News Scrapbook 1989

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(San Diego Co.) San Diego Business Journal (Cir. W. 7,500} NOV 2 o 1~ :; .Jllle11 ', P. c,_ B / ,r

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onsidered Most Likely \ court justice in October 1987, after hav- ing served two years as aLos Angeles Su- perior Court judge.

·dates

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He has an extensive background .n business litigation and was a partner in the Lo Angeles firm of Croskey. Hoffman o, Klausen from 1983 to 1984, in the firm to( Martin, Barker & Croskey from 1979 o 1983, and in the finn of Jackson & Good· tem from 19n to 1979. Croskey received his undergraduate degree from the University of Southern California in 1955 and his law degree from the same school in 1958. Croskey said he was "a little surprised and a little disappointed" by Kaufman's retirement. He did not comment about a successor. Marler was appointed to the Sacramen- to Supenor Court by then-Gov. Ronald Reagan in 1974 and served until being ap- pomted to the appellate bench ID 1987. He served as GOP floor leader in the California tate Senate from 1972 to 1974, after being elected to the S..:nate in 1965. He maintained a Redding-area law practice from 1959 to 1974, and was pre• siding judge of the Sacramento County Superior Court ID 1980 and 1981. 1arler was president of the California J1.dges AsSOCllltiOn in 1983-83. He is a 1954 graduate of the University of Califor• nia, Berkeley, and received his law de gree from the university's Boalt Hall in . 1957. He v.11s unavailab e for comment. Boren was appomted to the the appeals court m July 19 7. Having served as an I Assoaate Justice Pro Tern for the same court m 1986. Boren was a judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court from 1985 to 1987. He also sat on the Los Angeles County Municipal Court from 1984 to 1985. Prior to his jud1c1al career, Boren worked as a deputy state attorney general in Los Angeles from 1973 to 1984. He was head of the Special Prosecution Umt, and was co-counsel in prosecuting " Hill· side Strangler" Angelo Buono Jr. Boren received his bachelor's degree from the University of California, Berke· ley, in 1966: his master's degree from San Jose State College, now known as San Jose State University, in 1968; and h1 law degree from the University of Cah- fornia , Los Angeles, in 1973. He was unavailable for comment. George was appointed to the appellate bench in July 1987. He had served previ- ously as a judge of the Los Angeles Supe- rior Court from 1978 to 1987, and as l I I

CHARITABLE TRUSTS AND FOUNDATIONS (Ranked by fair market value of assets)

-- LARGEST

::2.4·5c;-

--

Largest Grants

s1LY Nam • 1988 Address Rank Rank Telephone 1.

1-

Value ot Assets

Grontt P1\d In Ascol Year SThou11nd1

Year Founded 1975

Contact Person

Fiscal Year Ending

Amount

GrantsFor;

Reclplenl

• Thou~nrl•

Slhousands

Holen Monroe

Social soniice agencies, cultural aetrvtttet. educalton, ci\llc

5o¥iet Arts Festival The 8,shop'I School

100 50 40 705 518 518

2.0.5

June 30.

39,074

attarrs and recreational actMilet

San Diego Community FoundaUon 2 525 BSt. Sult• '1 o San D,ego 92101, 239-8815 Charles Lee Powell Foundation I n42 Herschel Ave . Su,Ie A La Jolla 92037.459'3699 Join 8. Kroc Found1llon 3 8939 V Illa La Jolla Drive LI Jolla 92037, 4~737 4 me Ivanhoe A,e La Jolla 92037,454-0411 Pll1

1989

\nlemalional Aeroopa<:e Han of Fame

l'oss1ble 1'eplace r, ent for Justice Marcus Kaufman mclude, clockwise from above. Pam cia B nh, H Wal I r Cro key, Fred W Marlt1' Jr., Roger Boren and Ronald G orge

195-4

Herba~ Kunzel

Professors mengineering and scholarships in compuler

Umversrty of Cal1forn1a. San Diego CaMornia lnstitu1e ol Technotogy University or Southern Cal~ornia Unlver•rty of Notre Dame KPnering Foundat,on Ame,ican Founda1'or! For Aids UJl.wers,ty of San D,ago San D,ego Sym~llll!ly Orchestra San Diego SymphonyOrchestra San D,ago Repertory Theatre F rtends ol the La Jotla Library UnrtedWay

~- AnllaA

2.955

Dec 31 ,

32,794

science and applied mathematics

2.

,988

198'1

Elizabeth E.

Programs and lltllvi1ies that help people 10 accept and ovarcome ccndilions 1h11 may undermine Individual worthand

6.()00 2,000 1.000

11,935

Dec 31,

17,060

3.

19118

family love

- :

1953

Hospitals, communlly fund•,higher educa1ion and cuNural

357 202 150 125 80 45

Dec 31,

1.571

Baumgardner

16.247

programs

4.

