News Scrapbook 1989

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Palm Desert, CA (Riverside Co.) Palm Desert Post (Cir. W. 10,400) N

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- •·•-....u•a. va 4 5 • University of San Dieg6 rs spon- soring a special program featuring businessman Ernest Hahn, chair- man of the board of USD, at 5:3O p.m. Nov. 11 at the Eldorado Country Club in Indian Wells. Hahn will discuss the furure of the Coachella Valley and of USO. Pncc for the champagne reception and dinner is SI 00. Reservations are !united to 100 p.;eple. For more information or reservations call Bill Hilligoss at 325-3142. / ~i 345-9676. -

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• Six dollars, plus either a can or cash contribution to St. Vincent de Paul, is the entry fee for the Nov. 18 Pardee Corp. Thanks for Giving 5K Walk and 5K Run at Balboa Park. Last year, nearly 1,000 people brought their can~ and cash as a way of celebrating November's spirit of Thanksgiving. Tom Coat's RunniDg columa ap- pears every other Wedllesday 1D Tbe Tribune.

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PICK.ING UP THE pACE - Sue Chen, a 37-year-oldJISD saAi9r, ;was second for the second straight year in the last weekend's West Coast Conference cross country champion- ships in Belmont. Chen's 18:52 for the

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SA ' DIEGO Th'TERNATIONAL The entries of two more elite runners for the half-marathon por- tion of next month's San Diego Inter-

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C10 W!J.VNESD/\Y, OVEMOl' R I. 1989/SD 7 AN'DIEGO COUNTY COLLEGE NOTEBOOK/ JIM LINDGREN

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Tom Cost Running

erfep Six: UC San I)iego's Teams Sweei, J UC San i£e;:.t ~sports were a crfcct IX for SIX in qualifying for po tseason play this season. Biola third and The lege.

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complex. These NAIA coachtts know Lhey do not have the depth of talent that Division I schools have. But they also know the compet 1- tion level is congruent. (And their players know what congruent means.) "We've talked about 1t for a long time, and we usually wound up talkmg ourselves out of It," d Dan Van Ommen, Point Loma Na.:- arene's sports information direc "I think our biggest concern was that no one would show up." Said John Anthony, District :3"s sports information director and the man in charge of the event, "It really worked out heller than I had

hoped." Admittedly, it will never receive Lhe attention of a Big 10 media day. But said Dom1mcan College Coach Dave Weber, "Anything that en- ables us to let people know what we're trying to do, we're all for it." • Some notes from the NAIA bas- ketball media day: • Christian Heritage (24-9 in 1988) was picked fifth in Lhe pre- season coaches and SIDs poll. PLNC (8-21) was not one of Lhe seven teams ranked. Southern Cal- ifornia College IS Lhe top pick, followed by Westmont College,

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for The Master's in Newhall. Cal Lutheran's Loren White played at Lutheran High in San Diego, and WestmonL's Brad Smith played al El Capitan. • Michael Bateman, a redshtrl at the Umvers1ty of San Diego last season, is al Azusa Pacific. Azusa's Jeff Wells returns to basketball after five years as a member of the San Diego-based U.S. national vol- leyball team. • Fitz Wilson, a quarterback on Azusa's football team the past two years, is now playing basketball. In 1988, Wilson ran for one touch- down and threw for another in the Cougars' 14-13 victory over USD.

• Domm1can College, the small- est N AIA school Wllh JUSL 85 men on its Marin County r.ampus, has 15-members on its basketball team. That means 17% of its males play basketball for the Penguins. One of tho e is Mark Manmng, an El Cammo High graduate. • Cal Lutheran graduate Steve deLaveaga, who Jed the NAIA In scormg last season, lS now playmg for San Diego-based High Five America. • Ty Nichols, a former Poway High guard, and Erick Maedmg, a transfer from UC San Diego, play

