News Scrapbook 1989

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Daily Transcript (Cir. D. 10,000)

San Diego, CA (San Diego C?.I Daily Transcript (Cir. D. 10,000)

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,064) FEB 2

• SDSU scored its second run Ot the game in the third inning when USD first baseman Rick Doane tried to throw out Aztecs designated hitter Joe Valverde at third base. Valverde was standing on the bag at the time. He trotted home on the wild throw. • In the fourth inning, USD right fielder Parris Sorianello dropped a routine fly ball hit to him by SDSU third baseman Lance Pinnell. Pinnell scored an unearned run later in the inning. Sorianello would hear about his mistake from the fans for the re- mainder of the game. • SDSU left fielder Brian Lutes helped USD to its first run when he slipped while running for a fly ball hit by Toreros center fielder Paul Thornton. The ball hit off Lutes' glove for a double. Thornton later moved to third and scored on team- mate Jim Alexander's sacrifice fly to right field.

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..Alt...', ,. C. 8 Est. 1881 ,..,USD Starts Over On Its Law Dean Finalist Didn'tMake Deal ' So SixNew ()andi_dates Up -,< 55 By JOE ABBEFELD San Diego Daily Transcript S1/l/f Wri~r The committee selecting a new Uni ~ of San Diego Law School deandidn 't land a dean out of its first slate of six candidates so it has found five more to review. After a lengthy screening of the six finalists out of more than 100 applicants, the committee named its choice and USO made an offer but couldn't reach an acceptable agreement with the candidate, ac. cording to one source. The two-day visits lo the campus by live of the finalists in ovember and 0 Decem- ber. The sixth finalist removed his name prior to the visit:;. So it's back to th start, USO confirmed yesterday. In addition to the five new can didates, the committee, headed by Professor Lester B. Snyder, may include as candidates the four re- maining from the first round, the source said. The live new candidates include acting dean Grant Morris. Morris, a USO law professor who roughly 10 years ago served as acting dean, hasn't wanted to take the dean job permanently, but the 14-member committee has put hi name on the list anyway and he's pondering whether to keep it there, said USO spokesman John Nunes. Out of town, Morris couldn't be reached for comment yesterday. review rncluded

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It's sloppy: Aztecs walk past Toreros By Kirk Kenney Tribune Sportswriter ~(..r In Alaska, it was minus 80 degrees. Look out below. In Minot, S.D., they matched Ala - ka wind chill for wind chill. In Cut Bank, Mont., it was 75 below With high winds that created ground blizzards. In Valentine, Neb., the mercury dropped from 70 degrees to zero in 10 hours. For once, mom isn't exaggerating when she says, ''Wear a coat or you'll freeze to death." Why bring all this up? Because, while everyone else was chilling out, ..baseball began in San Diego. Let themgive- baseball the cold shoulder. San Diego State and USD gave it a warm welcome. Yes- terday's high was 70 degrees. Eat your heart out, Fairbanks. SDSU baseball coach Jim Dietz used to coach teams in Alaska. Of course, that was in the summer - when it was 160 degrees warmer.

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brnnnn at USO Law School ~hmr~ tht• Bibliogr~phy Co~mMtttee, Knthryn Whrstlcr anu nry SD La. School Lyn~ Hy~lc, U, . w ' . lihrnry; Durnc Garcta of Higgs, Bu. kirk nnd Son~ra Utz, Diego County Law Ltbrn_ry; The chnir of lhP lnst1tutc ('(I to he Jibrnrinn ut Western State and is now in Los Angl'll's. On Th<' Move: Rohcrt Bell of Lut'e, Forward, Hamilton & , cripps is 1989 president of the Snn DiC'go Apartment Associution Dnrl Danford (University of Oklahomn Colleg of Law) hns bcconw 11 pnrtner with Circuit, McKellogg-, Kinney & Ross. Rill B11ldwin (McCcorgc Law School) 1tnd Ross Epstein (Boston Univcrsity Law School) have joined Broheck, Phl<'ger & H11rrison as associates. Robet'I Coli and Karen Cnnoff are niPmbers of Dorazio, Bar- nhot·st & Bonar; Paul Delmore nnd hell y Card<'r arc associates and hnun Burns is ofcounsel. Craig Clark, Jr. (University of San Diego Law Schoof) is with Mc·('lcllnn & Associatcq William Gillespie (Fordham University Lnw School) has joined End<'man, Lincoln, Turck & Henter as nn associate ,Jt,ffcry Morris, Richard Thomas, Manuel Corrnles, Jr. and Thomas Era! are with Stutz, Gallagher & Artiano. ,frffr<'y Wade has hecn re- elcclPd pr sident of thLMake-A- Wis'1-Eo=~n Diego. Roger Geddes, an attorney for the Hotel del Coronndo, and Robert von Zirngibl of Edwards, White • Sooy, Pre on the board an C om- m1ttc is ,Judith Runyon, who us- I Fl('tc 1 I' & M k ac , nnd Colleen S

