News Scrapbook 1989

San Diego, CA. (S;in Diego Co .I San D1e90 Union (Cir . D. 217 ,089) (Cir s. 341,840) OEC - 1989

San Diego, CA. {San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341 ,840) OEC 4 - 1989

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/ BASKETBA_L_L_________ Egan tells officials they're 'crooks' after 77-72 USD loss By Bill Center / Egan railed at the of!icials a All three officials declined corn- wa~d Kelvin Woods to ,,.,.,fhile throws by guard Kevin ~cDaniels. It "Live and learn. But I thought it was Surr wr1itr g'7 manner unprecedented m bis five ment on Egan's remarks. tl'}'ll1g to rebound a r ·nis.sed free was McDaniels whose Jumper from sad." JAMAICA, N.Y. - USD basketball seasons at USD - maybe, he said, in USD outscored South Alabama, 69- throw. When James stu nibJer over the top of the key with 24 seconds left Jerome, who was named to the all-

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coach Hank Egan batt a few choice words for the officials who worked bis team's game yesterday. "You are crooks. You three are crooks,'' Egan shouted to Art McDonald. Bob Donato and Alonzo Hollowav as they eft the floor at St. South Alabama had just rallied from a six-point deficit in the final 41/a minutes to defeat USD, 77-72, in the consolation game of the 15th an- nual Joe Lapcbick Memorial Touma- ment. St. John's won the tournament John's lumm Hall

core ma ked some of the rn what l'f'l!nectable, espe- t Alumnl Hall, here the

56, from the floor. But the Jaguars (2- 2) had a 21-3 points edge from the South Alabama went to the free- throw line 25 times, USD six. The officials whistled 21 fouls against the Toreros, 11 against the Jaguars. USD (2-3) did not shoot a single one-and-one against a team that used foul line.

his coaching career

Woods, Woods drew bis f/Jt1, 1rul, for

tournament team, is an active Inside player, but be went to the foul line only once In 38 minutes after averag- ing 6.5 free throws in USD's first four games. Dottin had 15 points and five assists, Woods 12 points, and Anthony South Alabama Jumped to a 30-19 lead in the first half before the Toreros rallied behind Dondi Bell, Thomas 10 points. feeds from Jerome and Dottin. USD took the lead in the second minute of the second half and held it until

had given the Jaguars the lead for

"In my 18 seasons as bead coach, I can't remember an officiating team doing that to one of my teams," he said away from the floor "I felt all day that they were trying to take the game away from us. In the second half, I felt that we were fighting the "I don't believe they are honest. That game was a sham ... a traves- ty. Either those three are incom- petent or they are dishonest. They turned the game into an absolute three of them.

tripping.

good, 73-72.

"That was the second time that happened in the game," said Egan. With USD trailing by a point and three seconds left, Toreros guard Gylan Dottin was shoved in the back by South Alabama s John Jimmerson as Dottin drove the lane. Instead of a foul, Dottin was whistled

"We played a lot better tonight than we did Saturday (in a 74-59 loss to St. John's),'' said Egan. "U South Alabama beats us, that's one thing. But we didn't deserve to be beaten by "This might be the all-time worst situation I've seen in all my career. thinking the officials were trying to take the game from us. And they did. the officials.

er

a full-court p1 Several cal ticularly irke technical foul With USD a

into Alex Stanwood

ging

This is the first time I've sat there who scored seven quick points off

, basket.

San Diego• Calif· ( San Diego Co I SAN DIEGO TRIBUNE

as when Egan got the tech-

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You can tell them that."

title for

the 15th

time, beating

joke. I hurt for kids who get jobbed maining, Sou

Uabama scored four points inal seconds, all on free

"Tough

loss," said center John McDaniels' field goal In

the final

Wright State, 76-56. ___ ,:.-:,

by officials like that."

Karl James

Jerome, who led USD with 19 points. minute.

