News Scrapbook 1989
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score its second run ot the game in the third inning when VSD 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, USO 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 lipped 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. Don't blame Lutes for his slip up, lt's too early. His new cleats haven't arrived. Mizuno is out of size 12½ and up. Five Aztecs are runnJng around without traction. "I was talking to the shoe dealer just today," said Dietz. "I 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 ninth. 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.
Briefs:~ttorneys, Parolees- /Ii t2" Q f'3A fnntinur•r ,..,,,>l"nk
1989
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1JSDLaw- Continued from Page JA She has worked at the University of Utah for 16 years. The Univer~ity of Washington is clo,sed for two days, so Aronson couldn't be reached for comment. The first six finalists: University of Cincinnati law professor and former dean Gordon A. Christen- son, 56; New Mexico tax lawyer Robert J. Desiderio, 47, on leave from the University ofNew Mexico and formerly that school's law dean for six years; St. Louis Uni- versity law school dean Rudolf C. Has!; University of Minnesota law professor and law library director M. Kathleen Price, 46; University of Texas law professor Michael E. Tigar, 46; and Arkansas litigation lawyer Robert K. Walsh, 46, a former dean and professor at the law school of the University of Arkan as in Little Rock.
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E-l~ 1HE$1RIBUNE _It's sloppy: Aztecs walk past Toreros By Kirk Kenney (Ar:;; Tribune Sportswriter ::Zl,,t In Alaska, it was minus 80 degrees. Look out below. Io Minot, S.D., they matched Alas- 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 USO 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. Dietz prefers Southern California in February. He was at Smith Field last night to help SOSU and USO greet the 1989 season. The Aztecs won 7-5. There have been better- played games, but for Feb. 1 this will do. "It was about what I expected," said Dietz, whose team begi_ns a three-game home series with Florida International tomorrow at 5 p.m. Both SOSU 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 USO coach John Cunningham. 'There's no way we're going to walk 16 guys again this season. It 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."
librarian at h .
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Grny, ary, Ames & Frye, c ai rs the Spl'okers Committee; Karla Coslett r, law librarian at West- em Stutc College of Lnw; Jomes Dopp, law l1brarinn at Cal el ·n Law School; Nancy Co rter, 1 hrarian nl USD Law School chairs --.-. C ·tt cs.- I W l lihrnry; Dian Ga rcia of Higgs, Flntdwr & Mack, and Co lleen ' S Dit'"O 'ounly Law Library; ., The chair of the lnslilule m1ttr, is J udith Runyon, who us- t•d lob librnrian al Westl'rn State nnrl is now in Los Angel!'11. On The Move: Ro b rt Bell of Lure, F rwnrd, Hamilton & Scripps is 1989 president of the San Diei:o Apnrtm<'nt ARsoci,_1t10n Dnrl Dnnford (University of Oklnhoma College of Law) has lwcomc O partner with Circuit, Mc Kellogg, Kinney & Ross. Bill Baldwin (McGcorge Law &hool) and Ross Epstein CBoston University Law School) have joined Brobeck, Phleger & Harri. on as 11 ssoc (a Les. Hobl'tt Coli anrl Koren Canoff arc ml'mh rs of Dorazio, Bar- nhor~t & Bonar; Pau l Delmore nnrl Shelley arder are a~sociates nnd haunBurnsisofcounsC'I. Craig Clark, Jr. (Unive_rsity_ of Bnn Diego Law School) ts with Mc· lellan & Associates. William Gillespie (Fordham University Lnw School) has joined Endemnn, Lincoln, Turek & II enter as an associate. ,J«-ffery Morris, Richard Thomas, Manurl Corrales, Jr, and Thomns Era) arc with Stutz, Gallagher & Artiano. Jeffrey Wade has heen re- elected president of thLMake •A- Wish_L,-~n Diego. Hoger Geddes, an attorney for the Hotel del Coronado, and Robert von Zirngibl of Edwards, White . oo , nre on the board . .. Nnnw Change: It's now Page, Tucker-, Btbbk8' Wt liusbh (for- merly Page, Tucker & Brooks) located at 350 West Ash St., Suite 9 00. Mory Best and Philip Se. sons Jr. have joined the firm f'le.1.,etum tn Page l~A I C om- Buskirk and o ndro Utz, an th. Bibliography omm1 ee; ary M Lv n Hyde, USD Law School Knthryn Whistler nnd
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Monterey, CA (Monterey Co.) Monterey Peninsula Herald
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Jl./f~,1JJ,a Pearson named ~=u c~~~ 0 {?c~re, 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 Schoo), Pearson played pro- fessional football for the Atlanta Falcons for four years after gradu- ating from San Die o State Univer- sm:, He also payed for the Arizona Wranglers for one year. The Salinas Fire Department consists of about 100 firefighters. Among them are 12 captains.