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Monterey, CA (Monterey Co.) Monterey Peninsula Herald

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Don't blame Lutes for his slip up. .It's too early. His new cleats haven't arrived. Mizuno is out of size 12½ and up. Five Aztecs are running around without traction. "I was talking to the shoe dealer just today," said Dietz. "l said, 'Where are those shoes?' All of the sudden during the game I'm saying, 'Oh, my God. Just what I was afraid of.'" , Hemmerly pitched six innings of two-hit ball to earn the win for the Aztecs. USD third baseman Andy Roberts short-hopped the center- field fence with doubles in the eighth and mnth. He scored after each. USD catcher Sean Gousha, a freshman from Orange Glen playing in his first collegiate game, gunned down four SDSU base stealers. "You tell me if you've seen any rookie catchers throw better than that," said Cunningham.

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_ JI.II~, 1888 Pearson named ~:.c!~).a{Pc,.,.y resident and five-year veteran of the Salinas Fire Department, has been promoted from firefighter to captain. Pearson is the first black fire- fighter in the Salinas department to be promoted to officer, Chief Tom Campbell announced on Wednesday. A 1973 graduate of Monterey High School, Pearson played pro- fessional football for the Atlanta Falcons for four years after gradu- ating from San Diego State Univer- Slli'.: He also played for the Arizona Wranglers for one year. The Salinas Fire Department consis~ of about 100 firefighters. Among them are 12 captains.

('n rlln Oh<'rndorfrr Profi l,·: Nort h County Bar A• o<'lntlon l'r1's1d1•nt Ira Carlin i:rcw up in l'lvmo11th, _Muss, nnd went to ('olumhin lJnivrrs1ty for hoth his und1•ri;rnd11nlc drgn•1• (nlllJOI I'll in Amnican history) nnd lnw rl grN• lcla. R of l!l6:JJ. In h1• LWl'l'n 1,,. srrved two y1•ars in the Nnvy nhonnl nn n11·crnft cnrrier flpr herng commiRRionpd on en- s~n . Frcnn 1961 to 19f,8 he wns with a Lo. Anw•IP. firm prncticing civil Jitignt1011 lwfon• o~ening up ! 1 is own offit·t• in Apnl 1968. Nine vr rs I 11,1 IMnrch 1977) Cnrlin mov1•d to E ·condido There nn• two olttC'r nttorncys in his firm, Mich1wl Morg1m, who do s lit,i:ution, nnd ffarlnn R!'e~l', who rlo s tnx nnd 1•stntc plonning Curlin rnnrcntrnll•s on business und r al stn1!• litig11l10n Cnr lin nml his wifo ,Jane hove twn children Rl'lsy, a freshmnn nt Oht•rlin 'oil ge, nnd David, a ophomore nt Torrey .Pines High Srhonl II ajoys r11nnrng, • • * The North County Bar ASRoci ntion hold. its nnn11nl l'C'lrNtt this weekend at Warner Springs Hnnrh. On Feb. l6 thr hnr mC'mbership will h<'nr from Superior Court ,Judge Run ton Maino of the Do m stic RC'lntion• D partment at Visto durinr a dinner mPeting at th El Comino Country Cluh. He'll prec d talk hy Terry Flanigon, Governor Ueukmejian's appoint- ments sccret·1ry. . On Morch 16 State Bnr Prest• d!'nt Colin Wit>cl will he the dinner epcnkC'r Cocktnils for hoth start nt 6 p.m., with dinner at 7 and the prngrom at 8. • • • The , outhnn California As- soC'lation of Lnw Libraries will hold its 17th Annual Institute on