OE C 4 - 1989

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Modeslo, CA (Slanlslaus Co.) Bee (Cir. D. 74,100 S . 80,000)

San Diego, CA. (San Diego Co .) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) DEC 3 - 1989

).._.J._,: Tbreros no match or 20th-ranked Re men

OEC 4- 198

DEC 4 - 1989

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'TWELFTH NIGHT' - Shakespeare"s E11zabelhen comed_y w,11 be presented by sruden1s of the J0lnt University of San Diego-Old Globe The~ I of ~S degree program 61 8 P loday lhrough Thursday In Sacred . Hearl Hall, No 104 al USD·J. 3 ~ 55 Trekets are 3 And $6 -R_~y

..Allni~ , . C. B Est. 1888 (uso falls By The ~ffiated Press Kevin McDaniels' 18-foot Jumper with 24 seconds left proved to be the University of San Diego's undo- ing Sunday. McDamels, who added four free throws in the final three s~ conds, led South Alabama to 77: 72 v •ory o\·er US!!..J!!....!.:ik thml pl, 10 the ,apchick m morial Tournament held in Ne1 York. Trailing by one, USD took , timeout with 13 seconds left. Bu 10 seconds later Gylan Dotti! South Alabama's

in final seconds, 77-72 I Robert Werdann's 20 µomts and _ 16 rrbounds. .

I College basketball was called for an offensive foul San Diego coach Hank Egan was then charged with a technical foul for prote ting the call. McDaniels_made both free ...... mally and )iego d 15. San Diego, Calif . (San Diego Co) BAI DIEGO TRIBUNE

Frankie Garland New attorney gives thanks 1--?< M ore than 4,000 people were notifiec the day after Thanksgiving that thc had passed last July's California State Bar examination. None was more . thankful than Matthew James Enms. A standout basketball player who ranked m the top IO percent of hJ.S class . academically at Tracy High_School, Enrus had life by the tail heading mto the home tretch of his senior year. But on the afternoon of May 26, 1981, Enm lo t his grip. . 1Jke hundreds of his classmates, Enms kipped school that day as part of an. annual Tracy tradition known as Semor Ditch Day. He and a fnend_ heade~ up to his family's cabin, located m the hills bout 20 miles east of Sonorn. The t':"o drove on an old public loggmg road m search of Ennis' younger brother, Mitchell, who had gone fohi~g. Ennis sat on the passengers . windowsill, his legs inside _the car and his torso outside, when the dnver lost control of the car and careened mto a hillside. Ennis, at 6-foot-1 an-1180 pounds. was in superb physical condition. But he was no match for a tree. He suffered multiple body fractures and serious head injuries. That was the good news. The bad news was that the inner lining of Enms' aorta, the major artery leading from the heart, had ruptured. Ennis lay on the road for more than two hours. An ambulance finally arrived and took him to a Sonora hospital, where it was decided to transfer him to Doctors Medical Cent~r m Modesto. His chances of survival were so slim that Medi-Flight wasn't used. H is dad, Jim, a teacher at Tracy High School, recalled facing the prospect of losing his oldest son. "I remember them moving him around on a be? and he was hooked up to a heart monitor. All I of a sudden it made a straight line. What I didn't know was that they had pulled the cord out because they were movmg him to another bed. They had to hold me back - I just about made a big dive onto the bed." . Later the same evening, Enms underwent surgery to repair the damaged aorta Doctors were working against an unforgiving clock. Had the aorta ruptured, they would have had only a few minutes to correct the problem. Fortunately, no rupture occurred; surgeons told th_e family it was a textbook operation. Three days later. Ennis awoke from a coma. Eight days after that, he attended_ Tracy High's graduation ceremorues - m a wheelchair His recovery was steady, although there were th_e usua_l odd moments associated with patients recovering from head trau'!1a. Like the time he asked his brother to go downtown and bring him back a piece of Tracy Boulevard. And the time he informed the family he had a date that mght - with a Mrs. Boris Karloff. He had been accepted at San Jose_ State University and gave that a try m the fall, but after a few months he went home. By the spring he was ready to return to classes, this time at San Joaqutn Delta College. He later transferred to Pepperdine University, and received a degree in business admtnistration in the spring of 1986. From there he went on to the Un~iego's law school, where he graduated last May After working for a law firm in Tracy part of last summer, he accepted a job with a firm in San Diego.