1988

CuNural programs. health and welfare, Including medical ....,.,ch, adult 181Vices and you1h agenclet; grams for educa1,on and communityectl'lltles mootly In \he form ot pa~lal eeed and matching grants . support and

1971

Judy DIBenedoNo

54

708

12,272

5.

1988

1935

Institutions engaged In medical and oceanographic reseitch, Union Bank Trust h,ghef educat,on, conservation and recreatKJn, yo"lh and Dept.

San ~i: ::: The~

The B•shot>'s School

80 60 60

628

J"ne JO.

12.260

6.

:r•mal Park San D,ego

1988

child welfare agencies

1965

WilllamP Shannahan

lndepandes\ 1nter-Ame1 ie8n s\ud,e, 1ns111ut1 housed at \he

\nst

-

5.49 33

628

113y31,

5.808

Un11111r,,ty ot Ca\1\orma, San Diogo

7.

1988

, '

\

10

-

1966

R0 .Peterson

Cultural p,ograms. 1nclud1ng e hlSto,ic preservahon 01gan1zat10n,suppon tor en oceanographic rcsea,ch mshtute

Foundaton !Of Ocean ReSf'arch C,1y of SanO,cgo TonyCoelho Foundahon

85 52 25 87 JO 25

185

N•JY JO,

5.165

8.

..

1988

and educallon

. 1961

.

RR Frederickson

Educahonal purl)Olles

Orme School Goleta Boy, Club UMed Boy Club

203

Aog 31

4.820

9 .

1988

.

1985

Peter G Preuss

Med1cRI research, including cancer end neurology

.

The Preuss Foundallon Inc.

130

130

Nov. 30,

4.807

10.

-

1988

.

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.....

In addition to Benk , Croskey and Marler, th governor could name 2nd o· · tnct Ju t1ces Rog r Boren and Ronald G org for evaluation by the commi 10n. Like the oth r iustic . both are Deukmc- JI n ppointe who are considered likely candidates for elevation to the state's high court.

San Diego, CA. (San Diego Co .) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) O z 98

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COLLEG

?--q~7 oreros wake up from last year's nightmare

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came away feeling good about these kids. More often than not, they ral• lied me." Now it's a year later. Help has come to the Toreros from a variety of sources. The three freshm n - 6-5 swing- • man Gylan Dottin (the West Coast Conference co-freshman of the year last season and the Toreros' second· leading scorer at 12.0 points a game), 6-2 guard Wayman Strickland (8.1 points) and 6-5 forward Kelvin Woods

~la Marym~unt and Pepperdine are a close 1-2-E-2 I thought I'd go crazy," Cottrell said.

A former prosecutor, George worked for the state attorney general's office in Los Angeles from 1965 to 1972. In 1971, he was administrative assistant in charge of the office. George received his undergraduate de- gree from Princeton University in 1961 • and his law degree from Stanford Law School in 1964. George said he has not been ap• proached about a possible appomtment to the high court. However, he said many ju• rists are potential candidates. " I suppose that anybody who is on the court of appeal is a potential,'' he said. Daily Journal Staff Reporter Susan Kos tal in San Francisco crmtri&uted to th · story.

By Bill Center s1arr v. riter Hank Egan knows his basketball team is better than last year's. That's not the question. "How much betterr Egan won- ders. 'That's the question." "Leaps and bounds better," is the opinion of senior swingman Craig Cottrell, the leading scorer a year ago on a Uni~y._Qf__San..Dieio club that s{riiggled through an 8-20 campaign. "There were times last year when

fort after losing effort appear to have emerged unscathed from the ''When you go through a season like that," said Egan, "a coach al- ways wonders if his young kids are better for the experience of playing and losing, or are they scarred by the "When they hit tough times again, situation. frustrations of 1988-89.

"I knew help was coming, but that didn't help at times last year. Coach gan did a good job of helping us get

that was

rough the year, but

ugh."

As the Toreros prepare for tomor- row's opener against Cal Lutheran at the USD ~rts Center, the struggles of a year ago seem a distant night·

mare. do they dig in or fold up. Last year The three freshmen and three was tough . . . the toughest year rve sophomores who endured losing ef- ever had. But when it was over, I

His Toreros are impr

See USD on-Page E-2

nowmoves to front1?Jirner O .S THE S CIAL front burners today are turk~y and trimmings cooking in celebration of Thanksgiving the 368 year-old American holiday. ' · Ne!flyw~ Mr. and Mrs. Michael David Ll~ (Den1Se Kovacevic Yamada) who re- cen return~ from their honeymoon in ~u~t~d.Maw, Hawaii. will host their first . Pan _giving celebration at their new home m acifJc Beach Mr L' · • • 1 uzz1. a local attorney