In soccer, the derending CAA D1viS1on III champion men's team nd runner-up women's team will play this weekend m the West Regionals. The women (15-1-1 with 16 shutouts) are the top- ranked Learn m D1vis1on Ill, the m nare 17th. In cross-country, the No. 13 women's and No. 17 men's teams, ea h ranked for the ftrst time, will run in the West Regionals Nov. 11 m Santa Cruz. There ts a chance the meet may be switched to San Diego because of damage caused by the Bay Arca Earthquake. With two matches remammg, the de(endmg D1v1s1on Ill champi- on women's volleyball Learn has already qualified to compete in the We t Regionals av. 10-11 at a site to be determlnPd. No. 1 UCSD (17- 12) plays No. 2 La Verne tonight at 7 at UCSD. en's waler polo (17-12) has qual f1ed as the 'o. 1 seed for the eight-team Western Water Polo A n championship tournament ov. 10-12 at UC D. The wmner of t tournament earns an automatic rth LO the NCAA tournament. • Su Chen, Lhe Umve~.san Dm:o·a 37, ¥'!31'-old cross-country wonder, fm1shed three seconds be- Ind Pcpperdme's Kim McElhin- ney m the West Coast Conference champion h ps to finish second for t e ccond COIU1ecut1ve year. D's men's and women's teams finished firth m the wee r. t Saturday and will run m the CAA West Regionals Nov 11 in no • There was no heavenly whisper t 1mg them 'If you hold it, they w1I come " There was no upper-level man- age:nent demand for it. In fact, the higher-ups in this case were pess1- m1st1c But they held it, people came f om all over, and 1t was an 1ghtenmg afternoon. They are the 13 schools of the attonal Assn of Intercollegiate Athletics Dtstnct 3. It was the first ever AJA basketball media day eld Monday at the Gateway Plaza Holiday Inn tn La Mirada. It was not held to ease an nfonority complex. There is no

San Diego, CA. (San Diego Co.} San Diego Union (Cir. D, 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) NOV 2 - 1989

• • • MORE MAR THON LI a Weld nhacb a frequent winner m Diego-ar a road rac seemmg- ly wa unaff ted by the Chicago h t e took apart a d p women's (1 Id, defended b r title and lowered h r person I record by more than a minute m wmrung In 2 28 IS We1den- bach's ghtt rmg effort is the fiith- ra test women's tim or 1989 nd the

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\.rnr.S.~UJUUL \.Ur.&.J .l.> • ...,.,....._ enth m the state by the Junior Col- lege Athletic Bureau. --1len•• •occer - Tom Crane had two goals and one assist to help host US~at l:C Irvine, 4-1, and keep ve Its NCAA Division I playoff h pes. Vince Bianchi and Eric Deutsch also scored for USO (13-6-1). UCI is 3-14-1. The Toreros will host West Coast Conference opponent Loyola Marymount Saturday at 7 .n their final regular-season match. The i N:~ill announc~Jayoff pairings Sunday. °if-

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FB ES-ADVOCATE, Escondido, Ca., Wednesday, November 1, 1989 /I SD rµns and guns int6 1 start of year

San Diego, Cal i f . (San Diego Co) SAN DIEGO TRIBUIIE

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College Notes

The University of San Diego will open 1t basketball_ s~i:son Fri_day mght with an exhib1t1on ~gamst the East Side Melbourne Specta- tors of Australia. l1SD Coru:h Hank Egan says this year's Toreros are shorter, q •icker and love to ~core. • This is very unique for me, said Egan. "When I was with the ir Force Academy, we used to boot about once a week. This team doesn't even need a clock. They've been putting it in the hole about once every 10 seconds." Judging by the high-scoring practices, Egan ~onfessed he wasn't certain if this year's :quad is "a lot better offensively or a lot worse defensively." One highly-regarded newcomer at USD is Brooks Barnhard out of Escondido High School. At 6- foot-8 and 210 pounds, Barnhard can play center or forward. "Right now, he's a freshman and n struggle," said Egan. "I:Je's ducking and dodging a lot of thmgs that he's never seen and that are happening a lot quicker. "But, he's a no-doubter. He's gonna be a great one." Egan went on to explain that power positions in college basket- ball usually take a longer adjust- ment than the guard spots. "In high school, they'll blo"'. th; whistle on just about anythmg, said Egan. "If it isn't a face mask, they don't call it in college." Local flavor: The Torero women's basketball team has three top players frum the, ·orth Coun- ty. Julie Doria (San Pasqual), Chris Enger (Vista) and Lynda Jones (Mt. Carmell each won All- CIF recognition while in high school. Doria, a 5-7 guard, and Jones, a 6 2 forward-center, are both soph- omores. Enger, a 6-4 freshi:nan center was twice the San Diego County Player of the Year. Island setter: Hawaii's Cheri Boyer was the Big West Player of the Week recently. Boyer, a sophomore out ~f Poway High, helped the nat10n s No. 1 team defeat previously un- beaten and No. 4 •ebraska with 41 assists and three service aces. Nebraska got even the next night to hand the Wahine5 their first loss of the season and end a 32-game win streak. Nevertheless, Boyer was superb with 52 _assists, 15 digs and eight block assists. In the t,.,,o matches, Boyer had 93 assists Crane connecting: Midfielder Tom Crane is the leading corer for the SD soccer team Crane, a ju-

