrttr Likewise, he said, his writing about the Supreme Court's deci- ion on paper money was based on history and not personal opinion
P C. 8
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SAN DIEGO-Ths University of ,.San Djego men's basketball team will •ry to prevent Loyola Mary- mount from completing its first perfect conference season tonight at 7,30 in the USO Sports Center. Loyola, 23-3 and 13-0 m the West Coast Athletic Conference, already has clinched the No. 1 eeding m the WCAC's post-season t urnament. Lion players have ef"n saying for weeks that their
three-pointer al the buzzer beat St. Mary's, 96-94 Thursday. The Lions go into tonight's game with several players battling the flu, and Corey Gaines will play with an miured ankle. Hank Gathers and Bo Kimble lead the Lions' 110-point per gam attack averaging about 22 poin apiece. Munn leads the Torero with a 13.6 average.
the field and were led by Marty MJnn's 21 paints and 13 apiece by Danny Means and Efrem Leonard. The first time USO played Loyo- la-a 115-75 loss at Westchester Jan. 15-Munn made only 1 of 10 hots from the field, and Leonard did not play Loyola has wor its past two road game on last second hero•cs by Mike Yoe t. Hu; frc throw with
ning.streak into the tournament. is seventh m the eight-team conference at 3-10 (11-15 overall) but is tough m its gym, as Thursday's 76-74 victory over Pepperdine proved. Tomght's game, the last of the conference regular season, 1s a sellout • The victory over Pepperdin gave USD a 46-10 record in the USD Sports Center under Coach San Diego
Siegun said he '"fully, unques- tioningly" supports the landmark 1954 Brown v. Board of Education school de gregation case, but "I diffi r with the reasoning" the court u. ed in that decision and oth r d segregation ca~s. In r sponse to a list of ques- tions from Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, as to whether he would vote to overturn deci ions on chool p rayer, sc h ool de gregation, free speech, civil right and women's r ights, iegan r peatedly an1wered , "The law i11 settled on that. The an. wer is no." iegan'11 answers appeared not to convince committee Democrats. "Frankly, I am c San Diego, CA (San Diego Co) Evening Tribu~e (Cir. D. 123,092) F£B 27 1988 Corvette Diner m Hillcrest celebrat its first birthday Monday night with a present for the San Diego AIDS Project Corvette will kick in food, drink and entertainment as a $25-a-pop fundra1ser for t pro1 t. KFMB Radio w1 roa ca t live there ro 7 to 10 p.m.) ... The University of San Die o L.aw Alumni Assn. has come up with an appropriately punny name for its annual dinner party (March 26): "Puttin' on the Writs." ... Ex-Councilman Bill Cleator and his wife Marilyn will be the honorees at the Second Annual San Diego Ho pice Testimonial in September. (Joan Kroc is general chairwoman.) ... Linda Shirer, the former communications director at COMBO, succeeds Barbara Fleming this week as information director at the SD Museum of Art. .. . The surprise is that it took this Jong: According to Mexico's Secretaria de Turismo, tourists will now find all prices rounded to the nearest whole peso - no more centavos. So to speak: Bill Speidel's' favorite cross-cultural scene at Del Mar's Chinese New Year celebration was the sign over the Vietnamese food stand selling spring rolls: "GI's Favorite Food While Serviced in Vietnam." andon defen e 'i~ ~ ifiion mistake" (Feb. 15), was an appalling defamation of Alex Landon. I write o ehalf of two San iego organiza- tions who know Landon well, the Criminal Defense Bar Association (of which he is a past president) and the Criminal Defense Lawyers Club (of which he is a member). Despite the recantation of the in- mate 15 years ago, you chose to con- vict Landon of the charge without the benefit of