San Diego, Calif. (San Diego Co) SAh DIEGO TRIBUNE

San Diego, Calif. (SAn Die o C) SAN DI

NOV 2 3 ,989

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NOV 2 2 l9 9

"ljSDmaygo back to future By Kirk Ktnney .., I) .11:.:':) TnboneSports ,t~Y/'J C RAIG COTTRELL re- members the time 12,000 people showed up to watch the USD ba ketball team - and that was Just for practice. It was the first round of the 1987 NCAA Tournament, and Cottrell and his USO teammates were holding court in the Indi- ana Hoosier Dome. "We were commg in right after Indiana practiced and there was a sea of red in the stands," said Cottrell, who was a freshman on USD's 1986-87 t am. 'I couldn't believe how many people showed up just for Please see USD: E-12, Col. 2

NOV 2 2 1989

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EILEEN JACKSON SOCIETY

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~o~. 30: USO Law School Dean rachan addr

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Craig Co, trell

Thursday, November 23, 1989

playoffs three years ago. There is more depth and flexibility on the roster from top to bottom. The Toreros have the ability to run with teams, or they can slow things down and play defense. Egan's chore is making it all fit together. 2-12 record in the West Coast Conference and 8-20 overall In 1988-89 • . . coached by Hank Egan. 78-63 at USO (5 seasons) and 226-248 career record (18 seasons) .• • Improved schedule Includes first-ever games at St. John's end UCLA ••. home games at USO Sports Cen- ter. Key lose - Guard Danny Means. Top retumH • - Forward/center Dondl Bell (averaged 9.0 polnls. 5.9 rebounds a game); forwards Craig Cottrell (12.2, 4.2), Randy Thompson (3.7, 2.7) and Kelvin Woods (6.2, 4.5); guards Gylan Dottin {12.0, 5.4, 2.5 assists) and Wayman Strick• land (8.1, 2.9, 2.6). Outlook - USO has weathered 11-17 and 8-20 seasons and now appears ready to challenge Loyola Marymoun1 and Pep- perdine for the West Coast Conference champ1onsh1p. A postseason berth In el• ther the NCAA or NIT 1ournaments does not seem like an unrealistic goal. F • cta 'n' figurH -

ward from Lincoln Prep. The group returning from last year's learning experience includes Cottrell, Bell and junior forwards Randy Thompson and Keith Colvin. The biggest impact should be from three sophomores who received sub- stantial playing time as freshmen last season - guard Wayman Strick- land, guard/forward Gylan Dottin and forward Kelvin Woods. USD's 1986-87 team was successful because of its size, outside shooting and defense. The Toreros played a deliberate halfcourt offense that worked the ball inside to the 7-foot Thompson or to the wings for open jumpers. "Since we could rely on that, we never had to worry about running," said Egan, whose team limited itself to windsprints in practice. "We have more players (this season) who can do a lot of thmgs. I intend to set up a system based not on their position but on their personal capabilities." USD's 1989-90 team has better ath- letes than the one that went to the

before we could get back to that level talent-wise, but I thought we could get back there. "Hopefully, we can get to the NCAAs. With the (West Coast Confer- ence) tournament at the end of the year, it's anybody's ballgame (the tourney winner receives an automat- ic berth to the NCAA Tournament). Talent-wise, we're a Jot better than last year. And the experience of last year is going to help us tenfold this year." USO added four talented transfers from Arizona. Forward/center John Jerome, a 6-8 senior who sat out last season after transferring from Ari- zona State, heads the list. The other three players - forward/center Shawn Hamilton, junior guard/for- ward Anthony Thomas and junior guard Pat Holbert - all arrived from Mesa (Ariz.) Community Col- lege The Toreros also have two local freshmen in Brooks Barnhard, a forward/center from Escondido High. and Joe Temple. a guard/for-

streak, and we had seven or eight seniors who were just awesome." Cottrell played in 13 of the team's 30 games that season, averaging seven minutes and three points a game. Cottrell never played against Auburn that night at the Hoosier Dorne, but the experience was forev- er etched in his memory. ''The impression I was left with is that I want to get back there before I leave school," said Cottrell, who is the only player remaining from the 1986-87 team (although junior center Dondi Bell redshirted that season). The 1986-87 season now seems long, long ago in a place far, far away. USD completed the past two seasons with 11-17 and 8-20 records. However, hope has returned to Alca- la Park. The 1989-90 season begins at 7:30 tomorrow night when the Toreros play Cal Lutheran at the USD Sports Center. "I think we have a chance," said Cottrell, who led the Toreros with 12.2 points a game last season. "I thought it would be a couple of years

practice. It was incredible." The next night USO and Auburn treated the 29,610 paying customers to an incredible basketball game. The teams battled back and forth be- fore the Tigers finally won the Mid· west Regional game 62-61. USD's 1986-87 team featured four seniors - center Scott Thompson, forwards ils Madden and Mark Manor and guard Paul Leonard - and one sophomore (guard Danny Means) in the starting lineup. Senior forward Steve Krallman was the first player off the bench. Together they led USO to a school-record 24-6 mark - including 14 straight wins - that season. "They were like clockwork," said Cottrell. "Those guys coached them- selves. I got very little playing time, except for a couple of blowouts. It was frustrating not playing, but I un- derstood it. We were on a winning

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