N. Carolina 87, Towson St. 70 No. 17 North Carolina is -1-2 and has played all six of its games in the last 10 days. Smith hasn't had time to teach his player much lately "We haven't practiced 1n a week and we haven't been able to work on the things that we've needed to work on," said Pete Chilcutt, who scored 14 points against Towson State. );

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OE C 5 - 1989

San Diego, Calif. (San Diego Co) SAll DIEGO TRIBlP..lE

DEC 4 - 1989

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Friday, December 8 . /.versitl of San Di!Jlo will host • brukfa_st briefing torftyre~:~~ / um· t service program for the business commu 1 ~~; 0 o;~~e school's Manches~r ~ecutive Conference~ ter. Information: 260-4644. ~f.7 5 --- ...

~dents, faculty and staff in a candlelight march at 5 P-~- tomorrow in memory of six Jeswt priests and two bousek~epers assassinated recently in El Salvador. The march will converge from buildings across the campUB and end at the Hahn ,.JJ#rsity Center. ~1/ • • •

OEC 4 - 1989

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f.... 1888 7 Aztecs open a hectic week t a~~if s:,':,~~~!i?'ech

San Bernard ino CA (San Bernardino Co.) Sun (Cir. D. 82 573) (Cir. S. 88,328) DEC 5 - 1989

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Tex~ Tech ?pened_ the s':ilson w1t_h easy wms agamst Missouri-St. Lows (Division II). M1dwest_ern State ,. {NAIA) and Portland, whic~ went 2- 26 last season. The Red Raiders lost their first game Satu~day, a 78:77 de- cision to host Austm. Peay m _the Acme Boot Showdown m Clarksville, Like Brandenbur~, Te~as coach Gerald Myers i_s cornmg off h 15 first back-to-back Jos1Dg seasons. The Re

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Tribune Sportswriter

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San Diego State's bas~etball team will begin a busy week at 7:30 tonight it hosts Texas Tech at the he ~he AztC:· also will entertilin on Wednesda and USC on Satur a takin~ a week-long break (from games) for final exams. San Diego State will be trying to- ni ht for its third straight win, but its fiI~t against a Division I team. After losing season-opening games to Vil- lanova and James Madison, the Az- tees routed Chaminade and squeaked ua5~ before y Aztecs coach Jim Brandenburg tanning at least one change in his skrting lineup for tonight, but whether jumor Arthur Massey re- laces senior Rodney Jones at point p arc! depends on Massey's physical :ndition. He suffered a hematoma behind his ear yesterday during practice and was forced to sit out the remainder of the workout. Massey had his best game as an Aztcz on Thursday against UC River- side scoring 10 points and grabbing a tea~-high eight rebounds. He has scored 20 points this year, two fewer was ~ni~~esguard Michael Best and ·uruor forward Shawn Jamison lead ~e Aztecs with 53 points each. As a team SDSU is averaging 60 points a game on mediocre 45.2 percent Ar b UC Riverside. th J

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OEC 4 - 1989

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F, 1 IIU Egan slaf s the officials afte?-Tbreros lose in N. Y.