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Law School News 53€> 2 1 ' Donna Prokop Deans Issue Appeal for Fellowship Pia: Deans at 40 law schools nationwid -

San Diego , Calif. (San Diego Co) DAILY TRANSCRIPT

NOV 2 - 1989

than $800,000 by asking their classma to contribute a percentage of their s mer or post-graduate income to fund the fellowships. Law firms contributed $120,000 by committing $1,000 for every five summer associates they employed. Myra Nakelsky, NAPIL's president and a recent graduate of Hastings, said that despite the success of the project, NAPIL still must "turn away hundreds of students and recent graduates who apply for funding for their public-interest pro- jects. Hopefully, by working with law firms participating in The Public Service Challenge, we will be able to fund all of the worthy projects designed to serve those desperately in need of legal assistance.'' • • • THE FIRST isrue of a new law journal designed for policy-makers has made its debut at Stanford Law School this fall. Call 7 d the~eview, the Journal is a forum for scholars, gov- ernment officials and lawyefs to develop solutions to government, business and so- cial problems. Edited by law students at Stanford, Law & Policy reject• the '' nry' • approach or traditional law journals by adopting a magazine format and writing style, ac- cording to its editors. Chip Wood, one of the journal's founders and a third-year law student, said the new journal was de- signed with the reader in mind. "Very few people, even among law- yers, regularly read a law review," he said. "We carefully designed our maga- iine so that it would be read. We want it to be more than just a research tool." Among its distinctive features is an em- phasis on shorter sentences and fewer ci- tations than in normal legal journals. The first issue of the journal - 2,000 copies of which were distributed nation- wide - provides an overview of seven policy areas expected to be crucial over the next decade. They include the public schools, children, Lhe ~ities, drugs, home- lessness, the environment and govern• ment wclfar programs. • • • LAW SCHOOL BRIEFS: An inter- national law finn has donated $1.5 million to Ilarvard Law School to establish a pro- fessorship in honor of a late founding part- nrr of the firm. The New York firm of Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen & Hamilton is en- dowing the chair for Leo Gottlieb, a 1920 gi aduate or the law school who died Sept. 26. Gottlieb was a case editor of the Har- vard I...,,v Review and graduated first in hi class. The donation will endow a chair in Gottlicb's name ln commercial and busin slaw.

P. C. B F.st. 1888 / -USO, Aussies ;to scrimmage Qy Kirk Ke~~'j 1'rib1JJ1e Sportswriter : It's fitting that the USD bask1>tball am opens the !91f9-90 season ainst a team from Down Under. fter last season's 8-20 finish, the oreros have nowhere to go but up. The East ide Melbourne (Austra- ik) Spectators Club will visit the SD Sports Center tomorrow night 7:30 for an exhibition game with the Toreros. Although practice is well into its h_ird week, USD coach Hank Egan still has not settled on his starters • Senior transfer John Jerome ~ill start inside, junior transfer Anthony Thc.mas will start at one wing and ~phomore Wayman Strickland will start at point guard. But that still leaves two positions open on the '°urt, unless the Toreros plan to actice their fastbreak defense. • "We have it narrowed down to ~ven or eight people," said Egan. j\f ter those three, the rest of lt is still ~ndecided. No matter what hap- pens m the ballgame, we're going to 1.ry to play 12 people to get a look at eryone." • This is the first glimpse of Jerome nd Thomas in USD uniforms. Jerome sat out last season after ransferring from Arizona State. homas sat next to him the second au of the season after arriving from Mesa (Ariz.} Community College. There are plenty of familiar faces llowever. USO returns eight letter~ Jnen, including three starters - sen- ior forward Craig Cottrell junior center Dondi Bell and sophomore