Dietz prefers Southern California in February. He was at Smith Field last night to help SDSU and USD greet the 1989 season. The Aztecs won 7-5. There have been better- played games, but for Feb. I,· this Will do. "It was about what r expected," said Dietz, whose team begins a three-game home r1es with Florida International tomorrow at 5 p.m. Both SDSU and USD still need to thaw a bit. For instance: • Four Toreros pitchers issued a total of 16 walks to Aztecs batters. That resulted directly in four SDSU runs and indirectly in the other three "We don't walk 16 guys and it's a different ballgame altogether," said USD coach John Cunningham. "There's no way we're going to walk 16 guys again this season. rt wasn't like we were trying to walk them." • The Aztecs collected only four hits in the game. Part of the explana- tion is the 16 walks allowed by the Toreros. What's the rest of the story? "USD plays San Diego State tough every time we play," said SDSU starting pitcher John Hemmerly. "We never, ever look past these guys. They always play us tough. It's never a blowout - ever."

And somehow Lutes dug in at the plate in the seventh inning. He hit a three-run homer to left field in the inning that became the difference when USO came back with one run in the eighth aod two runs in the ninth. "We made one bad pitch," said Cunningham. "Everybody knows it. We know it, the pitcher knows it, ev- eryone knows it. It wasn't the fact that it was a bad pitch. It was in a bad location. And that cost us the ballgame. "The thing I'm going to tell them tomorrow is that we think we have a· pretty good infield, but we didn't give ourselves a chance to use the infield. They turned a good double play when they had the chance." OiViously, neither team was in midseason form. The only group that could make that claim was the col- lection of fans in the outfield bleach- ers known as Raggers' Rail. Some of them cooked dinner on a barbecue located just behind the right-field fence. And all of them raked Sori- llnello over the coals for dropping the ~-

Nunes provided the names of two of the other four candidates, all from out of the state, and expect to disclose the other two names after they've been contacted to authorize that. The two are University of Utah law professor Christine Strachan and University of Washington m Seattle law professor Robert Aron- son. The other two are a man and a woman, both law professors, one a former dean, both from univer- sities in the Midwest. Contacted yesterday 1n Utah, Strachan said she preferred not to provide any information about herself at this time because, "This is reaJJy a look-see at this time." Please turn to Page 14A J

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Name Change: It's now Page, Tudkcit-, Btbok8 Ilusbh (for merly Page, Tucker & Brooks) localed at 350 West Ash St., Suite 900. Mary Best and Philip Sessom, Jr. have joined the firm Please turn In Pnge l~A (

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Daily Transcr ipt (Cir. D. 10,000)

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p C. B 1888 / Scholars, commu~ leade_rs and business ~~nals will gather to exam,.:il ffie potential of establishing a ~gram. on Korea - its economy' poht1cs, culture, language and relation to the Pacific Rim - at a symposium Feb. 7, 5 p.m The program will be hosted by UCSD's grad school_ of International Relations and Pacific Studies. Lawrence Krause, a re- cognized Korean expert and IR/PS professor, will address "Kor~a•s Leap to Maturity." Also speakmg will be Craig oleman, executive F.,i

Los Angeles,CA l (Los Angeles Co. Times l (San Diego Ed. · D 50 010) (C~r . 5 "55 573) (Cir . . •

FEt1 2 1989

San Drego , CA (Sa n Diego Co .) San Dre[o Unron (Cir. D. 217 ,089 ) (Cir S. 341 ,840)