was calle4 for charging into Alex Sanderwood as he drove to the bas- ke~t was the last straw for E~an, whose response earned a techmcal from the officials. South Alabama guard Kevin McDaniel sank two free throws McDaniel added two more to cornpl;te the scoring with one second left when USD s Brooks Barnha~d committed an Intentional foul in d peration. South Alabama trailed much of the arne which meant it had to be more ~ggr~ive defensively against ~e Toreros. Still, the Jaguars commit- ted just 11 fouls. USD had 21. That explained why USD was outscored at the free-throw line (21-of-25 to 3:<>f-6). USD had a 17•14 lead early ID the game before a 10-0 run by South Ala- bama made it 24-17 with 10:19 re- maining m the half. T~e Toreros cut the dehcit to three points at 42-39 by baUt1me. The Toreros (2-3) took control early in the second half and led by as many a nine points three . Urnes. USD led by six pomts 72-66 with less than two minutes remammg, but the Jaguars scored the game's last 11 po~lm led the Toreros ~1th 12 mts and six rebound . Senior for- ~ard John Jerome, who was selected to the all-tournament team, had 10 points and ix rebounds. t. John's won its tournament for

There was nothing funny about USD's 77 _7 loss to South Alabama y er ay In the consolation game of the St. John's Tournament in New York. Well, there was on thing. " . "Th offic1aling was a Joke, said USO coach Hank Egan. "lt's a shame 'They were either incom- petent or d hon t I felt early on that we would be fighting., agalnst th officials all night long Like any coach, Egan Is known for ridin ofhclal during games. Rare-

Charles Hoadley works on a Boeing 737 engine cowling at the Rohr Industries plant in Riverside. Troubled Rohr gets stuck in red tape By MARK VEVERKA Sun Business Writer 9-- S, '55 SAN DIEGO- Harry W. Todd, people are still employed.

'The officiating wa a joke. It' a hame. They were either incompetent or dishonest.' -Hank Egan

Todd and Goldsmith said the bulk of the quarterly losses and the subsequent layoffs were caused by recently revamped ~overnme_n_t quality control guidelines on mili- tary contracts. After the meeting, Todd said. "This is not a problem unique to Rohr; this is not a problem unique to Riverside." But Rohr seems to have been hit especially hard by the problems caused by the red tape. oldsmith said that the way fed- ral auditors monitored bonding operations of replacement parts for Grumman Corp. F-14 fighters pre- vented the company from operating at a normal rate. He said it caused production lines to be halted seve- See ROHR/85

San Diego, CA (San Oiego co.) San Diego Business Journal (Cir. W. 7,500) OEC 4 - 1989 Jll/~ri 's P C. B

outgoing chief executive of Rohr In- dustries Inc., greeted shareholders and employees with warmth in _his voice in the sun-washed reception area of the student center at the University of San Diego. ..__ Saturday morning's annual shareholder meeting was his last as chairman and CEO of the Chula Vis- ta-based maker of jet engine hous- ings and aircraft components. !,Jn- der his mercurial, 10-year reign, Rohr's sales more than doubled to $1.1 billion by the end of the compa- ny's 1989 fiscal year. But the fiduciary function in the weekend meeting wasn't so sunny.

Todd, and his successor, Robert w. Goldsmith, were hard-pressed to explain to shareholders why t~e company posted losses of $11.4 mil- lion for the quarter ended Oct. 29. Hundreds of employees - the company won't specify how many- were laid-off in the last year at the company's Riverside and Moreno Valley facilities, where about 2,850

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/4toAY,.PECEMBERBI o~?ng a break· Ur,lversity of San D eg ram ii w,11 soon offer, fasl brrefing on a new prog for lhe Business Customer Service Progr~o a m. at the Man- Communily, from 1301:~ence Genier. The bnel- ches1er Execui,ve ont anyone ,n1eres1ed in a ,ng rs free and or:~ h~lp organizations achieve program des,gne ,-service ,mprovemenl a companywrde custotm:s call Jackie Fre,ber~ process. For reserve ,o . / al 260-4644

the 15th time, beatin_g Wright Stat,e 76-56 in yesterday's finals. St. Joh~ 5 advanced to the finals Saturday with a 74.59 win over USD. USO continues the season Wednes- day night against San Diego State at the Sports Arena.

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