investigation, prosecu- tion or trial. Coming from a major daily newspaper, it is a shameful ex- ample of irresponsible journalism. Defamation of a public figure hardly seems a responsible way to oppose the Board of Supervisors' ac- tion in voting for the new Communi- ty Defenders Inc. Alex has a well-earned reputation in this community as an honest, ethi- cal and hard-working lawyer dedi- ca ed to community se · e traits have been repeatedly recog- nized. In 1981, Alex was declared a Distinguished Alumnus of the USP Law ScbQQ!. He is also an adjunct professor at USD. He has won the county bar's Award for Service to the Legal Pro- fession (1985). He was elected presi- dent of the California Attorneys for Criminal Justice, a state-wide organ- ization with 1,900 mem~. In 1982, he was selected to his curr,nt post as ice in San Diego. Your editorial seems part of an ef- fort to undermine the Board of Su- pervisors' recent decision to imple- ment the Community Defenders Inc. program instead of a civil-service public defender. While the merits of the argument between the two insti- tutions was one for reasonable de- bate in the marketplace of ideas, that decision has been made after year~ of study and discussion. Your belated character assassination says more about this paper than anything truth- ful about Landon. CHARLE.5 M. SEVILLA, President Criminal Defense Lawyers Club Of San Diego Your editorial, "The $4 executi the larg director of DefeJ!der§._!Jlc., t indigent defe~ 'f~~ff- San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) FEB 2 '7 1988 Jll~~ P. c. a "'' ma ~ J/./{~II I P C B " • IIIR8 ---~~~---- ____ ... ,o'.t A couple of ·dead-eye ringers~ T HERE were a cou- ple of ringers in the halftime free-throw- ing shooting contest at Thurs- day night's USD-Pepperdine game. Each person In the crowd of 1,833 at ,,. Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co.) Los Angeles Times (Cir. D. 1,076,466) (Cir. S. 1,346,343) E 27 1988 the USD Sports Center was invited to fill out an entry blank for the contest before the game, with the winner earning two roundtrip plane tickets to San Francisco. Among the five persons selec ed a an m for the shootout were Mark Manor and Nils Madden - the Toreros' starting forwards last season. Manor shot an airball and was eliminated with two others in the first round. Madden made bis shot as did Mike Loretta, a fan. Both missed their second-round shots and Loretta missed his third-round attempt. Four years of college bas- ketball paid off for adden with a third-round swish. · Madden said he will probably use the tickets to fly home this spring. He grew up in Santa Rosa, a 30-minute drive from San Francisco. Manor and Madden exhausted their basketball eligibility last season. Manor is finishing up at USD this year and pitching for the Toreros base- ball team. Madden is now working in Rancho Bernardo for Hewlett-Packard / r1tnrws. H1R nominution has been held up for mon• thnn u year, in large men ure l' of what 1:1ome critics say rt• h1M "bizarre" con rv tive view. , Comm1tt D mocrnts and staff m mb rs aid yesterday the Siegan nomin11t1on is m · rious trouble nd may n•qu1re another hearing. Som.- ourct•s indicated the nom rnation 1s dead. Sie1an had n bbr •viat d first ppearance be- for •th pan •Im Novem r. l n ddit1on to th concern over h1 v1 •w , 1•gun•~ nomination h · b •n 1d •tr ck d bee use of the truggl, to fill th Suprem Court vacancy er nted by Justice Lewi" Powell's res1gnat1on last June. After Bork's rcjt•clion by the Sennt1· in October, and Douglas G1nHburg's withdrawal from nomination in November after dis-. clos u r • h · h d rnoked marvuana whil a 1 w profe r, the n te earli r this month approved fed r• ·11 ppeal. Judg nthony Ken• nedy for th high court v c ncy. K •nn •dy . •rv •d on 9th Circuit