It couldn't be determined which one the committee had selected nor which one dropped out. The selection committee consists of: Snyder, director of the law school's graduate tax program; faculty members Darrell Bratton Nancy Carter, Kevin Cole, c'. Hugh Friedman, Herbert Lazerow Terry Player and Donald Weeks: tein; students Tina Gallegos and Greg Tosi; Provost Sister Sally Furay; former U.S. Attorney Peter Nunez; Superior Court Judge Chr1 tine Pate; and 4th Distrid Court of Appeal Justice Howard Weiner, who joined the group for interviews after the first field had been trimmed to six.
('nrlln Oh<'rndorfrr l'rofih•: North County Bar AR'lol'intion l'n• 1d1·nl Jrn Cnrlin l(tl'I' up in Plymouth, . fas_ . and wPnl to Colurnhin l/mwr8ily for hnth Ills unrlergrnduat1• dt>grcc (mnJorerl in Atrwriran hi story) nnd lnw d«•grt•c And somehow Lutes dug in at the plate in the seventh mning. He hit a three-run homer to left field in the inning that became the difference when USD came back with one run in the eighth and 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." O~iously, 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- anello over the coals for dropping the ball. USD seeks a new dean to replace Sheldon Krantz, who last March resigned after several years in the post to complete writing a book on the legal profession. Krantz had moved to the University of Cali. fornia, San Diego, but Nunes yes- terday said, "He remains on facu). ty and this semester is teaching here." USD President Author Hughes ha final say on appointing a new dean. G.&RUNQ W.&U PAPl"R MAJI San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Daily Transcript (Cir. D. 10,000) ..Allot~ p C 8 fo 1888, ,, Scholars, communi~ leaders and business ~ ~nals . will gather to examii;if file potential of establishing a QfSD Er9gra~. on Korea _ its economy, poht,cs, culture, language and relation to the Pacific Rim - at a symposmm 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 a~d IR/P'S professor, will address Korea s Los Angeles.CA ) (Los Angeles Co. Times d) (San Diego E . (C\r. Ds·~~'~i~i (Cir. · , ') C'~ • • 1089 Allen', San Diego , CA (San Diego Co .) San D1eg_o Union (Cir. D. 217 ,089) {Cir S. 341 .840) Leap to Maturity." Also speak~ng will be Craig Coleman, executive 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 Bn,m L;?-J't,; 1, USJYs )act of of ;,tent with Sa, Di,go stat,, •ma. ,________------ 19'9 "Breath of Lil," •w•nL .,.,._ rootrol h,I,.. San Di;go Stat, ..., Poiat,ra eoaci, B,,oi, 11<1,n, s,;d. In g,,- Jack MeKeoo "'' many play,n the visiting Toreros, 7-5, in the base- addition to starting in the secondary, Padres ceremony - The Padres are expected to attend. ball ason op,,,,- lo,- both ''"" Low, (._loot-2, 170) played flaok,,- will be hooon,J hy th, Cystie F;bro- Mimh,,-, of th, Pad,,s' "65 ta,t ,;ght ,1 SmUh Ffold. and wa, tb, '"m', top ,,,,.,,.,. m st, Fo,m!atio, S.t,,-day at the s.., R""'' (th, way ymmg,ste,s some- Th, A,1.,,, ,,..., 15th hy &,~ sco,-;,g a,d y,,-d, P" .. ,,h ... Vt,ta Di,go M,,-;,,. M.m«>tt. Th, ream time, p,ooom,,, eysti, IU,,-os;,) doh b,JJ Am,rie,, m..,,,., o,Iy fo,,- ru• High ofl""'v, taekl, o.,;d Lamm ha, """ mo,, Iba, $350,000 o,,,- poy " anao,J 1100 m,mba-sbip 1,. - h>dodiog, 11,,.._nm horn,,- from ,._,, 255) ,aid be has ,.,.hally eom- the past ,;, '''"" lhro,gh th, "65 ""' tim, • Paw-, horn.,.., 110 • Lo<,s n, th• """th - bot e,pit•I- mitt,d to F,U,rtoo Stat,. H, will be Ro,,s" Spon, Clob. poid. Ciob mom"" abo ""'" '°"' 1"d om wait,_ """"'"' ru, 1;ra1 ym ... Patriet Fraok O.fon! of Sports m,.,trated, eomplimentacy ticket, to ""' of The Toreros "°"' twke i, th, Losruak, a "4, 260-po,md El Cajoo eba;,ma, of the Cystk F;bros;, live ,.,,.. m a seaso,, and oth,,- •i•lh before Pa,! Awt;, eamem to VaU,y ffigh o11..,,,. ta,~,. ha, Fow,datioo', Natiomtl Bo,n, of Trus- "'"'""- Mo,e iolonnatioo, 223--0228 stnke out the final batter. John verbally committed to Northern Ari- tees, will present the Padres with the or 748-9188.