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P. C. B E,r. I 888 Aztecs Amble Past Toreros itb16 Walks By Jf;J.if: ARENT! SAN DIEGO-In baseball ver- nacular, home plate is so~etimes called the dish. To the.~ty ~ego pitchers weanesaay night at Smith Field, the dish must have looked more like a saucer. Four USO pitchers gave up 16 walks and the 15th-ranked San Diego State had only 4 hits while winning the season opener for both teams, 7-5. ., "How do you explain 16 walks_? USO Coach John Cunningham sa.id. "Take those out and it's a whole different ball game." The tone was set early when San Diego State's second batter, Brian Dunn, walked off USO starter James Ferguson and later scored on Jeff Barry's double for a 1-0 Aztec lead. Four other Aztec run- ners would also walk and eventual- ly score. "It was the first game and (the pitchers I wanted to throw the ball hard " USD freshman catcher Sean Gou;ha said. "They tried to muscle up and go beyond what they could do." Ferguson, a 6-foot 7-inch sopho- more and the Toreros' best pitcher, spent most of Tuesday in bed wtth the flu. Although he walked 8 Aztec batters in 4 innings, he allowed just 2 hits and 1 earned run, but was victimized by 2 USO errors and left trailing, 3-0. "Ferguson was on~-third what he normally is," Cunningham said. "Nobody hit him hard." San Diego State starter John Hemmerly didn't have as much trouble finding the plate. In 6 innings, Hemmerly, a junior, walked 4 but allowed just 2 hits and I run . "I felt good " said Hemmerly, ' "l who was limited to 100 pitches. threw mostly fastballs. I wanted to keep going but coach wanted me to

FES 2 1989 .Jlfl,.,. 1 1 P. C B director of the Korea Society of L.A.; Dan Pegg of the local EDC; and Tun-Jen Cheng, Korean eco- nomic development expert and IR/PS professor. It's free. _,/" * * * Aztecs get 16 walks, beat USD in baseball opener B,ia, L?.-J.Z-. 1, Ull!Ys ~,. """'rtol •• 11<,t y,a, ... Patriclc Fc.,k n.tonl of ,'),o,-L< lll-to( eomplim,nt,ry Uelreo lo '"' of The Tore,., s0<>™ twio, ;, th, L,.mi>k, , ""4, 260-pmmd Et Cajo, ch,frnra, ot th, Cystic Fibrosis "" g,m,. ID , '"""'- '"" oth,c nIDth t,t,,. PaW Ao,tio

Hammerly gave up one run in six Innings to wm_James Ferguson lost. Pt. Loma corner- back John Louis has signed a letter Prep football -

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San Diego, CA (San Diego Co .) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341 ,840) rrg 1 1989

come out. I wanted to go a strong 5 (innings] at least." The hardest hit ball of the game, and the one that put the game out of reach for USD, was a 2-1 high fastball from Dave Monastero that Aztec left fielder Brian Lutes smacked over the left-field fence m the seventh innmg. The drive over the 365-foot mark scored Dunn, who had reached on a fielder's choice and Harry Henderson, who had walked, to put the Aztecs ahead, 7-2. In the top of that inning, USO, trailing 4-1, scored a run off Aztec reliever John Marshall. Jim Alex- ander fisted a single into left field to score Rick Doane and close the gap to 4-2. With runners on first and second and 2 out, pinch hitter Chris Stout, hned down the left- field line with the ball falhng foul by inches. Gousha, who was on

second, would have sco~ed a d Alexander, who had a good Jump off first might have as well. Stout grounded to second on the next pitch and Marshall and the Aztecs . USO got to Marshall for a run m the eighth and 2 in the_ mnth before .Paul Austin came m to ca~ch pinch-hitter Devin Bundy lookmg at strike three with a runner on second. "I was pleased," SDSU Coach Jim Dietz said. "USD is always tough on us. I thought we hit the ball pretty good. We did a lot of things well. I was really ~leased f?,r a first game. USD will be Just fm_e. For USO, Andy Roberts hit 2 doubles m 4 at-bats and scored twice, Alexander was 2 for 4 with 2 runs batted in and Gousha im • pressed SDSU by throwing out 3 of 5 potential base stealers. survived a scare.

Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co,) Los Angeles Times (Cir. D. 1,117,952) (Cir. S, 1,022,423)

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FEB 2 1989

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lost just 23 games in a1-o non-con- ference victory over visiting UCSD. USD's Mark Farren defeated Sig Huber 6-1, 6-1 at No. 1 singles. David Stewart and Jose Luis Noriega beat Huber and Jim Elliott 6-0, 6-0 at No. 1 doubles. uso (2-1) plays at use on Friday afternoon at 1:30. The Toreros then play an alumni squad Saturday afternoon at 1 at USO. T~ Tritons

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