pl)(' I. court Bork, who was on the £tppcnls court for the Distnct of Columbia, resigned his judgeship early this month. In his te timony yesterday, . iegan rep atedly portrayed th books and article he had written a b ing cholarly and not alway expre ing his actu- al vi w . H , aid from a historical stand- point. the intentions of the framers of the Constitution, the Bill of Rights nnd the 14th amendment had ornct1mes been wrongly ap- plied by the Supreme Court in dee,. ions favoring school de egregat1on and voting rights - but that did not mean he disagrees with the results. as has been claimed by his critics. / ,, 188H P. C. B Peppe_r~ne Plays Tonight at St. Mary's ~~<'tine? a 76-74 loser to the th d . Urµye~y of~ Diego Thursday Po~t~~~d ~~~~ti~g,inst last-place nlg'ht, 18 :;tlll tied with St Ma • If . ' · and Santa Clara for second.plac~~i S t P 6 ter formula, would be seeded second in next week's conference tourna- !11ent at Santa Clara's Toso Pavil- ion. If Pepperdine beats the Gaels and Santa Clara defeats Portland or if both lose, the Waves and th~ Broncos would flip a coin Sunday to see whi_ch team gets the higher seeding m the WCAC tournament. 1'he Waves (16- IO overall and 5 in the WCAC) play St. Mary's at 7,:J? tonight at Moraga, Calif. St. ary s 07-8, 8-5) is coming off a 96-94 loss to first-place Loyola arymount Thursday night. Santa Clara (17-9, 8-5), which lost to Gonzaga this week, plays on • Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co.) Lbs Angeles Times (Cir. D. 1,076,466) (Cir. S. 1,346,343) FEB 2 8 1988 San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Dally Transcript (Cir. D. 7,415) ~Yf!.~~I _ Saturday night, before a stand- mg r°?m only crowd of 2,500 in San Diego s Sports Center, Leonard sco:ed 28 points off the bench, and s_emor Marty Munn marked his fmal home game with a career- high 35. . But, once Loyola got its game gomg, the opposition didn't make much difference. The Lions ~ill enter next week- end's WCAC tournament as the No. 1 seeded team and will face last- place Portland in the first round San Diego (11-16 and 4-10) will play second-place St. Mary's. transfers Hank Ga th ers and Bo Kimble each scored more than 30 points, but it was Gathers who led Loyola. The 6 _7 post man scored 34 points, grabbed 13 rebounds and had dominating scon~g sprees in each half to help the Lions pull away. _Loyola Coach Paul Westhead ~aid, Gathers can control a game. _He s such a force on the boards, at times he truly is The Bank," Wes- thead said alluding to Gathers mckname of Hank the Bank. "He was.the difference in the game." Kimble scored 36 points, includ- Sophomore ing five three-point shots, and Jeff Fryer added 23, with four three- point shots. Loyola came out flat, and Munn took advantage to score several easy baskets in pacing the Toreros toa 14-6 lead. Th~n Leonard took over, scoring 20 _pomts in the half as San Diego bwlt a 32-23 lead with 11 minutes left m the half. But in the next 6½ minutes, Loyola turned the nine-point defi- cit mto a nine-point advantage 53-44. The Lion defense forced fou; turnovers on in- bounds passes, and ~athers began to assert himself mside, getting most of his '19 first- half points in the final eight min- utes of the period. Loyola also hit five three-point shots to one for USD on the way to a 72-62 halftime lead. For the game, Loyola outshot San Diego, 11-7, from three-pQint range. the league ~1thout a loss," Westhead said. Basketball is such a tough game, ~th so many var~ables. The thing is, we kmd of ehminate a lot of v8;J;iables with our [all-out) style. After we .hit 18 in a row, the guys were kmd of sticking their chests out. I told the guys that when I was coach at Cheltenham High [in Philadelphia], we won 26 ma row-so they've got a ways to go to matth that." ."It's nice to win 1989 F Jilt~,,~ 40. v------~--- Loyola Perfect inWCACAfter 14 126Romp P. C, 8 h 1. 