~-~~-~~-~ Hammerly gave up one run in six r-:-------~-~--~-------------~---- innings to win. James F rg son lo t. F B 2 1989 J lll~11·• P. C 8 E.,, 1888 P. C. e 1888 Aztecs Amble Past Toreros itb16 Walks By J~lfu~RENTI SAN DIEGO-In baseball yer- nacular, home plate is so~et1mes called the dish._To the_J!!11vers1ty ~iego pitchers w ednesc!ay 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 wh'le winning the season opener for both teams, 7-5. , .. "How do you explain 16 walks_. USD Coach John Cunningham said. "Take those out and it's a whole different ball game." The tone was set early when San Diego State's second batter, Bnan Dunn, walked off USD 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] 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 I earned run, but was victimized by 2 USD errors and left trailing, 3-0. "Ferguson was one-third w~at he normally is," Cunningham said. "Nobody hit him hard." San Diego State starter John Hemmerly didn't have as much trouble finding the plate._ IJ? 6 innings, Hemmerly, a JUmor, walked 4 but allowed just 2 hits and 1 run. "I felt good," said H~mmerl1,, who was limited to 100 pitches. I threw mostly fastballs. I wanted to keep going but coach wanted me to E Prep football - I L~.:..b_ac~k- J~o-hn_ L~ou_is_ ha_s_ s_ig_n_e~da-""I::::et=te=r=- Pt. Loma corner- For The Times ROBERT FAABORG SDSU's John Hemmerly delivers during 7-5 victory over USD San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union / Cir. D. 217,089) Cir . S. 341 ,840) re:-~ 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 mning. 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, USD, 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 h1Uer Chris Stout, lined down the left- field line with the ball falling foul by inches. Gousha, who was on second, would have scored 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 survived a scare. . USD got to Marshall for a run m the eighth and 2 in the_ ninth before -Paul Austin came m to catch pinch-hitter Devin Bundy lookmg at strike three with a runner on second. "I was pleased," SD~U Coach Jim Dietz said. "USD 1s always tough on us. I thought we hit the ball pretty good. We did a lot of things well. I was really ~leas~d f?,r a first game. USO will be Just fm_e. For USO, Andy Roberts hit 2 doubles in 4 at-bats and sc?red 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. Los Angeles, CA (Los Angeles Co,) Los Angeles Times (Cir. D. 1,117,9521 (Cir. S, 1,022,423) • -- / Tennie - .Jlll~,,~ P. C. 8 1989 Ff B 2 fo. 1888 The -¥filL!!ien's team lost just 23 games in a 9-0 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. USD (2-1) plays at USC on Friday afternoon at 1:30. The Toreros then play an alumni squad Saturday afternoon at 1 at USD. T~ Tritons are 0-2. ~o/'5":> / Jl([~II Ta~...J118P wo ens basketball P. C 8 los· :~. the Pepperdine (7-13 overall and 2-4 in the West Coast Athletic Conference) will play Fri- day night at the University of San Diego (7-9, 3-~) and Saturday n ight at St. Marys (12-8,_5-1). . Senior forward April Marion leads the Waves With averages of l3.9 points an:17.8 rebounds. team fa r. 1888 a three-game
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