including six in Califom,a - have issued a nati-,nal appeal to law finns to support a student campaign to raise money for sum- mer and full time legal f llowship serving the und r-represented. The appeal follows the successful first year of "The Public Interest Challeng ," a student-run program in which close to $1 million was raised to finance a series of public-interest fellowships for law students. This summer, 500 fellowships were awarded to students as part of the pro- ject. Students worked in legal service of, fices, civil rights organization,, consumer and environmental advocacy groups and other non-profit agencies. The ty•o page letter of support from the deans is being sent to more than 500 managing partners or Jaw firms nation- wide. In the letter, the deans applaud the 26 firms that contributed $120,000 to The Public Service Challenge in the past year, and urg~ other firms to do the same. "Ttie Challenge is unique in that it represents an opportunity to demonstrate a commitment to both legal education and our profe sion's public service ethic, and to make a ingle contribution which will benefit so many law school student bodies and public service efforts," the letter state•. The ix California law school deans who signed the letter or support were Florian Bartosic, from UC Davis; Scott H. BicC::: I.ISC.Su•an Westerberg Prager, UCLA· F nk T. ea , as ,n . e e a the Law; Knstme • !U:&Q,; and Gera d . Uelmen, Santa Cla . . lso signing t e"lttter were law deans at Columbia University, the University of Mi higan, Yale, Harvard, the University of Pennsylvania, Duke University, the Univcr ity of Virginia, Cornell and the Univer51ty of Chicago, Students hope to raise at least $ t.5 mil- lion ovrr the next year as part or the pro- ject, according to Michael Caudcll- Feagan, executive director of the Washington, D.C. based National Associ- ation for Public Interest Law. NAPIL is a coalition of 53 public-interest Jaw founda, tion at law chools nationwide. "Our hope i that Lhe law firm commu• nity will match dollar for dollar the amount rai, d by ~111<1.-nt, in 1990," he sai

By Bob Gaines/T-A Sportswriter nior out of Poway High, has 11 goals and five assists for 27 poin_ts. Crane scored the eventual wm- ner Sunday as the Toreros (12-6-1) blanked the University of San Francisco 2-0. USD's Sean Pinnell, a freshman from Mt. Carmel, has scored two goals and two assists for six points this season. Hall of Farner: Allen Clark, an All-CIF running back for San Mar· cos High School in the mid-70s, has been inducted into the North- ern Arizona Hall of Fame. Clark was the Big Sky Player of the Year back in 1978 and led the Lumberjacks to the conference championship. He then played professional football for both the New England Patriots of the NFL and the Arizona Outlaws of the USFL. Add: Doug Schwenke, a wide re- ceiver from Poway, plays for Colo- rado School of Mines, which has made the Division III playoffs ... Jeff Markey, a wide receiver from San Pasqual, scored a touchdown last week for Northern Arizona. The San Diego State men's s~- cer team (13-4-2) is ranked 13th m the nation ... In a preseason poll of media members, the Aztecs men's basketball team has been picked to finish last in the WAC. The favorite is Texas-El Paso. With 162 career receptions, Az- tec wide receiver Monty Gilbreath only needs to average five catches in his final four games to become the school's all-time leader. Tim Delaney holds the record with 180 catches. So far the Holiday Bowl has scouted Alabama, Arizona, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan State, Minne- sota, Ohio State, Penn State, Pittsburgh, USC, Syracuse,_Texas A&M, Washington, Washmgton State and West Virginia. Todd Jackson is the all-time ca- reer rushing leader at t:SD. The senior fullback now has 2,026 yards.

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~mes Wilson was sworn in yesterday afternoon as the seventh Municipal Court commissioner and will start hearing cases Monday. A graduate of USO Law School,~'s practiced for l5 years. .,;;6l5':;_,,,,- • . . /

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