1888 .Jlllen'• P. c. B hr. 1888 ' ' Bernie Siega~, USD ., /n w pro- inth Cir- fessor nominate cuit Court of Appea , was expected back home today after testifying Thursday and Friday before a Senate Judiciary Committee. Be- fore the hea rings, critical reports were issued by the All iance for Justice and the Center for Law .in the Public Interest, claiming S1egan advoc£ttes a "far-rightest • ,;]/41~ - ALANDROOZ I'imes St.aft Writer ' SAN DIEGO-Loyola Mary- mount completed its West Coast Athletic Conference schedule Sat- urday night as impressively as it started it, with a barrage of points and a 141-126 win over the Umver- ~y of San Die!JO. . l'he win completed a rather improbable regular season that found Loyola with a 24-3 record a 14-0 ~ark in the WCAC, a 21-g~e wm~mg st reak and the national scormg lead. The_ first time these teams met, San Diego was missing guard Ef- rem Leonard, and Loyola · n by Please see LOYOLA, age 15 San Diego , CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Uni on (Cir . D. 217 089) (Cir. S. 341,840) MA~ 1 1988 j~dicial activi~m" and , t I ion~visionism." _,,,- * * 'constitu - _,,/ San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,092) ...lllh,, P, C. 8 F.st. 1818 Baseball Mark Trafton had a double, tnple and three RBI to lead D past vis1tmg Penn State, 11-5. Chuck Graham had a double and two RBI and sophomore Parris Sonanel- lo hit a ba e -empty homer for USD (7-9) Penn State 1s 0-2 San Marcos, CA Courier (Cir. D. 3,205) EB 29 1988 Vista, CA +i!n [?iego (c· Vista Press !'· D. 7 676) (Cir. S. 7,967) " 1 1988 Co.) San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,092) .Jl/fe11 '• ~,n~.Gooo. S!!n Diego Will P. c. e 1,_.,_ 1888 MAR 1 J988 JJl/.11 '• P, C. B f.11 Students frorn th . 1 e of to do odd )Obs, s~~b U:teer t~eir time ture; cleaning th s moving furni- small errands t e ya_rd or running end. Senio: i~a~~~~6-rs this week- up. -;).._ 'f S- 5765 to sign 1888 ime management seminar set The llr11vers!.!,v of San Diego will present the se?11nar "'Inc On~utc Manager· A question of f1m(• or Timing," at 8 a .m . f<'riday al ij)c Man.chestrr Conference Center. ~Cf':iS ll:'m M,111'.1gcme11t Professor Dr. Darlene Pien- t. v. ill pre ( nt specific action steps toward ~h ncing the one minute concPpl time mana •ment _from the persp di\'e understandin hurn~n bdi vw, · our own and our subordinates g , contm~nt l hn•akfast will pre<·eed the pro. gr m ,11 7:.loa .m Co~t\\illbc•SJ5 'fhesemmaris P '}.<1 the [ '( .o Sehool of Husin ss Spring UP- IJA I I•, S(•ncs I• or mformation, call 2G • FEB 29 1988 F.n 1888 P, C. B ? .Jll/eri 's En /888 P. C. B Time managemeJJJ,~inar set The Cni~a~~l?will present the seminar '"The One-Minute Manager: A question of Time or Timing," al 8 a.m Friday at the Manchester Conference Center. USD Management Professor Dr. Darlene Pien- ta will present specific action steps toward enhancing the one-minute concept time rnana.:emenl from the perspective understanding humal'I behav10r, our own and our subordina tes A continental breakfast will preceed the pro- gram at 7: 30 a m. Cost will be$I5. The seminar is part of the UCSD School of Business Spring UP- DATE series. For information, ca ll 260-4682. :l.. cy 'i" <' Friday, March 4 \ _,_--- . D School fo Business will hold ana er: A Question of Time or Ti~·"?.'•nar on "The One- ~t 8 a_.m. at the USO A • mall bt1sinesa conferen~ with AT~n- H eg1strat1on_: 260-4585. t~ laws and other topics will be held t 8 aid • peaking on new Hilton, 1775 E. Mission Bay Drive F a a.m. at the San Diego 489-8924 or 457-577 5 · ee, $ 3 0. Reservations: 434-1749· . _/ . Minute Manchester Conference Center Alcala p /;r
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